Archive for November, 2009

Bhutan’s 1st BPO on brink of shutdown

November 25th, 2009

The government may have plans to create a high tech habitat in Bhutan by promoting the establishment of, among others, business processes outsourcing companies (BPO), but the country’s first such company may not even make it that far.

Bhutan business solutions (BBS), a medical transcription BPO, established in Thimphu in 2007, is contemplating shutting down after not being able to find a suitable location to relocate its company. The BPO was informed earlier last month by the owner of its present premises, royal insurance corporation of Bhutan limited (RICBL), to relocate by December.

Medical transcription is the process of transcribing voice information dictated by a physician, such as a patient’s medical background, into text format. BBS currently works with physicians based in the USA, where the medical transcription business is being outsourced, due to the cheap costs associated with labour in developing countries.

“We’ll have to shut down,” said the proprietor of BBS, Damchae Dem, explaining that the company originally intended to move into the country’s first information technology (IT) park, Thimphu Techpark, when it commences operations in 2011. “Now, all of a sudden, we don’t know what to do but shut down,” said Damchae Dem, referring to the notice to vacate.

“We’re at a crossroads on whether or not medical transcription in Bhutan will succeed,” added Damchae Dem, who is also the executive chairperson of Pelden group of companies. BBS is a corporate social responsibility initiative of Pelden companies, operated with no profit motive but simply to generate employment opportunities, according to Damchae Dem. Pelden companies has been operating the BPO at a cost of Nu 800,000/month and has spent nearly Nu 30m so far in sustaining BBS, according to her.

“If we succeed in medical transcription, it’ll open up avenues in other areas of BPO,” said Damchae Dem, explaining that medical transcriptionists could easily move into other areas, as their work was highly professional. “We can’t lose this opportunity or let this project fail,” said Damchae Dem, pointing out that BBS had, for the first time, made a profit in October of Nu 10,000.

She added that, with recent increasing interest from other potential clients, the future of BPOs as a profitable and self-sustainable business in Bhutan looked promising.

BBS currently employs around 60 medical transcriptionists. “It’ll be unfair to the youngsters, who’ll be hit the hardest,” said Damchae Dem, referring to the employees whom she described as “exemplary” in their work. She pointed out the company already had plans to recruit 100 more medical transcriptionists in January next year. BBS has requested the labour ministry for assistance.

Labour secretary, Dasho (Dr) Sonam Tenzin, said, although not offering any guarantees, the ministry will work with BBS in finding a solution to keeping it operating. The labour secretary added that, since the IT sector will enhance employment opportunities, the ministry would support private enterprises such as BBS. The secretary pointed out that he was aware that the medical transcriptionists at BBS were highly trained and should not be displaced.

An RICBL official said that BBS needed to move out because RICBL was moving its headquarters to Thimphu. The official said the current space occupied by BBS would become a conference hall as the insurance company has to rent halls, which is expensive. Any extension will have to be considered by RICBL’s managing board, said the official.

Damchae Dem said that BBS understood RICB is a commercial organisation has to minimise costs, adding that her company was now dependent on the organisation’s “compassion”.

Currently, there are three BPOs in the country, CMI (computer management institute) in Phuentsholing, TST in Paro, and BBS in Thimphu. BBS is the only company currently employing workers, with the other two BPOs currently engaged in training.

Source:http://www.kuenselonline.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=14058

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Singapore-based developer opens 1st tower in Global City

November 25th, 2009

Ascendas Pte Ltd, one of Asia’s leading developers and manager of business space, recently announced the opening of ACCRALAW Tower located within E-square in Bonifacio Global City in Metro Manila. The building spearheads the diversification of Ascendas’ portfolio to offer premium office space in the Philippine Central Business District in addition to its industrial park properties.

Singapore’s Foreign Minister, Mr. George Yeo, was the guest-of-honor at the opening ceremony.

The 26-story tower offers a total floor area of 18,400 sqm. Its features are designed to meet the needs of PEZA-registered companies involved in Business Process Outsourcing (BPO), IT, IT-enabled services, software development, call centers and telecommunication industries.

These include flexible floor plans and generous floor loading that enable customizing of work spaces; and an integrated business lifestyle with amenities conveniently accessible.

Ascendas will provide building management solutions to support every tenant’s business operations, including 100 percent power backup for companies with 24/7 operations and telecommunication facilities. Other features include a water-cooled air-conditioning system which consumes up to 35 percent less energy, naturally ventilated elevated car parking and energy-saving lighting; all of which results in savings for tenants of the building.

Chong Siak Ching, president & CEO of Ascendas, said: “The Philippines is one of Asia’s understated growth stories. We are pleased to have an opportunity to tap on its fastest-growing business centers here in Bonifacio Global City with the development and management of Ascendas’ first office tower in the Philippines.”

