Archive for October, 2011

China’s VanceInfo Technologies Tries To Outdo Indian Outsourcers.

October 27th, 2011

When David Chen met his future business partner, Chris Chen, in 1992, David was a Chinese student struggling to make ends meet in Southern California and Chris was working at a Great Wall computer store. Happy to find a fellow mainlander behind the counter, David put in an order for one of the cheap knockoffs the company sold. “It was all I could afford,” he says.

Over the years, whether to fix a mafunctioning keyboard or brainstorm big ideas, they kept in touch. Today the pair, who aren’t related, run one of China’s fast-growing info-tech outsourcing businesses, VanceInfo Technologies. It’s a long way from playing in the same league as the Indian giants–Tata Consultancy Services, Wipro, Infosys and HCL Technologies–but it does list blue chips such as Microsoft, 3M, IBM, Citibank and AirAsia among its customers. VanceInfo collected $212 million in revenue last year and turned in a $30 million net profit. This year consensus estimates call for $276 million in revenue and a $40 million profit. Analysts say revenue could jump to $345 million next year.

Typically, big companies turn to outsourcers such as VanceInfo to handle some part of their operation. The outsourcer supplies the office space, employees and the ability to scale up quickly to fill a need. Last year Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific Airways delegated some of its growing IT and software development workload to VanceInfo, which set up an office across the border in Shenzhen. Cathay’s chief information officer, Tomasz Smaczny, says outsourcing an IT operation pays better dividends than buying individual IT services or hiring more staff: “We didn’t do this so much for cost savings as for effectiveness and increasing our capabilities. Outsourcing allows us to dial up or dial down as needed.”

VanceInfo runs such offices around the country and works with some 25 universities to provide and train staff. Many of the offices are scattered around a huge new computer park on the outskirts of Beijing, though there’s no way to tell from the outside–they often sport only the customers’ sign. There’s a big office for Microsoft, a customer since 1997, where VanceInfo worked on Windows 7.

VanceInfo also keeps its headquarters here. Despite the marquee clients, and stakes that make them both well off–Chris’ 8.6% stake is worth $37 million, David’s 0.7% stake $3 million–each Chen drives his own car, unusual for Beijing executives, and works out of a nondescript office when he’s not traveling. David, 43, the company vice chairman and president, has files piled to the rafters in his. Chris, 48, the chairman and chief executive, sits in the next one, which does boast a window but it looks out at the wall of another IT office. “It’s our style to be frugal,” he says. “We’re in an industry where there aren’t big margins. What impresses our customers is good service at good prices.”

The austerity is certainly part of the company culture. One example cited by Alicia Yip, a former Citigroup analyst who followed VanceInfo, involves the chief financial officer, who found that his flight to the U.S. had been booked in business class. “He quickly went online and changed the ticket to economy,” she says. Another time, at a conference, she remembers that VanceInfo executives checked out of the pricey conference hotel and moved to a nearby budget inn.

Chris Chen grew up in Wuning, a remote village in remote Jiangxi Province that had scant electricity. His mother is illiterate. “She cannot even write her name,” he says. Nonetheless, he scored high on the national college test and won a place at Tsinghua University, considered the MIT of China, and graduated in 1986. He didn’t know anything about information technology then, so when he started working for Great Wall, then China’s biggest computer company, “Some people thought I was useless,” he says. “My major was mechanical engineering.”

Chris’ skills were more suited to an entrepreneurial age that hadn’t yet dawned in China. He spent six years with Great Wall and was posted to California, partly to scout new technology. In addition to selling computers to walk-in customers such as David, he was always on the alert for opportunities. One arose when IBM asked Great Wall to translate its operating system software into Chinese. The profit margin didn’t interest Great Wall. Chris pounced.

Raising money from friends and relatives, Chris started a business. That morphed into a company called Worksoft, which later changed its name to VanceInfo (see box, p. 38). It quickly enjoyed success in localizing software for China and helping foreign IT firms operate there. “We had no concept of outsourcing,” says Chris. “We just did projects, focusing on opportunities to make money. If I knew anything about outsourcing then, we’d be much, much bigger now.”

