Industry news

  • 13 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Westminster City Council, the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, and the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea ("the Tri-Borough Authorities") have aligned themselves as strategic partners and are about to embark on a number of different activities to streamline services and deliver savings.

    These activities include a programme of work to look at a fully outsourced managed solution (including the hosting and processing of transactions) for a number of corporate managed services. The proposal is in conjunction with Project Athena, a pan London initiative to enure benefits are available across London. The target operating model for this project is for all London Authorities to use common processes and share access to multi-tenant, cloud-based, fully managed business services, used the same way to deliver shared support function(s).

    Consequently, it is intended that all London Borough Authorities and other public sector bodies in London will have access to the framework agreement.

    Potential service providers will need to be able to support this approach as well as develop innovations that will result in further efficiencies and savings. The project aims to source a solution that will facilitate support for the following core services which form four Lots: Transactional Finance/Accounting & Procurement Human Resources/Payroll Property/Asset Management Integration/Business Intelligence/Reporting.

  • 13 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    British outsourcing firm Xchanging has said it had bought three insurance businesses in Australia and India from its already part-owned global processing company Cambridge Solutions for $71.7 million.

    Xchanging said the deals to acquire Cambridge's Australian workers' compensation business, Cambridge Integrated Services Victoria, and its Indian business process outsourcing firm would give it full ownership of Cambridge's major assets.

    The businesses are currently 100 percent owned by Cambridge, which is in turn 76 percent owned by Xchanging.

  • 13 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Som Mittal, head of IT industry body Nasscom, expects India’s IT outsourcing companies to deliver double-digit growth by the end of the year. Mittal is forecasting that revenues from the sector will rise at least 15 per cent to about $70bn this year as banking and corporate customers in the US and Europe resume spending following a slowdown in growth during the global economic downturn.

    However, despite the projected growth, Mr Mittal admits that India’s traditional IT outsourcing model is experiencing a fundamental shift as it adapts to the post-economic crisis environment. “We’ve now moved to an outcome-based model” – being paid on performance, rather than one based solely on the number of people deployed on any one job, he says. “That is giving outsourcers an incentive to be more efficient.”

    According to Bindi Bhullar, director of Global IT services firm HCL Technologies: “One interesting trend is that buyers are becoming more sophisticated in their purchasing of IT services, looking for more outcome based pricing models.

    “As a result, the frequency with which executives approve major consulting deals casually during a round of golf is diminishing. Instead, several developing trends are shaping client expectations for the client-consultant relationship. These trends include more centralised purchasing, better information sharing among clients and higher skilled IT workers.”

    Meanwhile, analysts say that above-average wage rises in India’s IT outsourcing industry could become a concern. Arup Roy, a principal analyst at consultancy Gartner, says wages have risen about 15 per cent a year.

    Mr Roy says that for many international companies, the key reason to outsource some technology functions to India is price. But he says that, while India still remains a low-cost destination, that advantage is “depleting with every passing year”.

    Indian IT outsourcers are still expected to see a 10 to 15 per cent rise in quarter-on-quarter growth, he says. “The problem is that investors have got used to growth of 20-25 per cent. Investors will have to reset their expectations.”

  • 9 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Dell has announced Dublin as the site for the company’s first Cloud Research and Development (R&D) Centre, and the company’s campus in Limerick as home to the first Dell Solution Centre built globally.

    These announcements were made in Dublin by Taoiseach Enda Kenny, Irish Minister for Finance Michael Noonan and Jeff Clarke, vice chairman, Global Operations & End User Computing Solutions, Dell. These technology investments in Dell’s global solutions and services capabilities are supported by the Irish Government through the Irish Development Agency (IDA).

    The Dell Solution Centre in Limerick was part of Dell’s previously-announced plans to invest $1 billion globally in new technology solutions and services while the Dublin Cloud R&D Centre is a new announcement. These facilities are part of the company’s investment strategy designed to help Dell customers worldwide innovate and drive business results through new solutions, services, and cloud-based delivery options. Recruitment is currently underway at both sites for world class software engineers, IT architects, engineers and developers.

    It is expected that a total of 150 people will be recruited across both sites in the next two years.

  • 9 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Apple® has introduced iCloud®, a breakthrough set of free new cloud services that work seamlessly with applications on your iPhone®, iPad®, iPod touch®, Mac® or PC to automatically and wirelessly store your content in iCloud and automatically and wirelessly push it to all your devices.

    “Today it is a real hassle and very frustrating to keep all your information and content up-to-date across all your devices,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “iCloud keeps your important information and content up to date across all your devices. All of this happens automatically and wirelessly, and because it’s integrated into our apps you don’t even need to think about it—it all just works.”

