Industry news

  • 27 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    U. S. General Services Administration (GSA) has signed a five-year IT outsourcing contract with CGI Federal, a wholly-owned U.S. operating subsidiary of CGI Group Inc. The contract has an estimated value of US$32 million and will see CGI data centre hosting and providing application management support to GSA's Integrated Financial System.

    As part of this contract CGI will provide hosting services for Pegasys, GSA’s financial management shared service for federal agencies. CGI will also manage a billing and accounts programme which supports more than 5,500 geographically dispersed users and 4,000 external customers across the United States.

  • 27 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Middlesex University has signed a five-year contract with IBM to upgrade and manage its IT infrastructure and provide disaster recovery services. The contract is part of Middlesex University’s enhanced efficiency goals and future IT strategy.

    Under the agreement, IBM will implement a hosted, virtualised server and storage environment and provide emergency back-up from a further IBM data centre, enabling a robust disaster recovery system.

    The University will also see a reduction in the power and space requirements of its on campus machine rooms, helping it to meet government energy saving targets. By using a variety of virtualisation systems the University will reduce the number of machines from around 250 to 25 at the primary data centre. Electricity usage will be cut by 40 percent, from around 47 kW/hour to 27 kW/hour and physical space requirements from approximately 1,000 square feet to 400 square feet.

    Steve Knight, Deputy Vice-Chancellor at Middlesex University, explained, “We need a system that allows flexibility according to our changing requirements and this solution does just that. We were looking for a platform solution to compliment our longer term plans to achieve a dynamic infrastructure. In IBM we have a found a partner who shares our technology vision and can help us achieve our strategic goals.”

    Paula Vickers, Pro Vice-Chancellor and Director of Computing and Communication Systems Service at Middlesex, said, “We needed to upgrade our existing hardware and were looking for a solution that offered reliable, modern, scalable infrastructure to underpin the University’s business systems and activities. A key requirement was a solution that also helped reduce our carbon footprint through the deployment of modern, energy-saving hardware.”

  • 26 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Daimler Financial Services (DFS), headquartered in Berlin, has extended its contract with CGI Group Inc., a provider of end-to-end information technology and business process services, for an additional five years.

    Markus Sontheimer, Director of IT Financial Services and Sales at DFS commented: “DFS is pleased to extend this contract and looks forward to a much improved business partnership with CGI, especially with its new upgraded status as a Preferred Supplier.” He continued; “CGI has been a long term partner of DFS and we will further develop our working relationship to share our goals and provide quality services. We expect to maximise on CGI’s knowledge and expertise and work together to help DFS remain the first choice provider of financial services for our dealers and customers.”

  • 26 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The federal government's Student Loan Programs has awarded a contract extension to Affiliated Computer Services, Inc. (ACS) for a further 12 months. The extension from the U.S. Department of Education is valued at $200 million and will support servicing and collection during 2010.

    ACS now enters the seventh year of the Common Services for Borrowers contract. Under this contract, ACS provides services including new loan bookings, loan consolidations, collection services, mailroom, customer care and payment processing.

    This is the second consecutive contract extension given to ACS who have been managing the business operations of $175 billion in student loans to more than 12 million borrowers.

  • 23 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    EquaTerra, the sourcing advisory firm, is inviting end-users within the outsourcing industry to participate in this year’s Service Provider Performance Study. Those responsible for managing outsourcing contracts in their organisations are invited to be a part of the survey which aims to provide independent, in-depth analysis of information technology and business process outsourcing service provider performance.

    In return for completing the questionnaire participants will receive:

    *A free copy of the findings report and are invited to a roundtable event to hear the findings presented.

    *Year on Year trending of data over the last four years across all metrics.

    *Strengths and Weaknesses of service providers from the perspective of the survey respondents.

    *Independent “real life” view of service providers from CIO’s and managers of outsourcing contracts and their peers.

    The survey is open until 30 October and the results will be published in November. For further information and to participate in the study visit the website.

  • 23 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The City of Santa Clara, California, has signed a contract with Unisys Corporation to provide information technology (IT) and application outsourcing services. The five-year contract has an estimated value of approximately $20 million. The city can extend the contract for an additional two years at its discretion. Under the contract, Unisys will provide a full range of IT management and support and application services for the city government.

    The Unisys services will support 15 city departments, administrative offices and utilities, helping more than 1,000 end users serve the city’s 117,000 residents more effectively.

    Gaurav Garg, Director of Information Technology, City of Santa Clara explained; “The City of Santa Clara has a new vision for the way IT can add value to the business of municipal government,” He continued, “We want to see IT management services and expertise available on demand, wherever and whenever needed, to serve continually changing initiatives and public-service priorities.”

  • 23 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    This week has been a tumultuous one for politics and outsourcing alike. The BNP were invited on the BBC’s Question Time for the first time ever, as a result of it’s European election win, whilst ITV’s Tonight program investigated the sale of British medical records offshore in India. All of this has put, race, culture and immigration on the political agenda. Whist this could have numerous benefits, it does inevitably put the image of the foreign ‘Other’ in the media. This poses the question: What effect will this have on outsourcing, and in particular offshoring?

    In respect to Monday night’s ITV investigative reporting show Tonight, the NOA Offshoring Director, Mark Kobayashi Hillary, aimed to set the record straight by insisting the expose was a data issue not an outsourcing issue. He commented “It’s useful for programmes like Tonight to be exposing these crimes, but not to disparage a largely trusted and successful outsourcing and offshoring industry. It’s important that this is understood to be a data crime, not an offshoring crime.” Hopefully the programme will not have harmed the hard the already perilous reputation of offshoring. No one wants to hear more of the protectionist sentiment that has played the media year.

