Archive for January, 2011

Software outsourcing firms ride out tough times

January 15th, 2011

The software outsourcing sector is powering ahead again as many local firms reported better results last year than in 2008 and 2009 when the financial crisis struck the global economy.

Pham Tan Cong, general secretary of the Vietnam Software Association, said 2010 saw the outsourcing sector recovery gaining steam with its traditional markets like Japan and North America improving.

It was tough for Japan’s information technology industry in 2009, thus rattling the domestic software industry. Japan is a huge IT market with an annual turnover size of US$130 billion, said Cong.

As the economic crisis bit, Japanese IT companies shut down their Vietnam branches, hurting the software outsourcing sector in Vietnam that is seen as the third largest outsourcing market for Japanese companies.

“Japan companies are coming back with many deals clinched with Vietnamese software businesses,” Cong said.

He said he expected the sector to earn around US$1 billion from outsourcing deals, up from the US$800 million achieved in 2009.

HCMC’s Quang Trung Software City (QTSC) that is home to over 100 software companies has registered good business results as well.

Chu Tien Dung, chairman of Quang Trung Software City Development Company, told the Daily that companies based in this IT park in District 12 did better business last year. The number of poor-performing businesses, including those at risk of shutdown, fell about 60% last year compared with a year earlier.

In terms of revenue, the enterprises at QTSC attained average revenue growth of over 30% in comparison to 2009 due mainly to the many contracts from traditional markets such as Japan, North America and Europe.

Dung noted another factor that contributed to good revenue growth was that prices were stable and in some cases, higher than those at the height of the economic crisis.

Investment activity also started to revive at QTSC last year with 12 new software companies licensed into the park, three of them foreign. That was not a big number, Dung said, since the global software industry had yet to gain full recovery.

Source:-http://english.vietnamnet.vn/en/science-technology/3764/software-outsourcing-firms-ride-out-tough-times.html

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Infosys losing edge?

January 14th, 2011

After years of commanding up to 15% better rates for outsourcing projects than domestic peers, Infosys Technologies now sees its premium pricing erode, raising concerns about whether India’s most profitable software company can sustain its high operating margins.

With customers such as BT giving more work to fewer vendors at lower rates, it’s becoming difficult for Infosys to sustain the profitability gap it used to have over bigger and aggressive rivals such as Tata Consultancy Services (TCS).

During the second quarter ended September last year, TCS reported operating margins of 28%, quite close to Infosys’ 30% margins during the same period.

“In my mind, the premium pricing for us was 10-15 %; it would have come down a bit, but we still command premium. Today it’s definitely not 15%,” Infosys COO SD Shibulal said in an interview last month. “The fact is that it’s a treadmill, and you have to keep at it, and that’s where the aspiration comes in,” he added.

“Factors that got Infosys ahead of peers on pricing in the past will not take it ahead today. This is a departure from the past when Infosys drew on a combination of both volume growth and meaningful price rises to drive performance,” JPMorgan Analysts Viju K George and Nishit Jasani said in their report.

In many ways, Infosys’ relationship with large customers such as BT and Goldman Sachs helped it build its premium positioning in the past.

However, during the past 2-3 years, when customers, including BT, started looking beyond just a few vendors to further squeeze costs, that positioning was threatened.

BT, for instance, is now working with both TCS and Wipro apart from Infosys. Clearly, the challenge Infosys faces is more of inventing newer models and service lines to keep widening the gap. “The only problem is that whatever distance you create, it keeps coming down, so you have to keep building that distance,” Shibulal had said.

Infosys — the first among peers to announce earnings every quarter — will report results for the third quarter ended December on Thursday.

Brokerage firms such as Citi and Kotak expect the top three Indian software exporters to register 5-7 % sequential revenue growth. Investors forecast TCS and Infosys to post 27-28 % and 31-33 % operating margins, respectively, for the quarter ending December.

Infy margins may shrink

Ifosys’ margins have shrunk from almost 35.5% during the December quarter of 2009. Kotak analysts expect the margins to drop to around 32% during the year ending March 2011.

The problem for Infosys has been accentuated by the fact that last year’s recession has brought cost back on the agenda for many customers — they still want the best, but are questioning every extra buck they have to pay for ‘premium services’.

