Archive for November, 2011

Top court relief for workers after outsourcing deal canned

November 25th, 2011

THE Constitutional Court ruled yesterday that the cancellation of an outsourcing contract between South African Airways (SAA) and cleaning company LGM obliged LGM to transfer the business back to SAA as a going concern.

The judgment means that SAA has to take over the business it had outsourced to LGM in 2000, along with the contracts of staff employed by LGM. The key question in this case was whether upon termination of the outsourcing agreement in 2007, the LGM employees were to be transferred to SAA together with the business they were engaged in.

The judgment guarantees the rights of workers at risk of losing their jobs when the business is sold as a going concern. Section 197 of the Labour Relations Act states that all rights and obligations between the old employer and an employee at the time of transfer remain in force.

The question that had concerned the Labour Court, the Labour Appeal Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal was whether section 197 still applied during a second- generation transfer of a business.

The first transfer happened in March 2000, when SAA concluded an agreement with LGM for the outsourcing of infrastructure, support services and maintenance. Workers’ contracts of employment were transferred to LGM. When SAA terminated the contract in 2007 and signalled its intention to take back the business, the airline contended that the contracts of 64 workers were not guaranteed.

The Aviation Union of SA applied to the Labour Court for an order declaring that the termination of the outsourcing agreement between SAA and LGM constituted a transfer of business. The Labour Court held that the section does not apply to a second or subsequent outsourcing agreement. In turn, the Labour Appeal Court held that the section did apply to a second agreement. SAA appealed from the Labour Appeal Court to the Supreme Court of Appeal, and won.

Yesterday Justice Zak Yacoob said an inquiry whether a transaction fell under section 197 would be misleading if it focused on the generation of the transfer.

“The true inquiry is whether there has been a transfer of a business as a going concern by the old employer to the new employer.”

Source:http://www.businessday.co.za/Articles/Content.aspx?id=159672

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FuseTalk(TM)’s FuseDiligence(TM) IT Partner Mico Systems Drives New Revenue by Providing Risk and Opportunity IT Assessments for their Clients

November 25th, 2011

The process begins with a thorough client assessment covering a wide range of issues, organized by categories, such as Corporate, Server, Workstation, Custom Software, Commercial Software, Employee Knowledge, Awareness & Satisfaction, and areas of Business Opportunity.

“It’s a really powerful way to communicate to clients the importance of IT in their businesses, and to help them develop rational plans for getting the most out of their IT investment,” says Mike Turczyniak of Mico Systems. “Our first client experience with the assessment process was remarkable. Right on screen, in real time, we engaged the client, assessed the issues, set priorities and discussed solutions and rough budgets. When we left the client site, we further developed solutions and budgets and reaffirmed priorities. It’s just the right way to do it!”

One hosted instance of FuseTalk’s FuseDiligence for IT provides IT firms with the ability to provide private and secure IT assessment and management forums for each of their clients. Access is limited to employees and contractors of the IT service provider and then, in turn, to the employees of their clients.

“The client felt empowered. Getting a balance sheet in time for all of their IT risks and opportunities was what they needed to make informed decisions. IT spending can be irrational in some organizations, defined by hardware and software, and not good practices,” adds Turczyniak.

FuseDiligence for IT runs independently of IT asset management systems but can import employee and IT asset information from Excel. The bulk of the assessment is not around hardware and software but around business risks and opportunities, though knowing what is in use now certainly helps in the evaluation. Partner plans are inexpensive and the revenue upside is, minimally, in the order of a 10 to 1 ratio of revenue to cost. In addition, policies and procedures can be placed on a client forum for all employees to access and discuss. FuseDiligence can be used by the client for literally hundreds of other applications at no additional cost.

“We have an exceptional offering with an ‘everyone wins’ attitude. Customers make informed decisions, partners provide customers with improvement plans, and we provide the starting point expertise and a world-class platform,” says Lesley Huppert of FuseTalk.

FuseDiligence leverages all of the capabilities of FuseTalk and provides powerful, patent and patent pending traits that make FuseDiligence “business essential” Collaborative Business Improvement Software(TM). Coupled with subject matter expert content, FuseDiligence can greatly assist consultants and channel partners realize benefits in terms of time, money and effectiveness.

