Posts Tagged ‘ACS’

ACS Buys The Breakaway Group

November 30th, 2011

Dallas-based ACS, the IT outsourcing and consulting arm of Xerox, said Tuesday that it has acquired The Breakaway Group, a developer of cloud-based services for the electronic medical records industry. Financial terms of the buy were not disclosed. ACS said that The Breakaway Group’s technology, PromisePoint, helps caregiver practice using EMR as they would in a hospital or doctor’s office, without jeopardizing real patient data. The software is used to help train caregivers on EMR systems such as Allscripts, Cerner, Epic or McKesson.

Source:http://www.texastechpulse.com/acs_buys_the_breakaway_group/s-0039632.html

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ACS, A Xerox Company, Acquires Symcor’s U.S. Operations to Expand Financial Services Offerings

October 5th, 2011

ACS, A Xerox Company XRX +4.32% , today announced it is expanding its capabilities in the financial services industry with the acquisition of Symcor’s U.S. operations.

Symcor specializes in outsourcing services for financial institutions. Its offerings range from cash management services to statement and check processing.

The acquisition enables financial institutions to adjust to the changing payment landscape from paper-based payments to electronic payments by incorporating Symcor’s U.S. check and payment processing services into ACS’ current suite of business process services. ACS will now be able to serve both Symcor customers in the U.S. as well as current clients with one of the industry’s broadest arrays of financial services offerings.

“Expanding our value and efficiency to banks and financial institutions continues to be a priority for ACS,” said Kent Schnacker, executive vice president of ACS’ financial services group. “As the finance industry evolves and business needs shift, ACS recognizes the need to ensure our customers are positioned for success with a wider range of services.”

Schnacker noted that despite the expansion of electronic payments options, consumers and business continue to rely on paper checks for commerce. In 2009, about 24.5 billion checks were processed valued at $31.6 trillion.(1) As financial institutions focus on developing new products and services for their clients, their traditional paper payments can be consolidated by a central service provider.

ACS benefits from the industry expertise of Symcor’s leadership team and its 1,500 employees located at 15 service centers throughout the country.

“This transaction will provide continuity of service to our customers and employment opportunities for our U.S. employees,” said Chameli Naraine, president & chief executive officer, Symcor.

Established in 2005, Symcor’s U.S. business is a subsidiary of Symcor Inc., a privately held company headquartered in Toronto and jointly owned by three of Canada’s largest financial institutions.

Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/acs-a-xerox-company-acquires-symcors-us-operations-to-expand-financial-services-offerings-2011-10-04?reflink=MW_news_stmp

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ACS, A Xerox Company, Expands European Presence with Acquisition of Innova Consulting’s Italian Facilities

August 2nd, 2011

ACS, A Xerox Company XRX +0.77% , today announced it is expanding its global capabilities with the acquisition of the Italian-based call center and business process services assets of Innova Consulting.

ACS’ latest acquisition will immediately begin providing business process services to Zurich Connect, the direct-to-consumer and online insurance brand of Zurich, as part of a five-year, $32 million outsourcing agreement to meet customer demand in the Italian market.

The acquisition provides ACS with its first operations facility in Italy with a 180-person call center and business process capability in the city of Cagliari on the island of Sardinia. The transaction accelerates ACS’ ability to offer its customer care services, such as inbound call center support, help desk services and back office processing capabilities to clients seeking these services in the region.

“This acquisition provides our current clients with the ability to serve their customers in the region or to expand their services in Italy,” said Connie Harvey, group president of ACS’ healthcare, payer and insurance group. “This newly-acquired facility and experienced staff will be able to quickly incorporate ACS’ proprietary business process services and immediately offer Italy as an option for global companies operating in the region.”

Innova Consulting was established to provide call center and back offices services to the Italian customers of Zurich Connect.

“Our insurance customers will immediately benefit when ACS introduces its proven industry expertise to the facility in Sardinia,” said Andrea Rapetti, Managing Director of Zurich’s direct business in Italy. “It is time this facility took the next step in providing exemplary client services to our customers.”

