How does offshoring actually work in practice?
This guide breaks it down clearly, using the same offshoring process we rely on with our own offshore team. No jargon. No hype. Just a practical, step-by-step look at how offshoring works for Australian businesses and what to expect at each stage.
What is offshoring
Offshoring is a resourcing strategy that enablesAustralian businesses to build dedicated offshore teams who work exclusively for them – using the same systems, processes and performance expectations as their local team.
You could build offshore teams across functions such as administration, accounting, engineering, marketing, customer support, HR or IT.
Done properly, offshoring creates a long-term extension of your local team, aligned to your systems, goals and culture – just based in another country.
Why Australian businesses are turning to offshoring
Australian organisations across industries such as construction, franchising, financial services and corporate environments are using offshoring to solve very real challenges such as:
Skilled labour shortages.
Rising local employment costs.
Slow hiring timelines.
Admin and operational bottlenecks.
Pressure to scale without increasing fixed overhead.
When implemented correctly, offshoring allows businesses to add capacity without adding local headcount, often delivering 30–70% cost savings compared to onshore hiring – without compromising quality.
How offshoring works: Step-by-step
Step 1: Identify the right roles to offshore
Successful offshoring starts with role selection. The best offshore roles are:
Process-driven.
Clearly defined.
Repeatable or specialist.
Capacity-draining for your local team.
Common offshore roles for Aussie businesses include:
Administrative and operations support.
Accounting, AP/AR and bookkeeping.
Drafting, estimating and engineering support.
HR and recruitment.
The goal isn’t to offshore everything – it’s to offshore the right work.
Step 2: Choose the right offshoring model
There are three common models – and only one consistently delivers results.
Freelancers – low commitment, low control, high risk
Traditional BPOs – pooled resources, limited accountability
Dedicated offshore teams – your people, your systems, long-term alignment
High-performing Australian businesses choose dedicated offshore staffing, where team members work exclusively for them, integrated into daily operations.
Step 3: Partner with an Australian-led offshoring provider
One of the biggest failure points in offshoring is lack of local oversight. The strongest models include:
Australian-based leadership.
Local account management.
Full Australia legal compliance and HR handling.
Transparent pricing.
Cultural alignment and retention focus.
This structure removes risk, ensures accountability and gives business owners confidence that offshore staff are being managed properly.
Step 4: Recruitment and talent selection
Offshoring works when recruitment is as rigorous as local hiring. A quality process includes:
Skills testing.
Role-specific assessments.
Cultural fit interviews.
Communication capability checks.
Reference and background verification.
You should be involved in final interviews because these team members are joining your business.
Step 5: Onboarding, training and culture alignment
Onboarding should be delivered collaboratively between you and your offshoring partner to ensure offshore team members are set up properly from day one. However, training must be led by your business, because only you can teach how work is done inside your organisation.
Effective training should cover:
Your systems and software.
Your workflows and processes.
Your definition of “done” and quality standards.
Australian business expectations.
Industry-specific compliance and regulatory requirements.
Cultural alignment, however, is a shared responsibility.
A quality offshoring partner’s role does not end at placement. Ongoing support is critical to ensure offshore team members integrate seamlessly into your business culture, communication style and ways of working. When cultural alignment is actively supported on both sides, offshore teams move beyond task execution and begin operating as true extensions of your local team.
Step 6: Integration into your local team
High-performing offshore teams don’t sit on the sidelines. They are:
Included in daily or weekly huddles.
Part of project workflows.
Given context, not just tasks.
Encouraged to ask questions and flag risks.
When offshore staff understand why the work matters, quality and ownership increase dramatically.
Step 7: Ongoing management and KPIs
Offshoring isn’t “set and forget”. Strong models include:
Clear KPIs and performance metrics.
Continuous improvement feedback.
Local escalation points.
This ensures consistency, stability and long-term value.
Is your business offshore-ready?
Now that you’ve seen how offshoring works step by step, the next question is whether your business is actually ready to offshore successfully.
Before hiring, it’s critical to assess your processes, role clarity, leadership readiness and internal alignment.
Take the Offshore Readiness Test to evaluate whether your business is prepared to build an offshore team.
If you’d prefer a direct conversation, you can also book a call with our team to discuss your situation and get practical, tailored advice.