Industry news

  • 4 Nov 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Wipro has set up a BPO centre at Curitiba in Brazil to provide shared services to AmBev, the largest brewery in Latin America. The company will provide BPO for finance and accounting, order management, customer care and HR human resource activity spanning AmBevs operations across Latin America.

    Ashutosh Vaidya, Wipro’s Head of BPO, commented: “We have expertise in delivering process specific solutions in finance and accounting, procurement, HR services, loyalty services and knowledge services. Our capability to transform processes, implement SAP and provide world class service delivery is a strength unmatched by competition.”

    AmBev is the biggest brewery serving South America with leading brands like Brahma, Becks, Stella and Antarctica.

  • 3 Nov 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Redcats Group, a leader in home shopping for fashion and home furnishings, has extended its ITO contract with Atos Origin for another three years.

    According to Atos Origin, the decision reflects “the two partners’ shared commitment to further leveraging their industrial-scale data processing capabilities to optimize the multi-channel home shopping experience.”

    As part of the continued contract Atos will provide back-office services via its service centers across Europe. Also, all orders made with Redcats, whether taken online, via telephone or by mail, will also transit through systems operated by Atos Origin.

    Patrick Terrier, VP Corporate Operations for Redcats Group, commented: “During the latest phase in our outsourcing agreement. Atos Origin successfully consolidated our IT resources and led a transformation plan aligned with the challenges that our businesses must address in terms of flexibility, cost-savings and quality. It is this ability that we’ve recognized by renewing our agreement.”

  • 2 Nov 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous
    In the US, where I am for a few days, business and financial stories have been shunted out of the limelight as senators McCain and Obama vie for the popular vote. Channel after channel devotes almost twenty-four hours of coverage to every grandstanding speech, broken only by adverts – mainly from the candidates, but occasionally for headache pills – and, on the West Coast where I am, by competing messages about local policy amendments.

    On the one hand, it's inspiring that American politics speaks so directly to American people and seeks to engage and motivate them about every policy nuance, but as the presidential campaign nears its conclusion, the two hopefuls' messages have merged into one: “American companies, American jobs, American people”. The rest of the world... who are they?

    One candidate (I forget which) even went so far as to say that outsourcing was part of the impetus for the Wall Street collapse – neglecting to mention that both candidates have outsourced their campaigns for voter registration. Each candidate, of course, has wasted no time accusing the other's outsourcing partner of corruption.

    The insularity of the US is something to behold at first hand: I was in the US a month ago, in the eye of the Wall Street storm, and even then the election was the only show in town, as the Down Jones tanked 800 points one day, and 500 on another.

    Perhaps the side effects of a decade of living on credit are simply accepted in America: like those painkiller TV ads I mentioned, which, by law, have to list all of the possible side effects of swallowing one: may induce nausea, dizzy spells, dementia, memory loss and liver damage. Just like buying a house, or a shopping spree on your store card.

    In the UK, the financial crisis has been a bigger story than in the US where it originated, while government is usually in the spotlight only to demonstrate its incompetence.

    Yes, another day, another memory stick lost: this time outsourcing provider Atos Origin is being blamed by the Department of Work and Pensions after a memory stick containing passwords and security details for the Gateway website was found in a pub car park. As I write, the website is down for security testing, so people are unable to submit tax information online.

    The Prime Minister has finally admitted the obvious – the Government cannot guarantee data security – but still has trouble with the underlying message: it's not about technology, it's about policy and good management.

    Also in the UK there is further unease in the services sector, as BT announces that its Global Services division is underperforming and dragging down the group's overall profits.

    This is a worry: unlike the US, whose economy relies on Main Street shoppers, the post-Thatcherite UK is built on services: that sector the Government is so keen to blame for its own ills.

    In the US, if you can inspire the people you can rebuild the economy. In the UK, if we talk down the services sector we are talking ourselves into a slump.

    But we'll be right back after this break....

  • 31 Oct 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Despite the fact that organisations worldwide are deferring capital expenditures, outsourcing continues to be the number one tool chosen to drive organisational change, according to EquaTerra’s 3rd Quarter Pulse.

