Archive for June, 2011

The potential storms of cloud computing

June 16th, 2011

The gap in expectations and perception of risk between senior business and IT executives is likely to be a major challenge to the expansion of cloud computing, according to a new report from LSE.

computersWith cloud computing becoming an increasingly important element of the IT function of most organisations, leading academics from The Outsourcing Unit at the London School of Economics and Political Science, undertook research to review the key features of cloud computing and its likely near-term and longer-term development trends. The research was undertaken from late 2010 into 2011 and included a survey of more than 1,035 business and IT executives.

The Unit has now released the second part of the report, which looks at the challenges cloud computing presents for businesses and service providers. These challenges include data security, compliance with regulation, the lack of strong service level agreements, and the potential for businesses to be locked in with service providers.

Notably the report found that senior IT executives weighed the risks of cloud computing quite differently from business executives. While both business and IT executives were worried about data security, the IT staff also expressed particular concern about potential contractual issues with service providers.

The report identifies this ‘Risk Perception gap’ as a challenge in the development of cloud. There is also an ‘Expectations Gap’. Business executives are convinced of the potential of cloud and look to in-house IT executives to steer success. But these IT executives see many more barriers to delivery than their business colleagues.

Source:http://finchannel.com/Main_News/B_Schools/88862_The_potential_storms_of_cloud_computing/

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How long is the Indian IT services sector’s shelf life?

June 16th, 2011

I blogged earlier this week about how IT Indian companies face challenges as a result of the growing trend for outcome based outsourcing. Basically as businesses look to outsourcers to help them improve business, rather than just cut costs, they are less interested in paying for time and materials.

I then spoke to quite a few people in the industry to get their views and realised that although there is an undoubted shift towards outcome based outsourcing, views are mixed on how it will impact the Indian suppliers.

Indian suppliers got their foot in the door of the global IT market just before 2000 when global businesses, worried about the Millennium Bug, needed lots of software resources to prepare for the worst.

As a result Indian technology companies, which had been around for years, developed relationships with global enterprises. The big attraction to big business was the availability of good software engineering skills at a fraction of the cost of home grown equivalents.

India’s IT sector is still confident but recognises that it needs to change. Som Mittal, who is president of Nasscom, the body that represents Indian IT suppliers, recently told the Financial Times that he expects the Indian services sector to grow 15% to be worth $70bn this year, despite challenges.

But despite this confidence a confluence of factors could mean the Indian suppliers will face reducing profit margins. These factors include a trend towards businesses paying for services based on outcomes rather than time and materials used, wage inflation in India and a tightening up on the rules regarding work visas in the UK and US.

Mittal accepted that outcome based agreements changed the game and will force Indian suppliers to become more efficient.

Mark Lewis, head of outsourcing at law firm Berwin Leighton Paisner, says the honeymoon is over for the Indian global IT and outsourcing players. “They now have to face the same challenges as their other global competitors. Join the Club, as it were.”

He says there is also a cost base issue for the Indian suppliers compared to in the past. “As the Indian economy has grown and continued to grow, so has GDP inflation and wage inflation, especially in the software engineering sector. So people who used to be cheaper than infrastructure are now much more expensive than they were.”

Douglas Hayward, analyst at IDC, believes the Indian industry has accepted that things are changing and is adapting to it. “Indian suppliers realise now that they are moving to the end of the golden-age of time and materials and throwing people at a problem.”

“They have already moved into fixed cost deals from time and materials and outcome based contracts are the next step.”

Ilan Oshri, associate fellow at Warwick Business School, believes that India still has a lot of room for manoeuvre. “There are rising costs but people are shifting to different cities where costs are lower. They are not just using cities like Mumbai and Chennai but also southern India.” He says his research actually shows an increasing trend for Western businesses to set up captive centres in India.

Oshri says outcome based contracts are becoming more popular but still only account for a small portion of total contracts. “Outcome based contracts are the smallest portion of contracts so it does not have a real impact at the moment.” He agrees with Hayward that outcome based deals are not a major step from fixed cost agreements.