David brings a dab more international expertise to VanceInfo. From Fujian Province, he went to the University of California, Irvine, earning a computer engineering master’s in 1994. He moved to Silicon Valley, where he worked as a software engineer at Oracle and a consultant at KPMG. After a decade in the U.S. he returned to China in 2001 and joined Chris. With his Silicon Valley background, David comfortably courts new customers and oversees operations. Chris is more of the strategist, as well as the closer. “Chris has great people skills, and is a good storyteller,” says David.

But can the Chens propel VanceInfo out of the crowded ranks of midsize Chinese outsourcers and into the global big leagues? It’s probably one of the three or four biggest outsourcers now. (Comparisons are tricky–larger companies, such as Insigma, Neusoft and DHC, get some of their revenue from software and product sales and other sources.) Analysts also see VanceInfo as one of the two or three best run and most reputable. Frances Karamouzis, an analyst for Gartner and the coauthor of a report last year on the Chinese outsourcing sector, praises VanceInfo’s adoption of Western-style accounting, which led to a New York Stock Exchange listing in 2007; most competitors opt to trade in China.

The comparisons with India are inevitable. Outsourcing has mushroomed into a $70-billion-a-year business in India, while some analysts value the Chinese sector at $20 billion; CLSA predicts that it will reach $30 billion in 2014. “China is almost exactly where India was a decade or so ago,” says Pierre Samec, former chief technology officer of U.S. Internet travel company Expedia. “I think it will follow the same rapid growth curve.” VanceInfo set up an outsourcing operation for Expedia in Shenzhen.

But times are different, and China is a different country–it may never produce another Infosys. Just as the Chinese industry is today, the Indian industry was once very fragmented, with dozens of small companies vying for business. The industry underwent a rapid consolidation, but in China, where analysts have been predicting the same trend for five years, it’s been slow in coming. Karamouzis says that when it does arrive, the key for VanceInfo will be how well it handles the numerous deals and the integration of thousands of added employees. It’s done four deals this year, spending almost $9 million to buy three Chinese outsourcers and one in Australia.

A hiccup for VanceInfo over the past six months was the drastic drop in its share price after an accounting scandal at rival Chinese outsourcer Longtop erupted in May (see box, p. 36). With consolidation a key to growth, the lower share price leaves VanceInfo with a weaker currency for buying other companies. Indeed, of its four deals this year, it did the two before May with cash and stock while the two since May were cash only. But David says: “We are actually in good shape. We have a lot of cash on hand ($130 million as of June 30), and are still looking at acquisitions.” He added that a lower share price could be an advantage in buying companies, giving the sellers more potential upside.

Another difference from India is that most of the Chinese outsourcing business is in Greater China–with Chinese companies or multinationals operating in China. Indian companies exported most of their work to the West (and have never been able to make many in-roads in China). VanceInfo’s headcount numbered 12,542 at the end of the second quarter–up by 25% from a year earlier–but only 200 of those were outside Greater China. The company does seek to grow in Europe and North America by moving into consulting and business solutions, allowing it to travel up the value chain by taking on more lucrative projects.

But despite VanceInfo’s digital culture, change can be slow. In fact much of the industry looks inward, because business has been so abundant in China. “This is a very Chinese company,” says Samec, noting that there has been much talk of adding foreign expertise to help the company grow and especially to expand overseas, but little action. Says David Chen: “This is something we have talked about and agreed upon, but we have been slow to implement. We really need to step up.

Punished for a Rival’s Misdeeds

VanceInfo began the year tipped as one of the world’s hottest stocks. Then in May a scandal erupted at rival Chinese outsourcer Longtop Financial Technologies, hitting the shares of the entire sector. From around $32 a share, VanceInfo’s stock fell to almost $5 early last month before beginning to rebound to around $11. And it didn’t help that VanceInfo Chief Financial Officer Sidney Huang served as CFO of Longtop in 2005–06; he has not been connected to the scandal.