    The report also showed a positive growth in outsourcing, with 40 percent of market sectors citing increased demand levels. Interestingly, the results show that the focus in outsourcing is shifting from longer-term initiatives, aimed at improving end-to-end business processes, toward efforts that deliver quick return on investment (ROI) and/or facilitate short-term business objectives.

    A summary of the report can be found at: http://www.equaterra.com/EquaTerraRelease10_28_08.htm

  • 29 Oct 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The results of the 5th annual National Outsourcing Association (NOA) Awards (NOAAs) were announced this week at a special ceremony in central London.

    Over the last five years, the “NOAAs” have become a landmark in the acceptance of outsourcing as a legitimate business practice and recognise the efforts of companies or people who have shown excellence in the field of outsourcing.

    Martyn Hart, chairman of the NOA commented: “The downturn in the economy has made it a very challenging and interesting year for all industries. Despite this, outsourcing has still retained steady growth and has seen significant positive performance. With outsourcing being such a fundamental part of the business landscape we feel it’s critical to raise awareness of how important best practice in all aspects of outsourcing is and these awards have become an essential part of that.”

    The 16 categories, which encompass every area of outsourcing, attracted hundreds of applications and were judged by a panel of outsourcing experts. The winners of this year’s NOAAs are as follows:

    • BPO Project of the Year sponsored by Steria

    WINNER: The Co-operative Financial Services & Capita

    • IT Outsourcing Project of the Year sponsored by Financial Sector Technology magazine

    WINNER: Lloyds TSB

    • Financial Services Outsourcing Project of the Year Sponsored by Homeloan Management Ltd

    WINNER: CSC & Zurich Financial Services

    • Public Sector Outsourcing Project of the Year sponsored by NelsonHall

    WINNER: Capgemini UK & Welsh Assembly Government

    • Utilities, High Tech and Telecommunications Outsourcing Project of the Year, sponsored by sourcingfocus.com

    WINNER: Luxoft & Aepona

    • Offshoring Operation of the Year sponsored by Buffalo Communications

    WINNER: Exigent Group Ltd

    • Outsourcing Professional of the Year sponsored by Outsource magazine

    WINNER: Barry Matthews, Head of ITO, Alsbridge plc

    • Outsourcing Service Provider of the Year sponsored by Invest Northern Ireland

    WINNER: bss

    • Outsourcing Contact Centre of the Year, sponsored by Invest Northern Ireland

    WINNER: bss

    • Outsourcing Advisor of the Year sponsored by Capita HR & Payroll Services

    WINNER: Eversheds Ltd

    • Offshoring Destination of the Year sponsored by Cognizant

    WINNER: Egypt (ITIDA)

    • Outsourcing End User of the Year, sponsored by The OUT group

    WINNER: The Co-operative Financial Services & Capita

    • Award for Innovation in Outsourcing sponsored by Capgemini

    WINNER: VocaLink & The BankGiroCentralen

    • Award for Best Practice in Outsourcing, sponsored by ITIDA

    WINNER: OPAL & HBOS

    • Best Academic Achievement, sponsored by NOA Qualification Pathway

    WINNER: Matthew McNeil

    • Lifetime Achievement Award, an NOA award

    WIINNER: Roger Barber, Senior Consultant, Equaterra

    • Special award for consistent excellence for outsourcing practice across all disciplines, an NOA award

    WINNER: Infosys

  • 29 Oct 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Deloitte, the business advisory organisation, has appointed two UK member firm partners to the leadership team of its life sciences and health care industry group.

    Dean Arnold has been appointed health care sector leader and David Jones takes up the role of financial advisory services leader for life sciences & health care.

    Bob Go, managing director of the life sciences and health care industry group at Deloitte, said, “With new opportunities regularly presenting themselves within the organisation, I’m delighted that Dean and David have agreed to share their broad industry knowledge and take on these pivotal roles.”

  • 28 Oct 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous
    The NOA Awards last week (not attended by yours truly, owing to a bout of lurgy) were by all accounts a glittering success, Congratulations to all of the winners (such as destination of the year Egypt), and also to the nominees. There is clearly a great deal of innovation and good work out there, and that is indeed cause for celebration.

    The big question, though, is how will we look back on 2009 at next year's event?

    As 2008 draws to a downbeat close, with the UK economy in Q1 of a likely recession, we're facing a year to 18 months of rising unemployment, falling property prices, scarce credit, and business collapses – especially among smaller enterprises and manufacturers.

