Archive for September, 2011

COSATU questions Public Works’ outsourcing

September 28th, 2011

The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) is shocked and utterly disgusted by the reports that the Department of Public Works spends thousands and possibly millions in outsourcing functions that the department has an in-house capacity to undertake.

Newspaper reports indicate that the Department has paid private companies thousands for functions such as media and communications work. This is despite the Department having a full complement of communications staff. COSATU is convinced that these revelations are a mere tip of the outsourcing and corruption iceberg in the department.

It is ridiculous that a department which describes itself as the “handy man” of the state and a crucial player in job creation though the Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP) resorts to outsourcing even the most basic of its functions.

The trend seen in the Public Works department is only one example. In reality, many government departments resort to outsourcing basic functions such as letter writing and report compilations for thousands of rands. Through outsourcing, government departments waste millions of rands which could be better spent creating jobs and providing housing and better healthcare services for the poor.

COSATU demands an end to outsourcing and tendering in government. Aside from threatening jobs and wasting millions, contracted out services make public control and accountability impossible and this provides a breeding ground for corruption and the dishing out of contracts to acquaintances and relatives.

COSATU is adamant that government must utilize its in-house capacity provide services and directly employ workers instead of relying on expensive and greedy consultants.

Source:http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71654?oid=258354&sn=Detail&pid=71616

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US, Europe woes may take toll on BFSI-focussed Indian IT companies like Infosys, Wipro

September 28th, 2011

Jittery markets, instability in Europe and a probable slowdown in US is causing top banks to postpone decisions on IT projects, endangering future orders and risking growth rates of Indian IT service providers.

An imminent drop in business volumes has already led to some outsourcing providers such as Infosys indicating a near-term blip, said analysts, who are taking a closer look at the kind of services offered by IT firms and re-rating them based on their susceptibility to a demand slowdown.

The banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) sector is the largest consumer of Indian IT services, contributing almost 50% to the $60 billion IT exports market. Banks and insurance firms were among the earliest users of India’s technology services to cut costs and in the past few years IT has gone from being a tool for greater efficiency to a revenue generator for the sector.

For most of the large US banks, IT now accounts for a substantial part of capital expenditure. Post the 2008 recession, Indian IT companies which had the largest exposure to the BFSI sector witnessed the highest growth in revenue as new regulations as well as integration of mergers and acquisitions pushed significant work to India.

All the top five Indian IT companies get over 25% of their revenue from banking and financial services customers with TCS getting as much as 44%.

Among the top Indian IT firms, Infosys, which gets about 36% of revenues from BFSI clients, and Wipro, which gets about a quarter of its revenues from BFSI clients, are more vulnerable, some said.

Infosys admitted to the first signs of slowdown in business from this vertical over the past few weeks, said Pankaj Kapoor and Apoorva Oza, analysts with Standard Chartered Equity Research, in a report last week.

“There is no spend freeze unlike 2008-09, but Infosys is seeing volume downtrend among BFS clients,” Kapoor and Oza said in the report, pointing that since June 2011 quarter, financial services firms have announced over 75,000 employee cuts. USA’s biggest bank and a top Infosys client, Bank of America announced 30,000 layoffs this month.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/ites/us-europe-woes-may-take-toll-on-bfsi-focussed-indian-it-companies-like-infosys-wipro/articleshow/10147085.cms

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ICT to boost Nigeria’s GDP, as country plans outsourcing hub for Africa

September 28th, 2011

The Nigerian Information Communications Technology, ICT sector is set to aid the Federal Government’s goal of increasing the nation’s nominal Gross Domestic Product, GDP from US$215 billion to US$900 billion by 2020 through investments and open approach collaboration with ICT companies globally.

Dr. Jimson Olufuye, President, Information Technology Association of Nigeria, ITAN, disclosed this at the Nigeria-India IT CEO High Level Business forum with the theme “Enriching Global IT Partnership” held in Lagos on September 19, 2011. The delegation of National Software and Services Companies of India, NASSCON were on a working visit to Kenya, Nigeria and Ghana to boost trade relationship in the ICT sector.

