Industry news

  • 2 Aug 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    A public sector report has urged fire and rescue services to employ collaborative procurement practices, in order to increase efficiencies and reduce costs.

    An independent report by Sir Ken Knight highlighted the need to increase efficiencies and operations in UK fire and rescue authorities.

    The report entitled Facing the Future, detailed large discrepancies in cost per head between providing services depending on where services are being provided.

    According to the report, as much as £200 million could be saved per year from efficiency savings, generated from modernising procurement frameworks. Facing the Future concluded that fire and rescue services would be well served by moving to a national framework, as seen within police procurement, rather than sourcing services independently leading to waste and duplication.

    The report concluded that it was: “clear is that authorities should adopt a principle of never buying alone”.

    Fire and Rescue services prepare for shared service agreement

    £81m boost for UK Fire Services Technology

  • 1 Aug 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Accenture has completed the roll out cloud services to radiology departments across five NHS hospitals and 23 facilities after a ten week period.

    The Accenture provided cloud services for Radiology Information Systems (RIS) are designed to store secure patient data, facilitate the sharing of data between medical staff and allow for remote access.

    Accenture said that: “this cloud-based solution will enable clinicians across the region to share patient data, which can be crucial in urgent cases, such as stroke or major trauma. It also will enable trusts to concentrate on providing the best care to patients, rather than having to worry about maintaining an IT system.”

    Accenture see sales growth from increased outsourcing demand

    Accenture led consortium wins national border control system contract

  • 1 Aug 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Councils including Westminster City Council, the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea and Hammersmith & Fulham are to move to a new e-commerce system as part of a cost savings initiative.

    The new platform is being provided by BravoSolution and is expected generate procurement benefits including increased negotiating strength from a centralised system.

    The e-commerce system will also help to meet government green targets by reducing paper transactions.

    Anthony Oliver, Westminster City Council's chief procurement officer, said: "Progressive local authorities know that working with private sector partners is the way forward in getting the best deal for local people and businesses. The framework with BravoSolution is part of that trend. It cuts away needless bureaucracy and introduces a simple, straightforward platform for doing business with us."

    London councils move to create a shared £1.1 billion ICT services framework

  • 1 Aug 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Arqiva who specialise in telecommunications will receive capital funding to develop and increase mobile telecoms coverage in the U.K.

    The funding of £150 million comes as the government moves forward with its Mobile Infrastructure Project (MIP), in a bid to extend mobile telecoms coverage in remote areas and “provide hundreds of millions of pounds of economic benefits as well as resulting in positive social impacts, such as increased safety and security in terms of emergency response," according to a government release.

    Telecoms operators including EE, Telefonica, Vodafone and Three will be involved in the operation of the new framework and in the funding of network infrastructure.

    The mobile infrastructure expansion is set to be constructed by a deadline of 2015 with Arqiva currently identifying viable sites for new infrastructure.

    Telefonica agrees on $1 billion sale of O2 Ireland to 3

  • 31 Jul 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    New research has revealed that customer expectations for improved banking services are not being met by the financial industry.

    Research carried out by financial services experts Cognizant and mobile technology specialists Monitise, has revealed that over 30 per cent of surveyed customers would be willing to pay for advanced features and mobile payment capabilities.

    The report entitled ‘Segment-Based Strategies for Mobile Banking’ found that banks could increase customer satisfaction by growing IT services.

    Vin Malhotra, Consulting Partner for Banking and Financial Services with Cognizant Business Consulting said: “Providing innovative and personalized mobile services based on consumer segmentation will enable banks to not only run better by maximizing their investments, but also run differently by strengthening customer engagement and driving greater adoption of mobile banking for competitive differentiation.”

  • 31 Jul 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Internet business giant Alibaba Group has revealed that it has commenced work on a ‘smart’ logistics network, in a five to eight year project, that is expected to cost as much as $48 billion.

    Alibaba Group which delivered eBay clone Taobao, will deliver the new logistics network alongside joint venture partners Intime Group and multiple delivery companies.

    The delivery of thee logistics network project is designed to increase the speed of e-commerce transactions and goods delivery, allowing for the coverage of all 2,000 of China’s major cities within 24 hours.

    The new logistics program comes at a time when China is seeing unparalleled growth within e-commerce markets over recent years, with logistical services competing to match supply to the increasing demand.

    Within 10 years 200 million parcels will be delivered a day within China according to predictions from Chinese news agency Xinhau.

