Case Study
A cross-border operations case showing how designing seven structural dimensions — time zones, regulatory alignment, communication norms, quality standards, holiday calendars, employment compliance, and technology — transformed coordination overhead into compounding advantage.
US accounting firm with team members in India and the Philippines, experiencing growing coordination tax
Cross-border coordination consumed 35% of theoretical cost savings. Quality variance, communication delays, and holiday conflicts created negative ROI
Seven-dimension structural design: handoff protocols, jurisdiction knowledge base, communication norms, quality calibration, unified calendars, technology standardization
Measurable Outcomes
Reduction in coordination overhead
Structural dimensions designed
First-pass acceptance rate achieved
The firm had hired qualified offshore talent but treated the cross-border model as an extension of the domestic operation. Work assignments assumed same-timezone availability. Quality standards were implicit rather than documented. Communication relied on synchronous channels that created 14-hour response gaps. Holiday conflicts caused seasonal surprises. The talent was not the problem — the operating model was undesigned across every structural dimension.
Replacing offshore team members would have placed new people into the same undesigned system. Adding a coordinator would have created a single point of failure. Reducing scope to simple tasks would have eliminated most of the value. Each “fix” addressed symptoms while ignoring the structural cause: no deliberate design across the seven dimensions that differ across borders.