Giving an update on the industry performance, Olufuye said the total estimate of ICT spending on hardware and services in Nigeria in 2010 stood at US$12 billion in an industry projected to be worth US$160 billion. While in same year, according to the industry regulator, the Nigerian Communications Commission, NCC, the telecommunications sector single-handedly contributed about 3.5 percent to the nation’s economy, a figure expected to exceed seven percent in the nearest future.
He lauded the government’s determination to chart a proper policy focus for the ICT industry and the recent creation of the Ministry of Communication Technology, headed by a private sector guru on ICT, Mrs. Omobola Johnson, who he said will ensure that Nigeria attracts more foreign direct investment in the sector, which will in turn provide employment for its teeming youths.

Olufuye said the Nigerian ICT practitioners are ready to partner and learn from the Indian experience. “Indians have gone through the process of fine-tuning its ICT policy; there is no need to re-invent the will. There is need for us to tap into their know-how and we have been assured of their support under the auspices of World Information Technology and Services Alliance, WITSA of which we are both members,” he said.

The ITAN president therefore stressed that “our expectation is that such partnership in the area of Information Technology Enabled Services, ITES will position Nigeria as the foremost Outsourcing destination in Africa in the more than US$600 billion market of which only about 25 per cent have been served.”

In addition, he pointed out that Nigeria is a huge market for potential investors and will welcome those with best practices which the country can tap into and adapt for its own system. “The whole ecosystem is a living organism, our relationship is a living organism, we will continue to evolve, continue to fine-tune and definitely we will get there in terms of trade and investment. There are a lot of local franchises and local people involved, and competition drives down prices. Imagine 36 states, lots of towns and villages that require these services, the market are wide open but we need to partner and learn from each other.”

Therefore, to maximize the opportunities at hand, he urged the minister to pursue her avowed mandates to “engender affordable broadband infrastructure access, promote local content development, develop the ICT industry and deploy ICT for transparent and cost effective public service delivery.”

His advice, “Open up the market and encourage the local players to play active role and with the proper empowerment and enabling ICT laws”, the country will maximize its trade potentials.

In her remarks, the CT minister expressed her displeasure over the dearth of ICT knowledge in the country particularly in the area of software skills. She promised to use her position as the minister to promote the inflow of Foreign Direct Investment, FDI’s into the country’s ICT industry while rekindling local demand and promoting favorable competition among the local and foreign companies operating in Nigeria.

According to Johnson, “Nigeria will not stop foreign companies from coming to invest in our ICT industry but what we would do is to ensure that the activities of those foreign companies are aligned with our ICT industry policy while promoting local competition.”

Already as fallout of the meeting, she said Nigeria will raise an industry regulation panel that will go to India to consummate the partnership between both countries.
Lending his voice to making Nigeria the next outsourcing hub in Africa, the Senior Special Adviser to Nigerian Vice President, Dr. Adamu Baba, explained that the world have demonstrated by action that Africa is the last frontier and “truly when you talk about Africa, you cannot forget Nigeria. With over 150 million people, we have huge internal market, comparative advantage in the areas of Business Process Outsourcing, BPO, we speak good English and the internal market can generate business and jobs for the youths.”

On his part, Mr.Mahesh Sachdev, Indian High Commissioner to Nigeria said as the leading IT outsourcing nation in the world, “Indian partnership with Nigeria will go down the annals of history as a change agent to leapfrog Nigeria’s ICT industry.”

The leader of the NASSCON delegation to Nigeria, Mr. Anil Bakht and CEO Eastern Software in his speech also signified his members’ willingness to partner with their Nigerian counterparts in mutual benefits to both countries.

Bakht said, “India is coming to invest on a long term and not just to take because of the large market. Those days are gone and the new ways are by partnerships.
“Nigerian market can only be developed by Nigerians. We are only bringing options and partnership opportunities. We are bringing solutions but we are not the ones to implement it.”

The journey towards building Africa’s outsourcing hub has started and with the enabling laws and level playing field, Nigeria is on the brink of making history on the continent.

Source:http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/10460709-ict-to-boost-nigerias-gdp-as-country-plans-outsourcing-hub-for-africa

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IT vendors should integrate software, hardware to grow revenue

September 28th, 2011

With the commoditization of hardware, IT vendors are increasingly turning to software and services to generate revenues, say market observers, who also dish out advice on how to sustain the hardware business.

Hewlett-Packard last month announced plans to offload its PC business, despite being the leading global PC vendor, to focus on its enterprise software and services business. Even consumer electronics giant Samsung was reported to be looking to boost its software capabilities through acquisitions.

