Industry news

  • 19 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Aberdeen City Council has awarded Atos Origin a £10 million contract for managed datacentre services and a virtualised desktop.

    It is the first contract that Atos Origin has signed directly with local government in the last five years.

    However, a spokesperson for the company said that it does provide services through an existing Government Gateway contract with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), which is used by some local government organisations.

    Under the five-year contract, Atos Origin will design and implement a virtual desktop environment for 5,000 users at Aberdeen City Council.

    Paul Fleming, head of customer service and performance at Aberdeen City, said: “This project will provide greater accessibility and a better service to users of Council IT systems. It is key to the forthcoming staff relocation to the new Marischal College corporate headquarters, and supports the Council’s strategy to create a more flexible and mobile workforce.”

    On analyst TechMarketView’s website, research director Georgina O’Toole said that the contract signing was a significant deal as the majority of Atos Origin’s public sector business currently comes from central government, revenue from which is expected to fall significantly following the memorandum of understanding it signed with the Cabinet Office agreeing to a 'single-client' approach to procurement.

    “Like all central government SITS [software and IT services] suppliers, Atos will be looking at the broader public sector – including local government - to make up any lost revenues,” O’Toole wrote.

    Source: http://www.computerworlduk.com/news/public-sector/3244607/aberdeen-city-council-signs-datacentre-contract-with-atos-origin/

  • 19 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Wednesday’s Comprehensive Spending Review will not only outline where the cuts will be made but it will also give a clear sign as to who the winners and losers will be in shared services.

    It is generally agreed that the cuts will be positive for the outsourcing industry. Reduced public spending means that savings need to be made which should present many opportunities for the industry and its variety of vertical expertise.

    The NOA believe that the cuts could fuel a ‘surge’ in public sector outsourcing with companies specialising in back-office service being the most who benefit.

    Martyn Hart, NOA Chairman, said: “This week’s announcement is sure to prompt more government departments to outsource services which are not core to their business.”

    Big integrated companies will be able to offer public savings by offering just one point of contact and companies with a broad range of services should be able to adapt easily to meet specific demands.

    A sourcing focus feature will follow the announcement. For further comment on the spending review:

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/supportservices/8071761/Spending-Review-2010-Cuts-may-hold-silver-lining-for-support-services.html

  • 19 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Wipro Technologies, the Global Consulting, System Integration and Outsourcing Business of Wipro Limited (NYSE:WIT) announced today that it has been recognized by Forrester Research, Inc., an independent research firm, as a strong performer in Security and Risk Consulting Services in a recently released report titled ‘The Forrester Wave™: Information Security And Risk Consulting Services, Q3 2010.

    Forrester evaluated twelve global vendors providing Security and Risk Consulting Services across 75 criteria. The report states, “Wipro has made a significant dent in the consulting market by focusing on identity and access management (IAM) and then expanding much beyond.”

    Prasenjit Saha, Vice President and Global Head, Enterprise Security Solutions at Wipro Technologies, said, “We understand customers’ priorities of keeping pace with evolving security threats and the changing regulatory environment. We believe the recognition by Forrester reinforces our commitment to address these challenges and our focus on investments that deliver innovative solutions which help our customers stay ahead of the curve.” According to the report, security managers are turning to security consulting service providers not just to answer technology and implementation questions but also to answer questions on how to address consumerization, harness the power of social media, handle virtualization and understand cloud computing.

    The report further states, “Wipro is the only Indian offshore provider with a standalone security consulting practice. While price remains a key differentiator, it has made significant progress in the North American and European markets. Its strength is in streamlining technologies and process in complex tactical security projects. It has developed some innovative consulting offerings in IAM and continues to provide value to clients in other areas such as data protection”.

    Source: http://www.wipro.com/corporate/media/newsdetail.aspx?id=1695

  • 19 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    In these hard financial times, more and more organisations are looking at far-flung destinations such as India, China and the Philippines to take advantage of lower infrastructure costs along with lower wages.

