Industry news

  • 15 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Ministers have been accused of reneging on promises to start a “bonfire of the quangos” and of simply moving many functions elsewhere in Whitehall. In a Coalition announcement on the semi-independent bodies, Francis Maude refused to say how many jobs might be at risk.

    Instead, the Cabinet Office Minister claimed his main intention was to restore accountability to swathes of government.

    From now on, he said, elected representatives rather than faceless quango bosses would take responsibility if something went wrong.

    Labour called Mr Maude “the most expensive butcher in history” who appeared to cut but offered few savings.

    In total, 192 public bodies, including the Film Council, the Audit Commission and the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), are to be abolished. A further 118 will be merged and 40 are still under consideration.

    But analysis of the 192 shows just 29 will disappear altogether. Some 30 will turn into “committees of experts”.

    Mr Maude said: “For too long this country has tolerated ministers who ducked the difficult decisions they were elected to make. For too long we have had too many people who are unaccountable with a licence to meddle in people’s lives.”

    He said pay was out of control, citing seven Audit Commission executives earning more than £150,000 a year. But where abolished bodies’ functions were important they would return to government departments, he said.

    Business welcomed the cull. Miles Templeman, director-general of the Institute of Directors, said: “The Government now needs to ensure that eliminating and reforming quangos is just the beginning of a wider process of moving to a smaller state.”

    But Liam Byrne, the shadow Cabinet Office minister, said: “The Tories need to tell us whether their desperation for headlines and faster cuts means the cost of closing quangos is actually bigger than the savings.”

    There was dismay at some changes. The chief coroner’s office, established this year, will be scrapped.

    Chris Simpkins, the Royal British Legion’s director general, said it was “absolutely central” to ensuring that deaths of Service personnel were properly investigated.

    The Environment Department will lose 90 arm’s length bodies. Natural England and the Environment Agency will be shaken up. The Office of Fair Trading and the Competition Commission will merge and the Teenage Pregnancy Independent Advisory Group will be scrapped.

    Ofsted, the schools inspectorate, and Ofqual, the exams regulator, survive. The functions of the HFEA, which regulates fertility clinics, will move to other regulators.

    Quangos whose functions return to Whitehall include the Disability Living Allowance/Attendance Allowance Advisory Board and the Appointments Commission.

    George Osborne’s spending review next week will be “a shower, not a hurricane”, according to a report by economist Tim Morgan for the Centre for Policy Studies. It will be “both modest and essential”.

    Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/8065436/Bonfire-of-quangos-is-a-smokescreen-that-will-cost-money.html

  • 15 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Webinar 1: Strategic Operating Model Design:

    FusionExperience, the specialist service provider to the financial services community, will be running a series of webinars to assist asset management companies to adopt a strategic approach to operations management. The free webinars will be open to all individuals within financial services who are involved with operations implementation, and can be accessed via its website.

    There are four sessions planned throughout October, November and December. The first – scheduled for Monday 18th October at 1pm- will address the issue of strategic operating model design. It is increasingly apparent that it has become vital to have a Strategic Operating Model Design, and the risks of not having a strategy are sometimes dangerously overlooked. The webinar will then look at the very significant changes in supplier capability over the last five years and the implications for asset managers, before looking at a case study of a rapidly growing asset manager that has transformed their operating capability at the same time as making very significant cost savings.

    The importance of a strategic approach to operations management has never been more crucial.

    As the entire financial services industry seeks to make substantial cost savings in many different areas, having a clear idea of how your business can run more efficiently, which areas of your business are suitable for outsourcing, and how to get the best out of existing outsourcing contracts is absolutely key. The purpose of these webinars is to encourage the financial services industry to think seriously around these issues and to hopefully introduce ideas to attendees about how to streamline processes and operate in a more time, and cost efficient way.

    The webinars will be run by Gordon Easden, a leading expert in Operating Models and Outsourcing in financial services. A summary of the webinar with the key highlights will be available once it has been completed, along with further written commentary on the themes and issues raised.

  • 15 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Webinar 1: Strategic Operating Model Design:

    FusionExperience, the specialist service provider to the financial services community, will be running a series of webinars to assist asset management companies to adopt a strategic approach to operations management. The free webinars will be open to all individuals within financial services who are involved with operations implementation, and can be accessed via its website.