ACS handles more than 1.5 million contact center interactions daily in 150 customer care centers in more than 20 different languages.

Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/acs-a-xerox-company-expands-european-presence-with-acquisition-of-innova-consultings-italian-facilities-2011-08-01?reflink=MW_news_stmp

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Outsourcing’s Odd Couple: Xerox & ACS, One Year Post-Merger

May 23rd, 2011

It’s been just over a year since Xerox officially acquired business process outsourcer ACS for $6.4 billion. But as students of successful mergers understand, the real work of integration–combining the technology, processes and cultures of the two organizations–has only just begun.
The question that looms largest is whether or not the conjoined companies can deliver on the premise–and promise–of their union. In the case of Xerox-ACS, according to its own recent marketing campaigns, that means changing “the way you see our company–and possibly your own.” By combining Xerox’s strengths in document technology with ACS’s expertise in managing and automating work processes, the company says it has created a new class of business services provider.
CIO.com spoke to Xerox CIO John McDermott and the head of ACS’s IT outsourcing unit Kevin Kyser about the challenges of integrating a products company with a service provider,the role of IT services in the merged company, and ACS’s newest–and least profitable–outsourcing customer, Xerox.
CIO.com: Industry watchers tend to view the Xerox-ACS partnership as the odd couple of technology mergers. It’s harder to see how the two companies might complement each other than it is with a Dell-Perot or HP-EDS match-up. How do you explain the value of the partnership?
John E. McDermott, Xerox CIO: We get reports from CIOs and other customers that Xerox has fundamentally changed the impression of its brand from a brand associated with great printing and some document management services to company that can manage document intensive processes across a wide spectrum. And that’s what pointed us toward ACS. ACS had found an important and profitable segment of the outsourcing marketplace that is document intensive. We see that in traditional BPO areas like HR. We see it in legal and mortgage and health records.
How do you explain the value of the partnership in terms of IT outsourcing?
Kevin Kyser, COO of ACS’s Information Technology Outsourcing group: There’s great synergy between the two companies in IT outsourcing. That’s where the ACS business started, and that’s where we’ve continued to grow in tough economic times. But now we can help companies run their entire business more efficiently–not just IT. That’s going to be a great differentiator in the marketplace–thinking through the big issues with our customers that we didn’t have the bandwidth or processes for before.
In the world of IT services, Xerox is famous for inking one of the first single-source outsourcing mega-deals. Recently, you shifted to a multi-vendor approach. Now that you’ve acquired ACS, will the pendulum swing back in the single-source direction?
McDermott: I now have the opportunity to insource [some IT services] and become [ACS's] largest and best customer. Years ago, Xerox made the largest EDS deal of that time. It was a monolithic arrangement, and only a thin veneer of IT talent remained within Xerox. Over time, we rebalanced that and moved key knowledge back into Xerox. As we began to manage more discretely by tower or application area, that led to the notion that we could get partners with more specific expertise at a lower cost by multi-sourcing. Four years ago, we started down that path with considerable success in reducing costs and improving service levels. That required us to put in place vendor management capabilities to make sure problems that needed to be coordinated could be effectively done. That provided a good backdrop to bring in the ACS services and get rid of some of the others.