Strategically located within Bonifacio Global City, the office building takes its name after major tenant, Angara Abello Concepcion Regala & Cruz Law Offices (ACCRALAW), one of the Philippines’ top law firms. ACCRALAW has taken up five floors of business space. Retail tenants include Maybank, 7-Eleven and Cheesecake.

ACCRALAW Tower stands at the nexus of a thriving business hub that is home to leading financial institutions and multinational corporations such as Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC), JP Morgan, Deutsche Bank and Baker & McKenzie, among others. Bonifacio Global City is also home to modern office towers, upscale residential condominiums, trendy retail and F&B outlets, international schools and the Philippine Stock Exchange.

Source:http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/231070/singaporebased-developer-opens-1st-tower-global-city

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Wipro to Increase Fixed Price, Goal-Based Orders to Lift Margin

November 25th, 2009

India’s third-largest software exporter, said it aims to get 50 percent of its sales in three years from orders where it shares risk with clients seeking to cap their costs to boost its own profitability.

Wipro is asking existing clients to move part of their orders to a fixed-price, “risk-reward“-based service that helps customers curb spending irrespective of the number of engineers deployed on a project, said Girish Paranjpe, co-chief executive officer of the company’s information technology unit.

“We get a base fee for development, but the real kicker is if the product is successful,” Paranjpe said in an interview at his office in Bangalore yesterday. “So that puts more pressure on us to design the best product.”

The company, controlled by billionaire Azim Premji, is experimenting with pricing methods as companies seek to reduce the number of vendors and cap the cost of outsourcing technical support after the worst recession since the Great Depression. Wipro’s profit margin at the computer-services unit rose 1.5 percentage points last quarter helped by the pricing strategy, Paranjpe said.

Wipro added 0.5 percent to 650.25 rupees as of 10:34 a.m. in Mumbai trading, in line with the benchmark Sensitive Index’s 0.5 percent advance. The shares have more than doubled this year.

The software provider earned 40 percent of its second- quarter revenue from fixed-priced contracts with most coming from those based on agreed outcomes, Paranjpe, 51, said.

‘Partnering With Clients’

Wipro is “partnering with clients rather than running the same old customer relationships, and becoming more adaptable,” Joseph Foresi, an analyst with Janney Montgomery Scott LLC in Boston wrote in a note to clients on Nov. 17. “We expect to hear a lot more about the different pricing models movement,” in the next few quarters, Foresi, who rates the stock “neutral,” wrote.

Bangalore-based Wipro won orders from phone companies in India and the Middle East to get paid based on their subscriber growth, Paranjpe said.

“We’ve committed to a certain price and if their subscriber growth goes up then they pay more,” Paranjpe said, without naming the customers. Wipro in May said it had won a nine-year technology-services order from the India unit of Fornebu, Norway-based Telenor ASA, the biggest Nordic phone company.

The Indian company’s profit margin at the computer services unit improved to 23.8 percent in the fiscal second quarter from 22.3 percent in the preceding three months, according to the company’s Web site.

Orders Spurring Profit

Net income rose 22 percent to 11.8 billion rupees ($255 million) in the three months ended Sept. 30, Wipro reported last month. Profit beat analysts’ estimates as the global economic recovery spurred clients to increase orders.

Wipro designs and builds software programs, maintains computers, and provides product-engineering services and back- office support to General Electric Co., Cisco Systems Inc., Citigroup Inc. and other customers. The company also makes soaps, light bulbs and hydraulic equipment.

Source:http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601091&sid=ajaCOY63AhWI

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Infy may acquire European cos for $400-500 mn

November 25th, 2009

In continuation of its pursuit to buy firms in niche areas, Infosys Technologies, the country’s second largest IT services firm, is actively looking at acquiring companies in the consulting and healthcare spaces in the range of $400-500 million.

“We are looking at spending up to 10 per cent of our revenues, which could be in the range of $400-500 million, to acquire companies in niche areas like consulting and healthcare,” Infosys CFO V Balakrishnan told Business Standard. He said the company was primarily looking at companies with a strong presence in Europe. “We are also open to the US if we get the right candidates,” he added.

He expects the acquisition to either give it a geographical presence or a strong consulting base which can enhance its revenues from the enterprise solutions business going forward.

Balakrishnan simultaneously rubbished some reports that Infosys is planning to buy European consulting firm Ciber Novasoft. Balakrishnan said: “I completely deny this. We aren’t looking at this company.”

Infosys, for long, had been trying to strengthen its consulting practice as clients are now asking for more advisory-related work. Consulting and enterprise solution business together constitutes about 25 per cent Infosys’ business today.