    Although the initial savings that can be made through offshoring are palpable, what is less obvious are the hidden costs, management problems, instability and miscommunication between the client and supplier, which can result due to a misalignment of expectations during the service delivery.

    Apollo Research analyses coverage of outsourcing in a large sample of UK media, including print, online news sites and blogs. The latest July and September research in the September Apollo report for the NOA shows that nearshoring attracted 83.4% of positive comment in September – this is more positive comment than other outsourcing sub-themes such as offshoring, multishoring, onshoring and insourcing. Nearshoring also attracted 0% negative comment while offshoring attracted 16.2%, due to concerns over security and risk, and only 10.6% positive comment.

    Nearshoring is fast becoming a significant option within the industry. An option which is seen as being more skill specific (in terms of vertical expertise) and practical for companies with a mixture of complex, high-end projects. Organisations are realising that there is a value in keeping outsourced work close to where the business generally is. As well as outsourcing models, many captive operations are also being implemented in nearshore lower cost locations.

    Many established offshore providers are also setting up nearshore centres to remain attractive and competitive to the UK market. While India is still doing great in the offshore stakes, Indian companies have also been looking to extend the offshore opportunity to include nearshore strategies and are building up sites in many European countries.

    This year Intelenet Global Services, a leading global third party BPO whose headquarters are in India, launched its first centre in mainland Europe and chose its facility in Krakow to enhance nearshore presence.

    Choosing between nearshore destinations can be difficult. Businesses should invest in conducting their research and looking at a country’s expertise in line with their own requirements. Many European countries are fast becoming experts in specific sectors.

    Eastern Central European countries such as Poland, the Czech Republic, Ukraine, Slovakia and Hungary are becoming increasingly popular as nearshore destinations. These nations have been working hard to gain a slice of the market and offer businesses a ready supply of high-quality, low cost labour.

    Growth in Poland in particular has surged. Last year Poland was the only member of the European Union which did not fall into recession during the financial crisis with 1.6% growth. Its total exports also climbed 21.23% to $135 billion.

    Luxoft, a Russian provider of application and product development services, has also recently opened a new development centre in Krakow, Poland.

    Dmitry Loshinin, president and CEO of Luxoft, said: “The opening of the Development Centre in Poland is a key part of our strategy to develop a global network of offices, all of which have the culture of engineering excellence, innovation and rock solid execution that our customers have come to expect from us.”

    Malta is also rapidly becoming one of the many nearshoring destinations for companies aiming to cut costs by bringing their technology and business processes closer to home. Big names such as HSBC, Crimsonwing and Lufthansa Technick are already taking advantage of its world-class ICT infrastructure, SmartCity media park, bilingual workforce and various tax benefits.

    Portugal has just started to promote itself as a nearshore outsourcing location, due to its highly skilled IT labour force and competitive cost to value environment.

    Commenting on his nearshore experience, David Walsh, CEO at the international IT solutions company Crimsonwing, said: “We have been fortunate enough to experience extremely low attrition rates, which has helped us to offer clients a great deal of continuity on projects. Crucially, the Malta centre has also allowed us to negotiate some of the typical offshore barriers, such as travel time, culture and language differences, all of which have helped us to compete in this competitive global marketplace.”

    Nearshoring can offer clients the advantage of outsourcing to a country whose cultural values and practices are more similar than offshoring destinations. This can be reflected through legislation, institutions, standards and trade practices. It is obviously difficult to convert cultural affinity into objective measurements however it is generally agreed upon that effective communication increases productivity.

    Europe offers businesses many significant benefits due to the EU membership and geographical location. Business outsourcing to Europe is guaranteed and protected by EU intellectual property rights and data protection laws. This is encouraging businesses to nearshore as sensitive, proprietary information is protected when transferred as part of an outsourcing agreement.

    Nearshore destinations offer small time zone differences, which allow for a quick turnaround of projects among other similar benefits. For projects where online and regular telephone interaction is a must, this is a key advantage.

    The geographical closeness between parties ultimately allows for cost savings often making nearshore destinations a lot more cost efficient in the long term.