    On the issue of Britain, racist politics and how this will impact offshoring, the effects remain to be seen. The UK media has chastised the BNP leader and have described his views as unacceptable, unlawful, and more poignantly, un-British. The Round-Up can only hope that the BNP leader’s lack of support from the British public will translate in the way the UK continues to conduct its sourcing business.

    It is also encouraging to see new outsourcing deals are coming thick and fast into sourcingfocus.com’s mailbox.

    Simmons & Simmons, an international law firm announced a 12 month agreement with Integreon to provide legal process outsourcing. This is an outsourcing agreement that sees Integreon supporting the legal firm from its facilities in Mumbai (India).

    There was also a deal struck this week between the City of Santa Clara and Unisys. The world-wide company will provide information technology and application outsourcing services to the Californian city. The five-year contract has an estimated value of approximately $20 million. Under the contract, Unisys will provide a full range of IT management and support and application services for the city government.

    So far, so good, as far as offshoring and outsourcing goes. Let’s hope it continues to go from strength to strength, despite the ramblings of some how misguided politicians.

  • 22 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has signed a blanket purchase agreement (BPA) with CSC for information technology (IT) support. CSC is one of seven companies signed up to the BPA which has a seven-year performance period and an estimated maximum total value of $955 million for all firms.

    Under the terms of the agreement, CSC will compete for task orders to provide services, including server and storage management, computing, geospatial support, IT security, call centre operations, telecommunications and video conferencing.

  • 22 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Despite these straightened economic times, compliance issues are still driving offshoring in the financial services sector and enterprises need to be sure they have the most efficient, and cost-effective, outsourcing strategy. For many this is a new opportunity to examine how the business works and improve it, to get it into a position where it can best take advantage of the upturn when it comes. But where are the top destinations, the most effective people and the greatest value for money?

    The UK financial services sector sees itself as a mature market, because of the high levels of competition and international knowledge collected together in the City of London. Outsourcing for these firms is often just seen as procuring cheap people, rather than experienced knowledge workers who augment the local team. This attitude does not allow banks to get the best from their outsourcing deals. Although it may surprise many UK banks, Spain is emerging as a new, cost-effective and yet highly knowledgeable centre for skilled financial sector consultants. Perhaps large UK banks should now be asking themselves whether they have something to gain from the Spanish experience.

    Once derided as an over-cautious approach to retail banking, the Spanish strategy has embraced the challenges of compliance, risk and IT investment which the UK has been guilty of putting off until the proverbial tomorrow. This over-caution may have stood the banks in good stead when it came to weathering the recent economic storm.

    The system’s experience of complying with strict regulation has its origins in the Spanish government’s response to the fallout from reckless industry loans in the 1980s. These included tighter central bank control, a ban on off-balance vehicles and an insistence on making extra provision during boom times. Rather than being seen as an obligation, compliance was instead viewed as providing significant benefits with respect to financial performance, operational excellence and business relationships with partners.

    Although the smaller banks suffered considerably from bad loans to the property sector, in terms of risk management the larger Spanish banks took a strategic approach, creating well-remunerated and long-term risk committees. As Emilio Botín (Chairman of Banco Santander) commented last year, “[risk management] consumes a lot of our directors’ time. But we find it essential. And it is never too much.”

    In addition, and in stark contrast to the UK, real-time banking, rather than next day (mañana) reconciliation has already arrived in Spain. Strategic investment in modern platforms means that the consumer has access to real time reconciliation of their personal financial information, via multiple channels, including the ATM.

    The experience of the last twenty years has created a knowledgeable workforce in the Spanish financial sector. One which Forrester identified in its Spotlight on Spain[1] report, where it recommends the country’s “large, well-qualified IT labor pool [and] world-class vertically-focussed services resources”. Noting the rise of Spain as an outsourcing destination, Forrester goes on to suggest that the country is an ideal nearshore complement for European firms outsourcing to India, or a first step for those new to outsourcing.

    As the outsourcing sector in India increasingly suffers from attrition, wage inflation and skills shortages, its cost advantages are beginning to narrow against European rates. For the financial sector, Spain’s banking experience and strong cultural and linguistic ties with Latin America allow the potential to scale. This makes Barcelona, plus somewhere like São Paulo in Brazil, an effective alternative to India or Eastern Europe.

    Successful outsourcers know that the so-called soft costs, such as travel time to the offshore destination, the impact of distant time zones and cultural differences, can have a significant effect on budgets. Correspondingly, close proximity and real-time collaboration can generate cost-efficiencies, reducing management overheads, travel costs and the need for repeated internal change requirements.

    Forrester does not see outsourcing going away, claiming “there is no doubt that interest in remote IT delivery is on the rise”. So perhaps UK banks could benefit from tapping into the Spanish outsourcing solution and considering a new approach to compliance, risk management and investment in technology platforms? UK financial institutions need not adopt Spanish practices wholesale, but it’s time to face these issues, which the sector has postponed for years. City financial institutions could finally shake off their mañana approach to efficient banking and, during this difficult economic period, take advantage of the expertise and knowledge of their Spanish counterparts, through outsourcing.

  • 21 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Toyota Boshoku Europe, global automotive manufacturer, has chosen Atos Consulting, the global consulting practice of Atos Origin, to design and implement its European finance shared service centre. The new contract is part of Toyota's expansion in Europe. As a result of this project, Toyota Boshoku Europe will build its corporate core Finance solution, harmonizing financial reporting and reducing period closing lead-times.

    Atsushi Toyoshima, Chairman & CEO of Toyota Boshoku Europe N.V. commented: “We have chosen Atos Consulting for its ability to lead international projects, and for its demonstrated expertise and capacity for innovation with Oracle solutions. With the leverage of Oracle Business Accelerators, Atos Consulting has been able to reduce implementation time from 18 to nine months, and deliver a complete solution for three countries."

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