    There are four sessions planned throughout October, November and December. The first – scheduled for Monday 18th October at 1pm- will address the issue of strategic operating model design. It is increasingly apparent that it has become vital to have a Strategic Operating Model Design, and the risks of not having a strategy are sometimes dangerously overlooked. The webinar will then look at the very significant changes in supplier capability over the last five years and the implications for asset managers, before looking at a case study of a rapidly growing asset manager that has transformed their operating capability at the same time as making very significant cost savings.

    The importance of a strategic approach to operations management has never been more crucial.

    As the entire financial services industry seeks to make substantial cost savings in many different areas, having a clear idea of how your business can run more efficiently, which areas of your business are suitable for outsourcing, and how to get the best out of existing outsourcing contracts is absolutely key. The purpose of these webinars is to encourage the financial services industry to think seriously around these issues and to hopefully introduce ideas to attendees about how to streamline processes and operate in a more time, and cost efficient way.

    The webinars will be run by Gordon Easden, a leading expert in Operating Models and Outsourcing in financial services. A summary of the webinar with the key highlights will be available once it has been completed, along with further written commentary on the themes and issues raised.

  • 14 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Outsourcing is second nature in the UK. But across the channel, in the major economies of Germany, France, Spain and Italy very different views prevail, which ultimately will be paid for in increasingly uncompetitive back-office operations, says Paul Morrison.

    Ask any outsourcing supplier about their goals for the year ahead, and you will certainly hear "sell more in Europe". At least since the turn of the millennium, continental Europe has been seen as the next major business process outsourcing (BPO) growth area. But one decade and a credit crunch on, it has yet to fulfil its promise. What is Europe playing at?

    BPO is rather old hat in the US and UK. If your organisation is not already outsourcing and offshoring to a third party at least some of its payroll, finance, HR or procurement functions, then it is in a distinguished and dwindling minority. On the continent, au contraire - or so it would appear.

    The UK remains by far Europe's largest BPO market, and although Switzerland, Benelux and the Nordics punch above their weight, the French, Germans, Italians and Spanish still don't appear to be all that excited. Many BPO suppliers - even a leading French supplier selling to French customers - complain of a crushing lack of interest in their outsourcing wares.

    Different world view?

    That reluctance might be explained away as a difference of world view: while cold-blooded Anglo-Saxons would outsource their grandmothers if they could, those conservative and consensus-driven Europeans prefer to keep the back offices close to home.

    Don't forget about the works councils, the unions and the Acquired Rights Directive. And isn't all BPO based on offshoring everything to anglophone India - which simply wouldn't work for my French, German, Italian or Spanish back office?

    Finally, there's also the small matter of the credit crunch and economic recession. Net result: no BPO please, we're European.

    A simple, persuasive picture - but it is also nonsense. In reality there is a breed of global firm - often British, Dutch, Nordic or particularly American - that have been doing European BPO for years, and who are now accelerating down this path.

    Top of the list come businesses working in the most global industries such as financial services, manufacturing and energy, but every sector has seen BPO success of some sort and their common trait is that they have been conducted at a pan-European level.

    Local versus global

    It seems concerns about BPO's incompatibility with Europe have real currency at a local level, and as a result many local French, German or Italian organisations instinctively baulk at the prospect of externalisation. But the likes of Philips, Axa or American Express have proven that the barriers can be overcome.

    They have seen shared services, BPO and offshoring work elsewhere within their operations; they have accumulated the skills to know how to deploy them; they know that complex European language requirements can be handled well by low-cost east European locations.

    In short they know that BPO works, and that there are only imagined barriers to it working well in Europe. As a result pan-European BPO is alive and well, while French, German or Italian BPO is not.

    So European companies choose to play by European rules - so what? Well, in the short term, that tendency is perhaps no big deal. BPO is not a panacea, and it can still be complicated to get right.

    Lower operating costs

    However, more and more companies are finding that they can get it right, lowering operating costs and improving back-office quality and compliance as a result.