    Costs are also saved on long haul flights, which can allow for an increase in project management and the reduction of time zone issues eliminates the need for extra work. Visas are not needed, training is less expensive and shipping is less costly and very simple. As a result of all of this, over time the real hourly rate difference between offshoring and nearshoring is a lot less than one would expect.

    Kerry Hallard, Communications Director, NOA, said: “There is huge growth potential in nearshoring as the range of different models can bring much needed flexibility to a project however there are also some challenges ahead.

    “Nearshore destinations need to try and offer an alternative option to the various benefits of offshoring, namely cost, by offering a service which is not only cost-effective in the long-term but one which also has the unique selling point of offering a variety of different sector specialists.”

    By focusing on expert service areas, as well as promoting geographical, cultural and long-term cost savings, nearshoring will continue to grow and become a viable and attractive alternative in the sourcing industry.

  • 18 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    BT has become the latest of the 19 biggest government suppliers to sign a Memorandum of Understanding with the Cabinet Office, following discussions with minister Francis Maude.

    In a statement, BT said the talks focused on new arrangements “designed to deliver efficiencies, many of them achieved by changes which will enable wider economies of scale while yielding genuine benefits to government.”

    BT follows recent signatories, Oracle and HP, together with early adopters including Atos Origin, Capgemini, and Logica, to sign up to the agreement.

    Jeff Kelly, CEO of BT Global Services, said the agreement meant the company could now continue to play “a central role in the transformation of public services which make a real difference to the lives of people in the UK every day”.

    “Having found efficiencies in our own business, we have considerable experience which can help the Government meet its efficiency objectives.”

    Kelly continued, “We are very proud of our long-standing relationship with the UK Government. With today’s agreement, we will continue to be one of its largest suppliers of networked IT services. Many of BT’s existing contracts have already delivered financial savings and operational efficiencies, demonstrating the benefits of public-private partnerships.”

    BT also confirmed there is no change to its overall outlook as a result of this agreement.

    Source: http://www.publictechnology.net/sector/central-gov/bt-good-talk-uk-govt-after-memorandum-understanding

  • 18 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust has slashed expensive missed appointments by nearly 40% and cut outpatient waiting times following the introduction of a Trust-wide interactive patient messaging service.

    Using mobiles and landline telephones, the system reminds patients of upcoming appointments and enables them to quickly and easily cancel appointments no longer required.

    In just three months since introducing the text and voice reminder system across all outpatient appointments, the Trust has seen a significant reduction in so-called Did Not Attends (DNAs) – down 38.3% in July 2010 than a year earlier (for follow-up appointments).

    As a result, Trust has been able to re-use an extra 1,776 appointments that would otherwise have been wasted, a move it says has helped to reduce waiting times and has enabled the Trust to save money by scheduling fewer clinics that are better attended.

    And if the success of the first three months using the system, based on technology from mobile supplier O2, continues throughout the year, the Trust will generate between 7,000 and 9,000 extra outpatient appointments.

    “We commissioned this service as part of our ongoing work to bring down DNAs and improve the efficiency of our outpatient clinics,” said Mandy Mugridge, outpatient project manager at the Trust. “Now because waiting times are coming down, we also no longer need to schedule extra clinics at a high cost.”

    Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust is one of the largest in England. It runs 1,379 outpatient clinics each month – totalling around 600,000 appointments a year.

    The project involved a specialist supplier called between Healthcare Communications, O2 Health and Voice Sage successfully delivered the two-way text and voice reminder system for patients.

    Source: http://www.publictechnology.net/sector/nhs-health/portsmouth-hospitals-reduces-cost-and-waiting-times

  • 18 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Contact Centre of the Year, under 50 seats

    Winner: The Shared Service Centre, The Regenda Group

    Highly commended: Johnnie Johnson Housing

    Contact Centre of the Year, over 50 seats

    Winner: Ai Claims Solutions

    Highly commended: The Contact Company

    Contact Centre Manager of the Year, under 50 seats

    Winner: Neil Kenwright, One Vision Housing

    Contact Centre Manager of the Year, over 50 seats

    Winner: Shelley Lawton, Vertex

    Highly commended: Angie Spencer, Paymentshield

    Agent of the Year

    Winner: Lee Thomas, Iceland Foods Ltd

    Highly commended Alysha Kennaway from Home Retail Group

    Team Leader of the Year

    Winner: Sophie Harding, The Mileage Company

    Highly commended: Angela Walsh, Capita Business Services

    Team of the Year (under 25 members)

