Archive for August, 2010

H-P to pay $55M to settle fraud, kickback charges -DOJ

August 31st, 2010

Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) will pay $55 million to settle allegations that it paid kickbacks to win U.S. government business and other charges that it defectively priced a 2002 government contract, the Justice Department said Monday.

H-P announced earlier this month that it had reached a settlement in principle with the department, saying the pact would reduce earnings in its fiscal third quarter by about two cents a share. Monday’s announcement finalizes that agreement.

The Justice Department alleged that H-P knowingly paid “influencer fees” to systems-integrator companies in return for recommendations that federal agencies purchase H-P’s products.

The department also alleged that H-P’s 2002 contract with the General Services Administration for computer equipment and software was defectively priced because the company provided incomplete information to contracting officers during negotiations.

“Contractors must deal fairly with the government when doing business with federal agencies,” Assistant Attorney General Tony West, head of the department’s civil division, said in a statement.

H-P denied that it engaged in any illegal conduct. “We believe it is in the best interest of our stakeholders to resolve the matter and move beyond this issue,” the company said in a statement.

The litigation against H-P and other technology companies sprang from whistle-blower suits that were filed by a former employee of computer outsourcing and consulting firm Accenture PLC (ACN).

Some other companies have settled the allegations, including data storage equipment maker EMC Corp. (EMC), which agreed in May to pay $87.5 million to settle similar charges.

Source:http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20100830-711169.html

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Wipro wins contract under rural banking initiative in India

August 31st, 2010

Wipro Infotech, the India, Middle East and Africa, IT Business of Wipro Ltd has signed a seven year outsourcing contract with five Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) sponsored by UCO Bank, a leading public sector bank. The contract is for implementing a Core Banking Solution (CBS) across 803 branches of RRBs under UCO Bank’s sponsorship.

The RRBs under the sponsorship program are Jaipur Thar Gramin Bank (JTGB), Kalinga Gramya Bank (KGB), Bihar Kshetriya Gramin Bank (BKGB), Paschim Banga Gramin Bank (PBGB) and Mahakausal Kshetriya Gramin Bank (MKGB). These RRBs have operations primarily in the states of Rajasthan, Orissa, Bihar, West Bengal and MP. With this initiative, all five RRBs would come under the ambit of core banking, thereby ensuring uniformity in technology platform and related business processes for improved business efficiency and customer care.

Speaking about the engagement, Ajai Kumar, Executive Director, UCO Bank said: “Today RRBs are being viewed as one of the primary vehicles to drive financial inclusion. This implementation by Wipro would be a big step in technologically enabling our sponsored RRB branches to deliver rural banking services to the masses.”

The scope of services includes building, hosting and managing the underlying infrastructure at the data centres, in addition to implementing the Finacle CBS across the five RRBs. Wipro would also provide network management and user training across all 803 branch locations. The roll out across all branches is expected to be completed by September 2011.

Source:http://www.consultant-news.com/article_display.aspx?p=adp&id=7164

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Infosys plans ‘extreme offshore’ model to tide over visa crisis

August 31st, 2010

Against the backdrop of a clampdown on visas by the US and growing antagonism towards foreign workers and immigrants in that country, Infosys Technologies, India’s second-largest IT services firm, is mulling an ‘extreme offshoring’ model to help reduce its dependence on H1 and L1 visas.
In the year ended March 31, 2010, Infosys’s onsite revenues were around Rs 10,461.32 crore, or 46.7 per cent, and offshore revenues were Rs 12,121.5 crore, about 53.3%.The Bangalore-headquartered company says it is capable of increasing its offshore utilisation capabilities to 95 per cent. It said the intent was to prepare the company to face an extreme situation should negative sentiment brewing in the US intensify further.

“There is a cost element (due to the visa fee hike) to what is happening now and there is a philosophical or directional element. The cost is no doubt increasing, but it is manageable. But it is more about what it indicates. If there a build-up of negativity in sentiment, we have to prepare ourselves (for extreme offshoring) if need be. However, as long as unemployment remains high, the negative sentiment will continue, unfortunately,” Kris Gopalakrishnan, CEO and MD, Infosys Technologies, told Business Standard.

Infosys has already conducted pilot programmes with a couple of clients in the US with which it has proven the model. By sitting at remote offshore locations, the company successfully transitioned outsourced projects to India.

The Infosys extreme offshoring model is expected to have a far-reaching impact on the delivery of IT services, as this could lead to increased hiring at offshore locations like India and fewer jobs being created onsite. Front-end sales and support jobs would have to be primarily manned by US citizens.

The US border security legislation will double the visa application fee, and is seen as targeted the Indian IT services industry. Unless there are further laws passed in the US that completely halt outsourcing, US companies have no reason to stop shipping work to India. “As long as globalisation is not reversed or stopped, I think the growth of remote delivery of services should continue. And it’s an opportunity for countries like India and China,” said Gopalakrishnan.

The Indian IT industry championed the offshore model in the early 1990s, which received a boost when global clients leveraged offshore work to gain a cost advantage and gained access to India’s vast talent pool. However, today’s standard delivery model is a mix of offshore, onsite and nearshore.

