Archive for September, 2011

Bleum Financial Services Expert Frank Pendle to Speak at High Frequency Trading Conference

September 26th, 2011

Frank Pendle, a prolific sales executive and financial services expert with Bleum, one of China’s leading IT outsourcing providers to American and European companies, will present at Golden Networking’s High Frequency Trading Leaders Forum 2011 Chicago, “How Speed Traders Leverage Cutting-Edge Strategies in the Post-Flash Crash World” (http://www.HFTLeadersForum.com), forum that will provide decision makers the most up-to-date overview of cutting-edge developments and insights to build a competitive advantage in High Frequency Trading.

Pendle is currently VP of North American Sales for Bleum, with over 20 years in IT sales experience in leading sales teams that generated over USD 500 million in IT solutions to Tier 1 companies. Pendle is a recognized expert in CPG and Financial Services industries in regard to IT, having published over 120 articles and papers in media such as “The Economist”, “Newsweek”, and “Businessweek”. He has also been retained for consulting at several Fortune 500 companies, organizations such as the United Nations, and the U.S. and Philippines governments, among others.

Pendle began his career as a Business Solutions Provider at IBM, moving into a sales executive role with the IBM Global Services Division where he received 3 President’s Circle Awards and 6 Service Stars. Pendle then went to Capgemini, where he helped grow the Central (now West) business unit from USD 2 million to USD 246 million in less than a decade. With Capgemini, Pendle received 3 Winner’s Circle Awards and 2 Salesperson of the Year awards. He currently resides in Naperville, Illinois.

Founded in 2001, Bleum provides ultra-high quality IT outsourcing work in a variety of sectors including financial services, retail, logistics and non-profit. Bleum specializes in creating offshore development centers, providing services such as application development, product development, support and maintenance, testing and legacy system modernization. Bleum’s relentless focus on quality has earned it prestigious ISO27001 and CMMI Level 5 certifications and a leadership position as one of the top 100 global outsourcing providers according to the International Association of Outsourcing Professionals.

Source:http://your-story.org/bleum-financial-services-expert-frank-pendle-to-speak-at-high-frequency-trading-conference-269210/

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Obama’s International Outsourcing

September 26th, 2011

To gauge President Obama’s lack of direct involvement on the international stage, you only have to look at the popularity polls in Europe, where his numbers still soar at around 75%. In Europe, leaders often become better liked as their visibility, leadership and influence decreases. Politicians’ popularity can really soar when they leave office. The most popular political figure in France today, for instance, is former President Jacques Chirac. Despite his current and ongoing corruption trial, from which his participation has been excused due to reasons of demonstrable senility, he has never been so popular.

Obama, in contrast to his predecessor George W. Bush, has shown comparatively little hands-on international leadership on contentious world issues. Yet, even in America, he doesn’t seem to be suffering much from it. His approval on the Libyan war sits at 42%, according to a recent Bloomberg poll—a figure not much lower than his overall approval of 45%.

A look at the White House website’s policy section reveals that the only “foreign policy” issues apparently worth publicly addressing are tsunamis, earthquakes and official visits to Asia and Cairo. Seems like a pretty sparse agenda given all the events going on in the world at the moment with a direct impact on America’s economy and security.

The evidence is pretty clear: Obama is outsourcing. He has outsourced European affairs to Britain’s David Cameron​. He has outsourced monitoring of the Arab Spring to both Cameron and France’s Nicolas Sarkozy. He’s outsourcing intelligence and military operations to well-paying private global security firms to which special forces have been flocking. Even contentious statements have been outsourced to his secretary of state, Hillary Clinton​, who was the only one to speak up and ask for the return of the Lockerbie Bomber behind bars around the time of my column titled: “Obama, Go Get the Lockerbie Bomber From Libya.” It was like Obama just sat there on the couch yelling at his mom to get the phone. He could have said something himself, or at the very least made an effort to stand somewhere nearby while she said it.

There are some advantages to this approach, particularly in the event that you don’t know what you’re doing. In these cases, it’s probably best to download the task onto someone trustworthy who does. In a sense, Obama’s hands-off—or at the very least arms-length—strategy with these international matters could feasibly be construed as implicit acknowledgement of personal ineptitude.

