Industry news

  • 16 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Hot off the press, the Round Up can reveal some of the results of the 2009 National Outsourcing Awards for Best Practice in Outsourcing (NOAA’s). Having managed to bag an invitation to this year’s event, the Round Up has hot-footed it into the office to divulge the outsourcing stars of 2009.

    AstraZeneca alongside their service provider Cognizant won the End-User of the Year Award. They managed to secure this win through their management and delivery of Astrazeneca’s end-to-end clinical data management processes. This is not the first time that Cognizant has come to our attention this week. They hit the trade press after the news that they were acquiring UBS India Centre Private Limited (UBS ISC). If they play their cards right we may be hearing about the progress of this BPO, KPO and IT deal in next year’s awards.

    Another company to hit both the news and the awards this week was service provider IBM, who prevailed in the award for Innovation in Outsourcing. They received this momentous accolade as a result of their work with CLS Bank International. During the week IBM also announced a new ten year contract with Korea Investment & Securities Co. Ltd. Party animals by night, BPO providers to the financial industry by day.

    The NOAA’s also awarded NHS Shared Business Services, Capgemini, Capita, Firstsouce, Exigent, Brodies, Stephenson Harwood, Consolve Consulting and the Philippines.

    So how will the outsourcing industry fare this year? Well, by all accounts. According to Equaterra, outsourcing is rising above the economic storm. This week they released a study that reported demand and pipeline growth as a direct result of price competition stabalising. Although the vast majority of users are still all about cost, Equaterra put forward predictions of an upturn and more investments into innovation and new technology. Let’s hope that this is the case. Who knows who will triumph as the shining beacon within outsourcing in 2010? If I get my way, hopefully I will be able to tell you!

  • 16 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    As customers we demand a good service from any organisation that we come into contact with. If we don’t receive it, we’re more likely than ever to share our frustrations with our increasingly connected peers. This will over time, define the organisation in the minds of its customers or in the case of public sector organisations, its citizens.

    Of course ‘good customer service’ is just a helpful label that can mask a myriad of complex interactions – from the first contact with a customer through to an after sales issue resolution and everything in between. Given this complexity, delivering a consistently good experience will always be challenging so how do some organisations manage to make this look effortless while others struggle to keep pace with their customers’ expectations?

    Vertex recently commissioned an Ipsos MORI research study to find out why this gap exists. We asked consumers to share their experiences of contacting organisations across a range of different sectors and to highlight the issues that they were witnessing. The research confirmed a fragmented picture with the discovery that some organisations are outpacing their peers. In fact, a majority of consumers told us that they find the high street retail environment delivers better customer service than any other sector including its online cousin with 68% claiming it to be ‘fairly good’ or ‘very good’. This is in sharp contrast to Central Government agencies, which are rated ‘fairly good’ or ‘very good’ by only 28% of respondents.

    What makes retailers so good at customer service? In our view one of the biggest differentiators between retailers and other sectors is the way in which they embrace the insights that good customer data can provide.

    Take online shopping where customers often receive tailored reminders about products or services they might have forgotten to add to their baskets on each visit. This approach – facilitating better experience - is now being adopted elsewhere. We are all used to airlines offering travel insurance when flights are booked or music stores making recommendations based on past purchases. When this kind of customer engagement is delivered in an appropriate way it is seamless, helpful and customer loyalty is increased.

    Smart use of customer data can go further still. If, for example, an insurance company knows that a customer has both household and car insurance through them, they are better placed to price the risk of insuring a second car whilst better understanding the customer’s value to the company and the potential for cross or upsell of other products and services. It is also easier to intervene around renewal dates, lock in loyalty and of course save money along the way.

    This data-centric approach has significant appeal but it is not without its challenges. Firstly there are the obvious technical questions – can we deploy the appropriate infrastructure, are our people skilled to use this information and what underlying technologies are needed to capture and then deliver the analysis? Typically, businesses focus time and resources around these critical infrastructure hurdles and build solid, reliable IT platforms. But to leap to a technology-led solution without first considering the wider customer engagement requirements would be to overlook one of the most fundamental pieces of the jigsaw – the end beneficiary.

