Industry news

  • 28 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA), the governing body of football in Europe, has selected Interoute’s pan-European cloud services to support all its business, football competitions and events over the next three seasons. Interoute will host all applications and systems used directly by UEFA including its Football Administration and Management Environment (FAME) and the UEFA.com website.

    UEFA’s Football Administration and Management Environment is its core IT platform running the services essential to UEFA, such as media bookings, accreditations, competition management, as well as services for referees and commercial partners. This is a unique application crafted for the specific needs of a sport’s governing body and is crucial for its operations during matches. At the same time UEFA also requires a platform that caters for huge numbers of visitors viewing videos and images on UEFA.com. UEFA’s competitions place substantial demands on UEFA’s online platform where over 400 million users are expected to visit the UEFA.com website are expected during its international competitions' season compared to some 270 million visits when the last EURO final tournament season was held in 2008.

    Daniel Marion, Head of Information and Communications Technology at UEFA, said: “Interoute has successfully designed, built and deployed a platform that delivers both enterprise grade stability and reliability as well as event-driven scalability. UEFA.com is one of the top ten most visited sites in the world during major football events providing high quality match coverage to football fans around the world. In Interoute we have found a partner who can match the high levels of performance and quality that UEFA and its competitions stand for.”

  • 28 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    OK, first things first: cloud is definitely here to stay! Almost every CIO (98 per cent) questioned by Xantus for our latest research report had already investigated cloud services for their organisations; almost a quarter are now using them, with a further third planning to join them within the next six months, rising to 73 per cent within the next two years.

    That equates to a pretty hefty budget spend on cloud computing, with anything up to 40 per cent or more of IT budgets already paying for cloud-based activities. There is an expectation of Return on Investment; two thirds felt that an ROI of 10 -20 per cent was realistic.

    So, it’s clear that everyone has big expectations of cloud and most can see a compelling proposition in the long term. However, there remains a significant challenge in seeking clarity from vendors as to what they are actually selling. Almost all CIOs (86 per cent) felt that vendors are using the term ‘Cloud’ generically to sell products and services without being specific about what it means, and almost half appealed for greater differentiation in products.

    Equally, while many public cloud vendors are offering a consumerised model – the key questions are - how big will the take up be? Have they got supply and demand right? Who’s going to grab market share? One view holds that too much tin is going into data centres and the whole global cloud IT estate is going to look a lot like 3G did immediately after the bandwidth auction. If that’s the case, then pricing will be very aggressive as vendors seek users for their newly-built mega datacentres.

    A flexible friend?

    Although agility, flexibility, business continuity and data recovery were all cited as key benefits of migrating to cloud services, the apparent ease of accessibility to generic, non-business-critical applications in The Cloud may be a double-edged sword. In Xantus’ experience, a number of firms see cloud as a very disruptive technology that IT has to react to.

    Business users, familiar with Facebook and LinkedIn at home, struggle to understand the inability to have the same functionality in the office. If IT doesn’t react fast enough, other business areas are already voting with their credit cards and using cloud services for projects and specific business requirements.

    Dark clouds

    While the cloud computing revolution is underway, a number of practical hurdles need to be overcome before CIOs, their organisations and Boards, commit wholesale to cloud solutions. The single largest internal block to implementation appears to be integration with existing IT estates. Closely linked to this is the complexity of the task, while almost one third of CIOs remain concerned about losing control of business applications or preference over their own assets.

    Surprisingly, security – often cited in the past as a serious stumbling block to cloud IT – only ranked equal fifth amongst respondents in terms of implementation. However, once ‘in the cloud’, compliance and audit (which includes security) becomes the most significant obstacle to cloud management for more than half of all CIOs.

    Despite the budget CIOs already claim to be spending, it is still taking longer to convince the private sector that cloud gain is worth implementation and management pain. Several CIOs of major corporates stated they knew the benefits were out there, and it was probably only a matter of time before they entered The Cloud, but they still needed to be shown a clear value proposition or specific service to seal the deal.

    Silver linings

    On balance, there is plenty of work still to be done to capitalise on the cloud’s business potential. There is a school of thought, to which I subscribe, that the term ‘cloud’ may fairly quickly disappear, becoming just another mainstream IT solution approach in the same way that ‘e-business’ has just become ‘business’

    However, a lot of clients are struggling with the technical and financial costs of integrating cloud into their existing IT estate, evidenced by the low level of potential partners. Vendors that solve this issue will win accounts quickly and establish some serious market share in cloud.

  • 28 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Persuading staff to “pull in the same direction” can deliver hard business benefits, writes Shirley Barnes, Client Relationship Director, Dinamiks Limited

    Today’s often tough economic environment makes it imperative that all aspects of business performance be studied to see if they offer prospects for optimisation.

