By: Wendy Greenawalt
The economy has changed drastically in the last few years and most organizations have had to reduce costs across their businesses to retain profits. Determining the appropriate cost-cutting measures requires careful consideration of trade-offs while quantifying the short- and long-term organizational priorities. Too often, cost reduction decisions are driven by dynamic market conditions, which mandate quick decision-making. Due to this, decisions are made without a sound understanding of the true impact to organizational objectives.
Optimization (optimizing decisions) can be used for virtually any business problem and provides decisions based on complex mathematics. Therefore, whether you are making decisions related to outsourcing versus staffing, internal versus external project development or specific business unit cost savings opportunities, optimization can be applied. While some analytical requirements exist to obtain the highest business metric improvements, most organizations have the data available that is required to take full advantage of optimization technology. If you are using predictive models, credit attributes and have multiple actions that can be taken on an individual consumer, then, most likely, your organization can benefit from strategies in optimizing decisions.
In my next few blogs, I will discuss how optimization / optimizing decisions can be used to create better strategies across an organization whether your focus is marketing, risk, customer management or collections.