Indian companies are noting a change in buying habits. Bindi Bhullar, director at Indian supplier HCL Technologies, says in the UK there is a trend towards outcome based contracts. He says customers are becoming more sophisticated in their purchasing of IT services. “Even first time outsourcers can use outcome based contracts if they have the right advisory support.”

But he adds that there is still a future for the time and materials model. “It still suits a lot of customers and when you look at the overall market there is still reletively low penetration.”

Indian IT service providers face a challenge to retain their strong position in the global outsourcing sector. The last decade has seen Indian companies outgrow their competitors but have they prepared for shifts in customer buying habits, geopolitics and economic change?

How the Indian IT giants took hold of Western IT contracts

Ashok Soota, a pioneer of Indian IT services, who was president of Wipro in the 1980’s told Computer Weekly last year how the Indian IT industry anchored in the West.

It is a story of missed opportunities for the Western IT giants. He said: “The suppliers in the West only started to feel threatened by us in 2000.”

“Before 1994 Western IT companies were not really noticing us because we were mainframe maintenance. Then client/server came they thought we could not do it. But we were.”

When the year 2000 approached the Indian companies took their opportunity. Soota said: “Then Y2K came along (millennium bug) and they thought we would go away afterwards. But Y2K gave Indian companies entry into big global companies.”

“It was 2004 by the time the big Western suppliers became anxious.”

Source:http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/inside-outsourcing/2011/06/how-long-is-indian-it-services-sector-shelf-life.html

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Council Considers Outsourcing Animal Control

June 16th, 2011

East Brunswick may be partnering its animal control services with a neighboring municipality, according to a proposal from Monday’s Township Council meeting.

With the township’s lone animal control officer, David Blumig, nearing retirement, Township Administrator James White proposed the idea at Monday’s council meeting, and was given the green light by council members to begin discussions with neighboring Helmetta Township on a possible agreement.

“We have some decisions to make, and this is the way to go. I think we can save the taxpayers some money,” White said.

The decision to enter into a shared services agreement with another municipality is the result of two related issues the township is concerned with in regards to animal control, White said. The first, the retirement of Officer Blumig is what prompted the township to rethink its animal control services department. Blumig is a full-time dispatcher who works overtime during the day as the animal control officer.

In his tenure as the animal control officer, Blumig’s services have cost the township less than that of his predecessors. But without a viable replacement waiting in the wings, the township is being forced to look at alternatives.

Coupled with that, is the process of impoundment, the sheltering of stray animals recovered by the township.

“We are coming very close to losing the ability to house (impounded animals) at the current location where we do,” White said. “This agreement would go hand in hand because we can’t be without a place to take animals.”

The agreement would mean splitting the duties of animal recovery, transportation and impoundment between the two municipalities. Currently, the township spends between $13,000 and $15,000 a year on impounding services, and, according to White, a shared services agreement would cost the township and its members even less money.

White added that he has not yet sat down with officials from Helmetta Township to discuss terms of the deal, but said he was looking for a green light from the council first. He said any deal would only be for one year, to allow for flexibility in future decisions on the issue.

He also said that the option of returning to employing a full time animal control officer is always on the table, should a viable replacement surface in the future.

“The realm of shared services is something I feel very strongly about, and really just the wave of the future now that municipalities are constantly seeing their budget tightening,” Councilman Mike Hughes said. “If it provides a cost savings to the people of East Brunswick without seeing a loss of service, I think it’s truly a win-win for everybody and something we should definitely be looking for.”

Helmetta looks to be the early favorite should any shared services agreement be reached, but Councilwoman Nancy Pinkin questioned whether or not Helmetta is the best option, calling for a more complete survey of any surrounding towns “just to see if there are other options as well that might be equally or more cost effective.”

“It certainly looks like it’s the best option. It’s right there for us, the proximity, it just makes every bit of sense in the world,” said White, noting that it is still very early in the process. “But we’ll certainly look and see how it relates to other municipalities.”

Source:http://eastbrunswick.patch.com/articles/council-considers-outsourcing-animal-control

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IT Application Outsourcing by Banks Rebounds

June 16th, 2011

In line with the broader, post-recessionary IT Outsourcing (ITO) trend, large banking Application Outsourcing (AO) transactions have revived to dominate the BFSI (banking, financial services and insurance) ITO market, according to Everest Group, a global consulting and research firm. A one-hour webinar will be held June 29, 9 a.m. CDT, to present study findings and insights about banking AO market trends and the service provider landscape.