FuseTalk Inc. is a leading provider of discussion forums, blogging tools, wikis and collaboration solutions. Available in ColdFusion MX and .NET platforms, FuseTalk enables organizations to build an interactive community that can share knowledge, exchange information and views, and help solve problems. FuseTalk brings the power of discussion to your customers, partners, employees, and stakeholders through its fully-featured, secure and customizable web interface. Highly scalable and configurable, FuseTalk accommodates any number of users, and offers an easy-to-use friendly user interface. A single FuseTalk installation can run a thousand different forums – all with different access rights and users.

Mico Systems is an IT Managed Service Provider headquartered in Oakville, Ontario, specializing in IT Outsourcing, Consulting, and Procurement to SMBs in the greater Toronto area.

The process begins with a thorough client assessment covering a wide range of issues, organized by categories, such as Corporate, Server, Workstation, Custom Software, Commercial Software, Employee Knowledge, Awareness & Satisfaction, and areas of Business Opportunity.

“It’s a really powerful way to communicate to clients the importance of IT in their businesses, and to help them develop rational plans for getting the most out of their IT investment,” says Mike Turczyniak of Mico Systems. “Our first client experience with the assessment process was remarkable. Right on screen, in real time, we engaged the client, assessed the issues, set priorities and discussed solutions and rough budgets. When we left the client site, we further developed solutions and budgets and reaffirmed priorities. It’s just the right way to do it!”

One hosted instance of FuseTalk’s FuseDiligence for IT provides IT firms with the ability to provide private and secure IT assessment and management forums for each of their clients. Access is limited to employees and contractors of the IT service provider and then, in turn, to the employees of their clients.

“The client felt empowered. Getting a balance sheet in time for all of their IT risks and opportunities was what they needed to make informed decisions. IT spending can be irrational in some organizations, defined by hardware and software, and not good practices,” adds Turczyniak.

FuseDiligence for IT runs independently of IT asset management systems but can import employee and IT asset information from Excel. The bulk of the assessment is not around hardware and software but around business risks and opportunities, though knowing what is in use now certainly helps in the evaluation. Partner plans are inexpensive and the revenue upside is, minimally, in the order of a 10 to 1 ratio of revenue to cost. In addition, policies and procedures can be placed on a client forum for all employees to access and discuss. FuseDiligence can be used by the client for literally hundreds of other applications at no additional cost.

“We have an exceptional offering with an ‘everyone wins’ attitude. Customers make informed decisions, partners provide customers with improvement plans, and we provide the starting point expertise and a world-class platform,” says Lesley Huppert of FuseTalk.

FuseDiligence leverages all of the capabilities of FuseTalk and provides powerful, patent and patent pending traits that make FuseDiligence “business essential” Collaborative Business Improvement Software(TM). Coupled with subject matter expert content, FuseDiligence can greatly assist consultants and channel partners realize benefits in terms of time, money and effectiveness.

FuseTalk Inc. is a leading provider of discussion forums, blogging tools, wikis and collaboration solutions. Available in ColdFusion MX and .NET platforms, FuseTalk enables organizations to build an interactive community that can share knowledge, exchange information and views, and help solve problems. FuseTalk brings the power of discussion to your customers, partners, employees, and stakeholders through its fully-featured, secure and customizable web interface. Highly scalable and configurable, FuseTalk accommodates any number of users, and offers an easy-to-use friendly user interface. A single FuseTalk installation can run a thousand different forums – all with different access rights and users.

Mico Systems is an IT Managed Service Provider headquartered in Oakville, Ontario, specializing in IT Outsourcing, Consulting, and Procurement to SMBs in the greater Toronto area.

Source:http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/501560

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Outsourcing wins over Lithuanian cautiousness

November 25th, 2011

In the times of low-cost, high-quality businessmanagement, outsourcing comes as an option to more and more time- and money-savvy Lithuanian entrepreneurs as they overcome initial fears over something that, until recently, was, for most, a matter of large foreign-capital companies. Before embarking on a business partnership with one – described as outsourcing – its advantages and disadvantages have to be weighed scrupulously, as there will be sharing of some sensitive business information with somebody you barely know, creating possible service redundancies, losing perhaps a personalized customer focus. These, though, are generally outweighed by the pros of such a relationship. The pros may include managing your time better by outsourcing non-core business activities and focusing on core business processes, streamlining all business operations, while being more flexible and, at the same time, keeping in control of the business.