    Shipping giant Møller-Maersk saves with internal IT software contract

  • 31 Jul 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    NOA Director Kerry Hallard comments on the pros and cons of outsourcing as part of the shared services expert panel for Business Reporter. The full report can be downloaded as a PDF below:

    Outsourcing_Shared_Services_Report.pdf

    This issue of Business Reporter looks at the pros and cons of outsourcing; René Carayol talks outsourcing and innovation; see the fight to reshore outsourcing to regional Britain; Bonnie Gardiner talks to Paul Pindar about the merits of being a nice guy; and how culture clash can potentially harm your offshore production.

  • 30 Jul 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Changing your procurement approach can lead to significant benefits and savings which might just reinvigorate your organisation. Some of these benefits can be easily measured, such as money saved. Others are less quantifiable, such as improved service delivery, supplier-led innovation or improved client/customer care. Either way it is worth taking a look at the way you buy to pin point if there are any areas where you can make improvements. Its amazing the results you can achieve when you approach procurement differently.

    For example the work we did at Mid Essex Hospital NHS Trust, which I mentioned in my previous blog, to date has saved the Trust over £3.1 million on their procurement spend. In the first year alone we managed to unlock a saving of £1.1 million. A massive difference in an organisation where every penny counts.

    We did this by introducing a category management approach. Category management segments the main areas of spend into discrete groups of products and services according to both their function and, crucially, how the supply markets are organised. It is a great way of ensuring that the majority of an organisation’s third-party spend on goods and services is addressed, leaving no stone unturned. This enabled the team at Mid-Essex to drive further savings from traditional areas of spend as well as extending procurement into categories such as medical equipment maintenance and surgical instruments which had seen little or no procurement involvement.

    Another key benefit has been an improvement in supplier relationships. Never underestimate the benefits developing a good relationship with suppliers offers. At Mid-Essex increased levels of supplier engagement has actually lead to supplier led product innovation, delivering even greater financial savings and patient benefits.

    Whilst change can seem daunting, you need only undergo the change process once. It is much easier to make the change and maintain it than continuing to struggle on. The benefits will also carry on, often for years beyond the initial project. For Mid Essex, it became an essential mechanism for identifying annual cost improvement opportunities and is an integral part of business operations.

    I hope these blogs have help you to understand the benefits of making changes to your procurement, and the impact it can have on your business performance.

    About Richard McIntosh

    Richard is Managing Director of INVERTO UK, an international management consultancy specialising in procurement. He has led and delivered many procurement consulting assignments, particularly strategic sourcing, organisation and process re-design and people and skills development. He has worked across many sectors, private, public and not-for-profit, leading procurement projects for clients such as Nokia, Visa, Aberdeen Asset Management, eircom, the Ministry of Defence and the NHS.

    Who needs to be involved in procurement decisions?

    Deciding to change your procurement processes

  • 30 Jul 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Ofgem, the energy in watchdog has called for new measures to be brought into place in order to reduce the stranglehold that the 6 main UK energy suppliers have over the market.

    The measures which would impact major suppliers including British Gas, SSE and npower, have been welcomed by the government and consumer groups, with calls for increased action after anger surrounding the suspected manipulation of energy markets.

    Senior partner for markets at Ofgem, Andrew Wright, said that the “proposals will break the stranglehold of the big six in the retail market and create a more level playing field for independent suppliers, who will get a fair deal when they want to buy and sell power up to two years ahead".

    UK energy companies have recently started to look at future energy sources within the UK, with energy giant Centrica looking to enter into shale gas fracking in the country, in a move which is likely to trigger large scale investment from within the industry.

    Centrica enters into talks for UK fracking stake

    Centrica and Qatar Buy Canadian Gas Field equiv. to 15 Billion Barrels of Oil

  • 26 Jul 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Just as the royal family are celebrating an addition to the family so are UK economists celebrating with reports of a strengthening economy in the second quarter.

    Office figures revealed that the economy grew by 0.6 per cent in the second quarter of the year, with services increasing by 0.6 per cent and manufacturing growing by 0.4 per cent.

    Important areas of UK industry such as construction have also shown strong signs of recovery, with a wealth of new construction projects providing new work.

    GDP grew consecutively over the three months leading to June with Chancellor George Osborne saying: "(Sic) GDP stats better than forecast”.

    The news of second quarter growth provides much needed valediction to the Chancellors economic strategy, which avoided multiple large spending programs designed to stimulate growth been employed within the EU.

    UK economy ‘improving’ according to European Central Bank as German growth shrinks

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