In August last year, Infosys had offered to acquire European SAP consulting firm Axon Group, which could not materialise due to a counter offer by HCL Technologies [ Get Quote ]. HCL finally acquired the company.

Infosys, according to industry sources, is on the lookout for consulting firms in European countries. However, the process is getting delayed because of the fact that there are very few pure-play European consulting companies at the moment.

It is learnt that Infosys is scouting for acquisitions in continental Europe, as this would give it a platform to get into certain European countries which have been traditionally conservative in terms of outsourcing.

Infosys, which had a cash reserve of $2.8 billion (Rs 13,796 crore) at the end of September 30, 2009, has been traditionally conservative in its inorganic pursuit, as compared to its industry peers.

The company has so far made three acquisitions, including the recent acquisition of US-based insurance BPO services provider McCamish Systems for about $58 million.

Source:http://business.rediff.com/report/2009/nov/25/tech-infosys-may-acquire-european-cos-for-400-500-mn-dollars.htm

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Convergys Expanding its Call Center Outsourcing Operations in the Philippines

November 25th, 2009

Convergys, a major vendor of contact center technology, as well as one of the world’s largest providers of contact center outsourcing and consulting services, has announced that it is expanding its contact center outsourcing operations in the Philippines.

The company recently announced that it plans to hire approximately 4,500 more agents between now and the end of February for its 12 contact center facilities in the country.

Convergys (News – Alert), which has been seeing increased demand for its contact center technology and services, despite the recession, already has nearly 18,000 employees and plans to surpass 20,000 employees in the near future.

“Convergys contact center agents continue to deliver superior relationship management services on behalf of our clients and that’s why there’s a global demand for their expertise,” said Marife Zamora, Convergys vice president and country manager, in a release. “The continued demand from our blue chip international clients to place their operations either partially or fully in the Philippines is a testament to the quality of service our agents provide on a daily basis.”

Zamora encouraged Filipinos looking for contact center work to text “CVG” to 2600, or to email their resume to jobsph@convergys.com, to start the application process.

Earlier this month, Cavalier Telephone, a CLEC offering reliable and efficient telecommunications solutions for business, consumer and government customers, reportedly signed a license agreement for Convergys’ Smart BSS Solutions.

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7 Ways an Outsourcing Advisor Can Save You Money

November 25th, 2009

When it comes to the outsourcing process, going it alone is one way to cut costs. But working with an experienced outsourcing advisor may save you money during the procurement process and down the road.

It doesn’t have to be a huge investment. While the biggest outsourcing advisors still charge a pretty penny, you don’t have to sign up for traditional soup-to-nuts service. Although some of the bigger firms will only work on end-to-end engagements, many advisors offer à la carte menus of targeted services to reduce the upfront investment for customers with beleaguered budgets.

“Good consultants pay for themselves-often many times over, whether the customer engages consultants throughout or selectively,” says George Kimball, an outsourcing attorney in the San Diego office of Baker & McKenzie. “The best consultants’ principal value is not so much their forms and methods as their judgment, experience and knowledge of the marketplace.”

Hiring the right sourcing advisor “virtually guarantees that you get the job done in a fraction of the time that it would normally take,” to select and sign on an outsourcing partner, says Paul Pinto, co-founder of niche sourcing consultancy Sylvan VI. “In an environment where time is money, there are clear cost savings associated with implementing your outsourcing strategy sooner rather than later.”

Here are seven ways an advisor can save you money during the outsourcing selection process and down the road:

1. Rigorous and relevant RFPs. There’s nothing more costly in the sourcing procurement process than an incomplete or impractical RFP. “Creating a thorough RFP that encourages complete and relevant responses is what these guys do best,” says Adam Strichman, an independent sourcing consultant based in Mechanicsville, Va.

[ IT Outsourcing: Think Twice Before You Issue a Single RFP ]

It’s not the outsourcing of RFP writing that saves you money; it will cost you considerably more to have an advisor draft these documents than it will to do it yourself. It’s the reduction in cycle time that comes from getting an accurate RFP out the door and expert evaluation of responses that reaps big benefits. “Customers have limited time to sort through an avalanche of information, evaluate competing proposals, then make decisions with lasting consequences,” says Kimball.

2. Pricing intelligence. Outsourcing advisors’ pricing professionals should have access to up-to-date benchmarking data. Not only can they perform a “sanity check on fees,” they also “understand the connection between the fees and services schedules,” says Edward J. Hansen, a partner in the New York office of Morgan, Lewis & Brockius, who represents clients in outsourcing transactions.

[ Outsourcing Prices: Why The Recession Isn't Really Driving Them ]

A professional benchmarker can pinpoint pricing that’s out of line with the market. “This doesn’t just mean ‘high prices,’ but rather a price that is [ir]relevant for the services being requested,” says Strichman. “Pricing can be off by more than 200 percent, and this is usually caused by a gap in service expectations or misunderstood requirements.”

