insource
/ˈin-ˌsȯrs/ (ame, mw)
insource — 動詞
- insourcepresent simple I / you / we / they
- insources3rd person singular
- insourcing-ing form
- insourcedpast simple
1. to arrange for a particular business task, service, or product to be carried out
內包
公司將業務改由內部處理
to arrange for a particular business task, service, or product to be carried out or supplied by people within your own company or country, as opposed to hiring an external company or workers in another country to do it.
The company decided to insource its customer service instead of using a call center in another country.
該公司決定將客服業務內包,而不是繼續使用位於其他國家的客服中心。
collocation: insource + [service / work / production]
Guo argued that insourcing the IT department would create jobs for local engineers.
Guo 主張將 IT 部門內包可以為本地工程師創造就業機會。
After costs rose abroad, the factory chose to insource the production of all spare parts.
海外成本上升後,這間工廠選擇內包所有零件的生產工作。
The hospital board voted to insource cleaning services to improve quality control.
醫院董事會投票決定將清潔服務內包,以提升品質管控。
Minh's team worked hard to insource the software development that had previously been sent overseas.
Minh 的團隊努力將原本外包給海外公司的軟體開發工作內包回來。
- bring in-house
more common in everyday business speech; slightly less formal than 'insource'
- keep domestic
focuses on keeping work within the home country, not necessarily within the same company
- keep internal
emphasises that the work stays inside the organisation itself
文法句型
insource + noun phrase (the work/service/product being brought in-house)
用法筆記
Often used in contrast with 'outsource'. Common in discussions of corporate strategy, supply-chain management, and employment policy. The object is typically a department, function, or type of work (e.g., 'insource manufacturing', 'insource logistics').