    European companies can opt out of this potential if they choose. But in the long-term this stance will condemn them to ever less competitive back-office operations, and the alternatives to BPO are not compelling.

    Internal transformation is almost always botched or unfulfilled, and despite claims to the contrary, insourcing - in other words, taking outsourced work back in-house - is a rare beast indeed. Then there is always the do-nothing option, which is how many European businesses are responding to the challenge of BPO now.

    Inaction will not help European businesses to compete. Global companies have shown that BPO works in Europe. Now it's Europe's turn.

    Source: http://www.silicon.com/management/cio-insights/2010/10/12/outsourcing-no-thanks-were-european-39746455/

  • 14 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Global manufacturing conglomerate 3M has extended its IT outsourcing relationship with Cognizant in a new multi-million dollar deal.

    The multi-year agreement expands Cognizant’s strategic relationship with 3M and encompasses a wide range of application development and related services. Under the deal, 3M aims to help drive operational efficiencies and improve productivity.

    In the UK, 3M has around 15 administrative and manufacturing sites, with its UK headquarters in Bracknell, Berkshire. The firm is involved in the graphics, signage, stationery, electronics and health sectors, among others.

    Cognizant said it will use its systems to reduce the total cost of ownership across 3M’s applications portfolio, including mission-critical software used in research and development, planning, sourcing and supply chain, manufacturing, sales and marketing, e-commerce, human resources, finance, and administration.

    Ernie Park, vice president and chief information officer at 3M, said the deal would "help accelerate our efforts to drive cost efficiencies". The company has worked with Cognizant since 2001.

    Janel Haider, director of the 3M Applications Centre of Excellence, said that a greater move to IT best practices "will enhance decision-making, improve service-level predictability, reduce defects through applications testing and quality assurance services, and help us more efficiently and cost-effectively scale production up and down, based on dynamic global market demands”.

    Other manufacturers to have recently renewed or extended their outsourcing deals include General Motors with HP, and Ford with CSC.

    Source: http://www.computerworlduk.com/news/outsourcing/3244063/3m-sticks-with-outsourcer-in-application-deal-renewal/

  • 14 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Boeing company Jeppesen has migrated its business-critical logistics systems to open-source Red Hat virtualisation technology to benefit from cost savings.

    Jeppesen develops crew and fleet optimisation systems for the global transportation industry, and has UK sites in Newbury, Crawley and Maidenhead. It will now standardise its business-critical software build systems on the Red Hat Enterprise Virtualisation platform.

    As a result, Jeppesen aims to achieve both reduced hardware and product time to market costs over the first three years of deployment.

    The system "has the necessary performance levels to enable us to achieve our cost-saving targets” said Annika Hansson, IT manager at Jeppesen, who said it would also help "get the most out of our current hardware".

    Jeppesen uses a method of “continuous integration” in its software engineering process, whereby any new developments to the software undergo continuous and thorough automated testing.

    “We cannot afford any downtime of our build systems as this would mean that we cannot provide critical updates and fixes for our customers whose businesses depend on our optimisation software,” added Kalle Kiviaho, systems administrator at Jeppesen.

    “Red Hat Enterprise Virtualisation provides the reliability and scalability that we demand and has given us confidence to trust our business to run on it.”

    Meanwhile, server spending has been weak in 2010, as enterprises continue their cost-cutting programmes, with server virtualisation one reason hardware sales are down.

    Source: http://www.computerworlduk.com/news/it-business/3244068/boeing-unit-cuts-costs-with-open-source-virtualisation/

  • 14 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Lloyds Banking Group has announced that it will cut 2,750 permanent and temporary IT jobs in the UK by the end of 2012.

    The company said the job cuts will be made up from 1,600 permanent and 1,150 temporary positions in the UK. In addition, 1,750 contractor roles will go at various offshore locations in India — bringing the total number of jobs lost to 4,500.

    The cuts follow Lloyds TSB's acquisition of Halifax-Bank of Scotland (HBOS) in 2009, which left the company facing duplication of roles in its IT operations. The shake-up will put in place a new organisational structure for the business once its three-year plan to integrate HBOS comes to an end. The integration is on track to be completed by the end of 2011.

