Most organizations will have to
rely on a qualified LSP (Language Service Provider) to help in that process as
the translation process is usually not handled internally.
Our history with the Maturity
Model concept
The LMM was introduced in 2006
as an adaptation of the exiting Capability Maturity Model that was modeled
after the software industry. The LSP world took notice of this
evolution, but at the time it was more of a concept than a comprehensive
approach towards localization maturity.
An example of an objective and metrics |
Our organization spent over 400
man-hours since 2007 developing this model. We took into account industry
standards, industry research and our own experience in managing translation
projects for clients at various stages of the maturity model to come up with a
comprehensive process management system for our clients. It has helped us
greatly in understanding how we can contribute to our client's processes.
Example of our scorecard |
We developed an assessment tool, the Global Communication Readiness Audit, based on 4 dimensions. Strategic Readiness, Organizational Readiness, Content Readiness and Design Readiness. This provided buyers with a scorecard of where they could find themselves on the GCMM and clear objectives and metrics to find improvements
A new platform for a
strategic Buyer/Vendor relationship
Balanced Scorecard with actual client |
Now, our GCMM in combination
with our Balanced Scorecard approach is the unique process that we bring to the
table as an LSP. When a buyer is seeking a more comprehensive
approach to managing their localization process, our approach provides a
committed relationship that looks at their corporate objectives and we tie
those in with our objectives and metrics that we have in place to move them up
the maturity model.
We'll post more about the Maturity Model in subsequent blog posts that addresses the pitfalls of implementing a Maturity Model and advice on how buyers and LSPs can collaborate to mitigate risk, manage expectations and strive for continuous improvement.
We'll post more about the Maturity Model in subsequent blog posts that addresses the pitfalls of implementing a Maturity Model and advice on how buyers and LSPs can collaborate to mitigate risk, manage expectations and strive for continuous improvement.
2 comments:
That blog was amazing, I am impressed with your thoughts. I got the best information from this site, It’s very useful to all and us. Thanks for sharing this post.
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Thank you Michael. This is an older blog and we write extensively on this subject. Check out our newer platform - https://langsolinc.com/advocating-global/category-localization-maturity/
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