    The free iCloud services include:

    The former MobileMe® services—Contacts, Calendar and Mail—all completely re-architected and rewritten to work seamlessly with iCloud. Users can share calendars with friends and family, and the ad-free push Mail account is hosted at me.com. Your inbox and mailboxes are kept up-to-date across all your iOS devices and computers.

    The App Store™ and iBookstore℠ now download purchased iOS apps and books to all your devices, not just the device they were purchased on. In addition, the App Store and iBookstore now let you see your purchase history, and simply tapping the iCloud icon will download any apps and books to any iOS device (up to 10 devices) at no additional cost.

    iCloud Backup automatically and securely backs up your iOS devices to iCloud daily over Wi-Fi when you charge your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch. Backed up content includes purchased music, apps and books, Camera Roll (photos and videos), device settings and app data. If you replace your iOS device, just enter your Apple ID and password during setup and iCloud restores your new device.

    iCloud Storage seamlessly stores all documents created using iCloud Storage APIs, and automatically pushes them to all your devices.

    iCloud’s innovative Photo Stream service automatically uploads the photos you take or import on any of your devices and wirelessly pushes them to all your devices and computers. So you can use your iPhone to take a dozen photos of your friends during the afternoon baseball game, and they will be ready to share with the entire group on your iPad (or even Apple TV®) when you return home. Photo Stream is built into the photo apps on all iOS devices, iPhoto® on Macs, and saved to the Pictures folder on a PC.

  • 9 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    HP has extended its Hybrid Delivery solutions portfolio so enterprises can improve their agility and quickly respond to changing customer and citizen needs.

    Hybrid delivery environments, which combine traditional IT infrastructures with private and public clouds, enable enterprise agility by using flexible delivery models to best meet changing market demands.

    Organizations today realize that agility is critical to their future success. They need it to meet the changing demands of customers and citizens, as well as drive competitive advantage," said Jan Zadak, executive vice president, Enterprise Business Sales and Marketing, HP. "HP’s experience, breadth of portfolio and global service delivery organization are integral to helping businesses and governments take advantage of cloud as part of their journeys to becoming Instant-On Enterprises."

  • 9 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Global Telecom & Technology, Inc., a global telecommunications carrier and leading network integrator serving the data communications needs of large enterprise, government and carrier clients, announces the completion of its acquisition of UK-based PacketExchange.

    This acquisition provides GTT with greater business scale and a combined customer base of over 1,200 worldwide clients. GTT will add significant network assets in North America, Europe, and Asia as well as an expanded portfolio of data services, including: Global Ethernet, Global Peering, Collaborative Networking, Cloud Networking, Dedicated Internet Access and Transit as well as Network Infrastructure-as-a-Service, complete end-to-end managed network solutions.

    Officially announced on May 23, 2011, GTT has moved rapidly to integrate the network assets, services and clients into its proprietary Client Management Database (CMD) to ensure seamless high-quality support of ongoing client installations, service delivery and network support.

    "We are excited with the rapid progress in closing and integrating the PacketExchange acquisition,” states Rick Calder, President and Chief Executive Officer of Global Telecom & Technology. “The combination advances our growth strategy to scale the business globally through both organic growth and strategic acquisitions.

    The acquisition was funded through an expanded term loan facility with GTT’s existing lender, Silicon Valley Bank and a new term loan facility from BIA Digital Partners, a private investment firm with a focus on mid to later-stage companies.

  • 9 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Of all the rumour and, in some cases, intrigue surrounding outsourcing in the public sector, one of the most interesting has been the recent saga surrounding the provision of services for the NHS, which has come under fire from no lesser authority than the Prime Minister.

    David Cameron went as far as to tell parliament that he is ‘very concerned’ at the progress made by a major outsourcing supplier in its efforts to implement multi-million pound IT projects for the NHS, and added that he was considering ‘all available options under the current contract including the option of terminating some or indeed all of the contract’.

    It’s clear that the Prime Minister is already facing some stiff opposition to his plans for reform in the NHS, under which groups of GPs would be handed control of around £80bn worth of NHS spending, with a remit to commission treatment and services from ‘any willing provider’ - including private companies.

    We’ve already seen Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg vowing to veto the legislation, which is proving unpopular amongst MPs and activists alike. However, it’s well worth asking whether, by publicly criticising a leading outsourcing supplier, Mr Cameron is setting them as the scapegoat for his unpopular policies, and outsourcing in general?