    Source: http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/jobs/2010/10/14/lloyds-to-cut-4500-it-jobs-in-uk-and-india-40090521/

  • 14 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Datacentrix, a leading provider of computing power, business value and solutions to corporate organisations in South Africa, has won a contract to provide desktop and hardware IT support and services to the 92 Virgin Active Clubs in South Africa as well as its one club in Windhoek, Namibia.

    Datacentrix’s head of outsourcing in the Western Cape, Celma Marcus, secured the deal in conjunction with Virgin Active Western Cape’s account manager, Francois de Kock.

    “Datacentrix ensured that Virgin Active was fully aware of its capability and focus on customer service, and we believe that it was this commitment to a customer centric value add proposition that led to Virgin Active being a very satisfied customer,” says Marcus. She adds that the key to any successful outsourcing agreement is to appoint the right people in the right positions.

    An on-site service desk has been established at Datacentrix to receive calls from Virgin Active. Service requests are logged, resolved and a full outcome report on each request is logged in the system.

    The IT hardware support and services were originally handled in-house by Virgin Active, before the company made a business decision to outsource. Datacentrix then won the contract for the outsourced hardware support and services.

    “We also took over the existing IT hardware support engineers at Virgin Active,” says Adam Pitts, service delivery manager for Virgin Active South Africa. “Virgin Active supported this as these former employees now have career paths and formed a knowledgeable core for the Datacentrix support team.”

    Four engineers are based in Gauteng where some 40 Virgin Active clubs are operational. Other engineers are resident further afield in centres such as Durban, Cape Town, Bloemfontein and Nelspruit.

    “We are a health company and our business focus is on people and their health,” says Patrick Nightingale, national IT manager for Virgin Active South Africa. “By outsourcing our IT hardware support, we have recorded a 60% improvement in services since the beginning of June 2010, so it has been a good move.”

    Nightingale adds that while IT is a vital tool for Virgin Active, without which it could not run its business, the company’s core focus is not IT and outsourcing was seen as the way forward in the best interests of all concerned. “Datacentrix has been very responsive and supportive and there have been very few hitches in their service provision.”

    The scope of the Datacentrix service includes the installation, movement of, changes to and retirement of assets such as application software, operating software, configurations, desktop computers, printers and peripherals. It also features on-site technical assistance and error resolution, operating software assistance, hardware and replacement support to PCs, servers, card readers, play stations, disks, RAM and power supply replacement; and finally network support, including WiFi routers, switches, network cables and fly leads.

    Pitts says there is ongoing communication, monitoring and management of the support and services provided. “Quarterly reviews of services rendered are conducted and assessments of requirements and improvements for the next quarter are also undertaken.”

    Virgin Active is part of the international Virgin group owned by highly successful British entrepreneur Richard Branson and is focused on bringing positive change and improvements to its services to clients through a commitment to technology.

    Source:http://www.itweb.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=37743:datacentrix-wins-it-hardware-support-servicing-contract-from-virgin-active&catid=69&Itemid=58

  • 14 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Malaysia’s strong talent pool and advantages have placed it among the top three Shared Services Outsourcing (SSO) destinations in the world.

    Quoting this from a study by global management consulting firm AT Kearney, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak said: “Thanks to Malaysia’s multi-cultural environment, the ranking enables the

    country to offer multiple language skills and a high-value workforce capable of interacting as well as meeting the needs of customers across the globe.”

    He said there were almost 140 foreign and 60 local companies in the country now performing various SSO activities, ranging from IT and business process outsourcing to knowledge process outsourcing.

    Najib said the sectors covered by the companies included energy, chemical and resources.

    The Prime Minister was speaking at the opening of the Acre Hewlett-Packard (HP) Global Centre here yesterday.

    Built on a 25ha site, the centre will host multiple core functions such as global applications development and support, global finance support and enterprise contacts.

    It also has a state-of-the-art next-generation data centre.

    Najib said information and communications technology (ICT) was a key enabler in the country’s ambition to achieve a high-income developed nation status by 2020.

    “It is no surprise that 85 of the 131 identified entry point projects under the Economic Transform­ation Programme are driven or enabled by ICT.