According to Everest Group’s study, BFSI Outsourcing: IT Applications in Banking – Trends and Future Outlook, almost 60 percent of active BFSI AO deals are comprised of large-sized contracts valued upwards of US$25 million. Most large banking AO deals continue to be structured around application development, ongoing enhancements and maintenance. The BFSI ITO market, estimated by Everest Group at US$72-80 billion, has seen deal volume and total contract values (TCV) of deals increase while average deal duration has remained stable over the past few years.

In a companion study, BFSI Outsourcing: Application Outsourcing in Banking – Service Provider Landscape, Everest Group examined the performance and capabilities of BFSI AO service providers. More than 20 leading performers earned positions on Everest Group’s Performance/Experience/Ability/Knowledge (PEAK) matrix, led by five PEAK Leaders – Accenture, Cognizant, IBM, Infosys and TCS – that collectively account for 70 percent of active annualized contract value (ACV) of large banking AO deals. PEAK Major Contenders are Atos Origin, Capgemini, CGI, CSC, Dell Services, HCL, HP, Polaris, Syntel and Wipro. PEAK Emerging Players are Hexaware, ITC Infotech, L&T Infotech, Luxoft, MindTree, Ness and Softtek.

“Managing growth and complexity, focusing on profitability by cost management and improving the customer experience are the key drivers for the banking AO market,” said Amneet Singh, vice president – Global Sourcing. “Key emerging technology investment themes in the banking AO space include mobility, social media, channel integration, risk management and regulatory compliance.”

Highlight observations of the banking AO market and its service provider landscape include:

* North American banks sign fewer but larger deals compared to European banks.
* Retail banking is the most active user of AO compared to other banking lines of business such as cards, lending and commercial banking.
* A notable decline in offshoring occurred during the recession, but offshore leverage is back to pre-recession levels.
* India dominates in offshore delivery; Brazil and China are emerging locations for banking AO.
* While global and offshore service provider majors focus on their broader presence across various geographies and serving multiple clients, Tier-2 Indian providers focus on growing their share within specific accounts. Regional players, expectedly, are successful in serving clients in target geographies or regions.
* M&A activity is expected to accelerate among the PEAK Major Contenders and Emerging Players with a potential to reorder the PEAK positions.

With the return of the BFSI ITO market to pre-recessionary levels, new and emerging demand drivers and nearly US$10 billion of banking AO contracts due for renewal this year through 2015, service providers are intensely competing for share.

“The evolving service provider landscape in banking AO services provides a diverse set of options for banking majors. Buyer-driven portfolio consolidation, service provider M&A, and a rapidly advancing technology environment will drive further evolution in the service provider landscape,” said Jimit Arora, research director. “Service providers need to demonstrate deep domain skills and develop micro-vertical expertise to achieve differentiation and success in the banking IT applications outsourcing market.”

This year, Everest Group is releasing 15 BFSI outsourcing reports focused on ITO and BPO themes. This includes nine reports on AO: market trends and outlook, service provider landscape and service providers’ profiles compendiums for AO in banking, capital markets and insurance. Everest Group’s research studies are based upon analysis of about 350 large, multi-year BFSI AO contracts and ongoing analysis of more than 20 leading service providers.

Source:http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20110615006562/en/Everest-Group-Application-Outsourcing-Banks-Rebounds

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Wärtsilä Signs Outsourcing Agreement with HP

June 16th, 2011

HP has announced Wärtsilä Corporation of Finland, a leading power solutions provider to the global marine and energy markets, has signed a three-year outsourcing services agreement with two one-year extension options. HP will deliver information technology services to help Wärtsilä become even more productive servicing their customers in the 70 countries where it operates.

“Our customers depend on us to power the ships that sail the world’s seas and power plants that light up our world, a feat requiring tremendous operational innovation and efficiency,” said Esa Kivineva, chief information officer, Wärtsilä. “HP helps us remain on top of technology developments with an infrastructure that gives our team the flexibility they need to serve customers and sustain cost-effective growth.”