    Staff behaviour and attitudes are one area where the complexity of the subject might make change look daunting. Individual behaviour, attitude and motivation, team working and alignment to objectives and values - and compliance - may all need to be addressed.

    However, new, online approaches to measuring and managing performance, as well as attitudes and behaviour, have brought costs down and improved ease of use very considerably.

    Where reducing costs and improving productivity of employees are top of the agenda, the effort can be particularly rewarding and the means to get there relatively pain-free.

    Traditional route

    In large organisations, the traditional route to change has been to use external specialists and an array of tools and techniques to map what is going on in the company, and then roll out a programme of change. It often involved using modern variants of time and motion studies to highlight where individual improvement was required. Workshops and training were employed to make the changes required.

    Smaller businesses relied on the MD or FD changing the company culture through group or face to face meetings, perhaps following informal or formal performance appraisals.

    With the switch to web enabling applications, the traditional ways are being replaced by a simpler and more automated approach.

    This analysis piece looks at how Medex Research, an SME, made the changes that have resulted in a more cohesive workforce; where staff now pull more strongly in the same direction. The lessons learned at Medex Research can be scaled up or down.

    The company is a full service global market research agency, operating in the medical devices and diagnostics market, which outsources research to companies like Medex.

    Traditionally, Medex used paper-based appraisals to track staff performance to

    ensure its people were permanently focused on the essential business objectives and values. MD Sarina Masson recognised the drawbacks of that approach and decided to switch to a new generation of employee performance management.

    Complete picture

    The new generation is automated and web-based and gives management a complete picture, from the employee performance and behaviour perspective, of what is going on in an organisation

    “Many people,” she says, “are now more familiar with web-based applications than paper ones, which makes the switch to web-based appraisals an increasingly painless one. There is the added advantage that they can be rolled out very easily at any time locally or globally. All that is needed is web access and computers.”

    The appraisals at Medex Research are carried out with two objectives in mind – (i) staff development, including meeting training needs and how best to improve performance, if it needs improving. “The system will tell us if it does,” says Masson (ii) using the system to build and maintain quality across the business.

    These objectives complement the business goal of always producing the highest quality research, in order to secure solid long-term client relationships.

    Staff development and re-direction

    “We’re different to a lot of other companies, but similar to market research companies, in that sales output can’t be objectively measured,” Masson cautions. “So, we focus on staff development in areas like analysis and report writing – generally, how to perfect the different stages of market research.

    “Now in its third year here, the system is key to optimising our employees’ market research skills, as well as their knowledge of the medical industry, through highlighting any gaps in it, which we then address.”

    Masson says the system “has helped us formalise and systemise employee appraisal and career progression. Paper-based systems can be run very informally and will take more time. A computerised, web-based system enforces good discipline by the managing director, or the head of HR or whoever manages its use.”

    The introduction of a new approach to performance management “also gives the opportunity for staff ‘re-direction’ in their personal development. It’s not just useful for showing where training is required; it can pinpoint where change is required in attitudes, attention to detail and overall quality of work, in line with company goals.

    “And it helps with fostering a better ‘connection’ with the company, in terms of individuals helping other staff; for example in generating more sales, being pleasant to work with, having ideas for the business and the workplace, being proactive in company support – including the way clients are serviced – and working better as a team.

    “Where a company’s positioning is ‘quality’, the system supports the drive for excellence in every area that contributes to it,” she says.

    Medex’s experience of the online approach is a good pointer for other SMEs and departments or divisions of large operations. It shows there is a new way for change and it’s one that challenges fear, cost of change and the assumption that managing employee performance is a complex and time consuming process. It’s not.

  • 28 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Organisations that put cost before the credentials of their IT support provider as they look to reduce their operational costs are taking a huge gamble, particularly in the current climate warns Paul Timms, operations director at Maindec.

    Increasingly, businesses are being seduced by bargain-basement IT support contracts, wrongly assuming - as with, say, car insurance – that one policy arrangement is much the same as the next.

    Most dangerously alluring of all, potentially, are the brand-backed services offering by the hardware equipment vendors themselves. To the customer, preferential terms being offered here appear easily explained by the supplier’s sheer size and economies of scale. Then there’s the argument that a hardware producer must surely be an expert in core technology. There is an assumption too that, with their heritage and reputation in the marketplace, their service offerings must be robust and reliable, among the best the industry has to offer.

    More commonly, the reality is the opposite. Those that provide IT support services as a ‘bolt on’ to other, core business activities are least likely to invest in the quality and comprehensiveness of those services.

