Industry news

  • 19 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    At least £25bn can be saved for the public purse by restructuring procurement and using more shared services and outsourcing.

    The public sector could save £15bn in procurement and another £10bn through outsourcing if it follows radical plans outlined in a report released by the Institute of Directors today.

    “The economic situation demands immediate action to reduce public expenditure through implementing the proposals in this paper. There is a lot of talk among politicians about the need to introduce efficiencies into the public sector, but very little detail on how this will be done. The report we publish today provides a vital needed blueprint,” said Miles Templeman, IoD director general.

    According to the Institute different departments and bodies are allowed too much autonomy and simply allowed ‘do their own thing’ where procurement is concerned.

    “Despite some areas of excellence and good collaborative initiatives, the majority of public procurement spending is so fragmented that huge potential savings are being missed every year. This is because most of the public sector still organises itself on the “corner shop” model, with the majority of purchasing organised in small scale silos,” the report claims.

    As a consequence departments are constantly ‘reinventing the wheel’ and having to deal with contract terms and conditions, procedures, processes and interpretations of procurement law; leading to a large duplication of effort.

    "This is absolutely true, but the government has tried this previously with OGC although it hasn't been a great success. Having said this, some local initiatives have been successful, so rather than try and do it in one bite, government should try the 'eat an elephant approach' and encourage units to get together that have common issues. They could use Treasuries budgetary controls to give organisations that band together and make savings then get the "saved" money back for more projects," said Martyn Hart, chairman of the National Outsourcing Association.

    The IOD recommends that Centralised buying organisations be created to ‘handle all key supplier relationships and all national and major contracts on behalf of the whole public sector’.

    National Outsourcing Association members and those working in the public sector can attend a dedicated Public Sector Forum dedicated to transformation through outsourcing and shared services. Interested parties can sign up here.

  • 19 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Research has been coming out of the sourcing industry’s ears this week, with sector giants such as Gartner, the IOD and TPI offering up their predictions for the outsourcing sector based on extensive studies.

    Gartner published research suggesting that financial services spending on IT is on the up once more, and predicted that up to a third of banks could invest in new IT by mid-2010, while TPI indicated on Friday that the number of outsourcing contracts awarded globally should rise in 2010, as organisations look for new ways to get the most out of their business operations as the UK crawls out of recession.

    If these herald an upturn in activity and a general optimism towards the global outsourcing sector’s progression however, the IOD’s research indicated a more worrying trend in its report on Friday. It suggested that disorganised outsourcing and procurement is squandering money, and at least £25bn could be saved for the public purse by restructuring procurement and using more shared services and outsourcing.

    It’s been a busy week for Virgin, too, with big outsourcing news across two of its departments. Early in the week it was announced that Virgin Atlantic had confirmed plans to open a new call centre this autumn, creating more than 200 jobs.

    Then on Thursday, it was revealed that Virgin Trains and Capgemini were entering into a three-year multi-million pound deal, which will see the outsourcer manage the train company’s entire IT infrastructure. The impressive contract is a further renewal of a relationship between the two companies that started in 1999.

    And finally, security giant G4S could be the latest firm to reap the rewards of the outsourcing phenomena thanks to the increasing popularity of electronic tagging of criminals around the world, the company said on Wednesday. According to the company, the popular tagging trend will continue to grow as other governments outsource their requirements this year.

  • 19 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    In an economic downturn, the natural reaction of most companies is to cut costs. Following the largest global recession for a generation, revenues for many have dropped so severely that overheads, especially labour, must be reduced immediately.

    However, for companies with some financial flexibility, there is another way. By applying tighter scrutiny to investments and only implementing initiatives that generate immediate return, companies can position themselves to leap ahead of competitors when the upturn comes.

    In an ideal world, companies would do both. Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) provides a way to address both objectives, generating immediate cash while improving business flexibility, operational health and scalability for the future.

    Re-Setting Expectations

    Today’s economic reality is clearly far removed from the strong and sustained growth we experienced at the start of the decade. Real growth will be harder to achieve, even after faith returns to markets, and in many industries expectations need to be quite dramatically re-set.

    Businesses facing the toughest challenge are those with inflexible operational models, such as manufacturers, while those that can respond quickly to changes in demand or supply are in a better position to adapt and survive. In this environment, BPO’s ability to offer a fast, efficient route to flexibility and scalability has meant that the industry has continued to grow, despite the downturn.

    BPO: Spending Less To Gain More

    BPO involves handing over all or part of a particular business process to a service provider who has access to greater scale, cost efficiencies and technological capabilities, giving a valuable advantage in the marketplace while freeing up an organisation’s internal resources to focus on core capabilities.

    BPO has been called “back-office outsourcing” because it often involves processes related to traditional back office functions such as finance, accounting, payroll, and HR. However, in recent years a growing number of analytical, knowledge-based functions have begun to be outsourced, contributing to the industry’s overall growth. These tasks include: claims processing and fraud detection for insurance companies; store operations for retail companies; and clinical data management for pharmaceutical companies.