“In international practice, foreign companies outsource services in pursuit of long-term goals, while in Lithuania the advantages of outsourcing services are often being evaluated through a local instantaneous prism – if an internal cost today can be reduced, it means some or all services, and certain activities, have to be outsourced. Most often these kinds of decisions are related to relatively unmeaningful activities, i.e. even if they are ideally outsourced, the desired economic effect is not reached, as, in most cases, the cost savings are extremely little in such non-core activities such as cleaning or bookkeeping,” Justas Gavenas, a certified management consultant at Ekonomines konsultacijos ir tyrimai (Economic Consultations and Research), said to The Baltic Times.

In the aftermath of such short term-oriented solutions, he says, goals of a larger production output and a focus on core business activities are not usually achieved, as the bulk of time is oriented to the control of outsourced services, which distorts the core principle of outsourcing – an orientation to core competences.

“I believe that relatively large enterprises, whose number in Lithuania is quite limited, though is bigger than that in Latvia and Estonia, benefit most from outsourcing. Speaking of the Lithuanian and Estonian differences in terms of outsourcing services, our country is notorious for its so-called pseudo-economy – Lithuanians tend to carry the biggest load of activities themselves and control scrupulously non-core activities, which often are outsourced. It is quite opposite in Estonia, which focuses mainly on principal activities, thereby, as a rule, achieve large productivity,” Gavenas maintained.

He says some large Lithuanian companies, like Achema and Mazeikiu Nafta, in attempts to optimize their main activity, tend to unbundle certain enterprise activities, forming a separate legal entity and allowing it to compete in the free market. “However, it is hard for them to remain competitive due to their relatively small competitiveness,” the management consultant stresses.

Different from the popular belief that outsourcing services are on the rise globally, he says, referring to data from Bain&Company, a global management consulting company, the popularity of outsourcing is on the decline, especially in Western Europe. “According to the data, the use of this management tool, over the last years, has plummeted, from 80 to 58-60 percent, though the general approval of outsourcing services still remains high,” Gavenas suggested.
Some other business consultants attribute the decrease to crisis-stricken companies’ will to be fully in charge of their non-core and core business management processes. “Most of the time, the outsourcing provider renders its services not for one organization, which some entrepreneurs wrongly expect, but caters to the needs of several companies, being unable to give their 100 percent attention to each company. In the crisis, that makes a big difference to many,” Dainius Kazlauskas, an economist, says.

In Lithuania, where business tries anything enabling it to lower costs and improve management, outsourcing remains a popular managerial tool even for large business groups such as, for example, SEB, the largest Lithuanian bank. It entrusted its IT networks to ATEA, the biggest Nordic and Baltic supplier of IT infrastructure solutions and services, with more than 5,400 employees around the globe.

“We did it in pursuit of a larger effectiveness, as we consider the IT operations management and services outsourcing to be the field where we will be better off if we rely on external service providers. The solution helps us focus on our principal activity,” Darius Likas, SEB IT Monitoring Department head, said.
He says that the bank hired the IT company after having evaluated its IT experience and reliability. “So far we have not had any case of their specialists being late, and the service quality is absolutely up to our expectations,” the bank representative said.

Linas Stepanauskas, ATEA Service Department director, suggests the company provides a wide-range of IT services, taking up such sensitive banking fields as maintenance of the bank’s computerized work places, fixing computer glitches and surveillance of the bank’s telephone services.
“Most of the time we fix the problems remotely,” Stepanauskas says.
To build the mutual trust and ensure a smoother run of the operations, ATEA accorded the bank a guarantee and insurance from third party influences. “Our company can satisfy the largest service demands of the bank, as we are running our own large IT network in the country,” Stepanauskas says.

