Archive for April, 2011

Infosys Profit Up 19 Percent, But Misses Expectations

April 19th, 2011

Infosys Technologies reported an 18.9 percent rise in quarterly profit in dollar terms Friday, missing expectations as expenses, global uncertainty and a rising rupee squeezed margins.
Investors, who were also unsettled by a tepid outlook for earnings growth and the decision of key board member T.V. Mohandas Pai to retire, sent the bellwether stock down 9.6 percent Friday.
Infosys rarely misses expectations and the news offered a disappointing kickoff to earnings season for India’s $60 billion software services sector, which has been pinched by wage hikes and a rising rupee.
Net profit at India’s No. 2 outsourcing company was 18.2 billion rupees ($402 million) for the quarter ending March. Revenues grew 23.6 percent in dollar terms, to 72.5 billion rupees ($1.6 billion).
Analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected a quarterly profit of 18.5 billion rupees ($414 million) on sales of 73.6 billion rupees ($1.65 billion).
“We are factoring in that the rupee is getting stronger,” said Ashok Vemuri, head of global banking for Infosys. “We are seeing the fact that there continues to be wage pressure. We have to factor that in especially in India.”
Europe’s debt crisis and Japan’s debilitating quake added to slowness — particularly in financial services revenues- in the March quarter, which is generally soft as clients finalize their IT budgets, he added.
Vemuri said a few Japanese banks pulled back on new projects following March’s devastating tsunami, but anticipates that cost pressures in Europe will ultimately be a boon for the company.
“Even though we may not get a lot of revenue from Japan, the effect of Japan will be felt for a longer period than we give it credit,” he said. “The issues in Europe will be beneficial for us in throwing up interesting opportunities. They realize they have been left behind on the tech curve and they are facing significant cost pressure.”
He said that despite fears of another protectionist surge in advance of U.S. elections, American clients are sending more work offshore than last year.
“We are not hearing our clients talk about protectionism,” he said. “They have increased the percentage of work they give to offshoring companies.”
Kotak Securities analyst Dipen Shah said earnings guidance in rupee terms was lower than expected for the year.
“They are taking into account most of the negatives,” he said. “This may prove to be conservative going ahead.”
Infosys said earnings for this fiscal year, which ends in March 2012, would be 126.05 rupees to 128.21 rupees ($2.83 to $2.88) per share, up 5.5 percent to 7.3 percent in rupee terms from the prior year. Revenues for the fiscal year should come in between 317.3 billion rupees and 322.7 billion rupees ($7.13 billion to $7.25 billion), annual growth of 15.4 percent to 17.3 percent in rupee terms.
While the rising rupee will likely hit margins by 1 percentage point, the company’s outlook for 10 to 12 percent wage hikes for offshore employees this fiscal year represents less wage pressure than last fiscal, when a fight for talent helped drive up salaries at Indian outsourcing companies by 12 to 14 percent, said Shah.
Infosys is also undergoing an unsettling shift of top management. Human resources head T.V. Mohandas Pai said Friday he will retire in June.
Vemuri said Pai plans to dedicate himself to “nation-building” in the field of education, but declined to say whether Pai would work for the government like Infosys co-founder Nandan Nilekani, who left the company to helm India’s ambitious national identification program.
Company co-founder K. Dinesh will also retire in June.
Ravi Venkatesan, former chairman of Microsoft India, was appointed to the board of directors on Friday, a move to be confirmed by shareholders at the next generalmeeting.

Board chairman N.R. Narayana Murthy plans to retire in August. The board said it would meet in April to hammer out succession plans.

Source:http://www.newsfactor.com/news/Infosys-Earnings-Miss-Expectations/story.xhtml?story_id=10200A66RB10

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01Synergy – back from International ICT Expo Hong Kong

April 18th, 2011
01Synergy International ICT Expo Hong Kong

01Synergy International ICT Expo Hong Kong

Team 01Synergy is back from a exciting International ICT Expo in Hong Kong, it was nice to meet so many of you there once again. The 01Synergy team, Kuljeet Sethi, Paul Singh & Preet Chandhoke did a good job, engaged in many conversations and shook too many hands to count!