Will ACS eventually become Xerox’s only outsourcing provider?
McDermott: I make Kevin compete for his incremental business here. We have every intent to move more services to ACS and we have already committed ourselves to replacing EDS with ACS. EDS is now part of HP, so that relationship has become a little awkward for us.
There are some areas–new systems within our SAP/Oracle footprint–where our relationships with other parties will remain important to us. But ACS has good capabilities in development in .NET, Java and other Internet technologies and my intent is to use that a lot more.
The transition of IT services from HP to ACS will not be complete until the end of the year. How are you handling that uncomfortable situation, where you’re biggest supplier became your biggest competitor when HP acquired EDS?
McDermott: This is the one and only plug I will give to our competitors [at HP]: the local guys on the ground have delivered with the highest level of professionalism. A few of those professionals, as happens in all [outsourcing] transitions, will join the Xerox group. The people at the absolute top will move on to other opportunities. They managed this transition in a way that you’d typically only see in a ramp-up of a relationship, not a ramp down.
It’s one thing to run an internally facing IT shop, but another thing to serve external clients’ distinct IT outsourcing needs, too. Is Xerox assuming a thought leadership role with ACS’s CIO clients?
Kyser: I’ve only been in my role as COO for ITO for 120 days–I was the CFO as we were going through the transaction–so I have a view of not just ITO but the BPO business as well. We were excited about the transaction because of the innovation and R&D that Xerox has inside of their business. That’s something we could not afford prior to this. We really struggled with innovation, spending our nights doing R&D.
Now we’re exposing ACS clients to that R&D through what we call “dream sessions.” We ask clients to tell us what keeps them up at night, and with the significant capabilities that exist inside Xerox and ACS, we figure out how we can create solutions.
How have you applied Xerox’s product innovation processes to services?
Kyser: We sell services, but we use software and products to deliver them. Our services are buoyed by the proprietary technology behind them. We have seen some early successes around imaging and photo capture that have really been eye opening. It’s totally different from what we’ve focused on in past, and we’re getting good early reviews.
McDermott: Take an area common both to Xeros pre-ACS and ACS pre-Xerox–the question of how you take information embedded in paper documents and put it in digital form. Xerox has extraordinary capabilities in this area. We not only can do key-wording, but we can parse that document, summarize it, put metadata headers on it, do automatic routing. A BPO health records offering from ACS [for example] would see enormous benefits from the translation of physical documents to electronic documents.
How does having an IT services company in the family benefit your Xerox IT group–beyond getting IT services at a discount?
McDermott: It’s great to be working with a sister company that has an externally facing IT organization. IT outsourcing is a fiercely competitive marketplace. In order to have a profitable business and a good margin, you have to be on top of your game in terms of infrastructure.
One place we’ve applied ACS’s very productive thinking is in the acceleration of our data center virtualization. It’s also helping us develop ideas about how to create more cost effective and productive network topologies. My guys are good at this, but they didn’t do it for a living. They have lots of other responsibilities. Now I have get access to people who do this for a living.
John, you’ve made clear the benefits of having an IT outsourcing company in the fold. But as a CIO, isn’t it annoying to be surrounded by IT know-it-alls?
McDermott: There are a couple of guys in ACS with some sharp elbows that make their points of view known. But I think we’ve come to appreciate that.
Kyser: I think there’s more of a personal downside for me. If I don’t deliver, I know I’m going to get a call from John. There’ a spotlight on us, and I know I have to provide John with better services than he’s experienced from any other outsourcer.
How would you describe ACS and Xerox’s distinct corporate cultures? Have you been able to bring them together?
Kyser: We [at ACS] have a hustle culture that says we’re not going to stop, even after whistle blows. Xerox brings good rigor around processes.
McDermott: A good example is the transition of services from HP-EDS to ACS. Xerox has a mature vendor management transition process. And ACS had come to agree that they were good methodologies. But they told us we ought to knock a couple of months off of the plan. As a ten-year employee of Xerox, that’s the kind of change of pace I’ve long wanted as company. And people who have been here longer than me look at this as positive rejuvenation of the traditional Xerox corporate culture. On the ACS side, some of the discipline we have, including in the IT area, is appreciated as a way to bring more predictability to the complex transactions ACS has to manage every day with their customers.