In an e-mail interview with ZDNet Asia, Tom Kucharvy, CEO of California-based Beyond IT, noted that the shift in focus from hardware to software and service had already been “well in place” with IBM leading the way in this transition when it sold its PC business in 2004. Similarly, Dell began focusing on its enterprise business, he added.

In an e-mail to ZDNet Asia, Ludmila Berkesova who is program manager at Technavio, noted that while HP only recently talked about exiting the hardware business, the “seeds were planted in 2008″ when it acquired EDS to gain a bigger share of the IT services market.

“While we can’t call that move spectacularly successful, it was good enough for HP to think of changing their business model with a higher focus on the services part of the business,” Berkesova added.

He noted that software and services were more lucrative businesses in both the short and long term when compared with hardware.

“If you look at any major corporations’ IT budget, you will find that spend on software and services is actually higher than pure hardware spend. It is also a significantly higher margin business,” he said.

“Low margins, higher labor costs, increasing local and global competition, and availability of low-cost hardware are all making this business difficult to run profitably,” he added.

Phil Hassey, founder of Australia-based CapioIT, noted that hardware also requires services to integrate. He added that it is simply a business that vendors prefer to keep as part of their revenue stream, rather than risk letting a third party benefit from it.

Beau Skonieczny, research analyst of computing practice at Technology Business Research (TBR), explained why software and services are margin accretive businesses. Software is build-once and sell-to-many, and services is able to capitalize on higher-end consulting services as well as lower-cost outsourcing and tech support services to expand margins, he said.

Kucharvy added that software and services were “more sticky” as customers would find it more difficult to switch between software or services vendors.

According to Skonieczny, the evolution of cloud will gradually dissipate the need for large-scale, in-house data storage and servers, and purchasing decisions will be less focused around hardware capabilities. Here, software and services will be key in supporting the added scalability of cloud implementations, he said.

Keeping hardware sustainable
With the commoditization of hardware, Hassey noted that it was increasingly difficult to keep this business segment sustainable. That said, he added that hardware products were still needed in the market.

Hence, IT vendors would need an “absolute razor-sharp focus” on cost as well as a commitment to innovation that delivered increased value for customers, instead of innovating just for the product’s sake, he said.

Technavio’s Berkesova concurred, adding that market players would need to carefully monitor and manage their internal supply chain.

“Sourcing of components to ensure quality while keeping costs down, will be paramount in keeping the business viable. In a volume business such as hardware, it is very easy to see sourcing costs spiral up in short order,” he said.

According to Beyond IT’s Kucharvy, the “easiest” way for vendors to have a sustainable hardware business was through delivering a proprietary hardware platform that provided unique capabilities, and a proprietary architecture that locked in customers through software or locked out competitors through brand loyalty.

While most proprietary systems have disappeared from the market, he pointed to IBM zSeries servers and the Apple Macintosh, iPhone and iPad as example of “most sustainable and profitable” proprietary product lines.

He added that while Cisco Systems had a similar lock, its position was being eroded by more aggressively priced competitors.

A more difficult route vendors, touting industry-standard platforms, can take is to have “such a large volume advantage and economies of scale” that they are always able to sell at lower pricepoints than their competitors, Kucharvy said.

However, selling hardware alone might not be enough.

According to Hassey, vendors will need to bundle products and services, and ensure they develop intellectual property (IP) that can be reapplied across different offerings and that can provide competitive advantage. He pointed to IBM’s achivements in the analytics space and HP’s success in the data center space, as examples.

TBR’s Skonieczny agreed: “Integrated solutions are the main ingredient to keeping hardware afloat. By owning the core IP behind software, services and hardware offerings, vendors are better positioned to establish more efficient and cost-effective ways to integrate the solutions with one another.”

“Developing a cohesive portfolio across software, services and hardware will help strengthen vendors’ offerings and promote pre-packaged solutions,” he added.

While interoperable systems might put pressure on a company’s hardware business as customers would find it easier to integrate products from different vendors, Skonieczny noted that packaged product pricing by large vendors such as HP and Cisco, that have larger scale and “end-to-end” products, could help promote hardware purchases and create a sustainable hardware business.

Enterprise lesson from Apple’s success
For IT vendors, Skonieczny noted that owning the entire software, services and hardware stack is an important piece of the enterprise IT puzzle.

