Industry news

  • 15 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Road and infrastructure support contractor Mouchel has confirmed today that it has “unanimously rejected” two takeover bids from rival outsourcing firm VT Group.

    The takeover rejection came as the VT Group put forward potential offers at around the 250p a share mark, although above the current price at around 240p the rival’s offer was far below Mouchel’s year trading highs of more than 384p.

    The Surrey based company said these approaches were “wholly inadequate and at a level which substantially undervalues the company”.

    Following the news, Mouchel shares have soared 28 per cent and whilst VT group responded to the announcement saying it is “continuing to review its options”, Mouchel believes the group still remains interested in pursuing a future transaction.

  • 15 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Public sector services company Serco has announced it expects double-digit revenue growth in advance of its 2009 year-end results. The company also predicts overall growth of up to ten per cent, it revealed in a statement today.

    In February, it forecast revenue would increase to about £5bn and adjusted operating profit margin to 6.3 percent by the end of 2012, excluding material acquisitions, disposals and currency effects.

    In a pre-AGM statement, Serco said: “The significant challenges facing our customers are driving their need to improve the efficiency and productivity of essential services, which together with our strong capabilities, gives us confidence in our prospects for the future.”

    Martyn Hart, NOA Chairman, said: “2010 should be a good year for companies serving the public sector such as Serco. Those delivering public services will be doing a lot more outsourcing in 2010 as they struggle to slash their outgoings whilst keeping the public happy.”

    Serco’s full year results will be published on 26 February.

  • 15 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Barack Obama’s recent decision to initiate a US troop ‘surge’ in Afghanistan has received support in the UK from both the Labour party and the Conservatives, and the UK’s own funding for military operations in Afghanistan may increase in the short term. It appears therefore that even in the context of major cuts in public spending generally, there are certain areas where, for special reasons, political parties are willing to maintain or increase the level of public expenditure.

    The challenge for UK politicians is that Afghanistan is not the only area where there is pressure to commit additional resource. The UK’s National Audit Office (NAO) recently issued a report entitled “Commercial skills for complex government projects”. In this report the NAO highlighted that value for money on major government projects valued at around £200 billion is at risk because of weaknesses in commercial skills and expertise in government departments. Should there be a ‘surge’ in commercial resources on complex government projects, in light of this report?

    In the current economic and political climate additional spending on commercial resources appears unlikely. In May this year, for example, HM Treasury announced, as part of its ‘Operational Efficiency Programme’, details of a plan to significantly reduce spending on back-office operations, including commercial functions. More recently the Government announced its intention to achieve ‘efficiency savings’ of £12 billion a year in departmental spending by 2013/14. Requests by project teams for additional commercial support may be met with a frosty reception in light of this.

    However, the Government should think carefully before cutting back commercial resource on complex projects. The NAO suggests in its report that the resource reductions envisaged in the Operational Efficiency Programme could “potentially conflict with the need to invest in staff with the commercial skills to deliver complex projects”. Government departments are frequently criticised for entering into major contracts on complex projects which do not deliver value for money. This failure is often due to inadequate commercial input at the procurement stage. Even if sufficient commercial expertise does exist during procurements, it is not always available post-contract when contract management skills are required. An unwanted ‘less is more’ position often arises as a result: limiting spending on commercial resource can lead to greater cost overall on complex projects.

    The NAO does not advocate a ‘surge’ in the sense of simply throwing additional resource at the problems identified. Although it does raise concerns over reductions in commercial resources, the NAO’s overall message is directed at ‘surgery’ on the existing government commercial function: using what already exists more effectively. Indeed, spending on certain types of commercial expertise may be cut if the NAO has its way. To fill gaps in their internal commercial teams, government departments employ substantial numbers of temporary staff and consultants. The NAO suggests that government departments should implement staff retention strategies for complex projects and apply a cross-departmental approach to commercial resource needs, including facilitating secondments between departments. As a result, gaps in internal commercial resource could potentially be reduced, leaving less room for consultants and contractors.