The SEB representative admits that, with the ATEA and SEB mutual agreement signed, synchronizing the IT service processes of both sides has turned out to be the most complicated part. “The integration has been carried out smoothly, and our bank workers are being given impeccable services,” admits Likas.
Demand for IT outsourcing services has been high lately, especially during the crisis, business consultants note. A survey by Op2i, a market research and consulting company, quite contrary to the Bain&Company data, revealed that 64 percent of IT company heads stand for entrusting IT outsourcing companies their IT network management. A few years ago only 44 percent of companies were willing to do so.

Though IT outsourcing along with logistics outsourcing remain one of the trendiest outsourcing sectors, other businesses also benefit from the economic tool. Like, for example, translation services providers, such as Vilnius-based Synergium, with its subsidiaries in Russia, Ukraine, Latvia and Estonia. Its Vilnius office director, Mindaugas Kazlauskas, says the company constantly outsources some translation services from freelance translators and translation bureaus. “We rely on outsourcing services provided not only by Lithuanian specialists, but by foreigners as well. If, for example, we need a translation from English to Chinese, we look for a language native in China,” Kazlauskas said to The Baltic Times.

When it comes to outsourcing translation services in the Baltics, he says he does not see big differences. “I would rather discern only a cultural thing: Estonians, as a rule, even working on a freelance basis, do not tend to work after-hours. In that sense, Lithuanians and Latvians are more flexible. Probably the difference is about the Scandinavian impact on Estonians,” the Synergium representative relates. He admits that it is even harder to work with Ukrainian and Belarusian translators. “If there is not a long-term competition, they tend to hike their service prices, dictate their conditions and often lack a customer-oriented focus,” Kazlauskas said.

He notes that all Lithuanian companies that have come to understand that it is impossible to do only with one’s own competence, employ some outsourcing. “Only small businesses still, out of habit, try to do everything themselves. However, those who hire outsourcers face one challenge – how to properly manage the external workforce. I often see some companies fail to do that, and the failure makes them return to their old-fashioned business management style of ‘I knew I could do it better,’” Kazlauskas points out.
He admits his company management costs went down by nearly 20 percent after having relied on some outsourcing services.

Audrius Losunovas, managing director of Raben Lithuania, representing quite another field, logistics and transportation services, says that “one of the ways to survive the difficult economic time is cost-optimization and outsourcing processes.”

“By outsourcing their logistics needs to Raben, customers are able to minimize fixed costs related to maintaining their own warehouses and fleet, as well as avoid investments in a logistics base, which is a real burden for companies in this volatile economic situation. What is more, outsourcing enables customers to concentrate on their core business and leave logistics services to professional logistics operators, which means better quality, faster deliveries and professional stock management,” Losunovas said to The Baltic Times.

He added: “Let me give you an example. Raben, as one of the logistics and transportation outsourcing services providers, is able to pick up goods from several factories located in different parts of Europe, deliver them to one warehouse where, as part of value-added services, promotional packs will be prepared and delivered directly to points of sale in yet another country as indicated by the customer. And our well-developed group transport means that even an order of one such pallet may be done at a very competitive price.”

Among other services, Raben Lithuania provides domestic distribution, international road forwarding, warehousing and contract logistics services. He describes competition in the market as “tough” and demanding to be in pursuit of new and better services in the same market segment. “For example, we provide transport of fresh products in controlled temperature,” he says.

Baltijos tekstile, a Lithuanian textile company, also advertises its weaving outsourcing services ranging from thread deliveries to their storage and logistics. “We’ve run for more than 10 years a 2,000 sq. m. storage, as well as 4,000 sq.m. production and 5,000 sq. m. non-manufacturing premises, and our annual production volume reaches 2 million meters of textiles, enabling us to provide textile outsourcing services in a wide range of activities.
Though the market niche is very specific and, with the Chinese constantly slashing the prices of this kind of service, very competitive, we have a constant clientele in Western Europe, particularly in the UK, and also Scandinavia. Foreigners would rather stick with our reliability, our quality and work ethics than switch to a less costly but also less reliable service,” Darius Daulenskas from Baltijos tekstile said to The Baltic Times.

