AI, GCCs, new models set to redefine outsourcing in 2026: Morgan Lewis

PENNSYLVANIA, UNITED STATES — Artificial intelligence (AI), global capability centers (GCCs), and global delivery models are set to reshape outsourcing in 2026, transforming it from a cost-focused function into a strategic business lever.
According to a recent insight from Morgan Lewis, companies are rapidly integrating AI into their core operations and adjusting global delivery strategies to navigate regulatory, geopolitical, and operational challenges.
AI-driven digital transformation in outsourcing
The shift towards digital continues to influence outsourcing, but at the same time, AI and intelligent automation are redefining the nature and challenges of engagements.
“Rather than simply migrating legacy processes, companies are increasingly relying on outsourcing partners to redesign business processes, modernize operating models, and integrate AI-enabled tools directly into service delivery,” the Morgan Lewis report noted.
Providers are entering the market with proprietary AI solutions, such as automated finance tools and customer service analytics, which are blurring the boundary between technical deployment and traditional services.
Contracts are also evolving. “Outsourcing agreements now need to address AI governance, data quality, human-in-the-loop requirements, intellectual property ownership, and exit planning for AI-enabled solutions,” the report highlighted.
Legal and compliance concerns are also mounting as AI becomes central to outsourced operations.
Rise of GCCs and outcome-based outsourcing models
There is a growing demand for hybrid delivery models that combine managed services, staff augmentation, and in-house operations.
GCCs allow companies to retain greater control over talent, intellectual property, and strategic priorities while maintaining cost efficiencies.
However, the report warned that GCCs have a unique legal risk profile, which makes it necessary to pay attention to local labor regulations, IP assignment processes that can be enforced, data governance rules, taxes, transfer pricing, and, finally, planning for operational resilience.
Outcome-based pricing models are also rising, tying compensation to measurable business results such as customer satisfaction or revenue growth rather than transaction volumes.
This method demands introducing performance metrics that are new, ensuring data integrity safeguards, and explicitly determining the distribution of risk and liability among the involved parties.
Outsourcing as a strategic business lever
Morgan Lewis concluded that outsourcing is evolving into a strategic lever for digital transformation and global growth.
Companies that integrate AI, build resilient global delivery models, and coordinate legal oversight will be better positioned to capture innovation benefits while mitigating operational and regulatory risks.
As the report notes, early and coordinated legal involvement is critical for companies navigating an increasingly complex, regulated outsourcing landscape.
The shift signals a broader trend in the industry: outsourcing is no longer just a cost-saving measure; it is now a strategic driver of technology adoption, business intelligence, and global operational resilience.

Independent