    In addition, re-use and standardisation are advocated by the NAO. Standard project methodologies and standard form contracts are already common on government projects. The NAO’s view is that the use of standard approaches should be increased. In a similar vein, increased levels of joint working between the Office for Government Commerce (OGC) and government departments are encouraged, to ensure that departments are making the best use of the OGC’s initiatives and are avoiding duplication of effort.

    Implementation of the NAO’s recommendations will not be easy. Joint-working between departments and sharing of resource will require a degree of cultural change. Equally, standardised processes and contracts can be very blunt instruments. Government commercial teams, for example, often find themselves locked in negotiations with suppliers over so-called ‘standard’ contracts and spend long periods amending the terms to fit the needs of the project in question. Standardisation has to be implemented intelligently in order to achieve the right result.

    In any event, the NAO’s recommendations will achieve little if there are significant cuts in the commercial resources available for complex projects. The concern is that any such resource cuts could prove to be a false economy, resulting in further cost-overruns and inefficiency on complex government projects, and could leave the Government no closer to meeting its targeted spending reductions. A dramatic ‘surge’ in commercial expertise may not be needed. However, a measured ‘spend to save’ approach to departmental commercial resource coupled with intelligent implementation of the NAO’s recommendations may bring major benefits for complex projects and achieve significant cost savings.

  • 14 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

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  • 14 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    By Dr Roger Newman, head of UK manufacturing and digital convergence relationship management at Mahindra Satyam

    Many companies have outsourced and off shored their IT service requirements and from all the research I have read, most of them are successful. More importantly people are becoming more successful over time as they learn lessons, either from their own experiences or through industry best practice. As companies become more mature at handling outsource suppliers the suppliers have had to respond and deliver ever increasing benefits; one of the positive effects of a very competitive market.

    Having successfully outsourced IT Services, companies are now turning their attention to other Back Office processes. Many processes in functions like HR and Finance cannot be considered ‘core’ or strategic enough to justify keeping them in-house. At Mahindra Satyam we are finding that customers are turning to us for a wide range of non-core back office services such as; Line balancing of assembly lines, development of art work for packaging, claims processing and so on. As with IT services the benefits of outsourcing this kind of work are considerable and include;

    a) Cost reduction

    b) Improved quality & standardisation

    c) Continuous improvement & innovation

    d) Freeing up management time.

    The disciplines required to outsource Back Office processes are similar to those required for outsourcing IT services. Of course the vendor landscape is different and the internal stakeholders may be different but the best practices are the same.

    Although the Back Office processes may not be core or strategic they are still vital to the well being of the company and their effective execution underpin the company’s reputation and productivity. If they are not executed effectively everybody in the organisation gets to know about it very quickly. These processes directly affect the customer, the staff and the management stakeholders. Your CFO may welcome the cost reductions that outsourcing will bring but if in outsourcing his function, there is any degradation of service you may have to start looking for another job.

    In summary back office processes can be successfully outsourced, the benefits are strong but we must learn from industry best practice and not get lured into thinking that this is anymore straightforward or easy that outsourcing IT services. As we move into 2010 I am sure that we will see a strengthening of the trend to outsource ‘the whole stack’ of a Back Office process.

    For example a company may ask a vendor to manage the IT Infrastructure, the IT applications and actually process the business process transactions e.g. a firm may monitor the hardware that the Oracle Financials application runs on, it will maintain the application and have staff entering the invoices into the system. This gives the outsourcer the opportunity to look at the complete picture and offer deeper benefits. Often this is governed by a contract that is based on outcome pricing e.g. a price per invoice processed. This does not mean that companies have to sacrifice the benefits of multi sourcing (see my views on the key to a successful multisourcing strategy at http://www.sourcingfocus.com/index.php/site/featureitem/1984). This is a trend towards deeper, vertical outsourcing e.g. everything in a particular process rather than outsourcing all processes to one supplier.

  • 14 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Mphasis, the fifth largest BPO operator in India, is opening a centre in Colombo to offer legal, finance and accounting services.

    The centre, which will be operational from next year, will recruit an additional 600 people in the first year to join the company’s 34,000 existing employees and then a further 2,000 in the subsequent three years. The expansion is said to come as a sign that the economic downturn is ending, officials said.