    These ‘softer’ challenges require a different set of skills and a fundamentally new way of examining the way in which organisations interact with their customers. The key questions that must be posed here are: how can we engage with our customers in a way that improves their experience whilst delivering greater efficiencies and improved loyalty and acquisition whilst reassuring them our use of data is appropriate? Beyond this it asks businesses to scrutinise how ready willing and able it is to learn from and respond to the insights this data yields.

    These are significant challenges. If an organisation builds its business around data it will quickly amass significant quantities of information. If it misuses this – intentionally or by accident - for example by calling a customer to try and sell them a service when they’ve specifically asked to be contacted via email rather than over the phone - customers will quickly lose confidence. Of course some organisations handle much more sensitive data than others and here the potential risks are magnified. In every situation organisations must choose where to ringfence data that will never be shared, even internally, and how to appropriately convey this policy to its customers.

    Our research brought this challenge into stark relief. While we found retailers and financial services companies are seen as the most trustworthy when it comes to protecting personal information, significant concerns remains with around a third still claiming they are ‘untrustworthy’. This lack of trust rises to an incredible 55% for Central Government agencies.

    So how can organisations gain customers trust so that they open up the channels of communication and offer the company their personal data? The key is being transparent in explaining why you are collecting information, what you plan to use it for and the benefit it will bring the customer. Organisations need to demonstrate that the customer will benefit through closer collaboration by offering special deals or more targeting marketing and promotional offers.

    Improving customer insight data doesn’t necessarily mean companies capturing more data. The first step is to analyse and then use the data already held and in our experience this can be as straightforward as overlaying an organisation’s existing interactions with the customer to build a more accurate picture of their requirements.

    Greater insight can also be generated by leveraging new technology - an excellent example of which is speech analytics. By analysing the specific words used and their frequency on a customer call it is possible to identify the reasons why a customer called. As a result, organisations have the chance to address the underlying root causes and make the overall customer experience both more pleasurable and more cost effective.

    As the quality and visibility of data improves organisations can begin to build a single view of the customer. Then, with all the information about each customer in one place, they can start to offer more joined-up service and tailored offers that improve the experience to customers and the capability for the business.

  • 16 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    By Alex Blues, Head of IT Sourcing at PA Consulting Group

    If you will forgive my leap onto the doom and gloom bandwagon, a recent Gartner report predicted that the IT services market will decrease by 1.7% in 2009, compared to a 6% increase in 2007. Furthermore, there will be no major recovery in IT spend until after 2012.

    However, it should be remembered that behind those statistics, not every area will be affected equally severely – certain areas will suffer more or less than others. According to Gartner, consulting and systems integration will be hit hard, while process improvement, due to its nature of typically being driven by the business, won’t be.

    And apparently, nor will outsourcing.

    My concern though is that this apparent safety will result in outsourcing industry remaining complacent, as the step change in thinking, strategy and approach – which has often been called for but remains an accepted failing of outsourcing – will not be deemed necessary and therefore will not happen.

    So, if Gartner is right, perhaps the recession will be good for the outsourcing industry as it will not be challenged. But for exactly this reason, the recession may actually harm outsourcing as the lack of challenge will allow a blind wandering through the slumped economy, without having to get fitter and leaner like the rest of the market.

    I believe that the outsourcing industry needs this step change, and so two concepts urgently need to be adopted.

    Firstly, ‘Outomation’ – the natural convergence of Outsourcing and Business Process Automation.

    Many industries have already made the leap to automate, such as the automotive industry in the 1980s, and it is from here that we must learn our lessons. Outomation preaches, amongst other concepts, that development costs are shared with competitors, that shared and virtualised infrastructures are deployed and that the business becomes location independent. However, far from achieving this, outsourcing is still struggling just to move to the level where the emphasis is on growing and transforming the business, rather than just running it.

    Secondly, there is an urgent need for suppliers to consolidate and collaborate so as to share the advances made for the benefit of their service offerings and the industry as a whole. In good times, this is unlikely to be even considered, but the deeper the recession and its impact, the quicker it will be forced to happen as we have recently seen in the financial services industry..