With more troubled economic times possibly ahead, for most companies outsourcing, a Western business management tool until recently, has made significant inroads into Lithuanian business, making even Lithuanian language watchdogs, linguists, scramble for a corresponding Lithuanian word. The suggestion – uzsakomosios paslaugos – seems to be too clumsy and vague for most, as the English word – outsourcing – of course with a Lithuanian ending, remains on the tip of the tongue of many Lithuanian entrepreneurs.

Source:http://www.baltictimes.com/news/articles/30041/

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Pentalog Group: Employee Stock Scheme Increases Quality

November 25th, 2011

The Pentalog group relies on modern compensation systems and a comprehensive stock scheme for employees. In doing so, the group aims to both increase the motivation and consequently the sales volume and also to provide superior project quality. Employees who identify with their company guarantee sustainable business development and a high level of responsibility and loyalty. About 56% of the company”s own capital belongs to its employees.

“We combine the benefits of an international group structure with the sense of responsibility and duty of an owner-managed middle-sized enterprise”, says Mircea Popa, Chief Executive Manager of Pentalog Deutschland GmbH. The company”s stocks do not only belong to the management, but also to its junior managers and many software engineers. Popa further illustrates that almost every person in the group could rightfully claim to own a part of the Pentalog group and its success.

However, the main beneficiaries of this stockholder policy are the customers and their contacts. Trust, reliability, transparency and, above all, quality awareness are of particular importance for international and sensitive IT projects. “Many other companies of our size do not have individual contact persons. It is impossible to find out who is responsible and contact someone”, Popa compares. Pentalog wants to avoid this at all cost. The constant growth of the Pentalog group in the domestic and overseas areas must not involve these negative aspects. Each IT project has its own project manager who can speak both the language of the client and the target market. Every client receives an individual service and consultation. Pentalog does not offer “off the peg” projects.

The French Pentalog group employs more than 600 employees in France, Rumania, Moldova, Vietnam, and other countries. The group is called upon whenever cost-efficient outsourcing of IT projects is required. Pentalog is one of Europe”s leading IT nearshore and offshore providers. “It is exactly this level of complexity that calls for innovative solutions”, explains Popa who represents the group”s German branch office in Eschborn. He says that he is proud that the company’s management does not solely focus on its products and selling them, but also advocates employee stock schemes, social responsibility and quality.

The group already has a high level of social responsibility, states Popa. “We want to encourage our employees to actively participate in a positive globalization by working in a multinational, innovative and economically interactive environment” is a quotation from the internal regulations of the Pentalog group. In concluding, Popa declares that this also involves the creation and maintenance of sustainable economic growth and the assurance of fair working conditions in the mostly post-communist target countries who host Pentalog”s production, development and engineering activities. In the area of international IT outsourcing, the key focus is not on cheap production but on providing cost-efficient and high-quality solutions.

For more information on the IT services of the Pentalog group and on the issues of IT nearshoring and offshoring as well as its employee stock scheme, visit www.pentalog.biz.
Pentalog Deutschland GmbH is located in Eschborn, Germany, and is the German branch office of the international Pentalog group, one of the leading suppliers of high-end offshore software development solutions in Europe. With branch offices in France, Germany, Rumania, Moldova, and Vietnam, the Pentalog group offers an ideal mix of nearshore and offshore services by employing local workforce in Western Europe. A smooth quality assurance system, professional project management and many years of outsourcing experience guarantee the highest possible efficiency and reliability for outsourced software development.

Source:http://your-story.org/pentalog-group-employee-stock-scheme-increases-quality-288035/

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Excels in both IT outsourcing and offshore outsourcing services

November 25th, 2011

Inflexi Technologies offers both IT outsourcing and offshore outsourcing services along with its ranges of web solutions for every clients.

India, —— 2011, As a leading web design development company,Inflexi Technologies providing websites with professional web design, content management and internet marketing services.

The Inflexi team is focusing on company’s professional web solution services, specific care for clientele requirement,premium quality services to meet international standards. They provide expert services including web design development, seo services, ecommerce web designing, online shopping cart with ranges of internet marketing strategies.

Along with IT outsourcing services, Inflexi Technologies is also emphasizing on offshore outsourcing services. The aim of providing offshore outsourcing is to develope and enhances the quality and efficiency of the core IT business. The other reasons which make clients to adopt offshore outsourcing services at Inflexi are domain and process specific knowledge, round the clock customer support management, high technological services with updated knowledge etc.