The ideal President would possess in-depth cultural, geopolitical and geoeconomic knowledge and experience. He or she would be someone who could identify a problem or flashpoint on the other side of the world—preferably even before it became a major issue. He’d understand exactly how it might play out given different scenarios, and how in each case America would be impacted. Such an approach could only feasibly be adopted by a statesman—a polymath or Renaissance man—but how many of those exist nowadays in public life? We’re light-years away from the era of Churchill, Eisenhower and de Gaulle.

Obama, by contrast, is a community organizer. When a community activist attempts to substitute his own mind-set for that of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, for example, in an attempt to ascertain how the Russian sphere of influence might shift in light of new emerging economic realities that include a rapprochement of bilateral trade between ideologically complicit Russia and China … it can only end in unmitigated disaster. The danger lies in what former CIA Directorate of Operations’ Dick Heuer, an expert on the psychology of intelligence analysis, called a cognitive trap, or mirror-imaging. He warned against projecting models on foreign entities that might be unfeasible and unrealistic given their cultural values, realities and mind-set. A popular revolt in the Arab world isn’t, for example, the Civil Rights Movement in America

As long as popularity polls support this kind of outsourcing of international leadership, there will be little impetus for change. And as long as voters are content with setting the bar so low in their selection of presidential contenders—requiring only that they possess the requisite views on social and ideological issues rather than an ability to operate on the level of a true statesman—perhaps it really is best for everyone that they don’t even try to take matters into their own hands.

Source:http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=46417

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IT Outsourcing Spending, Managed Services Grow Steadily

September 26th, 2011

Managed services demand is growing steadily in the data hosting and storage sector as companies increase IT spending in terms of dollars at a steady pace, says James D. Breen, CFA, Analyst at William Blair & Company, L.L.C.

“It’s going to be a pretty steady climb each year,” Breen said. “So whereas maybe 10% or 15% of IT dollars are outsourced today, it maybe another incremental 5% or 10% each year for the next 10 years.”

Breen likes Rackspace Hosting (RAX), a provider of managed hosting and cloud computing services. He says Rackspace is focusing on growth and trying to gain market share as the curve toward IT outsourcing and managed services improves.

“Rackspace showed year-over-year growth that accelerated to around 32% from 29%, maintained margins in the low-30% range and talked about those margins remaining stable as they continue to grow,” Breen said. “They’re seeing continued solid growth within their existing business.”

Source:http://www.twst.com/blog/2011/09/23/it-outsourcing-spending-grows-steadily/

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Customer intel is the key

September 26th, 2011

Mr ArjunValluri served as the Founder, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Intelligroup Inc., from 1993 till 2005. Intelligroup Inc., the first Indian company to go public on the Nasdaq (1996), provides systems integration and IT outsourcing services and employs over 3,000 professionals worldwide.

In 2005, he diversified into hydropower, consumer electronics and Food & Beverage sectors. He is also a strategic investor in real estate and agriculture.

He is an investor in the companies of HUL Hydro and Indus Renewable Energy. He is the Managing Director of Blaze Automation Services Pvt Ltd, which designs, compiles and manufactures Home Automation, Security and RFID Technologies. He is a key investor in the food and beverages sector and owns the brands of “Xtreme Sports Bar” – chain of sports bars, “My Café Latte” – chain of coffee Shops, “SUN” – corporate catering services, “Quiznos” –Master Franchisee of South India and also runs a supply chain and logistics company “Quattro” Logistics.

What are some of the mistakes committed by you in your initial stages of being an entrepreneur?

Mistakes are committed not necessarily during the early stages but throughout the journey of being an entrepreneur. It is important for entrepreneurs not to repeat the same mistakes. Some of the ones that are vivid in my memory are:

When I recruited my sales force I trusted them to deliver at least 50 per cent of what they had committed to. Their commitments remained a “pie in the sky”. I gave them a real long rope to perform.

Going after loss making customers with the hope that it is going to turn around one day. Assessing the potential of a relationship during the early stages of servicing the customer is critical.