    But how can a company decide if a business process should be outsourced? The first step is to look at how competitors perform in the same area. Aggressive benchmarking and comparison can help companies to assess whether their organisation is the same, better or worse than its rivals at a particular function, and therefore determine what is most beneficial to outsource. As a result of the downturn, many companies that are currently looking to rationalise costs have already started this process.

    Generating Immediate Cash

    The first benefit that BPO offers is immediate cash and a longer-term advantage. On that critical level alone, a BPO strategy can prove attractive.

    Decreased demand has had an impact on the revenues of many companies, damaging their ability to repay debt and support overheads. BPO gives them a mechanism for immediately increasing cash flow. Traditionally, the return on outsourcing was a long-term consideration, often measured in years, if at all. Indeed, a recent survey[1] we commissioned revealed that less than half of CIOs and CFOs have ever tried to quantify the financial contribution of outsourcing to their businesses. Today, because of greater efficiencies and the ability of the large providers to offer global delivery of outsourced projects, cash flow improvements routinely happen within months. In our experience, clients can now save in the range of 30% to 60% off their baseline costs within the first year.

    For example, we worked with a leading video rental company that was going through significant restructuring in response to market changes such as the rise of video-on-demand in PCs and TV. With in-store traffic declining, a rapid reduction in overheads was required, so our aim was to achieve a major decrease in retail store support costs within six months.

    By outsourcing the systems that provide live, 24/7 support to stores in areas such as merchandising and point-of-sale systems, we were able to achieve immediate cost savings of more than 40%. We were also able to introduce productivity gains through process centralisation, improvements in workflow and call queuing, providing additional savings of 10%. As a result, the company has been able to reinvest funds into its own direct-to-consumer initiatives, strengthening its positioning in the rapidly changing consumer entertainment space.

    But what about the upfront investment in BPO? After all, the transition of knowledge associated with any BPO initiative involves execution costs for both the client and the outsourcing partner. To alleviate this, providers can now structure contracts so the cash flow benefits start immediately without an undue capital burden. With larger BPO projects it is often possible to arrange payments over the life of an outsourcing contract, allowing for more cash flexibility. Furthermore, the outsourcing partner may sometimes be willing to recoup transition costs by bundling them into the price of services rendered, which are often hourly resource-based or transaction based.

    Scaling To Demand

    Another challenge for companies as we come out of the downturn is the agility to respond to unpredictable market conditions without knowing when demand will return, or by how much. Having fixed overheads is costly during quiet periods, and conversely, service suffers during peaks of activity. Utililsing transaction-based pricing provides a solution for companies to manage these fluctuations in demand more effectively.

    One example is claims processing, which can be costly when done in-house. Because an outsourcing partner can share work from many customers across its entire workforce, it can absorb fluctuations in volume and maintain a steady demand profile, meaning that it can charge a fixed fee per claim. Similar approaches have thrived in areas such as airline seat pricing and healthcare claims processing, where seasonal spikes are common. This way, costs that were once fixed can become variable.

    Even though BPO is a well established practice, there is still a tremendous amount of potential in the back office realm. In banking, insurance, retail, manufacturing and healthcare there are still many fixed processing costs being paid, regardless of volume. Those costs can be ‘variablised’ by a BPO partner, providing a powerful competitive lever during critical periods.

    New Levels of Value

    There are a number of other major advantages that make BPO even more valuable as the world economy slowly comes out of recession.

    Firstly, BPO is an obvious way to improve business performance. In addition, given the sophistication of today’s BPO organisations, even more value is being uncovered each year as discipline, quality and speed continue to be improved by competition in the marketplace.

    Service-level agreements have also improved. In the early years of outsourcing, SLAs were normally stick-driven agreements which penalised performance that fell below the agreed-upon level. Today, they resemble stick-and-carrot agreements that offer financial incentives when vendors exceed expected performance. As a result this makes outsourcing partners an extension of the client’s own workforce, working together to achieve beyond the agreed level. When that happens, both parties benefit.

    Time to market has also decreased dramatically, because providers are now able to offer global delivery of projects, with resources covering practically all global time zones. Routinely, the same work is now done in India, Eastern Europe, Mexico and China. While companies working in-house have a window of eight hours during the work day, a global outsourcing organisation can perform the same task around the clock by as many trained people as are needed. That’s at least a 300% advantage in processing speed.

    Positioning To Win

    Many of the benefits of BPO that generate immediate advantage also help strengthen companies for the future. Low-cost operations, greater flexibility and scalability, faster time to market, greater discipline, round-the-clock processing, continuous technology development and new profit centres are all ongoing. To be able to take advantage of these possibilities in the aftermath of an economic downturn can be an extraordinary advantage as the inevitable upturn becomes reality.

