Industry news

  • 17 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Five years from now the UK Pensions and Investment industry will have transformed. The primary reason is the changing dynamics in investor behaviour that are influencing the way they interact across multi-channels to make more informed investment decisions. In particular, the over fifties segment, referred to as grey-power, whose ranks are being joined by millions of baby boomers are demanding greater say over their future destiny. Their demand for more transparency and control over their financial destiny is a powerful force that could stimulate deep rooted and dramatic change that goes beyond the investment industry.

    Companies from other sectors, in particular retailers, have amassed considerable lifestyle data and have been pioneering more sophisticated self-service experiences and insights; inevitably this includes the grey-power sector. The combination of this shift towards empowering the customer and the increasingly crowded competitive marketplace is likely to lead to a significant change and more intense focus around winning a greater share of the ‘investor’s wallet’.

    Insightful lessons can be taken from other market sectors that have recently been transformed by customer behaviour, where those organisations that set new market standards for delivering service experiences are favoured above the competition (Apple, for example). The speed of these changes happened far faster than many expected, especially the conservative incumbents who have now been displaced as market leaders.

    The combination of these market shifting changes, when considered from a wider and deeper perspective, do demand attention sooner rather than later. This creates the impetus for a number of initiatives:

     Proactively targeting the grey-power market segment as a sustainable growth opportunity

     Redesigning and retooling the retail distribution channel including the associated processes and services

     Developing competitive advantage from improved and enriched interactions and experiences

     Increasing the volume of customer self-service using insights and knowledge as competitive differentiators

     Building a product innovation and development process that starts with the customer not the manufacturer

     Establishing a services platform for delivering superior multi-channel, consistent and transparent experiences.

    Customers are changing the way they research and buy products from the UK Pensions and Investment industry. Corporations must learn to influence the behaviours of both the mass affluent and mass market by managing the customer’s experience around their need for knowledge, insights and tacit interactions at key, and appropriate, stages of their decision-making process. Leadership of this en masse transition will trigger a customer-centric paradigm shift that will profoundly change the UK Pensions and Investment industry.

  • 16 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    After bursting upon the legal scene in mid-2009, legal services outsourcing (LSO) has gone from strength to strength. So much so, that 2010 will go down as the year in which this innovative new approach to the delivery of legal services achieved mainstream acceptance - and signalled that it was definitely here to stay. That’s no small feat considering how conservative and resistant to change the legal industry has traditionally been.

    Outsourcing lower-level legal work, such as document and contract review, transaction support, and legal research, was a hot topic for debate among legal professionals, in the media, and at industry conferences during 2010. Most tellingly, senior in-house counsel became increasingly open in discussing how partnering with an outsourcing provider could help reduce legal spend, increase efficiency and get their own lawyers back to practising law. With mounting pressure from their corporate clients to change the legal orthodoxy, many law firms who were previously sceptical about LSO were forced to look at how they would build outsourcing into their service delivery models. As a result, the concept of a three-way working relationship between corporate clients, law firms and legal services outsourcing providers has flourished and become a true symbol of change in the industry.

    Changed perceptions

    Perceptions of LSO and its place in the legal market also shifted dramatically in 2010. As little as two years ago, the concept of outsourcing legal work was met with scepticism across much of the legal industry. However, research that CPA Global undertook in conjunction with the Financial Times Innovative Lawyers Awards during August 2010 revealed that more than 43% of companies and 73% of law firms are now outsourcing or considering outsourcing legal work.

    The type of work outsourced has changed too, with document review and transaction support (including mergers and acquisitions) identified in research as the biggest areas for outsourcing in 2010 – more so than intellectual property management, which has tended to dominate the legal outsourcing scene in the past. While cost savings are still the main driver for outsourcing legal work, market recognition of other benefits became more apparent during the year. In a CPA Global poll of UK-based in-house counsel at the Legal Week Corporate Counsel Forum in September, 25% of respondents identified making better use of their existing resources as the most important reason for outsourcing, while 17% highlighted scalability for large, unpredicted projects.

    Attracting investment and talent

    LSO has also caught the attention of outside investors, looking for companies with high growth prospects in the post recessionary period. In January 2010, Intermediate Capital Group (ICG), a leading independent investor and fund manager, acquired a significant minority stake in CPA Global, underlining the growing confidence in LSO amongst the financial community. For CPA Global’s part, the investment has ensured that we are even better positioned to take advantage of the significant market opportunities ahead.

    As LSO has become more established and accepted in the legal mainstream, so has its credibility and prestige increased. This, in turn, has attracted more top legal talent to the sector - both onshore in the UK and US, as well as in offshore delivery centres – with LSO being seen as a viable alternative career for legal professionals. At CPA Global, for example, over the past year, we have recruited senior lawyers from leading corporations such as Virgin Media and Home Depot, as well as top law firms, including Baker & McKenzie, Allen & Overy and SJ Berwin. Our growing teams in the UK, US and India are working with some of the world’s best known corporations in the financial services, technology, telecommunications, pharmaceutical, healthcare, and FMCG industries.

    2011: a year of growth for quality providers

    Looking to 2011, we see LSO becoming more deeply embedded in the legal services industry as an increasing number of corporations and law firms see for themselves the benefits to be gained from the highly cost-efficient, three-way collaboration model that LSO is able to deliver. Law firms will increasingly recognise that LSO providers are not aiming to replace them – we never will, as we don’t practise law. On the contrary, by ensuring better use of resources and proper segmentation of work, we can ensure that law firms and in-house legal teams are able to spend much more of their time practising law, which is what they do best.

    Already, there are many different types of company offering outsourced legal services of various descriptions; and, as LSO continues its rapid growth, more players can be expected to enter the market, perhaps leading to greater price competition for some of the more commoditised services.