Source:http://www.networkworld.com/news/2011/052011-outsourcings-odd-couple-xerox-.html?page=1

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Genworth Names ACS Strategic Supplier of the Year

April 14th, 2011

Genworth Financial, Inc. (NYSE: GNW) today announced that ACS, A Xerox Company (NYSE: XRX), is the recipient of its 2010 Strategic Supplier Partnership Initiative (SSPI) award. The award recognizes key suppliers that show commitment to embodying Genworth values and demonstrating innovation, continuous improvement and cost performance.
ACS, a leader in business process and IT outsourcing, has provided Genworth with document and data management services since 2008. During that time, ACS evolved from a basic to a strategic supplier driven by a focus on sharing new technologies and capabilities. ACS brings increased value to Genworth through its investment in the partnership with technology, innovative methods and solutions.
“ACS not only delivers solid service but is first to the table with solutions and approaches to enhance our business processes,” says Sena Kwawu, Genworth Senior Vice President, Finance Shared Services. “Their reputation for process improvement has reduced Genworth’s costs and made ACS an invaluable strategic partner.”
“Genworth is able to focus on the financial decisions of their customers by entrusting us to manage their critical business information,” said Kent Schnacker, president of ACS’ Financial Services Group. “This approach draws upon our ability to apply innovation to daily business challenges.”
Other nominees for the SSPI award included Genpact, SIRVA Relocation, Acxiom Corporation, and Direct Mail Solutions.

Source:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/genworth-names-acs-strategic-supplier-of-the-year-119794959.html

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ACS bags $200m IT services contract from MGM Resorts International

April 6th, 2011

Will provide all service desk and desk side support to MGM Resorts International’s employees

Affiliated Computer Services (ACS), a Xerox Company, has signed a $200m, five-year agreement with MGM Resorts International to provide managed information technology (IT) services.

Under the agreement, ACS will perform all service desk and desk side support to MGM Resorts International’s employees; manage and continually update company’s IT equipment; manage the IT purchasing needs and store vital data.

In addition, ACS will establish a locally-based Center of Excellence in Las Vegas, which will be dedicated to applying the new technological innovation to support MGM Resorts International by using best practices that have been successful in other industries.

ACS IT outsourcing solutions executive vice-president and group president Derrell James said their clients benefit from the continual investment they make developing secure and reliable IT systems.

“We’ve established deep expertise in serving the unique business needs of the hospitality industry and are well-positioned to continue growing our presence in the market,” James said.

Source:http://itservices.cbronline.com/news/acs-bags-200m-it-services-contract-from-mgm-resorts-international-050411

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Xerox ACS Unit Buys Teleservices Provider TMS Health

October 19th, 2010

Xerox’s Affiliated Computer Services IT outsourcing unit has acquired pharmaceutical teleservices company TMS Health from Palm Beach Capital, a private equity company, Xerox has announced. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

TMS, a teleservices company based in Boca Raton, Fla., will now become part of ACS, and TMS CEO Guy Amato will remain in his current role.

Xerox announced its purchase of ACS in September 2009 and completed the transaction in February 2010.

With the addition of TMS, ACS will be one of the largest customer service providers to the pharmaceutical, biotech and health care industries, Xerox reports.

By integrating TMS, ACS plans to enhance communication among pharmaceutical firms, physicians, consumers and pharmacists.

“TMS brings strong communication capabilities to the deal,” said Connie Harvey, group president of ACS Healthcare Payer and Insurance, in a statement. “Together, we will save clients money and help them more effectively reach constituents.”

The deal will combine ACS’s expertise in delivering health care information through IT outsourcing with TMS’s focus on customer communication using video detailing, according to ACS.

“Video detailing is primarily being used to augment the old delivery model, armies of people driving in cars to deliver educational and promotional information,” Amato told eWEEK. “Now we can do that through the voice channel—it creates a virtual pharmaceutical sales rep.”

In addition to the pharmaceutical marketing side, TMS also uses its video detailing technology to help patients with medication compliance, Amato said.

TMS provides video for CRM platforms designed for the health care industry, according to Amato.

Video implementation is growing within the health care industry. It can be combined with pharmaceutical marketing efforts, like with TMS, or incorporated into electronic medical records, as with telehealth provider InteractiveMD. In August, InteractiveMD announced that its remote patient monitoring systems will now support video examinations.

Source:http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Health-Care-IT/Xerox-ACS-Unit-Buys-Teleservices-Provider-TMS-Health-573595/

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