Our CTO, Kuljeet Sethi also shared his technical expertise spanning more then 2.5 decades and helped many companies at the Free SME IT Clinic providing IT Consultation services in conjunction with HKTDC.

We at 01Synergy look forward to seeing you again in Hong Kong at the International ICT Expo Hong Kong 2012, and you will see us at other events in the meanwhile.

Do connect with the 01Synergy online on  TwitterFacebookLinkedIn

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Fresno County considers outsourcing park care

April 18th, 2011

Fresno County leaders have begun recruiting outside groups to help run a public park system wracked by budget cuts.

Plans for the Table Mountain Indian tribe to operate Lost Lake Park are back on the table — after falling prey to controversy two years ago — and local businesses such as Sun-Maid Growers of California may be asked to help with maintenance at other parks.

County officials say the outreach could culminate with an adopt-a-park program, in which private investment becomes commonplace in the county’s 13 parks, from popular Kearney Park with its sports fields and picnic areas to the more rugged Avocado Lake in the foothills.

“We’d put a plaque up that says, ‘This park sponsored by XYZ Company,’ and the company would provide funds and services,” said John Thompson, the county’s resources manager who oversees parks. “We’re trying to think of everything we possibly can to support the parks.”

Parks officials hope to line up several interested parties before going to the Board of Supervisors later this year to approve the partnerships.

The effort comes as county funding for parks has dropped from $2.6 million two years ago to half that today. Another cut of 14% is expected July 1. Parks departments across the state, like all public programs, have taken hits recently as government budgets have dried up with the economy.

County parks officials say they’ve had no choice but to scale back maintenance of campgrounds and hiking trails and let trash pile up, restrooms go unattended and weeds flourish on park grounds.

While a decade ago full-time maintenance employees worked at nearly half the county’s parks, today a couple of grounds crews service all the parks, driving from one to the next trying to keep up. Some sites such as Los Gatos Creek Park in western Fresno County — a nearly two-hour drive from Fresno — are visited just once a month, officials say.

“People get frustrated when they get charged $5 to go to a park and there’s litter all over the place and the lawns are not mowed, and I don’t blame them,” said Thompson.

Parks officials have looked for ways to cope, but little has stuck.

Earlier this month, a cost-cutting proposal to halt trash service at parks and shutter water fountains was shot down by the county Board of Supervisors. Two years ago the board nipped another plan to close parks during the off-season.

Cost-saving efforts have similarly fallen short with a program that puts wards of the justice system to work in parks. Because of budget cuts, the Sheriff’s Office can no longer maintain a jail-inmate work force once responsible for half of the upkeep in county parks, according to parks officials.

The Probation Department still provides work crews.

Last month, in another effort to cut costs, parks officials contracted with a private firm to operate fee stations in parks instead of hiring regular seasonal staffing.

The latest money-saving endeavor is to get outside groups even more involved.

Representatives of Table Mountain Rancheria said this week they’re willing to take another look at offers they made to the county two years ago, which included leasing Lost Lake Park and running it as well as financing new sports fields there.

“We haven’t closed the door on anything,” said Dan Casas, an attorney for the tribe. “We see that [park] as a big recreation component of our community.”

The tribe, which owns Table Mountain Casino, has helped fund a number of public programs — from libraries to schools– in the Friant and Fresno areas.

Source:http://www.fresnobee.com/2011/04/17/2354494/fresno-county-considers-outsourcing.html

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Ayala unit acquires US BPO

April 18th, 2011

HRMall, an affiliate of Ayala-led BPO firm LiveIt Investments Ltd. acquired the Los Angeles-based IQ BackOffice LLC, Ayala Corp. said without specifying the purchase price.

HRMall, now with IQ BackOffice folded in, are valued at a combined $15 million, Ayala Corp. said.

The deal will result in Ayala’s LiveIt holding an 82.5% stake in HRMall while the management team of IQ BackOffice will hold a 17.5% stake.

“HRMall will now be able to provide a complete suite of low-cost, best-in-class HR, finance and accounting services to the underserved mid-sized enterprise sector in the US and Asia,” Ayala Corp. said.