    “It is our belief that to achieve these lofty goals we must be bold enough to break convention and, ultimately, strive towards creating an innovative digital divide that stimulates new technologies, outlets and opportunities.”

    Touching on the Multimedia Super Corridor (MSC) designed to leapfrog the country into the information and knowledge age, the Prime Minister said MSC Malaysia would complete its second phase this year.

    “I am happy to report that the results are more than satisfactory,” he said, adding that in 14 years, 2,500 MSC-status companies had been created with a combined contribution of more than RM35bil towards the country’s gross domestic product.

    Source: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/10/13/nation/7215561&sec=nation

  • 13 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Asia-focussed bank Standard Chartered (STAN.L) launched a $5.3 billion (3.3 billion pound) rights issue to bolster its finances for new capital rules and provide the firepower to take advantage of growth opportunities, it said.

    The bank said it made record profits and income in the third quarter and for the first nine months of the year. Income in the third quarter rose faster than the first-half run-rate and trading levels were almost back to levels of before the financial crisis, it said.

    The bank wants to boost its capital "to continue to seize opportunities across Asia, Africa and the Middle East," it said, adding that the new capital rules could have constrained its asset growth unless new capital was raised.

    Regulators, seeking to prevent the repeat of the global credit crisis, agreed last month to force banks to increase the amount of top-quality capital which they must hold in reserve.

    Standard Chartered, based in London but deriving over three quarter of its profits in Asia, follows Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE) in raising capital due to the tougher capital rules, after the flagship German lender this month raised 10.2 billion euros (9 billion pounds), in part to meet the new rules.

    StanChart said it would offer shareholders the right to buy one new share for every eight shares held at a price of 1,280p, a steep 33 percent discount to its last price in London.

    The bank's core tier one capital ratio of 9 percent at the end of June was comfortably above the new requirement of 7 percent. The rights issue will raise that level to about 11 percent, although the new capital rules will force it to apply a higher risk weighting to its assets, which could reduce that ratio by 1 percentage point, it said.

    Under the new Basel rules the definition of core tier one will be tightened so that common equity and retained earnings must make up the bulk of a bank's capital base. This means many banks' core tier one capital ratios will be substantially lower under the new rules than they are at present.

    "Basel regulations will be difficult for some Western banks and they want to jump ahead of the line in raising capital before some of the European banks do that," CLSA analyst Daniel Tabbush said. "It could be the case that Basel regulations penalise more so banks like Standard Chartered and HSBC (HSBA.L) (0005.HK) within Asia, as they are more cross-border."

    CAPITAL RULES

    StanChart said Singapore state investor Temasek TEM.UL, StanChart's biggest shareholder with about 18 percent, will support the rights issue.

    Some banks believe that to maintain a reputation for financial strength, they need to pre-empt the full impact of the new Basel III rules, which will be introduced gradually by 2019 and will redefine how the ratios are calculated.

    The new tier one requirements also mean banks have to set aside more capital to offset their underwriting activities, which StanChart has been stepping up aggressively this year.

    StanChart has been particularly active in Asia, where it has been involved on underwriting big loan deals for Bharti Airtel (BRTI.BO), Vedanta Resources (VED.L) and BHP Billiton (BLT.L), according to Reuters Basis Point.

    In August, StanChart posted a record half year profit of $3.12 billion as key markets in Asia performed well and bad debts more than halved.

    StanChart's Hong Kong-listed shares (2888.HK), which had been suspended pending an announcement following an earlier Financial Times report, were down 2 percent at HK$225.00.

    The Hong Kong portion of the offer will be priced at HK$156.82 a share.

    The capital raising could also be to send out a message that it was not up for sale, CLSA's Tabbush said.

    StanChart is up some 21 percent this year, comfortably outperforming the DJ Stoxx 600 European banking sub-index .SX7P, which is down 4 percent.

    StanChart Chief Executive Peter Sands told Reuters last month the new capital and liquidity rules for banks are complicating the economic recovery.

    He estimated trade finance costs could increase by 20 to 40 percent as a result of the Basel III rules.

    Source: http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE69C0OL20101013?pageNumber=1

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