Share two lessons that you have learnt that stands out in your entrepreneurial journey.

Cut your losses fast – Any business that you build when you realise that one outlet is doing well then it is natural that you try multiple units in order to scale the business. You give the new outlets some time to make profits. You also start taking money from profits of other businesses and put into these new outlets. The key is for you to know when to pull out and cut your losses on the outlets that don’t perform well.

Watching your customers closely – You have to keep looking at what they want. In the F&B business, the customer requirements are constantly changing. Your product offering has to keep pace with the need. You have to be creative and offer alternate products to always meet the ever-changing need of the customers.

What is your advice to young entrepreneurs?

Keep your eyes on the ground all the time. You need both formal and informal channels to understand what your customers want.

Look at various ways to cut costs. This will help build a viable business. Know your cash flow position all the time.

Lastly, most important is to do what you love. Chase the joy of doing something that you will do because you love it so much. The joy of playing cricket or billiards or singing is what is chased by Sachin or Geet or Lata. What the society bestows upon you is called ‘success’ which may or may not be permanent.

Source:http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/industry-and-economy/article2484769.ece?ref=wl_opinion

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Growth rates of 2003-07 are a thing of the past

September 26th, 2011

The ever-changing landscape for Indian software services players means that interesting trends emerge from an IT outsourcing perspective.

Mr Sid Pai, Partner & Managing Director, TPI, throws light on these and the way forward for Indian software service providers during the course of a conversation with Business Line.

Excerpts from the interview:

Will it be a repeat of 2008 for the Indian IT industry? What is the outlook for outsourcing?

In 2008, there was a general ‘shutdown’ as it were. Along with the financial crisis, we had events such as the near collapse of GM and so on. So the financial contagion spread to other sectors as well. This is not happening now.

The downgrade of US sovereign debt rating is just a commentary on the state finances and nothing else. From an outsourcing perspective, we have not seen any reduction in the pipeline. We feel there will be no early closure of projects for the next six-nine months.

But we are beginning to see some weakness in the second calendar quarter of this year. But much of this has to do with seasonality. It is also due to the fact that some of the contracts that have come for re-negotiation or were going to be renewed had slowed down, which we knew was coming.

In so far as there is reduction in the cost for an existing platform, clients will continue to consider outsourcing. There is a second wave of outsourcing, with some Fortune 500 and global 2000 companies considering outsourcing for the first time.

But, overall, we will not get to see the growth rates in IT outsourcing we saw in 2003-07. It is a thing of the past. It is a maturing market.

We have seen mega deals dry out over the past couple of years. Has there been a paradigm shift in clients’ strategy of structuring large contracts?

Large deals have died out. This happened even prior to 2008. To illustrate from a TPI standpoint, seven-eight years ago, we were advising on contracts worth $25-30 billion annually in TCV (total contract value). That was done over roughly 30 transactions. So, on an average, it translated to a billion dollars a deal.

Now, we still advice on $25-30 billion annually. However, the number of transactions is 120-140. At a micro-level, we see that the $200-300 million deals are still a preserve of the global MNC players such as IBM.

In such large deals, even when they come up for renewal or re-negotiation, 89 per cent of the time, the incumbents get the contract. So even though Indian majors compete, such deals tend to go to global players.

Then, there is an entire $50 million-minus deal, which is a space that is almost completely owned by the Indian service providers. By a ‘penetrate and radiate’ strategy, they gradually build good relationships with these clients. Now, the true battleground is in the $50-150 million deal space, which is what the average deal size is today.

How has vendor rationalisation affected the top-tier IT players?

Vendor rationalisation is actually not what most people think it is. To give you an example, one of our clients recently found that it was working with over 400 vendors! Apart from the usual suspects — IBM, Accenture, TCS, Infosys and others — there were also several ‘mom and pop’ players with two, three or 10 people, and so on. It is this segment that is being taken out.

Rather than dissipating their buying power over so many vendors, clients are looking to concentrate it to about six players. It is the long tail that is being rationalised, not the cream.

Why are higher end services in larger deals awarded to MNCs? Is this likely to change?