[ Benchmark Your Outsourcing Provider Without the Hassle ]

Thus, the sourcing advisor can save clients money by getting the right price and insuring that the bids are relevant, Strichman adds.

3. Access to innovation. The traditional approach to outsourcing-develop a business case, issue an RFP, select a vendor, negotiate the contract, begin the transition-is tried and true. But “there are a series of innovative methods and techniques that can be applied to accomplish the same results with less of an investment in time and money,” says Pinto. A seasoned advisor can provide access to new methods and tools, like collaborative vendor selection, online RFP builders and business case templates.

4. Vendor knowledge. You know all the big names in outsourcing. But an advisor can bring to the table lesser-known but highly capable vendors to consider. Advisors’ knowledge of the marketplace saves you from having to research and create long- and short-lists of service providers. One caveat: some consultants can get a little too cozy with certain vendors. Review the deals the advisor has worked on; if the same provider pops up again and again, that consultant may not be able or willing to provide a broad view of the marketplace.

5. Focus. Establishing an outsourcing deal is one of many things on your plate. Heck, it may not even make the top of the list. When you can’t devote adequate time to researching vendors and negotiating an outsourcing deal, you start out at a disadvantage and set your organization up for outsourcing problems later on. For that reason, bringing in someone who is paid to give proper attention to the outsourcing deal early on can save you trouble later on.

“Outsourcing projects are time consuming and many times customers do not have the ability to dedicate sufficient subject matter expertise to the project,” says Hansen. “If a client is either under-resourced or inexperienced in outsourcing transactions, the process methodologies that sourcing advisors bring can pay for their fees many times over in avoiding the pitfalls that add unforeseen costs.”

6. An upper hand in negotiations. You may once every few years, if that. Those guys on the other side of the table? They do it every day. A good advisor will have a handle on all the tricks and traps a vendor can use to structure the contract- SLAs, metrics, clauses-to its advantage. “While the standard terms and conditions are best left in the hands of legal counsel,” says Pinto, “the negotiation of the business terms are best performed by an advisor who has seen the good, the bad, and the ugly of outsourcing relationships.”

7. Transition and governance preparedness. These are “crucial subjects, often neglected” in the sourcing process, says Kimball. What can go wrong may not go wrong in your outsourcing relationship, but at least you’ll know what pitfalls to look out for if you work with a practiced outsourcing professional. An advisor will help you prepare to hand-off your IT services to the vendor and will assist with the ongoing management of the service provider.

“The vendor’s sales team has completed their job, the agreement has been signed, and the hard-part begins,” says Pinto. “While there are a number of vendors who are good at leading the transition phase, there is a vast majority that struggle their way through it.” A skilled advisor can help to smooth over the rough patches.

Source : http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9141431/7_Ways_an_Outsourcing_Advisor_Can_Save_You_Money?taxonomyId=14&pageNumber=1

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US banks set to begin offshoring

November 25th, 2009

As America’s top banks emerge from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) and the economy shows signs of recovery, Indian outsourcing vendors

Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys and Wipro are set to gain new offshoring projects worth around $1 billion over the next 1-2 years.

Among the firms seeking operational efficiencies by outsourcing non-core IT and back office projects to India are JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley—which received approval to buy back government stake worth $68 billion earlier this year, as well as American Express, Bank of New York Mellon Corp and Capital One—which have started repaying government debt. Many of these banks had deferred new offshoring decisions as they attempted to cope with TARP funding requirements and internal restructuring processes.

Experts such as Andy Efstathiou , director of banking sourcing practice at research & consulting firm NelsonHall, said US banks are increasing offshoring. “Since the beginning of the economic crisis, many of these contracts have been put on hold. That is beginning to change. It is looking like Q4 of 2009 is shaping up to be a 20% growth over Q4 of 2008,” he told ET in an interview.

The US government’s decision to allow these banks to repay TARP funds also reflects a growing pressure to operate independently devoid of any political and public interference.

In a September survey of around 480 firms by Efstathiou, only 2% said they plan to reduce offshoring, while almost 37% said they will increase offshoring. “The financial services firms we have spoken to intend to increase spending on offshoring. Specifically, in a survey of firms we did in September 2009, only 2% expect to spend less on offshoring, the rest expect to spend the same (61%) or increase spending offshore (37%),” he added.

The merger of the banking systems of Bank of America and Merrill Lynch, among many other such deals, is creating newer opportunities for offshoring and outsourcing vendors.

Source : http://infotech.indiatimes.com/outsourcing/US-banks-set-to-begin-offshoring-/articleshow/5261028.cms

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