Despite offshoring being at the forefront of the delivery roadmap, the IT industry used to send people to the US on H1 and L1 visas on a temporary basis to transition clients’ work to India. This process requires gathering first-hand information about a client’s business requirements and readying the framework before shifting work offshore.

“The technological capabilities for extreme offshoring is already there with us. You have video conferencing, which allows you to be there virtually, rather than in person, and the quality of video conferencing is extremely high today, with the availability of technologies like telepresence,” added Gopalakrishnan.

Over the last couple of quarters, Infosys has increased its offshore ratio a few percentage points. “Our offshore-onsite ratio has shifted towards offshore in the last two to three years, and we can look at further shifting it down to offshore. In fact, we have many clients who are pushing us to reduce onsite work further,” said S D Shibulal, COO, Infosys Technologies.

Infosys has also reduced its dependance on H1 and L1 visas. According to the company, the number of visa renewals has fallen 80 per cent in the last three years. Infosys today employs around 13,000 people in the US, of which the approximate number of H-1B visa holders is 8,900 and L-1 visas around 1,800. This does not include figures for its BPO subsidiary and other wholly-owned subsidiaries.

Source:http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/infosys-plans-/extreme-offshore/-model-to-tide-over-visa-crisis/406424/

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Still a lot of room to grow in global IT market: Azim Premji

August 31st, 2010

There is still a lot of room to grow in the global IT industry, Azim Premji, the boss of Indian IT giant Wipro, has said.

“If the global IT services market is growing at 3 per cent to 5 per cent and global exports from India are growing at 5 per cent, evidently that proposition is more attractive to the customer,” Premji, India’s second richest man, with an 11 billion pounds fortune, told The Sunday Telegraph.

He said, “The base is USD 50 billion a year of IT exports from India, so it’s not a small industry any more, but there’s still a lot of room to grow because it only represents between 3 per cent and 4 per cent of global market share. This is a USD 1.6 trillion industry.”

Nevertheless, Premji admitted that until recently, India’s IT services sector was spooked by fears that Britain would become more protectionist on account of its current austerity drive.

“This question was asked to British Prime Minister David Cameron when he was in Bangalore because some outsourcing contracts had been suspended,” he said.

“A specific question was asked as to whether the new policy of the British Government was to only give contracts to UK companies,” he said.

Cameron’s answer was that Britain was running an 11 per cent deficit and would look at all costs, regardless of where suppliers are based, and needed to obtain the best possible prices. “He got an ovation for that,” Premji said.

“I thought it was a fair answer. The visit was very successful. He created a very strong impression. Trade between India and Britain is surprisingly low, but there’s a very high feel-good factor about Britain in India,” he added.

65-year-old Premji, nicknamed “the Bill Gates of India,” has pledged to give away most of his fortune.

“I’ll announce it when it happens,” he said. Premji’s family holds a 75 per cent stake in Wipro. The largest IT services company in the Indian market by sales and the seventh largest in the world by market capitalisation behind Indian rivals Tata and Infosys as well as global giants IBM and Accenture, Wipro has ridden the boom in outsourcing and global IT services.

India’s IT services sector saw the growth of its exports halved from 11 per cent to 5.5 per cent during the global downturn after growing by more than 30 per cent for seven consecutive years.

It is expected to grow by 15 per cent this year. Wipro reported a 20 per cent increase in revenue in Q1, 2010, and is forecast to earn revenues of about USD 6.5 billion (4.2 billion pounds) for the entire year.

Wipro has long outgrown its Indian roots, with just 9 per cent of sales now in India, compared to 55 per cent in the US and 25 per cent in Europe.

Half of Wipro’s European sales are in Britain, which Premji said is also back in a growth mode in IT services.

Wipro is strong in financial services, with a lot of UK and US banking clients that Premji isn’t allowed to name.

It’s also active in retail, working for companies including supermarket chain Morrisons, and has large IT services operations in the manufacturing, energy and utilities, transportation and healthcare sectors.

Source:-http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/infotech/software/Still-a-lot-of-room-to-grow-in-global-IT-market-Azim-Premji/articleshow/6456275.cms

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The case for outsourcing

August 31st, 2010

More and more businesses worldwide are contracting out functions, or business processes, that were previously thought to be important, internal tasks sacred to the organisation.Even in Pakistan, corporations – local and multinational – are increasingly outsourcing processes such as marketing, corporate social responsibility programmes and human resource management.Unilever, for example, has handed over the responsibility of marketing various ‘Ponds’ products to an external firm specialising in retail enablement.

The organisations supervise the results while our teams deliver them,” explained Saad Ali, chief executive of Helium Private Limited.Helium is primarily a business process outsourcing company with over 450 employees on its payroll and offices in three major cities of Pakistan. Although the firm is more popularly known for providing marketing solutions, such as brand activations and road shows, it offers a range of outsourcing services.The company is involved in everything from handling back office operations, including finance and administration, for an international technology giant to running corporate social responsibility programmes for oil marketing companies like Shell Pakistan.

