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Removing Operational Debt for a Global Enterprise

Client

Fortune 250 multinational enterprise with large shared services operations across finance, HR, procurement, and IT.

The Situation

A Fortune 250 company was experiencing growing operational friction inside its shared services organization. Costs were rising faster than revenue, and internal teams struggled to adapt to new business demands.

Attempts to improve efficiency had produced only short-term gains. Complex processes, siloed decision-making, and legacy operating models created persistent bottlenecks that slowed execution across the company.

Leadership recognized the symptoms - rising costs, slow response times, and inconsistent service delivery - but the underlying causes were less visible.

What they were dealing with was organizational debt.

The Challenge

Several systemic issues were holding the organization back:

- Cost misalignment – Commodity services were being delivered at premium internal cost structures.
- Operational silos – Business units operated independently, preventing consistent service delivery.
- Shadow operations – Teams created independent solutions to bypass slow processes, increasing complexity.
- Slow response to change – Internal teams struggled to adapt to new technology and evolving business needs.

 

These issues compounded over time, creating friction across the organization and eroding operational agility.

Leadership needed an objective partner to identify and remove the structural causes of the problem.

The Minus Partners Approach

Minus Partners began with a structured review of the organization’s operating model to identify areas where hidden operational debt had accumulated.

The work focused on four priorities:

1. Clarifying what work creates value
We helped leadership separate strategic work that should remain internal from high-volume operational activities better delivered through external partners.

2. Simplifying the operating model
Workflows, ownership structures, and service boundaries were redesigned to eliminate duplication and reduce coordination friction.

3. Rebuilding the delivery ecosystem
Through a structured evaluation process, new partners were selected to deliver commodity services at significantly lower cost while maintaining service quality.

4. Designing a sustainable transition
A detailed transition plan ensured continuity of operations, including knowledge transfer, change leadership inside business units, and a structured stabilization period.

The Results

Within the first phase of transformation, the organization achieved:

$240M in projected savings over five years - Cost reductions created immediate financial relief while freeing capital for strategic investment.

Greater operational agility - A simplified operating model and flexible service structure allowed the company to respond more quickly to market and technology changes.

Improved service quality - Service levels were maintained or improved while reducing costs and operational complexity.

A repeatable transformation model - The improvements created a foundation the company could replicate across additional shared service functions.

What This Demonstrates

Organizations rarely struggle because they lack effort or expertise.

They struggle because layers of decisions, tools, and processes accumulate over time — creating organizational debt that quietly slows everything down.

By identifying and removing those layers, leaders can unlock performance that already exists inside the organization.

Engagement Outcome

The transformation delivered measurable cost savings, improved service delivery, and a simplified operating model that positioned the organization for long-term operational efficiency and growth.

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