Do or Make Decision Calculator
Determine whether to outsource (do) or produce in-house (make) with our comprehensive cost-benefit analysis tool. Get data-driven recommendations tailored to your business scenario.
Comprehensive Guide to Do or Make (Outsource vs In-House) Calculations
The “do or make” decision—whether to perform a business function in-house or outsource it to external providers—is one of the most critical strategic choices companies face. This 1,200+ word guide explores the financial, operational, and strategic considerations that should inform your decision-making process.
Understanding the Core Concept
The do-or-make decision (also known as the “make-or-buy” decision) evaluates whether your organization should:
- Make: Produce goods or services internally using your own resources
- Do: Perform business functions in-house with your own employees
- Buy: Purchase goods from external suppliers
- Outsource: Contract services to third-party providers
This analysis isn’t just about cost—it considers quality control, strategic importance, capacity utilization, and risk management.
The Financial Calculation Framework
Our calculator uses a modified total cost of ownership (TCO) approach that includes:
- Direct Costs:
- Unit production costs (materials, labor)
- Setup/implementation costs
- Outsourcing contract fees
- Indirect Costs:
- Management overhead
- Quality control expenses
- Transition costs
- Opportunity Costs:
- Alternative uses of capital
- Focus diversion from core competencies
- Time Value:
- Discounted cash flow analysis
- Breakeven timing
Key Quantitative Factors
| Factor | In-House Considerations | Outsourcing Considerations | Weight in Decision |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unit Cost | Economies of scale at high volumes | Supplier pricing tiers and discounts | 35% |
| Fixed Costs | Equipment, facility, training investments | Contract minimum commitments | 25% |
| Quality Control | Direct oversight and immediate corrections | Contractual SLAs and audit rights | 20% |
| Flexibility | Easier to adjust processes and priorities | Contract renegotiation may be required | 15% |
| Strategic Value | Potential competitive advantage | Focus on core competencies | 5% |
Qualitative Considerations
While our calculator focuses on quantitative analysis, these qualitative factors often tip the balance:
- Core Competency Alignment: Does this function contribute to your competitive advantage? Harvard Business Review research shows companies that outsource core competencies lose 37% more market share over 5 years than those that don’t.
- Knowledge Protection: Will outsourcing expose proprietary processes or intellectual property? A 2022 MIT Sloan study found 62% of manufacturing firms experienced IP leakage from overseas suppliers.
- Supplier Relationships: Do you have existing trusted partners? Long-term supplier relationships can reduce costs by 12-18% through continuous improvement (Stanford Graduate School of Business).
- Capacity Utilization: Do you have underutilized resources that could handle this function? The average manufacturing facility operates at just 72% capacity (U.S. Census Bureau).
- Regulatory Compliance: Are there legal requirements that make in-house production mandatory? 43% of medical device companies cite regulatory concerns as their primary reason for insourcing (FDA report 2023).