Investors were giving the sector’s wave of listings increased scrutiny, albeit a bit late. Both Longtop and VanceInfo went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2007. Choosing the U.S. over markets in China opened the vaults to bigger investments, at the price of more regulation and paperwork. The scandal came to light when its auditor for several years, Deloitte Shanghai, resigned, alleging that financial information had been falsified.

By the time trading in Longtop was halted in August, over $1 billion in value had evaporated. Scores of lawsuits are pending and a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission investigation guarantees that the matter will remain in the news. “It will take some time to recover,” says VanceInfo’s David Chen. Yet he downplays any long-term impact. Rising costs and the yuan’s continuing strength, he maintains, are bigger concerns that also contributed to the stock drop. Now, with a chance for the sector to feast on Longtop’s clients, analysts see VanceInfo becoming a hot stock again, climbing to a $16 to $20 range. –R.G.

Source:http://www.forbes.com/global/2011/1107/companies-people-technology-service-provider-chen-outsourcing-india-gluckman_2.html

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IBM will need to ‘drastically alter cloud outsourcing model’

October 27th, 2011

IBM’s new chief executive officer Virginia Rometty has a huge task ahead of her overhauling the company’s IT outsourcing model as it shifts towards a pay-as-you-go cloud computing model. Speaking at the Best of Breed conference in California at the start of this week, vice president of outsourcing and offshore services for IDC David Tapper claimed that IBM has a mammoth task on its hands.

“IBM is dealing with a huge set of challenges,” he was reported by CRN as saying. Mr Tapper added that system integration is quickly becoming a core aspect of service delivery – particularly as software-as-a-service (SaaS) becomes much more widespread.

Mr Tapper concluded: “My belief is IBM has to build a distinct business unit like a cloud unit that pulls it all together and moves the old business model to the new business model.”

Recently, IBM’s vice president of cloud services Ric Telford claimed that platform-as-a-service and its associated technologies were no longer about cost savings alone. He told V3 that migration to the cloud offers an entirely new paradigm for the development and deployment of applications.

Source:http://hosting.onestopclick.com/technology_news/ibm-will-need-to-drastically-alter-cloud-outsourcing-model_800776250.htm

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WA Main Roads expands IT outsourcing scope

October 27th, 2011

Brings traffic light systems and IT transformation under outsourcer’s remit.

Main Roads Western Australia has awarded a two-year, $14 million contract extension to IT outsourcing partner Empired.

The deal represents a significant expansion to the scope of the original $11.65 million deal that Empired won in 2008.

The original contract included a two-year extension option – awarded this week – that is more lucrative in dollar terms than the original three-year deal.

“It’s close to a 300 percent increase on an annualised basis,” Empired managing director Russell Baskerville told iTnews. “It’s a big jump”.

The jump reflects an expansion into other areas of Main Roads not within the initial contract scope, as well as a new “project services” component.

The original deal put Empired in charge of IT support desk, infrastructure management and remote monitoring of network and application availability.

Baskerville said Empired now looks after the backend infrastructure that manages all traffic light systems across the state.

The department’s drive to implement IT infrastructure library (ITIL) best practice across its operational systems is also reflected in the extended contract.

In addition, there is a significant IT transformation body of work underway, beginning with the migration to Windows 7, although the transformation isn’t limited to the desktop.

Baskerville said the transformation would occur from “end user computing through to the data centre and provision of services”.

“We’re looking at putting in a range of new technologies predominately around the Microsoft product set into the organisation,” he said.

In addition to Windows 7, the agency could deploy Microsoft’s unified communications product Lync and “a range of different monitoring tools” from the System Center family, including Operations Manager (SCOM) and Configuration Manager (SCCM).

From an infrastructure perspective, Baskerville foreshadowed some focus on virtualisation and “private cloud services”, including those that might be applicable in a disaster recovery context.

Scaling up

When Empired prised the Main Roads business from the grip of rival Alphawest in October 2008, the services firm branded the win its “first major government outsourcing contract”.

In the time since, it has landed contracts with the Victorian Department for Education and Early Childhood Development (DEECD) and with the Western Australian Department of Indigenous Affairs.

It is also focused on IT managed services deals in the resources sector.