Organisations like Coca Cola and P&G are looking to outsource not just to cut costs but also to achieve flexibility in the long run,” said Ali. “Specialisation and headcount control were two important trends that emerged towards the end of the 1900s,” he added.These developments gained popularity because they were believed to be efficient cost control measures and once they had been achieved internally, the next logical step was to outsource.Companies want to control their destiny and one way they can achieve this is by tagging expenses with revenues,” commented Ali. By doing this not only can costs be managed better, they also become more predictable. Citing the example of distribution, he highlighted that at one point in time it was common for companies to control the distribution of their products themselves but now almost all large firms hired external distributors who handled the entire process.

The common practice is to link the distributors’ commission with sales revenue. This means that even though the distributors earn more when sales are high, they are also the first ones to take a hit in case turnover drops. Meanwhile, it is the distributors who make infrastructural investments to make sure the product is available in the market and not the corporation, further reducing risk for the latter by making costs both manageable and predictable.

Responding to a question regarding what functions could practically be outsourced, Ali cited the case of Nike, one of the pioneers of outsourcing. He said that except for marketing and finance, the company has outsourced almost all functions, including manufacturing and supply chain management.

Source:-http://tribune.com.pk/story/44187/the-case-for-outsourcing/

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Ayala land increases BPO inventory

August 31st, 2010

Aside from substantially increasing its residential inventory, property giant Ayala Land, Inc. is also building more office space for lease amid the recovery of demand from the business process outsourcing sector.

ALI President Antonino Aquino said they are putting up new office spaces, particularly in the provinces, in response to the preference of BPO locators.

Set for launching for the rest of the year are BPO projects in Bacolod, Bonifacio Global City, UP Technohub, Pampanga, and Vertis in Quezon City.

The firm had placed its office space projects on the backburner and on a “push button” mode due to excess supply amid the declining demand in 2008 when the US economy weakened.

New buildings have already been put up earlier this year. “I think we had announced some, an example is our BPO building Iloilo and Bacolod. Most are in provincial locations because I think that is where it’s now better to do (these),” said Aquino.

Early this year, Ayala Land announced it will build Two Evotech, Cebu Peak A, and other BPO buildings in Iloilo, Bacolod, Baguio, and Cavite. The six buildings will add a total of 56,000 sqm. in new leasable space.

As of the middle of the year, the projected construction in six locations has increased to 11 with five already launched – Baguio, Ayala Center redevelopment, Two Evotech, Cebu, and Iloilo.

ALI has also kicked off several BPO projects in Manila. “We have announced what we are doing here in Glorietta 5. In Glorietta 2 we will also have BPO buildings there as well,” he added.

As of end-2009, Ayala has a total of 347,000 square meters of leasable space of which 67 percent has been occupied as of end-June 2010, compared to 58 percent a year ago.

For the first semester, revenues from Ayala Land’s office building reached P844 million, compared to P788 million last year. The 7 percent improvement was due to the significant growth in occupancy by 40,296 square meters.

Office revenues were further boosted by a 4 percent increase in average BPO lease rates due to both programmed rental escalations and a general improvement in outlook for the BPO sector as a whole.

Source:http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/274889/ayala-land-increases-bpo-inventory

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JDA software joins forces with Tata Consultancy

August 31st, 2010

JDA Software Group Inc. has joined with Tata Consultancy Services in a quest to help customers drive high performance within their organizations through the delivery of world-class solutions and services.”

Spanning both companies’ global locations, the alliance brings together supply chain management, merchandising and pricing management products and services and Tata Consultancy’s business consulting, IT and BPO services. As a result, JDA and Tata Consultancy will work more closely together to help companies achieve a faster and greater return on their JDA products investments leveraging Tata Consultancy’ global reach, deep understanding of customer business and IT environments, and strong program management and governance capabilities, the company’s said.

“A key component of JDA’s corporate strategy is to drive growth and customer success with and through our expanding network of alliance program members,” said Mark Nation, JDA group vice president of global alliances. “We are truly excited to have Tata Consultancy as a global alliance partner, and we’re confident our mutual customers will gain significant value through JDA’s best-in-class supply chain solutions, coupled with Tata Consultancy’s industry-leading engagement model and commitment to delivering client success.”

JDA, which is headquartered in Scottsdale, Ariz., has more than 6,000 customers for its supply chain management, merchandising and pricing products and services.

“Tata Consultancy is always looking to add value to our customers and this relationship with JDA, a leader in supply chain solutions, will help us deliver that value,” said K. Jayaramakrishnan, Tata Consultancy vice president of global alliances. “Tata Consultancy continues to deliver on its promises for customers around the world and we are confident that this alliance will help provide our customers an experience of certainty and the competitive edge they need to succeed in the market.”

India’s Tata Consultancy Services is an IT services, business solutions and outsourcing company that is part of Tata Group, India’s largest industrial conglomerate. Tata Consultancy has 160,000 IT consultants in 42 countries and $6.3 billion in revenue in 2009.

Source:http://www.indusbusinessjournal.com/ME2/dirmod.asp?sid=&nm=&type=Publishing&mod=Publications::Article&mid=8F3A7027421841978F18BE895F87F791&tier=4&id=8E190FB2D746436AB982581C3892E0A1

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