The Small Business BPO Checklist: 10 Functions to Outsource in 2026
Last updated: June 3, 2026
Most small business owners spend somewhere between 15 and 25 hours each week on work that has nothing to do with why they started the company.
Scheduling. Invoicing. Following up on unpaid bills. Answering support tickets. Processing payroll. Posting to social media.
None of it is strategic. All of it has to happen. And every hour you spend on it is an hour you’re not spending on selling, building, or leading.
That’s the problem BPO solves for small businesses. Not just the cost reduction — though research consistently puts savings at 40 to 70% for most functions — but the time you buy back. According to Clutch, 37% of small businesses already outsource at least one function, and 83% of those plan to expand that footprint.
This checklist covers what’s actually worth outsourcing, what isn’t, and how to decide where to start.
Before You Outsource: A 3-Question Readiness Check
Not every function is ready to hand off. Run any candidate through these three questions first.
Is it documented? If you have a written SOP for the task, a vendor can follow it. If the process lives only in someone’s head, outsourcing it now produces inconsistent results. Document it first, then hand it off. This takes a few hours per function and pays back immediately.
Is it repeatable? One-off projects are harder to outsource than recurring processes. Payroll runs every two weeks. Support tickets arrive daily. These are repeatable. A one-time strategic rebrand is not. The more predictable the volume and cadence, the more cleanly it transfers.
Is it non-core? Core means it’s directly tied to why customers choose you over a competitor. Your pricing strategy is core. The spreadsheet you use to track time-off requests is not. Outsource the second category and keep everything in the first.
If you answered yes to all three, the function is ready to evaluate. If any answer is no, fix that first. Vendors are better at running processes than building them.
The Small Business BPO Checklist: 10 Functions Worth Outsourcing
These are the 10 functions that consistently deliver the strongest ROI for small businesses across accounting, operations, sales, and support. Each one includes a cost benchmark and a readiness signal to confirm the timing is right.
See What Kore BPO Places
Pre-screened offshore talent for US small businesses across all 10 functions. Resumes in 2 to 5 days, $0 until you hire.
3 Functions Small Businesses Should Keep In-House
Outsourcing fails most often when companies hand off something they should have kept. Three categories get mishandled consistently.
Where to Start: A Simple Prioritization Framework
Most small businesses try to outsource too many things at once and run into vendor management overhead they didn’t account for. Start with one or two functions. Build the handoff process. Prove the model. Then expand.
To prioritize, score each function on two dimensions: how many hours per week it currently consumes internally, and how much damage a quality drop would cause to your business or customers.
| Function Type | Hours Drain | Quality Risk | Starting Move |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accounting, payroll, data entry | High | Low to medium | Outsource first |
| Customer support, HR admin | High | Medium | Outsource with oversight |
| Marketing execution, RPO, IT helpdesk | Medium | Low | Outsource in wave 2 |
| Sales support, VA/admin | Medium | Low | Outsource in wave 2 |
| Core product, key relationships, strategy | Varies | High | Keep in-house |
For most 10 to 50-person companies, the right starting sequence is: bookkeeping first (or payroll), then admin and data entry, then customer support. These three functions together typically recover 20 to 35 hours of internal time per week and break even in under six months.
Before you engage any vendor, run your own numbers. The free Outsourcing ROI Calculator compares your real in-house costs against offshore rates and shows annual savings, weekly time recovered, and break-even timing. It takes under two minutes. For deeper context on what outsourcing should cost across different functions, the ROI calculation guide walks through the full formula with a worked dollar example.
The businesses that get the most out of BPO are not the ones that outsource the most. They’re the ones that outsource the right things first, build a clean handoff, and expand from there.
Pick the one function on this list that’s costing you the most time right now. Document the process. Get three quotes. Run the numbers. That’s the entire starting sequence.
If you want to see what Kore BPO places for US small businesses across accounting, customer support, admin, HR, and sales, start at korebpo.com/bpo-solutions. Pre-screened resumes in 2 to 5 days, $0 until you hire.
BPO Questions Small Business Owners Ask Before They Start
What does BPO actually cost for a small business?
Depends entirely on the function and team size. Payroll outsourcing for a 15-person company typically runs $75 to $150 per month. Bookkeeping for the same company is $1,000 to $2,000 per month. A dedicated offshore customer support rep costs $1,800 to $2,500 per month fully-loaded. A virtual assistant runs $1,200 to $2,000 per month. In every case, these numbers compare favorably to the equivalent in-house hire, which carries benefits, taxes, PTO, and overhead that typically multiply the base salary by 1.5 to 1.85 times.
Realistically, how long before outsourcing pays off?
3 to 6 months for most functions, after the transition period. Month 1 usually costs more than it saves because of onboarding and documentation work. Months 2 and 3, the vendor is running independently. By month 4 to 6, you have clear cost data and the savings compound into a reliable annual figure. Payroll and bookkeeping break even fastest — sometimes in the first billing cycle. Customer support and HR admin take longer because the ramp includes quality calibration.
What’s the most commonly outsourced function for small businesses?
IT services, accounting, and digital marketing, according to Clutch. That order reflects how small businesses actually prioritize: IT is outsourced because it’s technical and intermittent, accounting because it’s compliance-heavy, and marketing because it’s time-consuming without requiring full-time internal expertise. Customer support outsourcing is less common at very early stages but becomes one of the fastest-growing categories once companies hit 20 to 50 customers.
Can a business with under 10 employees actually use BPO?
Yes, and often with better ROI than larger companies. At 8 employees, you probably have no dedicated bookkeeper, no HR person, and no full-time admin. That means the founder or a senior team member is doing all three. Outsourcing those functions costs less than adding a single part-time employee and removes three sets of tasks from someone who should be doing something else. The smallest companies Kore BPO works with have 5 to 10 people. The economics work because the alternative is the owner’s time.
What’s the biggest mistake small businesses make when starting BPO?
Choosing purely on price. A provider quoting 30% below the competition is almost always cutting somewhere — response time, quality control, staff tenure, or all three. HireHoratio’s analysis of outsourcing failures finds the cheapest-vendor trap is the most common cause of first-attempt BPO failures. The second most common mistake is handing off an undocumented process and expecting the vendor to figure it out. Document first, outsource second.
How is BPO different from just hiring a freelancer?
A freelancer is an individual who takes on work for a fixed period or project. BPO is a managed service where a company handles an entire function on an ongoing basis, often with backup staff, quality monitoring, and SLAs built in. Freelancers are great for one-off projects. BPO is better for recurring, volume-based processes where you need consistency, not just completion. Payroll, customer support, and data entry need the same quality output every week. A single freelancer introduces availability risk. A BPO provider absorbs it.
Ready to Hand Off the List?
Kore BPO places dedicated offshore professionals for US small businesses across all 10 functions in this checklist. Pre-screened resumes in 2 to 5 days.
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