    So, counter-intuitively, I hope the outsourcing industry will be affected by the recession. But just enough so as to have a significant impact on how services are delivered, to encourage suppliers to re-think their approach and to finally embrace the changes that other industries have made and seen succeed.

  • 15 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The U.S. Department of Treasury’s Office for the Controller of the Currency (OCC) has signed a US $30 million contract with EDS, an HP company, to maintain end-user computing resources in order to improve the overall user experience for the agency's workforce.

    Under the agreement, EDS will provide workplace services support and deploy HP desktops and accessories. EDS will also aim to consolidate the number of desktops and help meet the needs of OCC employees by providing solutions tailored to improve productivity, simplify remote access and reduce support costs.

    OCC charters, regulates and supervises national banks to ensure a safe, sound and competitive banking system that supports both the citizens and the economy of the United States. The contract will enable OCC’s mobile bank examiners to be more productive in regulating and supervising 1,600 national banks and 50 federal branches of foreign banks in the United States, which account for nearly two-thirds of the total assets of all U.S. commercial banks.

  • 15 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Cognizant has signed a definitive agreement to acquire UBS India Service Centre Private Limited (UBS ISC), the Hyderabad, India-based captive service provider to the UBS Group.

    As part of the transaction, UBS and Cognizant have entered into a multi-year services agreement under which Cognizant will provide a range of business process outsourcing (BPO), knowledge process outsourcing (KPO), IT, and remote infrastructure management services to UBS divisions around the globe. Undertaking the service agreement will enable UBS to reduce time-to-market, expand service delivery, and enhance productivity, operational efficiency, and quality.

    UBS' experience in wealth management, investment banking, asset management, research, and remote IT infrastructure management will help Cognizant strengthen its business and knowledge process capabilities, extend its financial services domain knowledge, and support its capabilities to provide integrated services across consulting, technology, and outsourcing.

    Ulrich Körner, Group Chief Operating Officer of UBS AG, commented: “Cognizant’s broad banking and financial services expertise and its cultural fit with UBS complement the competencies provided by the India Service Centre today, while providing technology capabilities that expand the services we can buy from India and support our cost savings, efficiency and flexibility objectives.”

  • 15 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    For those of you who missed last week's entertaining insight into the world of outsourcing at Mark Kobayashi-Hillary's book launch, do not fear. Mark, the most prolific blogger, author and networker in the industry, has kindly donated a signed copy of his book for us to give away. The book brings together almost three years of Mark's Computing blog, Talking Outsourcing, and charts the years of hard work that have gone into making the blog the most well-read on the Computing website.

    Talking Outsourcing reads like a diary of the industry since its inception in 2006 to date. What's more, this insight into multifarious outsourcing industry could be yours by answering this simple question: what was the title of Mark's first ever Talking outsourcing blog post? (Tip: there is an archive section on the right hand side of Mark's blog)

    Simply email in your answers to editor@sourcingfocus.com stating your name and the title of the blog to enter. The winner's name will be drawn randomly from all entries and announced next Friday.

  • 14 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Korea Investment & Securities Co. Ltd. (KIS), has signed a ten-year strategic outsourcing agreement with IBM. Valued at $157 million, the contract is the largest outsourcing deal in the Korean investment and securities industry.

    KIS is one of the country's leading security companies, offering a range of asset management and investment banking services. Since its merger with Dongwon Securities in 2005, KIS has been rapidly expanding its presence in other Asian markets.

    Under the agreement, IBM will provide KIS with a full range of IT services. The new IT infrastructure system will be used to support KIS' major business areas, including account and financing, channel management, external interface, data analytics and call centres. In addition, IBM will manage the company's IT infrastructure operation including its management and maintenance.

    Byung-ho Lee, Chief Information Officer, Korea Investment & Securities commented: "We decided to transform our business process for the purpose of reinforcing our global competitiveness in the fiercely competitive financial industry. By enhancing our IT capacity, we will be able to actively respond to the rapidly changing global financial environment."

