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Defining Shared Services as an Internal Service Provider

Clarifying strategic intent starts with defining shared services as an internal service provider, not merely a back-office consolidation. The model exists to deliver measurable outcomes for internal customers through shared accountability for quality, cost, and timeliness. Business units do not simply “hand off” work; they co-own demand quality, policy choices, and process compliance, while the service organization owns execution discipline and performance improvement.

It is critical to distinguish the model from alternatives.

  • Centralization moves authority to one place; shared services adds a customer-service logic, explicit performance commitments, and outcome transparency.
  • Outsourcing transfers delivery to a third party; shared services remains internal, preserving greater control, institutional capability, and strategic flexibility, though usually with less external market pressure.

Strategic objectives should be ranked explicitly:

  • Cost reduction from reduced duplication
  • Efficiency through standardization and specialization
  • Quality and consistency
  • Better internal customer experience

If objectives conflict, specify the rule: for example, standardize by default, except where revenue, compliance, or customer commitments require variation.

Scope should favor processes that are high-volume, repeatable, rules-based, and common across units. Keep local activities that are bespoke, market-facing, or require exceptional regulatory interpretation. Define service boundaries clearly: end-to-end ownership or only sub-process execution, handoffs, and retained responsibilities. Build a baseline before change:

  • Cost-to-serve
  • Cycle times
  • Error rates
  • Customer satisfaction
  • Pain points and rework drivers

Without this baseline, later value claims are opinion rather than evidence.

Outputs should be explicit:

  • Strategy statement: why shared services is being adopted, for whom, and what outcomes matter most
  • Scoped service portfolio: included functions, excluded processes, service boundaries, and retained organization accountabilities