Starbucks has awarded a multiyear HR business process
outsourcing deal to Convergys, marking the second big-name client that the
Cincinnati-based provider has won this year.
U.S. and Canada as well as take over benefits
administration for Starbucks’ employees in Canada.
Starbucks has 145,000 employees globally, “the majority of whom are in the
U.S.,” says spokesman Brandon
Borrman. He declined to comment on the length or value of the
deal.
Without knowing the terms, it’s difficult to guess its value,
but analysts estimate that it’s below average.
“The average deal is around $400 to $500 per employee, and I
would expect that this is much lower,” says Michel Janssen, managing director at
the Hackett Group, noting retail employees aren’t as costly as other
industries.
Assuming that the contract is seven years, the average length of most HRO
agreements, IDC estimates the value of the contract to be between $350-400
million, well below some of the industry's biggest deals, which range
around $1 billion.
Regardless of the deal’s value, the Starbucks contract is a
good win for Convergys because it’s such a big brand name, says Jason Corsello,
a vice president at human capital management consulting firm Knowledge
Infusion.
“Brand is very important, because this is a ‘me too’ market
and early adopters like to see their competitors in their industries doing the
same thing,” he says. To date, there have been few HRO deals in the retail
sector, but this contract could spark more, Corsello says.
Corsello believes Convergys won the deal because, unlike
other HRO providers, it’s willing to take on just some of the HR processes with
the hopes of adding on to the deal later, rather than taking on all processes at
once.
“Convergys is willing to build up, while Accenture and IBM
really only want the big-bang deals,” he says.
For Starbucks, the agreement with Convergys enables the
coffee retailer to continue growing at an aggressive pace, Borrman says.
“This is a way for us to continue to grow our
infrastructure,” he says. Starbucks plans to add 10,000 stores in the next four
years, which averages out to about six stores a day. The deal will affect some
jobs within the company, but Starbucks will find other positions for those
employees, Borrman says.
The reasons behind Starbucks doing this deal are significant
for the HRO industry, Janssen says.
“This is probably one of the first deals I know that was
signed because of the client’s need to grow, rather than fix a broken platform,”
he says. And that’s bodes well for the HRO industry, according to Janssen. “What
this is saying is that it’s no longer just about saving costs, it’s about
supporting growth strategies,” he says.
—Jessica
Marquez