Source:http://www.bworldonline.com/content.php?section=Corporate&id=29958&title=Ayala%20unit%20acquires%20US%20BPO

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Firms embrace, but fail to execute IT as key strategy

April 15th, 2011

Most enterprises today recognize IT as integral to their overall business strategy, but not all have executed or invested enough to execute this realization, note tech consultancies, who advise firms to go further by actively tweaking existing implementations and tapping new technologies.

Ho Wah Lee, head of advisory at KPMG Singapore, said the importance of IT in a company’s business strategy is “now a reality, and no longer just a PowerPoint presentation”.

And in terms of IT utilization across industry verticals such as banking and healthcare, Ho told ZDNet Asia that it is easy to spot differences between high-performing and mediocre companies.

High performers, he said, embrace and continuously utilize IT as a key differentiator in their business strategy, integrating it across all parts of the organization. Mediocre performers, in comparison, see IT as a “necessary evil” and “short-term fix”, implementing it only because “everyone else is doing it or it’s part of a required [industry] standard”, he explained in an e-mail.

He added that leading companies also continuously review, finetune and improve their IT implementations, and do not exhibit the “don’t fix unless broken” mentality that is typical of average performers.

More than a mindset

Michael Broberg, vice president of U.S. strategic technology solutions at Hitachi Consulting, concurred, noting that high-performing companies take IT out of the backroom and adopt technology throughout all areas of their business, including supply chain, logistics, customer and channel management, as well as corporate functions such as legal, finance and human resources.

“Technology is no longer just a way to support a business but a way of doing business,” Broberg said in his e-mail. However, while most large organizations have internalized this perspective, not all have made the necessary changes or investments to get ahead of the curve, he said.

Some resist changing internal processes that have been ingrained for years, while others may have legacy systems and processes that are complex and not conducive to rapid changes, he explained.

Ho added that leadership is also often a key factor. C-level executives may not fully embrace IT because they view other business issues with higher priority, or prefer to maintain status quo.

They may also adopt a “short-term” view on IT implementations and are not willing to impact key corporate financial indicators, he said, noting that strategic investments in IT may not yield immediate results and returns on investments (ROIs) are sometimes difficult to quantify or articulate since the benefits can be intangible.

Leveraging new technologies
Patrick Lopez, senior manager of U.S. strategic technology solutions at Hitachi Consulting, noted that enterprise mobility has driven more companies or left them with little choice but to utilize IT as a core requirement of their overall business strategy.

Lopez observed that enterprise users today want easy, immediate access to technology, and expect business tools to be developed for mobile platforms.

James Bostock, advisory services partner at Ernst & Young, noted in his e-mail that organizations looking to further enhance and better utilize their IT spend ought to tap areas such as social media, mobile apps and mobile devices. These new technologies have the potential to generate new businesses or new markets for companies, he said.

Steve Garrou, vice president of outsourcing and cloud services at Savvis, pointed to the consumerization of IT as the “new wave of influence” as both employees and consumers demand increased mobility. Businesses today need to empower their employees to work from any place, at any time, to successfully achieve their business needs, Garrou in an e-mail.

By adopting emerging technology such as cloud computing, companies can focus on newly-founded excess capacity–time and money–on activities core to its success, have quicker time-to-market, leaner costs or create new products, services or capabilities to remain competitive and differentiate themselves from others who have yet to adopt the latest technology, he explained.

Lawrence Goh, executive director of Accenture Asean, iterated that high-performing organizations that have already integrated IT across their overall business strategy, understand how to adopt new technologies securely as new information is pumped into application architectures for use throughout the company.

Goh highlighted that since the tech consultancy started its High Performance IT Research in 2008, the gap between high-performing and mediocre IT users has been widening. High performers are reaping the benefits of positioning “IT as a partner and growth engine for their business”, and thus, continue to hone this capability, he said in an e-mail.

CIO as business leader, not just tech leader
Bostock remarked that the more progressive companies no longer view IT simply as an efficiency-enabler and have CIOs who claim a “bona fide seat” at the table with their management team. Advice from CIOs should be sought in driving the business forward in areas other than improving efficiencies.

Garrou concurred that CIOs have seen their roles shift from technical planning to strategic planning, where they focus not only the latest technology and trends but also on ways IT can help achieve business objectives.

