Outsourcing or ‘white label’ graphic design and creative has proven to be an increasingly popular strategy over recent years, both for agencies and in-house creative teams.
Despite agencies in general having a tough time of it in the last two years1, the Graphic Design outsourcing market is now a £3.6bn revenue market in 2023, with growth predicted at a CAGR of 10.7% from 2024 to 20322.
So what’s driving this change?
To outsource or not to outsource
When looking to add design resource, there are two options: either invest in-house and recruit, or outsource. In general terms, the benefits of having an internal team at your fingertips are clear, but it comes at a cost. Not just the ongoing financial commitment (they’re a long term commitment straight off the bottom line), but the management hours, holiday and sickness, training, capability gaps, hardware and software, and that unspoken issue - in-house inefficiency. In-house inefficiency is the utilisation black hole, the average 35%5 of unchargeable time that staff members spend that the business has to swallow, either working on internal jobs, reading emails and professional admin, or where the workload just isn’t there.
Of course, there is a balance to be struck, what works for one business may not work for another.
According to Deloitte4, there are three core drivers in the shift to outsourcing design:
Reasons to outsource design
Source: Deloitte4
1. Capacity and flexibility
Rarely do teams have a steady consistent workload, there are peaks and troughs. The ideal business model has enough permanent resource to cover the troughs, and flexible options for the peaks. And to be in a position to respond to opportunities and move quickly for clients, flexibility is key. Being able to shuffle your pack can be the difference between winning and losing key accounts.
2. Access to specific skills
Some key skills and disciplines are just not feasible or cost effective to in-house, but are still required on a regular basis. It could be a 3D animation, a complex UX or UI design, video work - things that require specialist skills but on a sporadic infrequent basis. Partnering with an agency gets you that depth of skills and capabilities, from one point of contact.
3. Cost reduction
The hot topic, ultimately any solution needs to be both cost effective and provide maximum bang for the buck. You will likely spend more per hour with an agency but you balance that with 100% utilisation. As outsourcing design also reduces fixed liability in the business, it’s not only a smaller spend but is a lot lower risk to boot.
Achieving 100% utilisation and beyond
In a tough economic climate, businesses and agencies are striving for efficiency, and crunching the numbers to find marginal gains. Outsourcing design is a quick win strategy. It’s a great way to achieve maximum efficiency with design and creative. This obviously comes at a short term financial cost, as the rate you will pay an agency is going to be far beyond that of an internal employee. But crucially, your are getting 100% utilisation. And with the right partner, commonly overall costs are reduced.
The actual cost of a single experienced and capable in-house designer on a £40k salary, would be somewhere in the region of £54k, an effective day rate for around 230 days work of £232.
1. https://www.ibisworld.com/united-kingdom/market-size/graphic-design-activities/#:~:text=The%20market%20size%2C%20measured%20by,industry%20increased%203.5%25%20in%202022.
2. https://www.openpr.com/news/3485850/graphic-design-outsourcing-service-market-survey-report-2024
3. https://www.thewowcompany.com/download-agency-benchpress-2023
4. https://www2.deloitte.com/us/en/pages/operations/articles/global-outsourcing-survey.html
5. https://www.synergist.co.uk/resources/guides-and-more/agency-utilisation-rates-everything-you-need-to-know