“Our managed services business is growing and I think what this [contract extension with Main Roads] – $7 million a year in core services – demonstrates [is] that Empired’s got the capacity to start to take on some much larger deals,” Baskerville said.

“On an annualised basis over five years, [Main Roads] is a $35 million contract and that’s very much now the size of deals we are chasing.”

Source:http://www.itnews.com.au/News/277999,wa-main-roads-expands-it-outsourcing-scope.aspx

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Offshoring and Security: IT Managers, Network Admins Divided on Risk

October 27th, 2011

Does offshore outsourcing make an IT organization more vulnerable to data loss or attack? Or are offshore providers actually improving network security for their customers?

According to a recent report, enterprise IT professionals are pretty evenly split on the issue. The survey, conducted by Boca Raton, Fla.-based Amplitude Research and commissioned by VanDyke Software, drew from a broad pool of 350 respondents working in corporate IT, including CIOs and CTOs. The majority of respondents were systems administrators and IT managers who deal with network security day to day. “They are uniquely positioned to judge the potential network security risks,” says Steve Birnkrant, CEO of Amplitude Research.

When asked how their company’s offshoring of IT had impacted their organization’s network security, 36 percent said it had a negative impact (nine percent reported a significant negative impact and 27 percent said it had some negative impact).

Meanwhile, the exact same proportion of respondents said that offshore outsourcing had a positive impact on their network security (nine percent reported a significant positive impact and 27 percent said it had some positive impact).

The remaining group indicated that they had not experienced any security impact from sending IT work overseas.

But concerns about the security implications of sending IT work offshore are waning, according to the survey, which has inquired about network security and offshoring for three years. The proportion perceiving at least some positive impact from offshore outsourcing increased from 24 percent in 2009 to 36 percent in 2011, while the percentage perceiving a negative impact declined from 50 percent in 2009 to 36 percent this year.

“It is possible that [some] enterprises could actually be exposed to more security risk [by offshoring], but we cannot say for sure,” says Birnkrant. “We can only go by what the survey respondents said to the particular questions we asked.”

The survey’s follow-up questions reveal that those unhappy about the security implications of their offshore outsourcing arrangements noted other issues with the relationship, such as language barriers and service issues, while those who felt offshoring strengthened their security efforts reported cost savings and better service and support.

When asked why they felt offshoring had a negative impact on security, 48 percent said they were simply uncertain about offshore security or concerned about increased security risk exposure. Nearly one in five (18 percent) said language barriers and communication difficulties were to blame, and 12 percent pointed to problems with service.

Those who said offshoring was making their organization more secure said the offshore personnel did a good job (42 percent), the deal delivered cost savings (39 percent), and that the 24/7 nature of the offshore model delivered better network monitoring and support (15 percent).

India remained the most popular offshore outsourcing destination for IT among respondents (79 percent), followed by China (40 percent), Mexico (26 percent), and the Philippines (18 percent). Approximately half of the organizations that outsource technology jobs offshore named multiple countries as outsourcing destinations.

Respondents were most likely to offshore help desk or user support (62 percent), followed by application development (52 percent), database administration (42 percent), application management (36 percent), data storage/backup (35 percent), and network monitoring (33 percent). Nearly eight in ten reported offshoring multiple types of IT services.

Source:http://www.networkworld.com/news/2011/102511-offshoring-and-security-it-managers-252369.html?hpg1=bn

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Wipro and Workday Enter into an Alliance to Help Customers Build 21st Century HR Organizations

October 27th, 2011

Today at Workday Rising 2011, Wipro Technologies, the global Information Technology, Consulting and Outsourcing business of Wipro Limited WIT +1.21% announced that it has entered into an alliance with Workday. Wipro will provide Consulting and IT Services to clients deploying Workday solutions. Workday is the leader in SaaS-based enterprise solutions for global human resources, payroll, and financial management.

Wipro has identified Cloud Computing to be the driver of a new wave of innovation. Wipro has helped customers adopt and integrate cloud services into their enterprise systems with an integrated solutions approach and managed IT as a service.