The heritage and delivery model has a lot to do with the nature of deals won. Our Indian service providers are mostly focussed on low-cost destinations. They have built capabilities mainly in low-cost offshore destinations. For example, TCS has large capabilities in Brazil. But have they hired 5000 delivery people each in the US or the UK? No.

Forget consulting, even some simple technical work can at times be done only with local presence. Obviously, that would mean lower profitability, which is why Indian service providers are not doing it. Cognizant, Infosys, Wipro or TCS all have bulk of their workforce in India.

Higher-end services such as consulting, advisory etc will require significant local presence. So, Indian service providers cut themselves out of such deals.

Margins of 28-29 per cent are unthinkable in the global context! At some stage, the penny has to drop and they have to globalise their workforce, if they are to climb the value chain.

Will BFSI still be driving growth going forward? Telecom still seems in trouble and will the manufacturing segment continue to grow further?

BFSI will always be the biggest spender and consumer of IT services. Based on interest rate cycles, they step up and step down. So it tends to be lumpy at times. But the cycles are also shorter.

So the same bank that has fired 30,000 people will do a large outsourcing contract or hire 50,000 people within 24 months!

The investment cycles of telecoms are typically longer. It is around seven years, based on technology changes. Right now, we are seeing a down cycle, but we see it coming back in two-three years time.

It will be driven by computing on a mobile platform, devices such as tablets, and so on. Investment will happen from both equipment manufacturers as well as carriers. Semiconductor manufacturers would see a slower revival — they have a 7-10 year investment cycle.

Source:http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/features/investment-world/article2482310.ece?ref=wl_opinion

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Discovering the Value of Supply Chain Outsourcing

September 23rd, 2011

Supply chain processes must constantly evolve to meet changing business requirements, shifts in customer demand and unstable market conditions.

Today, these fundamentals are compounded by the responsibility of ensuring your value chain is environmentally sustainable and socially responsible, and by the challenge to reach a customer base dispersed not only by geography, but across an ever-growing number of channels.

If you currently manage your supply chain in-house, it may be time to consider upgrading to a more efficient, robust and cost-effective infrastructure: It may be time to make the outsource transition.

Source:http://www.sdcexec.com/whitepaper/10365125/discovering-the-value-of-supply-chain-outsourcing

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I.T. Alliance invests stg£500k in UK expansion

September 23rd, 2011

Irish technology outsourcing provider I.T. Alliance has revealed it is to invest stg£500,000 in an expansion in the UK market that will also see the firm beef up its UK management sales team.

The investment follows strong performance in the UK, with the company recording a 15pc increase in services in the last year from existing tier 1 partners, including BT and HP.

I.T. Alliance Group has half of its 400 staff spread across the UK, where the IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) market was estimated to be worth in excess of US$50bn in 2009, according to Research and Markets. The recent UK expansion follows a €1m investment a year ago in the same territory.

On foot of growth with existing partners, I.T. Alliance has announced a new partnership with Fujitsu Services in the UK.

The company has developed a Tier-Two Service Alliance (T2SA) outsourcing model, whereby it acts as the outsourcing partner to the world’s major outsourcers.
UK IT outsourcing market worth US$15bn

The company is targeting a niche in the UK IT outsourcing market which it estimates to be worth about US$15bn.

“There is increased pressure on public and private sector organisations to drive cost out of their business while boosting service through the use of technology,” commented Philip Maguire, CEO, I.T. Alliance Group.

“The main outsourcers themselves are looking to outsource to trusted partners who do not compete or sell directly. This means the global IT outsourcing players can better manage costs while being able to respond quickly to changing market conditions.”

The company has also beefed up its UK management sales team.

Mark Bowman, formerly with IBM UK for 25 years, has been appointed account director. In addition, Colin Armstrong, who has worked for 25 years with leading industry players including HP, Fujitsu and Gartner, has been appointed account director for BT. Gary Herrick, formerly employed directly by IBM UK for 31 years, has been appointed account director for IBM. All report into Clifford Harris, I.T. Alliance Group sales director for UK and Ireland.

Source:http://www.siliconrepublic.com/business/item/23696-i-t-alliance-invests/

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