  • 13 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Continued bullish reports of growth in their pipelines by the world’s largest outsourcing providers may be further evidence the economic storm is waning. Over 75 percent of the service providers polled in EquaTerra’s Q309 Advisor and Business/IT Service Provider Pulse Survey reported continued growth in their deal pipeline, up ten percent from last quarter and an impressive 34 percent rise from the same time last year, the highest levels of pipeline growth cited since Q3 2005. EquaTerra’s customer-facing advisors – whose insight into current buyer activity provides a forward view of demand two to three quarters out – forecast steady demand through the first quarter of the year.

    “The bulk of outsourcing demand is still defensive, aimed at short-term cost-cutting and cost-containment strategies,” said Stan Lepeak, managing director of global research for EquaTerra.“But roughly 10 percent of both EquaTerra advisors and service providers see some buyers are preparing for an upturn with selective investments in new technology.”

    The key findings from EquaTerra’s Q309 Pulse:

    • Demand for outsourcing up – Pipeline growth, one of the strongest indicators of market demand, has been increasing by eight to ten percent per quarter since the first of the year, fuelled by the worldwide economic recession. Service providers (75 percent) continue to cite growth in their new-deal pipeline and over two-thirds of them (68 percent) predict demand will continue through the end of the year. Forty-eight percent of EquaTerra’s advisors cite growth remains steady, up two percent from last quarter.

    • Buyer base growing – The severe economic downturn has made outsourcing more attractive to a broader base of clients, and business process outsourcing is often the lever. EquaTerra advisors report that offshoring is an increasingly compelling option for first-time buyers looking for short-term cost savings with little upfront investment, an approach well suited to the labour arbitrage model.

    • Price competitiveness stabilizing – Service providers continue to indicate they are seeing less pricing pressure. The number of service providers citing increased levels of contract re-compete or renegotiations fell for the third straight quarter to 21 percent, indicating buyers are weighing quality against lower cost and/or service providers experiencing their own margin pressures are unwilling to make further cuts.

    If readers want to find out more they can register for EquaTerra’s regular pulse update webinar here. The event takes place on the 15th of October at 11am.

  • 9 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Ford Motor Company has signed an ITO contract with Affiliated Computer Services, Inc. Under the contract ACS will provide the administration of health and welfare, pension, and savings plans.

    These services will be deployed through ACS' call centre and Web portal. The self-service website provides participants accessible information that integrates Ford's benefit information, vendor partners, and benefit program information.

  • 9 Oct 2009 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Royal Mail has been splashed all over the UK headlines again for causing havoc this week. Strikes have resulted in two of their largest customers, eBay and Argos, revealing interest in other service providers. The Guardian has also published that it had learned of thirty online retailers who have agreed to switch to other postal operators because of the disruption at Royal Mail. I think either in a personal or business capacity we all know someone who has been affected by the strikes. Luckily for our avid readers we are a web based publication and there is no delay on your weekly sourcing news round up.

    Therefore I will not keep you waiting any longer…

    Atos Origin won the 2016 RIO Olympic Games ITO Contract. After Vancouver in 2010 and London in 2012, Atos Origin will also serve as the IT systems integrator for the Sochi Games in 2014 in Russia before delivering all back-end IT for the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. It is the largest sports related IT contract ever awarded. Unlike the Royal Mail, Atos Origin seem to know how not to loose their major customers!

    In keeping with the theme of ITO contracts, there has also been news that the US City of Houston has signed a contract with TPI in the hope that they can advise on how to improve service deliveries. The City of Houston currently spends more than $125 million per year on technology. I think TPI couldn’t have arrived any sooner.

    Since I seem to be consumed with name dropping this week, I don’t see why I shouldn’t finish the round up in the same way. The BBC has renewed its ten-year iPlayer support contract with Capita and Transversal. Transversal has been working with Capita to provide self-service technology to support the BBC’s Audience Services.

    So, big names being won and big names lost all in one week. Let’s just hope the Royal Mail can pull their act together in time for Christmas. I can envisage more torrid times ahead for the postal operators if they mess with the distribution of Christmas cheer. Yep, I am afraid I went there; I brought up the C word in the first week of October! Before I say anymore I think I should stop writing. That will be the last mention of the C word until the middle of November. I promise.

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