    It’s not until something goes catastrophically wrong that the customer organisation finds this out. All too often, they now find themselves having to wait days for spare parts so that a core system can be rebuilt (losing productivity and business in the meantime). In saving £500 on their annual service contract, they now find they have incurred £5,000 in unforeseen ad-hoc costs, just to resolve a single incident.

    It is only in crisis that customers realise what a false economy it is to skimp on IT services. If it’s a choice between spending £1,000 and getting a solid service contract that will deliver in a crisis, or halving that and leaving the business to chance, the decision should be a no-brainer.

  • 27 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    EMC has helped the The Isle of Man Government reduce its operating costs by 15 percent through virtualising its entire server platform and all service applications and implementing cloud infrastructure.

    The Isle of Man Government is providing its 9,000 staff with access to more than 1,000 applications, including email, financial accounting, customer relationship management (CRM) and health administration services, enabling them to improve service levels.

    The Government also claims the cloud infrastructure will improve its disaster recovery processes.

  • 27 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Piston Cloud Computing, Inc. the software company founded in 2011 by several of the creators of OpenStack™, including former NASA Nebula Chief Technical Architect Joshua McKenty, and former Rackspace luminary Christopher MacGown, has announced the launch of Piston Enterprise OS™ (pentOS™), which it claims is the first enterprise OpenStack cloud operating system specifically focused on security and easy operation of private clouds.

    OpenStack claims to be the fastest-growing open source project in the world, with over 1,550 contributors and 110 participating companies including Rackspace, NASA, Citrix, Intel, Cisco, Arista Networks, Microsoft and Dell.

    Joshua McKenty, Piston CEO and Co-founder, commented: “We’re building the most secure and feature-rich distribution of OpenStack in the world. We plan to define the future of secure private cloud, while propelling OpenStack forward with ongoing and significant contributions to the open source codebase.”

  • 27 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Securities and Exchange Commission has issued a notice to S & P regarding its rating of a $1.6bn deal. The SEC may seek monetary penalties, if it finds S & P guilty of misleading investors after giving triple A ratings to a collateralised debt obligation (CDO) called 'Delphinus CDO 2007-1'.

    McGraw-Hill, the company which owns Standard and Poor said is cooperatign with the commission.

    Rating agencies in general have been under scrutiny after issuing for issuing their safest ratings scores of mortgage-related securities only to downgrade many of them only months later.

  • 27 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    NHS Confederation CEO Mike Farrar yesterday warned Ministers that “the NHS's cash crisis is so great that it will have to either cut services to patients or close accident and emergency and maternity units if it is to avoid going bust”. The need to make £20bn of efficiency savings by 2015 "means our finances are under more strain than ever", he says.

    £1.2bn of those savings are expected to come from the hospital procurement budget. However, a National Audit Office (NAO) report has found that there is a significant lack of standardisation and bulk buying by NHS trusts, with prices for identical items varying by some 50%. And this issue is only likely to get worse, as by 2014 nearly all hospitals will be run as independent foundation trusts, leaving ministers with little direct control over their spending priorities.

    A consistent basis for measuring performance, whilst still giving trusts autonomy to make their own decision, is required.

    The NHS problems remain under the spotlight, as an appendix to a Department of Health document has revealed that the cost of the government’s NHS reforms could outweigh the savings made by cutting large numbers of administrators.

  • 26 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Concerned about its reputation following a swathe of corruption cases, India has launched a “Credible India” campaign. The Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) has appointed management consultancy Bain, to assist it rebuild faith in India’s business community and profile as an investment destination.

    “Credible India” is a marketing campaign leveraging the country’s successful tourism campaign “Incredible India”.

    Kerry Hallard, Managing Director of Buffalo Communications and Communications Director of the NOA commented: “India has been the source of much negative commentary of late. The country’s high attrition rate and soaring cost of living coupled with stories of UK companies bringing their business back to the UK due to dissatisfaction, have caused real concern for many of the country’s leading companies. Ata time when India is vying to be a real power house among offshore destinations, it is essential India invests time and money rebuilding its credibility and re-climbs the world rankings”.

  • 26 Sep 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Cumbria is set to join forces with other fire and rescue services in the north west by transferring its control room function to a single centre in Warrington.

    The collaboration has been identified as the best route to secure a resilient and long-term solution for the county’s fire call-handling and mobilising function.

    Following the collapse of the Government’s FiReControl Project at the end of 2010, fire and rescue services in the north west have been looking at how they could work together to get maximum benefit from the funds Government is making available for future changes to control and the replacement of control systems.

    The collaboration will transfer fire 999 call handing and fire engine mobilisation, currently carried out by individual Services to a local authority controlled company, NW Fire Control Ltd, based at a single centre in Warrington. Cumbria County Council members would be directors of this company. New arrangements would begin in 2014.

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