Pointing to Apple’s lead in the consumer space as an example, he said Cupertino’s success was supported by its closely knit products, software and services, which each had clearly defined focus areas and the ability to execute well on that focus in a streamlined manner.

Such a strategy could translate over to the enterprise space with success, but the key differentiator would be organic versus inorganic growth, Skonieczny said. Apple’s innovations were built with minimal help from acquisitions which was one of the reasons why it had been able to maintain more product fluidity and closer integration of hardware, software and service, without needing to mix and match differing technologies, he said.

In comparison, other IT companies grew inorganically through acquisitions of disparate technologies and processes, he noted.

While it would be too late for many larger companies such as HP and Dell to build out an enterprise strategy similar to Apple’s in the consumer space, he suggested these market players looked at deploying effective inorganic growth strategies within the software and services realms to differentiate their offerings from the competition.

Pointing to HP’s acquisition of Autonomy, the TBR analyst noted that the purchase would “significantly bolster” the IT vendor’s software expertise in managing unstructured data sets.

“While this is an excellent opportunity for HP from a strategic standpoint, the execution of Autonomy integration is another story,” he said. “HP will need to find ways to integrate the data management capabilities into its existing enterprise portfolio, while building a more streamlined and cost-effective solution set for enterprise clients to utilize.”

Source:http://www.zdnetasia.com/it-vendors-should-integrate-software-hardware-to-grow-revenue-62302250.htm

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Bleum Appoints Pete Gibson as Chief Information Officer

September 28th, 2011

Bleum Inc., a China-based specialist IT outsourcing provider, announced today that it has appointed Pete Gibson as Chief Information Officer. Mr. Gibson is assuming responsibility for Bleum’s information technology and software development division as it strategically expands to meet the growing needs of the company’s clients.
Bleum founder & CEO Eric Rongley said, “We are happy to have Pete join Bleum as we continue to expand our core offerings as the premier China-based outsourcing provider for MNC clients. His two decades of information technology management experience, including as CIO of several Fortune 400 organizations, are a great addition to our management team.”
Mr. Gibson commented, “Having focused my career on aligning IT as a strategic business asset, I am very pleased to be joining a company that not only has a track record for quality software development second to none, but specializes in enhancing business value for its clients. The software outsourcing industry is moving away from a reputation of cost savings and cheap labor and into the value-added sphere. Bleum is leading this change and I am looking forward to working with some of the industry’s brightest engineers based in China.”
Prior to joining Bleum, Mr. Gibson was CIO at BridgeStreet Worldwide and CTO at Cendant (now Wyndham Worldwide). He streamlined Alamo Rent-A-Car’s local technology division and worked with IBM to restructure and improve their global e-commerce operations. Prior to joining IBM, Mr. Gibson spent 14 years with the U.S. Department of Defense directing large research, development, innovation and technology operations.

Source:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/bleum-appoints-pete-gibson-as-chief-information-officer-130624778.html

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How BP got its IT suppliers to collaborate and perform after massive vendor consolidation

September 28th, 2011

Oil and Gas giant BP spent 65% of its $3bn annual IT budget with 3000 suppliers in 2008 but now it outsources to only seven and has reduced its annual IT budget by $800m as a result.

Vital to the success of the new multi-supplier ecosystem was retaining supplier performance levels while getting them to work together.

BP is a massive consumer of outsourced services across its business and as a result the overheads associated with working with partners are massive. Taking IT in-house was not an option due to the company’s size, global presence and confluence of diverse business functions.

BP Group CIO Dana Deasy told an audience at Gartner’s annual outsourcing summit in London how the company managed to cut hundreds of millions in costs in a couple of years while retaining a multi-vendor IT outsourcing environment. Most of the $800m savings on IT is the result of the company’s sourcing transformation.

Deasy says the company wanted to reduce the cost and complexity of working with thousands of IT suppliers. It now has seven IT service providers in its multi-vendor environment and has shaken up its vendor management capabilities to ensure it gets the most out of them.

The seven suppliers in the ecosystem are: IBM; Tata Consultancy Services (TCS); Infosys; Accenture; Wipro; HP; and T-Systems.

Deasy says the challenges for BP were to ensure that the suppliers give their all and work together in a collaborative ecosystem. “We had to keep all the vendors on edge to get the best out of them. But we also have to create a collaborative environment,” he said.

