Workday HCM Core, Payroll (US), Recruiting, Learning, Talent Management, Compensation, Benefits, Adaptive Planning. Eight-module deployment with a three-phase implementation plan over eighteen months. The engagement focused on the implementation services component — both Workday's professional services and the selected systems integrator's statement of work.
A mid-market financial services firm with 9,400 employees had signed a Workday master agreement six months earlier and was finalizing the implementation services contract with a top-tier Workday systems integrator. The eight-module deployment had been scoped at approximately $4.8M for the SI work, plus $1.2M for Workday's professional services component — a combined $6M implementation budget that the CFO and the CIO believed was substantially above what was reasonable for a deployment of this complexity.
Internally, the implementation services contract had been negotiated by the program management office under significant time pressure. The Workday SaaS contract had already been signed, the implementation start date had been committed to, and the SI had been selected through an abbreviated procurement process that prioritized speed over commercial discipline. The CFO requested an independent review of the SI scope and pricing before final signature.
Our initial review surfaced three structural problems. First, the SI scope of work was written at a level of generality that allowed substantial scope creep — phase definitions were vague, deliverables were not enumerated against specific Workday SKUs, and change order triggers were poorly defined. Second, the SI's fixed-fee component covered only 60% of the projected work, with the remaining 40% structured as time-and-materials at hourly rates well above peer benchmarks. Third, Workday's professional services component duplicated several SI deliverables, particularly around tenant configuration and integration build.
Compounding the challenge: the implementation start date was eight weeks out. The program management office and the SI's delivery team had already begun joint planning. Restructuring the commercial framework risked schedule slip if the SI walked or if the renegotiation extended beyond the scheduled kickoff. We needed an approach that preserved the schedule while still recovering material value.
We had spent so much energy negotiating the Workday SaaS contract that we lost discipline on the SI side. The implementation services component turned out to be where most of the money was actually leaving the building.
We engaged on a fixed fee basis with a defined eight-week scope: SI scope review, benchmark analysis, redline restructure, and live negotiation support through signature. The engagement ran exactly to schedule, completing the day before the implementation kickoff.
Weeks one and two was the scope and benchmark review. We pulled comparable SI deployments from our benchmark cohort — fourteen mid-market financial services Workday implementations in the 6,000-12,000 employee range that had completed in the prior thirty-six months. The benchmark showed the proposed SI fee was 38% above median for a deployment of comparable scope, and that the time-and-materials hourly rates were 22% above the median for the same SI tier. We also identified six specific SI deliverables that duplicated work in Workday's professional services scope.
Weeks three through five was the structured negotiation strategy. We did not approach this as a contract dispute. Instead, we restructured the commercial framework along three lines: (1) tighten the fixed-fee scope so that 85% of projected work fell inside the fixed-fee envelope rather than 60%, (2) renegotiate time-and-materials hourly rates to peer-benchmark median across the SI's bench, and (3) eliminate the six duplicated deliverables between SI and Workday professional services. We also introduced credible competitive pressure by running a brief RFI with two alternative SIs — both of which submitted indicative proposals that anchored the negotiation.
Weeks six and seven was the live negotiation with the SI's commercial team and engagement leadership. Three rounds of redlines, two executive escalations to the SI's regional managing partner. The key negotiating moves: tighter scope definitions enumerated against specific Workday SKUs, an 85/15 fixed-fee/T&M split, T&M rates at peer median, change order triggers defined with specificity, and a structural carve-out for the duplicated deliverables.
Week eight was contract execution and a parallel renegotiation with Workday's professional services team on the carved-out deliverables. Final redline cycle, legal review, signature. The implementation kicked off on schedule.
The change-order trigger discipline alone was worth the engagement. We had been one ambiguous SOW clause away from a million-dollar change order in phase two.
Total documented cost reduction against the baseline (the SI's original SOW plus Workday's original PS quote): $2.1M. Each component was independently verified against the original commercial terms and the signed amendment.
The structural wins beyond the dollar figure: the scope of work is now enumerated against specific Workday SKUs, the fixed-fee envelope covers 85% of projected work rather than 60%, change order triggers are defined with specificity, and the duplicated deliverables across SI and Workday PS are eliminated. The implementation kicked off on the original schedule and is currently four months in with no material change orders.
Our fixed fee was a small fraction of the documented savings. The CFO described the engagement to the audit committee as the single highest-ROI deliverable of the implementation program preparation phase — and recommended that the same approach be applied to all major SI engagements going forward. The CIO retained the benchmark data and scope-discipline framework as an internal asset for future deployments.
Every Workday engagement is unique, but the negotiation discipline transfers. We run all engagements under one of two commercial models — you choose.
Scoped deliverables. Predictable cost. You know the fee before we start. Benchmarks, redline strategy, and live deal support across every contract SKU, integration, and professional services line item.
Zero upfront cost. Our fee is a percentage of verified, documented contract savings over baseline. No savings, no fee. Aligned incentives, end-to-end.
Workday SaaS pricing gets all the attention. The implementation services contract — typically the same order of magnitude or larger — often gets negotiated under time pressure with limited benchmark data. The savings curve on SI scope discipline is steep, and the leverage is best before the first deliverable lands.
Monthly intelligence on Workday pricing, renewal tactics, and module-specific benchmarks. Used by Workday customers in 32 countries.
Fixed fee or gain share. SI scope review in two weeks.
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