“Historical premiums, enjoyed in the past on certain accounts such as BT by Infosys may still exist, but stand considerably diminished today relative to where they stood. In other words, we do not see a case for pricing premium in favour of any one player in this industry, going forward, unless companies differentiate on clear parameters,” the JP Morgan analysts said.

Rivals say as lines of differentiation between the top three Indian software exporters blur, the gaps would fade away.

“We have been catching up, and it’s no secret. Some customers have now realised that they were paying for brand, when in fact they should be paying for services being offered,” said a senior executive at one of the top five Indian software exporters. “We now work with at least two of large Infosys customers,” he added.

Some customers are also questioning high margins enjoyed by vendors such as Infosys, as they struggle to cope with pressures of their business amid a jobless recovery in the US.
“I know of at least 3-4 customer discussions during the past few months where the high margin of vendors was used as a tool to negotiate better, lower rates,” said an outsourcing consultant based in the US who helps mid-sized customers plan their outsourcing strategy.

Analysts tracking TCS and Infosys say India’s biggest software exporter has been reducing wage costs, among other initiatives, to narrow its profitability gap with Infosys. “TCS strong margin performance through the last 3-4 quarters can be traced to a series of steps that began in early 2009. The key focus of margin defence has revolved around controlling the manpower costs, which form 75-80 % of total costs for Indian techs,” CLSA Analysts Bhavtosh Vajpayee and Nimish Joshi said in a report.

Other cost-cutting initiatives to increase margins include closing redundant offices. “It (TCS) had four times as many offices as Infosys at one time — raising overhead costs,” the CLSA analysts said.

On its part, Infosys still sees scope for premium pricing though this is being driven more by aspiration than anything else.

The company is pushing harder to increase its revenues from newer areas that are not commoditised. Infosys plans to have a third of its total revenues coming from new services, including cloud computing and platform-based offerings, over the next few years, even as such engagements mean lower profitability to begin with.

The company has already started serving four customers using these models of delivering services, and derives nearly 5% of its revenues from such services currently.

In a cloud computing or platformbased model, Infosys can serve multiple customers using same set of services developed for an existing customer such as Royal Philips Electronics. But rivals TCS and Wipro are already offering similar services to customers who are seeking to lower their capital expenditure by adopting pay-as-you-go model.

“Profitability is more about aspirations than anything else; you have to have high aspirations. Profitability is your cost of production and what a customer is willing to pay for it, the more unique you are, the more intellectual properties you have, customer would be willing to pay for it,” said Shibulal.

Source:-http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/enterprise-it/services-apps/Infosys-losing-edge/articleshow/7269619.cms

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2010-2011: IT outsourcing trends & outlook

January 14th, 2011

Services Outsourcing Contracts have witnessed an increasing trend in Application Development and Support, Business Process Outsourcing and IT Consulting Services. During the calendar year 2010, the IT contracts awarded globally were up by almost 15% in H2 2010 as compared to H1 2010.

However, all the Indian vendors together have captured less than 20% of the global IT outsourcing market, leaving great scope for entering new markets and capturing new IT Services contracts.

Source:-http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/quickiearticleshow/7273679.cms

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BPO, cloud services to be key govt. IT trends for 2011

January 13th, 2011

Bangalore: Business process outsourcing and cloud-based services are predicted to be the key trends that will drive efficiency in government IT for 2011. As the government agencies focus more on their need to cut costs, outsourcing and cloud-based approach to service delivery will gain more prominence this year, reveals a new We expect to see consumption-based and shared delivery models gaining momentum in 2011, as agencies become more open to the efficiencies that a cloud-based approach can offer. However, issues of privacy and security will mean some governments will remain cautious,” says Jessica Hawkins, OvumThe author further states that those economies most affected by serious deficits will direct their attention to outsourcing, particularly in back-office processes, to cut costs.

The year 2011 will see increased number of takers for BPO, shared services and on-demand access than ever before. However, she opined that the governments should push beyond knee-jerk cost-cutting measures and adopt a long-term vision of how fundamental changes to the way they deliver services will bring efficiency. Government agencies will turn to their IT vendors to guide them through the new technologies that can help them achieve this and vendors should be ready to do this.

The technology analyst also predicted the emergence of a new approach to procurement by government agencies. The agencies will be keen to ensure there is more visibility and accountability of how taxpayers money is spent which will lead to new ways of procuring services in 2011.