    Winner: D Relief, Trafford Operational Communications Room, Greater Manchester Police

    Highly commended: Complex Query Team at B.O.C Gases

    Trainer / Coach of the Year

    Winner: Jane Macartney, Cheshire Police

    Support Person of the Year

    Winner: Terry Smillie,. Capita Business Services

    Highly Commended: Angela Plant, Cable and Wireless Worldwide.

    Best Technology Partnership

    Winner: Carole Nash Insurance

    Best Outsourced Partnership

    Winner: Vertex & The National Trust

    Highly commended: Capita Business Services & The Criminal Records Bureau

    Best Training Programme

    Winner: ‘Getting Connected’, Ai Claims Solutions

    Highly commended: Synapse

    Best Customer Experience Program

    Winner: Direct Debit Operations, Scottish Power

    Highly commended: One Vision Housing

    Best Contact Centre Improvement Strategy

    Winner: Cable and Wireless Worldwide

    Highly commended: Liverpool Direct Limited.

    Source: http://www.callcentrehelper.com/winners-of-the-north-west-contact-centre-awards-13470.htm

  • 18 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Alstom SA, the world’s second- largest trainmaker, said Indian sales growth may surpass local economic expansion as the government works on a 14 trillion rupee ($317 billion) plan to expand and modernize railroads.

    The company has to be prepared for India growth “which is equal to if not higher than GDP,” Sunand Sharma, 61, Alstom’s local head, said in an Oct. 15 interview at his office in Noida, near New Delhi. He declined to give specific sales numbers.

    Alstom, which also makes power-plant systems, expects to eventually get a third of India sales from transportation as the government expands the railroads 10 percent a year to support economic growth. The Paris-based company has been shortlisted with General Electric Co., Bombardier Inc. and Siemens AG as a possible partner in an Indian trainmaking venture and is considering building a rail-car plant in the country.

    “India is an opportunity but not without hiccups,” said Jagannadham Thunuguntla, chief strategist at SMC Global Securities Ltd., which manages $100 million in assets in New Delhi. “For companies, it may be better to sacrifice profit margin for scale because whoever comes in now will have first- mover advantage.”

    The planned trainmaking venture will produce about 120 electric locomotives a year, according to the rail ministry. Bids have to be submitted by Oct. 25, A.K. Saxena, a ministry spokesman, said by phone Oct. 15 in New Delhi. He declined to say when a decision will be made.

    Railway Expansion

    Indian Railways, the state-owned rail operator, has proposed to add 25,000 kilometers (15,534 miles) of new lines by 2020, compared with the 10,000 kilometers added in the past six decades, according to the rail ministry. The nation’s economy, Asia’s third-largest, will probably expand at a 9 percent annual pace by the year ending March 2012, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in June.

    Alstom may build an Indian rail-car factory after last month winning a 14.7 billion-rupee contract from Chennai Metro Rail Ltd. to supply 168 carriages, Sharma said. He declined to say where the factory may be built or when a decision will be made.

    Alstom’s India operations have mainly focused on the power sector to date. Alstom Projects India Ltd., a subsidiary, generated 97 percent of its 20.4 billion rupees of sales in the year ended March from its power division and the rest from transportation, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Alstom has other ventures and businesses in India. Sharma declined to comment on local sales numbers.

    Alstom’s power operations may boost India sales to more than 1 billion euros a year from several hundred million euros, Denis Cochet, senior vice president of sales and marketing for Alstom’s power division, said Oct. 12.

    The company is building two factories with Pune, India- based Bharat Forge Ltd. that will make equipment for so-called super-critical power plants, which use less energy and generate higher pressure for greater efficiency than traditional plants. The factories will start operations in phases from April 2012, Bharat Forge said in its annual report for the year ended March.

    Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-10-18/alstom-says-sales-growth-in-india-may-outpace-economy-on-rail-investment.html

  • 18 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    President Barack Obama said the U.S. tax code shouldn’t benefit companies that create jobs in other countries, as he criticized Republicans for “rewarding corporations that create jobs and profits overseas.”

    “For years, our tax code has actually given billions of dollars in tax breaks that encourage companies to create jobs and profits in other countries,” Obama said in his weekly address on the radio and Internet. “We should be using our tax dollars to reward companies that create jobs and businesses within our borders.”

    With less than three weeks to go until U.S. congressional elections, Obama defended steps taken by his administration to spur hiring and help the economy grow, such as legislation signed last month to provide tax cuts and credit help for small businesses. Obama said that measure has already helped “thousands of business owners” get access to government loans.

    “When more things are made in America, more families make it in America, more jobs are created in America, more businesses thrive in America,” he said.

    About 8 million jobs have been lost during the recession and the unemployment rate, after reaching a 26-year high of 10.1 percent in October 2009, was 9.6 percent last month.

    Obama said the nation remains in a “tough fight” to help the economy recover. He said government has an “important responsibility” to help business grow.

    “That’s to create an environment in which someone can raise capital to start a new company, where a business can get a loan to expand, where ingenuity is prized and folks are rewarded for their hard work,” he said.

    Republican Address

    In the Republican address, U.S. Representative Mike Pence, of Indiana, said Congress should take immediate steps to extend current income-tax rates to remove doubts that are damaging the economy.

    “Uncertainty is the enemy of our prosperity,” he said.

    Tax cuts passed under the administration of President George W. Bush are scheduled to expire at the end of this year.

    Obama and most Democrats have backed extending the lower tax rates only for households making more than $250,000 per year. Republicans support an across-the-board extension.

    “No American should see a tax increase in January, and Republicans are determined to oppose any effort to raise taxes on any American in this difficult economy,” Pence said.

    Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-10-16/obama-says-tax-breaks-shouldn-t-reward-companies-for-creating-jobs-abroad.html

  • 18 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    “Never assume anything,” Visa chief information security specialist warns about one of the common pitfalls of outsourcing.

    One of the common pitfalls of outsourcing software development is not clearly defining and communicating the business's security requirements to the supplier, a panel of security experts have warned.

    "If you outsource then don't tell the development partner what data the application will be processing, they just don't know anything different. The contractor will develop the application as required and nothing else," said Gunter Bitz, head of product security governance at SAP, speaking at the RSA security conference in London yesterday.

    "The biggest thing to take into account is to never assume anything," she said. "For example, if they [the suppliers] advertise that its service is used by the DoD, or DoD-blessed, forget it. It does not mean it is secure."

    "Say, for example, with software for a [fixed-term] marketing campaign - there should be specific guidelines for what is going to happen when the software reaches end of life, how it is going to go away."

    In order to manage the software lifecycle, Lane said that it would be a good idea to keep a high quality, up-to-date inventory of outsourced development, with details such as who contracts are.

    "It's very important from a security perspective," she said.

    Lane also warned about increasing security of web-based administration websites.

    "Watch out for QA [quality assurance] sites on the internet. If there's an administration website open over the internet it's just asking to be hacked. They need to have at least IP filtering. Make sure they go away when production goes away," she said.

    Meanwhile, John Sapp, director of product development standards - security, risk and compliance, at medical software company McKesson Corporation, said that in the health sector, security issues are often related to legacy applications.

    "Generally, security is not a consideration for software developers. Also, risks can be inherited from web-enabling legacy applications," he said.

    Sapp also recommending making security requirements part of the software development outsourcing agreement.

    "We [McKesson] are starting to contractually require suppliers to have a foundation security standard. I would suggest that with any contract, ensure you have security as part of your acceptance criteria. If it does not meet our standards, we just won't accept it," he said.

    Source: http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/101510-rsa-security-requirements-must-be.html?hpg1=bn

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software