HP will continue providing a full scope of technology infrastructure outsourcing services enabled by the HP Best Shore global delivery model. Best Shore combines HP’s technology portfolio with global delivery expertise to give clients greater flexibility and cost efficiencies while minimizing risk.

Wärtsilä will continue to benefit from Data Center Services, which HP will deliver from HP data centers and customer’s global sites. HP will provide Server Management Services and monitoring from HP Best Shore delivery centers in Bangalore, India as well as Storage and Backup and Restore Services to ensure high availability of IT services and continuous reliable operations. HP will also provide Network Management Services to remotely manage and monitor the company’s LAN/WAN environment from the HP Best Shore delivery center in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

In addition, HP will continue delivering Workplace Services for all of the company’s computing devices such as desktop and notebook PCs, handheld devices and printers. Wärtsilä will use HP Service Desk Services, Onsite Support Services and remote Desktop Management Services from HP Best Shore delivery centers in Bangalore, India.

Source:http://www.sourcingfocus.com/site/newsitem/3704/

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9 ways to stop your IT outsourcing deal from leaking money

June 16th, 2011

As outsourcing investments have grown more complex—more locations, more functions, more service providers—governance has become even more important and difficult.
“The bar is constantly being raised, and for many outsourcing buyers, the capability to perform good outsourcing governance cannot keep up with sourcing ambitions,” says Stan Lepeak, director in KPMG’s Shared Services and Outsourcing Advisory group.
Here are nine governance tips for managing your outsourcing deal.
1. Assess your strengths and weaknesses. “The actual acts of governance may be simple, but doing it has become sophisticated,” says Marais. “Everyone thinks they do it well, but very few do.”
Be honest about what you’re good at and what you’re not and consider outsourcing the areas that are suffering or that you have no interest in making a core competency.
2. Invest in insight, not just oversight. Nothing saps the value from an outsourcing relationship like layers of management. “Most of the time when you are not seeing the value you were expecting from outsourcing, it’s not because anyone is breaching a contract,” says Edward Hansen, partner at law firm Baker & McKenzie. “One of the first places to look is how the governance structure is working.”
The typical outsourcing management hierarchy, designed for contract enforcement, may be ineffective. Hansen advises CIOs to encourage functional communication between the customer and supplier at all levels.
“It can be helpful to turn to the people in the trenches who are working together on a day to day basis,” Hansen says. “These people have worked out problems together and [may] even have ideas on how to improve [the engagement] that would bring real value to both companies.”
3. Focus on high-value governance processes. Two places you get the most bang for your buck are invoice management and contract management. If you focus on those two areas alone, “that will get you a long way,” Marais says.
4. Reconsider the role of service level agreements (SLAs). SLAs exist to balance what is essentially a flawed business model. “At its most basic you have two companies that are not naturally aligned economically, so the natural profit-seeking tendency is for the customer to overburden the provider and for the provider to over-charge and underperform,” says Hansen. “Most SLAs attempt to make non-performance expensive for the vendor in an attempt to realign the economics.”
If there were a relatively straightforward way for an IT leader to boost his company’s bottom line by millions of dollars a year, chances are he wouldn’t ignore it. But that’s just what many CIOs are doing as a result of poor outsourcing management.
The typical outsourcing deal loses between five and 30 percent of its expected value each year through ineffective governance, according to outsourcing consultancy TPI. That lines up with the results of a survey by the International Association of Outsourcing Professionals, which found that 63 percent of companies believed they were losing an average of 25 percent of contract value due to poor governance. For a typical five-year $100 million contract, that’s a loss of as much as $6 million annually.
“Companies make the same mistake over and over again,” says Claude Marais, TPI partner and managing director of governance services. “All the effort goes into the transaction. Outsourcing governance is an afterthought.”
But SLAs and their enforcement do little to protect or increase the value of an outsourcing deal. Re-examine each SLA and consider whether or not there might be a structural alternative to achieve better results. For example, a change in fee structure might be more effective in driving the desired outcomes. If you’re seeking efficiency, you might shift fixed infrastructure costs to the vendor and pay per use.
“That creates an economic incentive to use the smallest infrastructure to support the activity, driving cost down,” Hansen says. “SLAs would be used to ensure that the infrastructure isn’t cut to the point where it puts the service at risk.”
5. Define what value means to you. Is your goal to maximize cost cutting? Improve process performance? Enable transformation? Develop realistic and measureable metrics to track whether or not value is being delivered, advises Lepeak. When it’s not, perform root cause analysis to determine why.
6. Recruit experienced and enthusiastic governance professionals.Most outsourcing governance groups are improperly staffed. Very senior IT professionals may get bored by some of the minutiae and perform poorly. Junior people may not have the experience to thrive.
“Performing good outsourcing governance is very different from running an internal, non-outsourced operation, yet quite often those tasked with managing an outsourcing effort have a background and skill set based on running internal functions,” says KMPG’s Lepeak.
Because CIOs do a poor job of incorporating the group into the overall departmental structure, they turn governance into an IT ghetto. “There is still a ways to go in terms of making governance experience a relevant and understandable step in the career track,” says Liz Evans, director in KPMG’s Shared Services and Outsourcing Advisory group. “Many companies struggle to find and attract the right resources internally and externally.”
7. Go holistic. “Look at governance and the way you govern across your portfolio, whether that be IT or the enterprise at large,” advises Evans of KPMG. If outsourcing governance is not aligned with overall IT governance, friction is bound to occur.
8. Beware of non-stakeholders in negotiations. When reevaluating a deal that is underperforming, bring problem solvers—not risk mitigators—to the table, advises Hansen.
“Lawyers are the classic non-stakeholders,” he adds. “When a company evaluates a deal for renegotiation, one of the exercises typically involves handing the contract to some lawyers who then look for ways they can ‘tighten it up.’ To most lawyers it doesn’t really matter if the deal as it was written is choking the parties to death, that the economics are not aligned or that the governance is dysfunctional.”
Third-party advisors or procurement professionals could also fall into that category. A better option is to put deal leads and stakeholders in a room to analyze how to improve the relationship.
9. Commit to continuous improvement. Once there are solid governance processes in place to track performance, financials and relationship management progress, it’s important to constantly measure the effectiveness of the governance organization and identify areas for improvement. “Then you can start to say, if I’m really doing this well enough in all areas, could I do it at a lower cost,” says Marais. “Then it’s a whole new world of opportunity.”