Source;-http://www.siliconindia.com/shownews/BPO_cloud_services_to_be_key_govt_IT_trends_for_2011-nid-77111.html

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IT support in London: Soca agrees major outsourcing deal

January 13th, 2011

The Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) has become the latest organisation to agree a major IT outsourcing deal.

Soca has decided to delegate responsibility for its IT infrastructure to a third party in a £157 million, ten-year deal.

The move has been made in light of the government’s £81 billion public spending cuts, with many public-funded institutions turning to outsourcers to provide increased IT efficiencies.

Soca’s outsourcing plan was approved by the Home Office and Treasury following a full review conducted by the Cabinet Office’s Efficiency Reform Group.

Trevor Pearce, director general of SOCA, said: “This contract secures an efficient and sustainable IT platform which will enable us to modernise and enhance our technological capabilities in fighting crime.”

He added that the IT infrastructure “would improve the effectiveness of UK law enforcement in dislocating criminal markets”.

Last week, it was reported that NASA had signed a ten-year deal to outsource its IT operations to a third party support provider.ADNFCR-8000229-ID-800335043-ADNFCR

Source:http://www.ihotdesk.com/article/800335043/IT-support-in-London:-Soca-agrees-major-outsourcing-deal

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Logica heads up £157m SOCA outsourcing deal

January 13th, 2011

A consortium of vendors led by Logica has signed a £157 million deal to provide the UK’s Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) with IT and case management systems.

The ten-year contract also includes the providers Detica, Cable & Wireless, and Qinetic.

SOCA said the agreement will support increased collaboration with partner agencies, better use of intelligence and case management, and efficiencies through infrastructure consolidation.

“This contract secures an efficient and sustainable IT platform which will enable us to modernise and enhance our technological capabilities in fighting crime and improve the effectiveness of UK law enforcement in dislocating criminal markets,” commented Trevor Pearce, director general of Soca, in a statement.

The contract is another example of the Cabinet Office’s difficulty in enforcing a pledged deal value limit of £100 million on all public sector IT agreements. Another, in December, was the Ministry of Defence’s signing of an 11-year, £800 million IT logistics information systems deal with Boeing.

The Cabinet Office’s web site currently states that delivery of its commitment to keep IT contracts under £100 million is “overdue”.

Source:http://www.information-age.com/channels/it-services/news/1311608/logica-heads-up-157m-soca-outsourcing-deal.thtml

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Forrester: Canada to see IT purchases growth of 4.9% in 2011

January 12th, 2011

New forecast data from Forrester Research, Inc., says that global IT purchases will rise 7.1% in 2011 to $1.7 trillion, with Canada behind the trend at 4.9% growth.

This means that the overall 2011 global tech market will look similar to the 7.2% market growth experienced in 2010. However, there are differences between the two years in terms of both products and geographies, and within those difference lies some good news.

For example, despite the fact that the computer restocking and replacement boom that propelled the tech market in 2010 is coming to an end, with hardware growth slowing to 7.4%, software purchases are starting to accelerate. This should lead to increased demand for the IT consulting and systems integration services to help implement that software.

Additionally, Forrester believes that communications equipment purchases will lag the overall tech market growth, with enterprise demand for wireless, unified communications, and videoconferencing strong, while equipment sales to carriers will be more measured. IT outsourcing will match the overall market growth.

“Our forecast of 7.1% for IT purchases is still a bullish one, given the economic weakness in Europe, the questions about the US recovery, and the potential slowdowns in Asian economies,” said Forrester Research vice president and principal analyst Andrew Bartels. “The projected growth of 7.2% in 2010 was a rebound from depressed levels in 2009, but our forecast of similar growth in 2011 is actually more impressive because it comes on top of the good growth in 2010.”

The US tech market is expected to grow slightly faster than the total global market, with 7.5% growth, as investments in cloud and Smart Computing solutions allow companies to grow profits despite weak revenue increases. Though IT purchases in Canada will rise by only 4.9%, there should be a longer-term positive impact coming off of American growth.

The biggest growth will be found in Latin America and Eastern Europe, Middle East, and Africa (EEMEA), at 9.8%. IT purchases in Asia Pacific will grow by 8.5%, with slow-growing Japan offsetting faster growth in China and India.

Source:http://www.tele-management.ca/content/23545-forrester_canada_to_see_it_purchases_growth_of_49_in_2011

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