At Inflexi, the customer is important for us, whether the client belongs to small, medium or large sized business or having any national or international franchisees, we accept the web services according to clientele requirements. The proficient team also helps the new client business with good suggestions. With advent technology we design best websites and apply all possible strategies to increase web presence potentiality of the client.

Our provided outsourcing services are very much cost effective and it helps you to give the benefits of competitive IT solutions. Through IT outsourcing you can focuses on your core business areas.Both outsourcing services are providing tax benefits to its owners. Starting from hiring staff to solve technical tasks, preparing short term goals to long term costs, Inflexi is one stop solution for all web development services.

At Inflexi Technologies we are providing creative web design services according to our clientele requirement. We work rigorously to meet client’s exactexpectations.Perfection is our only aim to bring in our professional yet innovative web design development services. Unlimited web design revision to bring accurate results and build reliable relationship with clients. Round the clock technical support and secure functioning helps our company to build trust vote at global web market.

Source:http://www.addpr.com/articles/web_design_development/96945.html

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Wait and watch IT sector: Sandeep J Shah

November 25th, 2011

Given the way how rupee has depreciated, looking at the way how US companies outsourcing more, is IT more like no-brainer buy?

IT is defensive within this whirlpool that we seem to be in. Most companies are sying that they are seeing growth in Europe when clearly growth is slowing down dramatically. In US as well we find that companies are finding that demand is still fairly strong.

It is important to remember that in a bear market we are in, there is ultimately no safe bastion. The difference is in terms of the timing and the magnitude. So you may want to nibble at IT stocks. IT stocks which have not corrected. will see some correction as well. So there again I do not think there is any ways to actually chase stocks.

Be a little careful about some of the midtier companies. If you look at what is happening in the US, the fortune 1000 companies are doing very well. But, the small and medium enterprises and mid tier IT companies have a problem.

In the same way that we seem to have two different bull and a bear market continuing in India even though there is a correction in the bull market in the defensives. In the US also something similar is happening.

Broadly, US economy is clearly going down but large US corporates are doing well. Stay in the larger ones and do not chase them, look for corrections to buy.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/stocks/views/recommendations/wait-and-watch-it-sector-sandeep-j-shah/articleshow/10853865.cms

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Nasscom’s BPO Career Guide, a one-stop-shop info centre

November 25th, 2011

In an effort to promote jobs in Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) as a career, Nasscom, the premier organisation that represents and sets the tone for public policy for the Indian IT industry, has come out with a ‘BPO Career Guide’. The Guide has been published on the Nasscom website and also on the NASSCOM Assessment of Competence (NAC) website, downloadable for free. Meanwhile Nasscom is planning something similar on Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO) as well.

According to M S Sujith Unni, Senior Associate at the Nasscom’s Kerala Office at the Technopark in Trivandrum, “For a while, we were hearing, from different stakeholders, about the ignorance towards the BPO sector that common mass has, especially in Kerala, which is due to lack of knowledge about the sector. This is what prompted us to work on a manual, called ‘BPO Career Guide’ that, in simple language, attempts to make one understand the nitty-gritty of the BPO sector, including the career paths, various job verticals / job profiles, skills / competencies required, compensation & benefits, etc. We are happy to share that the said manual that has been compiled with inputs from the industry too, is now in place”.

This initiative is expected to help Nasscom promote BPO jobs as a career, as the readers will now be able to understand the basics / rudiments of the industry. “After all, having a ‘well informed’ group of candidates is critical for industry as well as for our various Education Initiatives and this is where the Guide will play an important role”, adds Sujith.

Higher educational institutions and students have welcomed this initiative from Nasscom as there are tremendous job opportunities in the IT & ITeS sector coming up in Kerala with the expansion of existing IT Parks like the Technopark in Thiruvananthapuram and Infopark in Kochi and upcoming ones like the Cyberpark in Kozhikode.

Source:http://keralaitnews.com/it-parks/technopark/3690-nasscoms-bpo-career-guide-a-one-stop-shop-info-centre

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