According to a Forrester report*, the Software as a Service (SaaS) market today represents the largest public cloud market by far, with USD 21.2 billion in total revenues in 2011. By 2016, SaaS will have total revenues of USD 92.8 billion — accounting for roughly 26% of the total packaged software market.

In today’s rapidly changing business environment, HR organizations are responding by building 21st Century HR operations by leveraging new technologies, strategies and models. Workday’s innovative cloud based business management solutions combined with Wipro’s vast experience in optimizing and integrating cloud based solutions will enable organizations to achieve accelerated value.

Wipro’s Human Capital Management Services helps customers build a “people plan” based model using solutions that range from deploying new technology or creating a shared services center to outsourcing and best-shoring.

Wipro is Diamond sponsor at Workday Rising 2011. Wipro will showcase its unique HCM offerings that help customers accelerate business value with Workday, including Wipro’s Cloud & Beyond for HRO. Cloud & Beyond for HRO is an innovative BPO solution that will integrate Workday with Wipro’s process and workflow management tools supported by Wipro’s implementation expertise, process support and transition management services. This unique solution will allow clients to manage HR operations in a more effective and efficient manner. Experts from Wipro will present on how they drive business value as a Human Capital Management Transformation partner to global organizations.

“We are excited to join forces with Workday and the opportunity it creates to rapidly accelerate the momentum Workday has built in the enterprise market,” said Preet Takkar, Global Head – Cloud Applications & Solutions, Wipro Technologies. “With increasingly decentralized workforces, the rise of social networking, and rapidly evolving government, privacy, and regulatory compliance requirements, the value of a truly integrated enterprise solution is significant. It effectively aligns industry best practices with the overall business objectives of a company.”

“Wipro is one of the leading global systems integrators when it comes to experience in delivering enterprise solutions.,” said Jeff Pulver, vice president, Business Development, Workday. “The combination of their services expertise with Workday’s industry-leading solutions will deliver tremendous benefits to clients.”

Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/wipro-and-workday-enter-into-an-alliance-to-help-customers-build-21st-century-hr-organizations-2011-10-25

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Outsourcing in Anaheim Continues to Raise Questions

October 25th, 2011

The plan review firm Charles Abbott Associates received the vast majority of Anaheim’s outsourced plan check work while company employee Steve Ahuna was the city building division’s plan review supervisor, city invoices show.

Ahuna was the city’s contract plan check supervisor from April to October 2008. During that period, and in the months immediately before and after, Charles Abbott Associates billed the city $103,441 for plan review work, according to the invoices.

The disclosures regarding Ahuna come on the heels of revelations that during a two-year period Anaheim outsourced most of its plan check work to a firm owned by Scott Fazekas while Fazekas was under contract as the head of the city’s building division. Fazekas resigned his post earlier this month after a Voice of OC story revealed the potential conflict.

A good-government expert said the two situations indicate a troubling trend in the building division and show that the city is not doing enough to safeguard against conflicts of interest.

“I don’t know if two is a pattern, but it shows to me a little inattention to the potential of conflicts. If you see it once — and you see it twice — there may be more,” said Tracy Westen, CEO of the Los Angeles-based Center for Governmental Studies.

In response to the revelations about Fazekas, Planning Director Sheri Vander Dussen issued a directive to distribute the plan check work more evenly to the plan check firms.

Neither Ahuna nor Rusty Reed, president of Charles Abbott Associates, returned calls and emails seeking comment about Ahuna’s case.

City officials didn’t directly address questions about the potential conflicts.

“It is possible he [Ahuna] did outsource plans to CAA [Charles Abbott Associates] to meet the City’s established turnaround times,” wrote city spokeswoman Ruth Ruiz in an email to a Voice of OC reporter. “Because he was at City Hall, he was able to work directly with applicants and internal staff, resulting in better customer service.”

In a memo to City Council members and City Manager Thomas Wood, Vander Dussen wrote that Ahuna “did perform some plan checks” and also “provided technical support to our staff members and performed some supervisory tasks.”

The memo acknowledges that the city wasn’t “outsourcing much plan check work to other firms” while Ahuna was plan check supervisor.

