Acquired an outsourcing partner? Here's how to maintain control over IT
How to stay in control of data and IT
Acquisitions in the outsourcing market have become commonplace. International players – including American and Chinese parties – regularly acquire service providers. For many clients, the initial conclusion is reassuring: service delivery simply continues. However, given current geopolitical developments, there is a danger that someone could press ‘the red button’.
Contractual continuity alone is not sufficient. The real value lies in something else: control over data, the IT environment, and strategic choices.
The service continues, but the responsibility remains with you
In the event of an acquisition, daily operations usually change very little. Contracts remain valid, SLAs are met, and teams remain active. Nevertheless, the context in which service delivery takes place shifts. Governance becomes more international and decision-making more centralized.
That is not a problem, as long as you, as the client, are clear about what belongs to you and to what extent the supplier has access to it.
Control over data and IT environment as a starting point
The basis for control lies in ownership. Prepared organizations have explicitly documented:
- where data is located and under which legal regime
- who owns data, configurations, and documentation
- how access, logging, and audits are set up
- encryption has been configured for which only the organization holds the key
As a result, the IT environment remains manageable, regardless of who owns the supplier. The supplier provides services; the organization retains control.
Exit strategy: arranged in advance, not conceived afterwards
A mature sourcing strategy always includes an exit strategy. Not as a contingency plan, but as a normal part of professional contract management.
A good exit strategy describes, among other things:
- how service provision is transferable
- how knowledge is safeguarded and transferred
- what support the supplier offers upon exit
This proves its value particularly during an acquisition. Not because you want to leave immediately, but because you can leave if that is strategically desirable.
Contractual right to exit upon acquisition
An important, often underestimated component is the change of control clause. With this, you stipulate that you, as a customer, may reconsider when the ownership structure of the supplier changes.
This can mean:
- the right to terminate the contract without penalty
- the right to renegotiate terms
- additional requirements regarding data, compliance, or governance
This ensures the choice remains with the client, not with the supplier's shareholder.
No “red button”, but structural control
At SourceMinds, we prefer not to speak of emergency buttons, but of structural control. Organizations that have properly set up their sourcing, contracts, and governance do not need to react to changes; they remain in control.
Characteristic features of this include:
- clear contractual agreements
- transparent IT architecture
- multi-vendor model
- active supplier and contract management
The role of SourceMinds
SourceMinds helps organizations to set up this control explicitly and workably. From sourcing strategy and contracting to exit scenarios. Always with the starting point: you remain the owner of your IT and data.
An acquisition changes the supplier, not your responsibility. With the right agreements, you remain in control, today and tomorrow.
If you have questions about IT Governance, feel free to contact us for a no-obligation consultation or call directly at 010-2036640.
#sourceminds #itcontracting #itsourcing #itstrategy #contractlifecyclemanagement #contractmanagement #itsm #siam #aanbesteding #berkelenrodenrijs #rotterdamregio #denhaagregio #regiozuidholland