Broberg added that CIOs today need to “think differently from CIOs of the past” and understand the ins-and-outs of the business, how it operates and what drives profits.

However, he emphasized that understanding the importance and opportunities associated with technology is not the sole responsibility of the CIO, but all business leaders within the organization. The CIO should not be the only channel introducing new ways of leveraging IT to change the paradigm of the business, he advised.

Source:http://www.zdnetasia.com/firms-embrace-but-fail-to-execute-it-as-key-strategy-62208415.htm

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Cloud computing to drive tech startups

April 15th, 2011

If you are an aspiring technology entrepreneur, do not hesitate or delay in launching your business. This is about the right time, in fact, the best in the last couple of years, at least in terms of flexibility of IT infrastructure.

While large companies are still struggling with the idea of completely relying on third parties for their IT systems, several startup firms in India are setting precedence by fully outsourcing their infrastructure.

Right from customer facing, breadwinning applications to backend software, technology startups are fully leveraging cloud computing to quickly go-to-market, reduce capital expenditure, increase efficiencies and also free up cash for day-to-day operations.

“Startup firms are the fastest adopters of cloud computing technologies,” says Ezhil Arasan B, director — CSS Corp Labs. “Many of them are ready to experiment with the technologies as they give them the liberty to pay as they go.”

One example is the startup Marcellus. The company provides a software-as-a-service platform that allows its clients (such as media companies and news agencies) to deliver high-quality videos on their own websites. Marcellus creates custom plans for enterprises with large bandwidth requirements. The company was started in 2007 and has employees in North America and India.

Marcellus has incorporated Amazon Web Services (Amazon’s cloud services arm) extensively within its architecture. The company does most of its revenue generating activities including storing and distributing content; handling video queues; running clients’ encoding processes, and scaling capacity on demand, on the cloud. It also plans to move its data storage to a cloud environment.

Preetam Mukerjee, CEO of Marcellus says, “Adopting cloud reduced our time to market by at least a year, which was crucial for us, given the Asia Pacific market space we target.” Marcellus is now planning to expand beyond Asia Pacific to the North American market. “Cloud environment helps us to continue to iterate on our business model of offering value-added infrastructure.”

Agrees Regina Tan, head of public and analyst relations, Amazon Web Services. The company has seen several such examples in India over the last couple of years, she adds.

She cites the example of redBus, the bus-ticketing portal. The company started by developing its applications on the cloud and then eventually moved all of its applications. Right now, almost all of redBus’ IT infrastructure including its customer-facing portal is handled by AWS and this has been one of the company’s successful cloud implementations in India, she adds.

Source:http://www.mydigitalfc.com/entrepreneurship/cloud-computing-drive-tech-startups-471

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Capita Group acquires BPO provider

April 15th, 2011

London-based business process outsourcing (BPO) providers The Capita Group has acquired Right Document Solutions Holdings (RDS), in a deal that could rise to £40 million.

Founded in 1988, RDS provides document consultancy and print services for businesses in the financial services, legal, media and educational sectors. BPO is a form of outsourcing that involves the contracting of the operations and responsibilities of business functions to a third-party service provider.

The acquisition is described by Capita as a ‘good strategic fit’ and will enable the company to build upon existing design, bulk print and document management capabilities.

Paul Pindar, CEO of Capita Group, comments: ‘The acquisition [...] will ensure that Capita is well positioned to participate comprehensively in this market.

‘These services also play an integral role in many of our businesses and contracts, and we can therefore provide further service efficiencies to both Capita and its clients.’

Under the terms of the deal, an initial consideration of £30 million is to be paid on completion, with an additional £10 million deferred and conditional on RDS meeting certain undisclosed performance criteria.

Paul Gillett, managing director of RDS, says that the purchase of RDS by Capita will give the business a range of unique selling points.

Gillett adds: ‘Being part of the larger Capita Group will allow us to reach our full potential across both across both private and public sectors.’

The Capita Group employs 37,000 people across 350 sites, with 34 of those in the UK, Ireland and India.

Source:http://www.mandadeals.co.uk/m-and-a-deals/acquisitions/1618508/capita-group-acquires-bpo-provider.thtml

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