Other details about the billing arrangement remain unclear. Invoices show that Ahuna worked for some months as a full-time staffer. On those same invoices, Charles Abbott Associates charged the city for plan review work. City officials have so far refused to answer questions about the bills and other details of the outsourcing arrangement.

If Ahuna was outsourcing plan check work to the company that employs him, then it is a worse conflict of interest than Fazekas’ situation, Westen said. Fazekas and the city took steps to prevent the appearance of a conflict, including a clause in Fazekas’ contract prohibiting him from directly participating in outsourcing decisions.

Fazekas’ company billed the city for at least $18,954 in building plan review work between his appointment late in 2009 and June of this year, according to city records. During that period, Fazekas’ firm received 80 percent of the city’s outsourced plan review work.

Fazekas said others in the building division made the decisions to send plan check work to his firm. “I wanted to make sure there wasn’t a perception of exactly what you’re talking about,” Fazekas said previously. “We specified that I would have no involvement.”

There seems to have been no such effort in Ahuna’s case.

“If you give a city employee or a city contractor the power to hand out city money, you want to make sure he’s not handing out the money to his own firm,” Westen said.

Even if Ahuna wasn’t making the decision to outsource to the firm that employs him, it still placed psychological pressure on his colleagues within the building division to outsource to Charles Abbott Associates, Westen said. “There is still an appearance of a conflict because people like to get along,” Westen said.

Ahuna was plan review supervisor while also doing plan review work. The double duty is another apparent conflict, Westen said. Ahuna would have been under pressure to look more favorably on the work his company was doing than that of an independent contractor, Westen said.

Mayor Tom Tait and Councilwoman Lorri Galloway said they hadn’t seen the memo from Vander Dussen and weren’t aware of the situation regarding Ahuna. Galloway said she didn’t know about Fazekas’ resignation, nor did she know about his potential outsourcing conflict.

“I don’t know. I absolutely don’t know,” Galloway said.

Tait declined to comment on this article, but when he was previously asked about Fazekas’ resignation, he said the city needed to be concerned about public perceptions of conflict of interest.

Source:http://voiceofoc.org/oc_north/article_f753896e-fe22-11e0-b887-001cc4c002e0.html

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Indian IT Biggies TCS, Infosys, Wipro Can Withstand Demand Uncertainty

October 25th, 2011

Credit rating agency Standard and Poor’s (S&P) said top three Indian IT companies Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys and Wipro — are likely to maintain their investment grade ratings even if demand weakens.

“The largest Indian IT companies have strong margins, are cost-competitive, and have proven delivery models. These attributes will help them to weather uncertain and volatile demand,” S&P’s Credit Analyst Abhishek Dangra said about the three firms.

S&P has given TCS and Infosys BBB+ and Stable rating, while Wipro holds BBB and positive credit rating.

S&P report said that the three leading IT companies will be able to grow at a faster pace than the global industry, at least over the next few years.

It expects these companies to maintain industry-leading EBITDA (indication of cash flow) margins and grow in double digits in the next 12 months.

“Bigger challenges for the Indian IT companies will occur in the long-term. We expect the cost advantages of these companies to diminish as foreign competitors increase their already-large employee bases in India,” a S&P statement said.

The agency said business and reputation risk is rising due to increasing protectionism and it expects the three Indian IT companies to adapt to the challenges, as they have in the past.

On dependency of IT companies on the slowing economies of the US and Europe, it said sovereign budget cuts across these markets could hurt business sentiment and lower private-sector IT spending.

The agency, however, added that deal cancellations would not have as much impact as in 2008-2009, and the time it takes to close deals has lengthened.

Dangra said high unemployment rates, slowing growth and political activism in many countries are generating opposition to outsourcing.

“Still, we expect focus on cutting costs in a slowing global economy to support demand for outsourcing to India. Such a practice results in significant cost savings,” he added.

Source:http://www.siliconindia.com/shownews/Indian_IT_Biggies_TCS_Infosys_Wipro_Can_Withstand_Demand_Uncertainty-nid-95780-cid-2.html

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