As well as boosting its internal supplier management resources with a dedicated team and taking up supplier management standard, BS11000, BP has focussed on getting its suppliers to perform in the face of less competition.

The seven suppliers all have a core role which BP expects them to stick to. At the same time the suppliers must collaborate as if they were one

BP introduced what it calls “The Captain’s Table.” This is a mandatory week-long event where the CEOs of its seven IT suppliers get together for group meetings and one on one’s with BP. “You need to get the top of the house [supplier CEOs] aligned,” says Deasy. “You need to get them together and set them joint targets.” All supplier CEOs are expected to attend.

Deasy says it is important to make sure that the suppliers know that there is something in it for them when they attend these meeting, which are aimed at improving ecosystem collaboration. He says with more and more businesses multi-sourcing their IT services collaboration between suppliers will become increasingly important. “We need to tell the suppliers that there is a marketing opportunity for them. If they can demonstrate that they can work in a collaborative ecosystem they can use our relationship as a reference for new business.”

He says it is surprising how little the senior executives at IT suppliers in the same ecosystems interact. “Next time you see your suppliers ask them how many times they have communicated with another supplier in your ecosystem.” He says there are huge behavioural changes to be instigated.

BP also had the challenge of getting its own large internal supplier management teams as well as its CIOs to move in the same direction. Deasy believes getting internal supplier relationship management to change how they work was perhaps the biggest challenge. “We underestimated the time it would take to explain this.”

The company also recognised the business continuity risks associated with reducing its supplier portfolio. It carried out a hypothetical incident of losing an entire city in India where a lot of its IT and BPO services are delivered from. Known as City Down the test it helped BP understand how suppliers could work together in a crisis.

Source:http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/inside-outsourcing/2011/09/how-bp-got-its-it-suppliers-to-collaborate-and-perform-after-massive-vendor-consolidation.html

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Welch Allyn and Wavelength Information Services, Inc. Partner to Increase EHR Adoption

September 28th, 2011

Welch Allyn, a leading global provider of frontline medical products and solutions, today announced it is partnering with Wavelength Information Services, Inc. (Wavelength) to offer its clients a unique service designed to ease the process of selecting and preparing for an electronic health record (EHR) system. Wavelength is a Maryland-based healthcare IT outsourcing and systems integration firm whose comprehensive range of programs and services include system implementation, integration, networking, optimization, project management, programming, custom reporting, education and knowledge transfer expertise. It is a sub-recipient partner of the Chesapeake Regional Information System for our Patients (CRISP) Regional Extension Centers (REC) system.

Wavelength clients will be introduced to the EHR Prep-Select tool, customized for Wavelength by Welch Allyn. The program systematically guides physician practices through the complex EHR preparation and selection process by offering an optimal mix of expert consulting, an easy-to-follow, 10-step project plan, and an intuitive online tool that addresses the challenges associated with selecting an EHR vendor.

“Preparing for and selecting an EHR is a complex process full of unknown twists and turns,” said Jay Mangicaro, senior global category manager, Professional Services, at Welch Allyn. “The process is even more challenging for small primary care practices that are the focus of REC EHR adoption efforts. The Welch Allyn EHR Preparation and Selection program offers a proven, step-by-step, Web-based solution for this difficult project. By partnering with Welch Allyn for the customized EHR Prep-Select tool, Wavelength is able to not only provide primary care and specialty practices with this valuable selection service, but ultimately it will leverage Wavelength staff to help more practices achieve ‘meaningful use’ requirements and secure HITECH stimulus incentives.”

Welch Allyn will be collaborating with Wavelength on several marketing initiatives to introduce and educate members on the value of the EHR Prep-Select Service.

“The efficient delivery of quality patient care is the clinician’s priority, but selecting the right EHR for the provider is a major undertaking. The EHR Prep-Select program delivered by our staff is designed to educate the practice and to empower the providers to make a thoroughly informed decision on the EHR solution that meets their practice specific requirements,” said Murray Oltman, president of Wavelength. “Wavelength is focused on addressing our clients’ healthcare information technology needs while continually seeking opportunities to optimize the service delivery process for our consulting team. Through our partnership with Welch Allyn and its’ EHR Prep-Select program, our clients have access to a comprehensive tool that will help them successfully navigate EHR preparation, selection and business process transformation.”

Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/welch-allyn-and-wavelength-information-services-inc-partner-to-increase-ehr-adoption-2011-09-27

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