    However, as customers become more familiar with LSO and more discerning about the service they require, quality will increasingly be the key differentiator when selecting an outsourcing partner. In the Corporate Counsel Forum poll in September, 66% of respondents identified quality as the greatest concern when considering outsourcing. This is a challenge that LSO providers have to deal with head-on by proving that quality can be maintained and even improved through outsourcing. Only well resourced, established players in the market who recruit and train the best talent will be able to do this.

    This focus on quality is likely to define the industry over the next 12 months. Providers who can deliver the high standards and performance demanded by leading corporations and law firms will enjoy significant growth; while those who compete on price alone will struggle to sustain their business in the longer term. This, in turn, could lead to greater consolidation in the industry, with just a few strong, well resourced and well run providers leading the market.

  • 16 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Convergys Corporation, a global leader in relationship management, has announced its expansion into Colombia with a state-of-the-art contact center that will provide top quality customer care services for leading corporations in the Americas. The new facility in Bogotá will bolster Convergys’ presence in Latin America, where the company already has offices and contact center facilities in Brazil, Mexico, and Costa Rica.

    Bogotá has a large bilingual talent pool and advanced telecommunications and transportation infrastructure. Convergys has outfitted a facility located in one of Bogotá's top commercial areas with the latest tools in contact center technology. It is hiring for all levels of talent, including management, support staff and skilled contact center agents to begin serving clients from the site in the first quarter of 2011. Once fully staffed, the site will employ up to 2,000 customer service experts.

    “Continued client demand for the high quality bilingual services Convergys provides from Latin America is driving our growth in the region,” said Jorge Robledo, Convergys Vice President of Operations in Latin America. “Bogotá boasts a highly-educated bilingual population ideally suited to help ensure that Convergys continues to meet our global clients’ current and future need for superior technical and customer support, sales, and back office services.”

  • 16 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    New research has revealed that human resources outsourcing, including that of firms recruiting new IT staff in London, is poised for a dramatic increase over the next five years.

    According to the market research report from StrategyR, the total value of outsourced recruitment activity worldwide could reach $162 billion (£100 billion) by 2015.

    "The global economic meltdown forced global governments and corporations to re-evaluate business plans and strategies, whereby cost reduction has emerged as a key driving force for human resources outsourcing," the paper explains.

    As well as its growing presence in the recruitment sector, there is also an increasing trend for businesses outsourcing IT operations.

  • 16 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    HP and VMware are set to work together on cloud security - the number one concern for organisations transferring to the cloud.

    The collaboration will unify security management and automate scanning procedures. This should unify procedures for identifying threats and blocking attacks.

    The two firms already work together on HP's TippingPoint intrusion protection systems for VMware vSphere deployments, but the latest agreement is to integrate the systems further.

  • 15 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Land Registry, the government department responsible for maintaining England and Wales' Land Register, has signed an open source data contract with software company Talend.

    The Talend Integration Suite will be used to improve data integration for its business intelligence warehouse and to support the department's new business intelligence (BI) project.

    Steven Philips, delivery manager at Land Registry, said: "Maintaining concise and accurate data for BI is crucial to Land Registry's operational performance and we needed a flexible and cost-effective tool that would improve data integration for the BI warehouse."

  • 15 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Barclays has boosted its technology staff and budget, according to the bank's full-year results.

    Staff numbers increased by 1,000 from 66,000 in 2009 to 67,000 last year across the firm's global retail banking operations.

    Due to economic pressures, this is not a common trend but one which is largely due to the insourcing of operations and the company's international development of IT infrastructure.

    Overall administration and general expenses in the banking arm increased, up 18% from 2009's figure of £5.56bn to £6.585bn last year.

  • 15 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    SQS Software Quality Systems announces it’s tripling the size of its software testing facility in Belfast to meet increased demand for outsourced testing services from a ‘near-shore’ site. The expansion will mean the creation of 37 new jobs.

    SQS is the largest independent software testing and quality assurance provider. The Belfast facility will offer a range of services including: security testing, environment hosting, test automation and performance testing for its Irish, UK, European and US customers. It will also provide specialised expertise in banking, insurance and telecommunications.

    Rob McConnell, SQS Regional Director for Northern Ireland, says: “We’ve seen a strong growth in demand for outsourcing testing services to Belfast. In addition to cost-savings, near-shoring customers benefit from highly technical resources, close proximity for site visits, a common language and time-zone, full-cultural alignment and common communication channels.”

    “We’re also fulfilling the needs of organisations, such as those in the public sector and financial services, whose data needs to remain in the UK for political or legislative reasons,” Rob continues.

    The SQS Belfast office was originally set-up in 2007, based on Northern Ireland’s reputation as a technology hub with a strong supply of skilled IT graduates, high-quality service provision and low-cost differential over onshore providers.

    The expansion has been partially funded by Invest NI.

  • 15 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The “super council” between Westminster, Kensington & Chelsea and Hammersmith & Fulham will include a “rationalisation” of tech posts. It is hoped that the cuts will save £400,000 a year by losing between 10 to 12 positions which are part of a five year programme that includes other cost-cutting moves in the tech area such as adopting unified communications.

    Source: http://www.publictechnology.net/sector/local-gov/ict-jobs-go-flagship-london-shared-services-partnership

  • 14 Feb 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Interconnector, gas pipeline operator, has signed a £28m outsourcing deal with HP.

    The 10-year contract involves the full range of HP products and services, including a dual data-centre service.

    "Our expectation is that the improved performance will enhance our user experience and our visibility of service quality and we estimate that it will reduce IT costs significantly over alternative solutions," said Terry Stephens, chief information officer for Interconnector.

    The services will be delivered from HP's data centre in Wynyard, UK with disaster recovery through Interconnector's Data Centre in Zeebrugge, Belgium.

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