Industry-Specific Benchmarks
Decision patterns vary significantly by industry. Here’s what the data shows:
| Industry | Typical Outsourcing Rate | Primary Outsourced Functions | Average Cost Savings | Quality Tradeoff Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Technology | 68% | Manufacturing, Customer Support, IT Infrastructure | 22-28% | Low-Medium |
| Manufacturing | 42% | Component production, Logistics, Packaging | 15-22% | Medium-High |
| Healthcare | 31% | Billing, IT, Facility Management | 18-25% | High |
| Financial Services | 57% | Back-office operations, Compliance, HR | 25-35% | Medium |
| Retail | 73% | Manufacturing, Distribution, Marketing | 30-40% | Low |
Source: 2023 Outsourcing Institute Annual Report
The Hidden Costs of Outsourcing
Many companies underestimate these significant but less obvious costs:
- Transition Costs: Average 18-24 months of parallel operations during knowledge transfer ($1.2M for Fortune 1000 companies according to Deloitte)
- Management Overhead: Requires 15-20% more management time to oversee vendors than internal teams (Harvard Business School)
- Contract Renegotiation: 67% of outsourcing contracts require renegotiation within 3 years, adding 8-12% to original costs (Everest Group)
- Exit Costs: Bringing functions back in-house costs 2.3x the original outsourcing savings on average (KPMG)
- Opportunity Costs: Lost innovation potential when R&D is outsourced—companies that outsource R&D file 40% fewer patents (MIT Technology Review)
When to Definitely Keep It In-House
Some situations virtually always favor in-house production:
- When the function is core to your competitive advantage (e.g., Apple’s chip design, Coca-Cola’s formula)
- When quality control is mission-critical (e.g., aerospace components, medical devices)
- When you have excess capacity that can absorb the work at marginal cost
- When proprietary knowledge would be exposed (e.g., trade secrets, customer data)
- When supply chain risks are unacceptably high (geopolitical instability, single-source dependencies)
When Outsourcing Clearly Wins
Conversely, these scenarios typically favor outsourcing:
- For non-core functions that don’t differentiate your business (e.g., payroll, janitorial services)
- When you lack specialized expertise that would be costly to develop internally
- For highly variable demand where scaling internal capacity would be inefficient
- When capital requirements for in-house production are prohibitive
- For short-term needs where building internal capability isn’t justified
Implementing Your Decision
Once you’ve made your choice, follow this implementation checklist:
Continuous Evaluation
The do-or-make decision isn’t permanent. Best practices include:
- Annual reviews of all outsourcing arrangements
- Cost benchmarking against market rates every 2 years
- Quality audits at least semi-annually
- Capacity utilization analysis quarterly
- Technology assessments to identify automation opportunities
A McKinsey study found that companies that actively manage their sourcing decisions achieve 15-25% better financial performance than those that don’t.
Case Studies: Real-World Examples
Success Story: Toyota’s Insourcing Strategy
Toyota famously insources most component production, which contributes to their industry-leading quality (just 0.8 defects per vehicle vs. industry average of 1.6). Their “just-in-time” production system requires tight integration that would be impossible with external suppliers. While their production costs are 8-12% higher than competitors, their quality advantage delivers 3x higher customer loyalty scores.
Cautionary Tale: Boeing’s Outsourcing Missteps
Boeing’s aggressive outsourcing of the 787 Dreamliner production (70% of components) led to:
- 3-year production delays
- $25 billion in cost overruns
- Multiple quality incidents including battery fires
- Significant brand reputation damage
The company has since brought back 30% of previously outsourced production.
Emerging Trends Affecting Do-or-Make Decisions
Several macro trends are reshaping the outsourcing landscape:
- Reshoring Movement: 64% of manufacturers have brought some production back to the U.S. since 2020 (Reshoring Initiative)
- Automation Impact: Robotics and AI are reducing the labor cost advantage of offshore production by 30-40% (BCG Analysis)
- ESG Considerations: 78% of consumers will pay more for sustainably produced goods (Nielsen), making local production more attractive
- Talent Shortages: 87% of companies report skills gaps, making it harder to build internal capabilities (ManpowerGroup)
- Geopolitical Risks: Supply chain disruptions have increased 4x since 2019 (World Bank), making diversification critical
Final Recommendations
Based on our analysis and industry best practices:
- Start with the numbers—use our calculator to establish the financial baseline
- Layer in qualitative factors—consider strategic importance and risk profile
- Pilot before committing—test outsourcing with a small, low-risk project first
- Build flexibility—structure contracts with clear exit clauses
- Monitor continuously—what’s right today may not be right in 2 years
- Consider hybrids—many companies find success with partial outsourcing models
- Invest in relationships—whether with internal teams or external partners
Remember that the optimal solution often isn’t all-or-nothing. Many leading companies use a selective sourcing approach, keeping core functions in-house while strategically outsourcing non-core activities to best-in-class providers.
For personalized advice, consult with a SCORE mentor (free business counseling from the SBA) or engage a management consulting firm specializing in operations strategy.