    Let’s look at this another way. Is it a coincidence that in the last week, we’ve seen outsourcing hit the headlines, following suggestions that wholesale outsourcing of public services could be a ‘political risk’?

    By criticising a major supplier of outsourcing so publicly, is the Prime Minister implying that they are, in fact, the root cause of the problem? After all, the proposed NHS reforms, and in particular, the emphasis they place on using a number of different suppliers - and not just those from the private sector - hold strong echoes of the sentiments expressed in the leaked memo between Francis Maude and business chiefs, in which it was suggested that charities and social enterprises had a role to play in the provision of public services.

    It’s clear that the supplier in question has owned up to a number of the inefficiencies that Mr Cameron refers to, and have even taken the step of revealing sweeping changes to the way it rolls out services, including a new deployment method to roll out patient administration systems into smaller deployments of more standard and modular components and a willingness to involve doctors at an earlier stage in IT development and implementation.

    Even so, it seems to me that one supplier cannot be blamed entirely for the existing inefficiencies in the NHS - and neither should any poor performance from that supplier be held up as a reason not to outsource additional public services.

    When outsourcing contracts struggle, it can be for a number of reasons, and not only because the supplier has not performed to expectations. For instance, in this case, has the contract been managed effectively from the government’s end? Were clear objectives put in place at the start of the contract? How were changes handled? For that matter, did the government work to find a supplier with the right level of cultural understanding to understand the way the NHS operated? Were they cheapest supplier?

    All these are questions that need addressing before any outsourcing contract is entered into - and if they weren’t, then perhaps the government should be held accountable? The NOA is always willing to help, perhaps our lifecycle model or sourcing knowledge could be of assistance?

    Whether in this case it’s a government or supplier problem, it’s clear that outsourcing has a lot more to offer than many in the government would like to admit - for whatever reason - at the moment.

    Just as it’s true that one swallow does not make a summer, one project with poor performance does not necessarily mean that all outsourcing contracts are destined for failure - and the government would do well to remember that.

  • 7 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    IBM has announced the IBM Intelligent Operations Center for Smarter Cities, a new solution designed to help cities of all sizes gain a holistic view of information across city departments and agencies. By infusing analytical insights into municipal operations through one central point of command, cities will be able to better anticipate problems, respond to crises, and manage resources.

    The Intelligent Operations Center for Smarter Cities will allow cities to use information and analytics to make smarter and more timely decisions, helping local leaders manage a spectrum of events, both planned and unplanned, such as deploying water maintenance crews to repair pumps before they break, alerting fire crews to broken fire hydrants at an emergency scene, or anticipating traffic congestion and preparing redirection scenarios.

    IDC Government Insights estimates the new Smarter Cities information technology market opportunity at $34 billion in 2011, increasing more than 18 percent per year to $57 billion by 2014.

    “All cities are made up of a complex system of systems that are all inextricably linked. The Intelligent Operations Center for Smarter Cities recognizes the behaviour of the city as a whole, thus providing more coordinated and timely decision-making based on deep insights into how each city system will react to a given situation,” said Anne Altman, general manager for Global Public Sector at IBM. “With more than 2,000 smarter cities engagements worldwide, we are now applying best practices and solutions that can be scaled to cities of all sizes around the globe.”

    As the majority of the world’s population repatriates to metropolitan areas, key city systems such as water, power and transportation are being strained to the breaking point. For citizens, a smarter city can mean automatically finding the fastest way to get to work, electricity and drinking water that can be counted on, and safer streets, to start. And today’s increasingly empowered consumer expects their standards for quality of life are met to support the urban influx and resulting economic growth of cities.

  • 7 Jun 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Scottish Police Services Authority (SPSA) has put out a tender for a national ICT solution on the Official Journal of the European Union.

    The contract will be worth between £40m and £80m and will create a "modern, scalable, national ICT solution for the Scottish Police Service allowing for the recording, management and analysis of information", according to the tender.

    The procurement forms part of the National Information Management (IM) Programme and entails the acquisition of a new modern, scalable, extensible, national ICT solution for the Scottish Police Service that allows for the recording, management and analysis of information which aligns to and supports the Scottish Police Service's national model of common end to end policing processes and, through its design and its ability to integrate with other police ICT systems, minimises data management inefficiencies.

    The scope of the IM procurement will primarily focus on the acquisition of a national core ICT solution and services to implement this solution for the entire user base (currently circa 25,000 users across Scotland). The procurement exercise may include some or all of the following: software components, software licences, specialist hardware, integration tools and services, business change activities, implementation services, reporting capabilities, data management activities, support, optional managed service arrangements, additional integration services and other relevant services necessary for the implementation of the solution.

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