While loan originations are down and subprime lenders and those that invested in the loans they orignated are feeling pressure, there are opportunities in the troubled mortgage market.
Hedge funds are looking for distressed loan pools. Analytics firms that monitor leading indicators of at-risk mortgage are seeing a brisk business. The default management divisions at First American Financial (NYSE: FAF), and Fidelity National Financial (NYSE: FNF) are experiencing record volume in their loss mitigation and other related services.
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Housing downturn indicates opportunities in Default, REO
Posted by Mike Arrigo at Tuesday, November 20, 2007 0 comments
Labels: analytics, default, default rates, home prices, housing market, mortgage
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
12 Step Program for Successful Offshoring and Outsourcing
Offshoring can be seen in the context of either production offshoring or services offshoring. After joining the World Trade Organization 2001, China emerged as a popular destination for production offshoring. After technical progress in telecommunications improved the possibilities, India became a country leading in service offshoring.
The economic logic is to reduce costs. If some people can use some of their skills more cheaply than others, those people have the competitive advantage. The idea is that countries should freely trade the items that cost the least for them to produce. However, the cost of reduced quality and the costs associated with managing an offshore or out sourced process need to be considered early in the plan.
A common consequence in both captive and outsourced operations originates from unrealistic ramp-up expectations, where project planners try to start up too much new offshore process too quickly. Quality could be sacrificed for quantity. The most important lesson that new project managers should to learn is that quality must be achieved before ramping up large numbers of seats -- or quality will never be achieved. Risk factors in quality usually should include customer satisfaction. Customer sat with remote call centers, fulfillment, language and time zones should be carefully scrutinized at the planning phase and reviewed after roll out to continuously measure results.
The planning and implementation processes for moving work offshore is similar for back office, customer service, and knowledge process outsourcing (KPO). Firms should plan to choose between outsourcing and opening a captive facility once they have completed an assessment of the types of work that could be shifted. Offshoring is a series of tasks and deliverables. Key decision points are identified -- to enable them to be recognized and formally presented to a senior management authority. Describing offshoring in a work plan format enables it to be quickly translated into an implementation document.
Once the initial management goals have been set and planning have been completed it make take between six to twelve months to establish an offshore presence and have transferred operations ramping up. Time frames for a new offshore operation to "go live" vary according to the size of the project, complexity and training.
It is also important to ensure that labor savings alone are not used to create the business model and the ROI. There will be additional costs of managing an offshore or outsourced organization that will counter the cost savings, to some extent.
Twelve Step Program for Successful Offshoring and Outsourcing
1. Set business goals with senior management for expected benefits of offshoring (cycle time, cost, customer satisfaction) and make sure these are measurable metrics.
2. Identify the low-hanging fruit in the project – seek an initial process that marries reasonable exposure to risk with an attractive ROI
3. Use Business Process Mapping (BPM) to map the existing process and simulate it VISUALLY. Ensure that business stakeholders buy in to what exists today. Consider using a Lean “Kaizen” approach to ensure that team members, not just management have input into what the current process is and the new process will be.
4. Use Business Process Mapping (BPM) to map the new process, and simulate the new process in a VISUAL way for senior management and ensure that they buy-in to the new process, costs, timing, and change management process.
5. Socialize metrics for success with the team
6. Catalog and baseline work that could be shifted offshore
7. Assess infrastructure requirements
8. Develop tax and other compliance strategies
9. Develop a labor strategy and personnel procedures
10. Determine whether to “make” your own presence offshore or partner
11. Train
12. Roll out first process
No World Borders can help with your offshore or outsourcing process. We have experience in what works and what does not, and which roles should stay local and which may be successfully outsourced. Contact us at info@noworldborders.com or 877-623-76287
Posted by Mike Arrigo at Tuesday, November 13, 2007 0 comments
Labels: BPM, BPO, offshoring, outsourcing
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Impact of Google's wireless strategy - cellphones with ads or easier access to applications?
Carriers traditionally have decided what applications most consumers see on their cellphones, setting rules and negotiating fees for software developers to gain access. Google has struggled at times in recent years to get its products -- including Google Maps, Gmail email and its search engine -- onto mobile phones in a way that's easy for people to use.
In the video below, Amol Sharma of the Wall Street Jornal reports on Google's new announcement that the company is developing cellphone software with a variety of wireless handset makers and operators. However, ad server technology designed or cell phones is a part of the componentry being built out as well.
Posted by Mike Arrigo at Wednesday, November 07, 2007 0 comments
Labels: ad server, cell phone, Gmail, Google, mobile computing, mobile phones, wireless