    The international BPO industry has been hit by a global slump, with much of the industry in Europe and North America drying up due to inward looking policies forced upon the private sector by governments to save local jobs.

    Gopinathan Padmanathan, president of applications at Mphasis said: "We have a fairly well established global footprint and with the Colombo office we are expanding it further. After completing the due diligence Mphasis were really confident."

  • 14 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    United Utilities is selling off its metering, waste treatment and connections BPO business, according to reports.

    On the back of a spate of recent outsourcing divestments, the UK’s largest listed water company is expecting bids of up to £500 million.

    The company is reported to have hired investment bank JP Morgan Cazenove to oversee the auction as part of a wide-ranging asset disposal.

    In the last week United has also sold minority stakes in Northern Gas Networks and the Manila Water Company raising approximately £130 million. The company also plans to sell its last non-regulated businesses in the UK, Australia and the Middle East, which could raise another £270 million.

    Chris Gayner of the Shared Service Outsourcing Network (SSON), said: “This is not what we normally associate with core outsourcing services but the specialised custom BPO services provide potential suitors with a route into utilities and the opportunity to provide further services.”

    “It would not surprise me if the services were combined with a broader outsourcing offering specialised for Utility Companies.”

    United has not yet issued a statement on the report.

  • 14 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    BP is outsourcing its telecommunications infrastructure in a multi-million pound deal, with the aim of reducing costs by up to £1bn in the current financial year.

    The energy company signed a five-year deal with T-Systems this week, which will see the IT services arm of Deutsche Telekom take over the management of its voice and data communications infrastructure, and manage BP’s contracts with external suppliers.

    Meanwhile, BP has signed a parallel deal with Siemens Enterprise Communications, which will provide managed voice and conference services.

    The twin deals come as yet another signal that outsourcing activity is returning after a slow year in the industry, according to informationage.com

  • 14 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    UK companies have revealed their satisfaction with the performance of IT service providers has increased to record levels this year, as has their ability to manage their outsourcing contracts.

    The amount of outsourcing has also increased and looks set to increase further in 2010, according to this year’s Information Technology Outsourcing (ITO) Service Provider Performance and Satisfaction Study carried out by business advisory firm EquaTerra.

    UK ITO buyer companies rated Capgemini (79 per cent), Cognizant (79 per cent) and Computacenter (78 per cent) as the top three service providers for client satisfaction scores in this year’s study.

    The bottom three were HP/EDS (59 per cent), Verizon Business (58 per cent) and CSC (51 per cent).

    Martyn Hart, chairman of the National Outsourcing Association, added: “The shift identified in this study is symptomatic of the changing nature of outsourcing relationships.”

    “End users are now looking for IT partners that will advise, push back with ideas and innovate. As IT continues to become more central to businesses operation, those suppliers that can offer a higher-value service will see increasing success.”

  • 14 Dec 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Emerging market suppliers are gaining traction with organisations as they seek to mitigate risks through expanded global sourcing networks, it has been revealed. These six emerging markets are Brazil, Central and Eastern Europe, Israel, Mexico, Philippines and South Africa.

    The news comes from Everest, a global consulting and research firm, which has completed a new study examining key emerging market suppliers that have achieved meaningful operating scale and, through investments in delivery capabilities and adopting industry best practices, are successfully serving Global 1000 corporations.

    Suppliers profiled in the study are CPM Braxis (Brazil), EPAM Systems (Central and Eastern Europe), Ness Technologies (Israel), Softtek (Mexico), SPi Global Solutions (Philippines) and Merchants (South Africa).

    Amneet Singh, Vice President,Global Sourcing Everest, said: “Recent world events, supplier scandals and other factors have prompted organizations to take more sophisticated approaches to risk management that go beyond performance management of their engagements. Now, they are considering the entire sourcing ecosystem, as well as a collective portfolio of suppliers, to not only diversify locations but also meet increased demands for global services delivery networks.”

    Visit the Everest website to view the full study.

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