    Leaders don’t stop investing in their future. According to BusinessWeek magazine’s 2009 Innovation Survey, many multinational companies, including Microsoft and GE, continue to maintain aggressive R&D spending through the downside of business cycles. BPO can yield both the cash and human resources needed for future-looking initiatives, so businesses should consider now the potential benefits that can be realised. Reallocating an organisation’s best talent to revenue-generating projects, or ones that will help drive market-share gains when the upturn comes, makes a lot of sense, especially if they can save money in the meantime.

  • 18 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Department of Defense has signed an IT outsourcing contract with CSC. As part of the contract, the outsourcing giant will provide information technology help desk services to the Department of Defense Dependents Schools-Europe (DoDDS-E).

    The contract has a one-year base period and four one-year options, bringing the estimated total five year value to $27 million.

    DoDDS-E provides instruction to more than 35,000 school-age children of active duty military and civilian employees at 81 schools located in Portugal, Bahrain, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Turkey and the United Kingdom.

  • 18 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Data Security Council of India is planning on introducing a certification mark for the country’s outsourcing industry to help with global competition.

    Under the proposal, DSCI is also planning to implement data security and privacy in some of the country’s largest IT companies.

    DSCI Chairman, Shyamal Ghosh said: “The initiative will help create a USP for the IT sector where countries like the Philippines and Kazakhstan are catching up fast at the lower end of the market. This will give India a competitive edge globally.”

  • 18 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    HCL has struck a deal with healthcare technology provider Wellogic to provide interoperability and health records management solutions to the global healthcare market.

    The technology will leverage HCL's professional services and cloud computing resources to help clients adopt and operate Wellogic's market leading health information exchange, electronic health record, and personal health record solutions.

    “With this new partnership, HCL with further strengthen it healthcare service offerings in the US, Indian, and other global markets with proven yet leading edge solutions and bundled services to help solve important challenges faced by healthcare organizations,” said Pradep Nair, Senior Vice President - Healthcare, HCL.

  • 18 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Virgin Trains and Capgemini are entering into a three-year multi-million pound contract which will see Capgemini manage the train company’s entire IT infrastructure, it was announced today.

    The contract is a further renewal of a relationship between the two companies that started in 1999.

    Under the deal, Capgemini will look after financial and key operational systems such as train and crew scheduling and rostering, and the catering management system.

    It also includes desktop and laptop management and support services for approximately 1,000 Virgin Trains staff at 42 locations across the UK.

    Francis Jellings, Head of IT at Virgin Trains, said: “We continue to be impressed by the quality of the Capgemini people working with us and by their ability to work in full collaboration with our own teams.

    “They have an excellent appreciation of our business and IT needs and I am pleased that we are to work with them for a further three years.”

  • 18 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The recession has created a clear divide between SME customer service success and failure, according to a Cisco survey.

    Out of the 1,000 business polled in the survey, 57 per cent had refocused their business on customers to steer their way out of recession, while the remaining 43 per cent had failed to implement changes which would enhance customer loyalty.

    Nearly one third of businesses agreed that customers are more likely to shop around than they were 12 months ago, underlining the need to focus on customers. Social media has also helped UK business engage more effectively, with 43 per cent of those using sites such as YouTube and Twitter to communicate seeing a growth in custom as a result.

    David Critchley, head of SME and commercial for Cisco UK and Ireland, said the results indicate that ‘customer kings’ will thrive in 2010, by ‘remodelling their business around the needs of their customers, embracing new technology, routes to market, and ways of communicating with their audiences, these customer kings are set to thrive in 2010’.

  • 17 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Security giant G4S has predicted that it will benefit from the increasing popularity of electronic tagging of criminals around the world.

    According to the company the tagging trend, popular in Britain, will continue to grow as other governments outsource their requirements this year.

    Chief executive Nick Buckles said budget pressures meant governments are cutting spending and the firm was poised to scoop big contracts.

    “Other countries are starting to adopt the UK's approach to outsourcing,” he said.

    “The initial service that tends to be contracted out is electronic tagging, because it's seen as politically acceptable — it's a major growth area. And if we win those contracts, bigger ones to supply prison security and manage immigration centres will often follow.”

  • 17 Mar 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Revenue growth is in decline for many telcos, and slowing for those in emerging markets, even though the economic downturn hasn’t resulted in the expected downward pressure on top lines, research has indicated.

    A global consumer survey conducted recently by Ovum’s parent company Datamonitor revealed that over a quarter of consumers surveyed indicated that they either would, or consider cutting back on their telecoms spending, with a further 24 per cent undecided. When asked which services they would look to cut back on, over 30 per cent indicated that they would consider downsizing their mobile phone tariff, while 24 per cent saw fixed voice as an area where they could make cuts.

    Ovum believes those that prudently managed their finances during the downturn will grow, but should be wary of initiating M&A programs designed solely to grow top-line revenues. Targeted mergers, acquisitions and partnerships that fill key skill-set gaps will be the flavour of telecoms going forward.

    Ovum’s principal analyst Clare McCarthy said “While the recession accelerated revenue decline, challenges such as market saturation, increased competition and regulatory intervention on roaming and termination rates won’t disappear just because the economy picks up”.

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