    Some economists believe the worst is yet to come, and few would bet against further banking collapses. At least one international bank, which owns some UK finance names, has been quietly selling off its assets.

    It's sometimes said that a recession is an opportunity for the outsourcing industry, in that companies looking to slash costs or source external, non-core expertise will turn to outsourced service providers. But I'd argue that's a challenge, not a cause for backslapping and glee.

    Of course, there is good news... on the face of it. Despite the fact organisations worldwide are deferring capital expenditures, outsourcing continues to be the number one tool chosen to drive organisational change, according to EquaTerra’s quarterly Advisor and BPO/ITO Service Provider Pulse Survey.

    The findings of the Q3 2008 edition show that demand for outsourcing is outpacing business investments in areas such as hardware, software and other types of more discretionary service.

    Growth in outsourcing was positive in Q3, it said, with the focus shifting away from “longer-term initiatives and towards efforts that deliver a quick return on investment (RoI)... help align operating costs to reduced circumstances, and minimise short-term capital outlays”. In other words, projects that slash costs.

    Despite this, the economy's losses are not our gains, and we must guard against celebrating.

    Face it: most people still see outsourcing as about job losses, not expertise or innovation. In a recession – perhaps even a slump – that means storing up a huge amount of negative equity, if you like, in terms of people's attitude to our industry and we should take a careful step back from celebrating an apparent upturn in our fortunes. Otherwise we will be seen as part of the problem, and not as a long-term solution.

    Celebrate innovation, as the NOA Awards did, and not an opportunity to trouser cash as unemployment soars, people default on payments, and businesses can't find the credit they need to survive.

  • 27 Oct 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The international healthcare organisation, AstraZeneca, have appointed Cognizant to provide application maintenance over the next five years.

    Cognizant will work with AstraZeneca’s global shared services organisation and implement end–to-end application maintenance services.

    Richard Williams, global CIO at AstraZeneca, commented, “Our strategic partnerships will enable us to streamline operations efficiency, raise standards and deliver world-class services. The selection of Cognizant will allow us to leverage their global operations to meet the needs of our business.”

    Francisco D’Souza, president and CEO of Cognizant, said, “We are pleased to have been selected by AstraZeneca’s global shared services organisation to provide application-related services.”

    No financial details have been released.

  • 27 Oct 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Whitbread, the UK's largest hotel and restaurant company, has signed a five year contract with Steria, the European IT enabled business services company. The contract, which will be going live in early 2009, will see Steria provide a finance and accounting (F&A) service which is delivered from its offshore locations.

    Andy Pellington, Whitbread finance director, said, "This signifies an important step in Whitbread PLC's ongoing organisational review.”

    John Torrie, CEO of Steria UK, commented, "We are delighted to be working with Whitbread PLC.”

  • 24 Oct 2008 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    TCS has reported strong consolidated financial results for the quarter ended September 30, posting a 17.69 % increase in year on year revenues to $3.1 billion in H1. Its Q2 revenues were also impressive, with a 14.74% year on year increase to $1.57 billion.

    Mr Ramadorai, TCS CEO and MD, commented: “Our growth has been balanced across markets and verticals with a 9.5 per cent sequential growth in our international business during Q2 and we have improved margins significantly. New opportunities are emerging and there are signs that our services will play a significant part in the global economic recovery. Our acquisition of Citigroup Global Services will provide another driver for growth.”

    TCS’s success in the BFSI sector continued to register positive growth despite unprecedented volatility and uncertainty in the global financial markets. The Manufacturing and Retail verticals grew as large transformation deals ramped up, while the Travel, Energy and Media verticals gained traction in new markets. While outsourcing services continued to enjoy strong demand across major markets, traditional application development and maintenance opportunities gained futher prominence in the current economic climate. The engineering services sector continues to experience strong demand across all markets.

    Commenting on the reasons behind TCS’s good performance Mr Chandrasekaran, Chief Operating Officer, explained: “Our business model is resilient and we have demonstrated this in Q2 through volume growth, improvement in our offshore leverage, pricing, productivity as well as over 50 new client wins. We have a robust pipeline even in the current environment and our diversified market presence and full services will drive growth in the future.”

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