Source:http://www.cio.com/article/684433/9_Ways_to_Stop_Your_IT_Outsourcing_Deal_From_Leaking_Money

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HP,CISCO and Motorola increase Egypt IT promises

June 16th, 2011

Recent moves by Hewlett-Packard, CISCO and Motorola to establish stronger bases in Egypt have the outsourcing community in an optimistic fit. Adel Danish, the head of Xceed, one of Cairo’s leading call centers, believes the recent developments will help continue to push Egypt to the forefront of international investment options.

“We are definitely keeping pace, even after the troubles earlier this year with the protests,” he said. “Outsourcing is a key institution for Egypt and through our concerted efforts, it is obvious that companies see it the same way.”

All three companies have signed agreements with either ITIDA – a government information technology operator and regulator – or the ministry of communications to develop their companies reach into Egypt and the region. For analysts, it is a sign that the Egyptian economy appears to be rebounding nicely.

“It is a positive step in the right direction. Now the key is to keep it going forward,” said Reda Omran, a Cairo-based IT executive.

Yasser ElKady, ITIDA’s CEO said in a press release that “this MoU is a clear testament to our commitment to support all segments of the IT industry in Egypt. While our endeavours in positioning Egypt as one of the key outsourcing destinations have yielded significant results, we are keen on extending all the necessary support to the Egyptian hardware companies and we are positive that this training, along with other initiatives will have considerable impact.”

Hewlett-Packard (HP), the world’s largest technology company, and Egypt’s Information Technology Industry Development Agency (ITIDA) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to provide world-class training to Egyptian hardware companies and increase their competitive advantages. The MoU aims to assist Egyptian companies in training to help grow their businesses, impart key skills to employees and in the wider talent pool, and increase their footprint in local and regional markets.

Source:http://bikyamasr.com/wordpress/?p=34813

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