Posts Tagged ‘Customers’

`IT moving to co-creation with customers’

February 2nd, 2011

Indian IT’s move from outsourcing to co-creation with customers and with other countries will be a major point of discussion at the Nasscom Leadership Summit scheduled to be held in Mumbai between February 8 and 10.

Speaking to TOI ahead of the organization’s largest annual event, Nasscom president Som Mittal said Indian IT companies are beginning to work so closely with its customers and so strategically, that it is becoming difficult to define what the customer is doing and what Indian IT companies are doing. “It’s already very visible in product engineering, and this will be the way forward in many other areas too,” he said.

A similar process, he said, is happening with other countries too. Countries seen earlier as being competitors are expected to become partners. “There will be more country collaborations, with those like Chile, Egypt, the Philippines. We will help them to develop their skills, and they will help us develop ours,” Mittal said. Countries like the Philippines have become very strong in BPO.

Mittal said the domestic market was becoming a big opportunity. As connectivity reaches rural areas, as 3G becomes widespread, as cloud computing takes off, whole new markets are expected to get developed. Mobile internet is expected to become enablers for farmers and rural folk in general. “Current IT sector players are aligning themselves to these opportunities, and many new players will emerge in these areas,” Mittal said.

Nasscom, he said, is focusing on ensuring there’s talent available to take advantage of the opportunities. “A large amount of capacity is getting created, but how to get quality is a big question,” he said. Nasscom is working with the government on a number of education initiatives.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/IT-moving-to-co-creation-with-customers/articleshow/7399071.cms

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Outsourcing ruling against EDS gives customers power

February 11th, 2010

In what could be an important decision for the IT outsourcing industry and its customers, a London court recently ruled that EDS ( now part of Hewlett-Packard) must pay damages to a former outsourcing customer for failing to live up to its sales pitch.

British Sky Broadcasting (BskyB) had signed a £48 million outsourcing contract with EDS to build a customer service system in 2000, but terminated the deal early in 2002 after what it said was “woeful” performance by the IT service provider. BSkyB alleged deceit, negligent misrepresentation and breach of contract by EDS.

Although the total costs and damages will be determined at a later date, BskyB said it expects EDS will be liable to pay at least £200 million-more than four times the amount of the original contract.

“This size of claim for a fraudulent statement made prior to an IT contract being signed is unprecedented within the U.K.,” says Peter Brudenall, a partner in the London office of law firm Hunton & Williams.

The damages include the “cost of replacement services,” which is almost unheard of, according to Dan Hildebrand, a partner in Mayer Brown’s litigation practice.

In fact, it’s rare that an outsourcing dispute makes it to court, let alone to a final decision. And given the result, many outsourcing experts expect this could have implications not just in the U.K. but industry-wide.

“Customers are often discouraged to take on their vendor in such a manner and settle for far lower compensation than they could otherwise get in court,” says Phil Fersht, an independent outsourcing analyst and author of the outsourcing blog Horses for Sources.

Vendors want to avoid the bad publicity of a trial, and the customers just want the problem to go away. Consequently, disputes are often arbitrated outside of the courts, which results in confidential settlements.

“This could set a precedent to encourage more customers to seek damages for business impact caused by poor IT delivery performance,” Fersht says.

“The basic lesson is the same on both sides of the pond,” says James Harvey, a partner in the Hunton & Williams outsourcing and privacy group in Atlanta. “Customers need to pay attention to what suppliers say so that they’re sure they get the full benefit of suppliers’ statements. And suppliers need to be somewhat more thoughtful with their pursuits so that they don’t overpromise, underperform and then get brought to task for it.”

Although the U.K. court ruling was decided largely on the basis of facts from one person’s statements as opposed to systematic failings of the outsourcer or outsourcing vendors as a whole, says Brudenall, dissatisfied outsourcing customers may go digging through notes from the pre-contract courtship phase of their relationships to see if arguments around fraud can be made.

“The letter of the contract will generally prevail under U.S. law,” explains Harvey, “unless a complaining party is able to prove that there was fraud in the inducement to sign the agreement or intentional misrepresentation or something of that nature that would cause a court to look beyond the contract itself.”

It’s likely only large or high-profile outsourcing customers might consider this kind of lawsuit, but Fersht says he’s already seeing several vendors trying to preventatively terminate unhappy-and unprofitable-relationships where delivery is not meeting expectations.

“It’s not always the vendor’s fault,” Fersht points out. “It’s often a combination of poor relationship management on both sides.”

The cost of establishing an outsourcing agreement could also go up as a result of customers engaging in more extensive due diligence on their providers’ pitch, notes Harvey. And, says Brad Peterson, a partner in Mayer Brown’s sourcing practice who helps companies contract with IT vendors, “it will be harder for customers to get vendors to accept risk.”

What’s unclear is whether this case is likely to influence vendors’ sales tactics. “The days of IT suppliers making grandiose claims about the abilities of the company or a particular piece of technology should be over,” says Brudenall. “If suppliers learn anything from this case, it is that courts-in the U.K. at least-will come down hard on any supplier found to have given misleading and fraudulent statements to a customer in order to win the business.”

Vendors already know the risks of putting “optimists” on commission, says Peterson, and have controls in place to manage that.

Still, “the pressure to win business is greater than ever,” says Fersht. Some providers may continue to promise the moon, and “just try harder not to mess up with clients in the future.” That could mean greater attention to SLAs in the negotiation process and increased investment in project management and client delivery expertise.

Diligent IT outsourcing customers should make sure their contracts capture as much of what is said during sales and negotiations as possible.

“Customers need to take the time and invest the energy to get the contract right and to document exactly what products and services they think they’re buying,” advises Harvey. “Without that, customers are left trying to prove that the supplier has engaged in fraud or misrepresentation, and that’s a difficult task from a legal perspective. It’s much better to get it right the first time and use the contracting process as a sort of due diligence period to really test and probe and capture what the suppliers are trying to sell.”

Source:http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9155138/Outsourcing_Ruling_Against_EDS_Gives_Customers_Power?taxonomyId=14&pageNumber=1

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Dell Services Focusing on Simple, Effective, Best-Value IT Solutions for Customers

December 16th, 2009

Dell leaders today will tell investors and others that the company’s integration of Perot Systems into a broader Dell Services organization is progressing well, and will benefit customers by making information-technology solutions easier to access and simpler to manage.

“Dell now has a comprehensive and growing set of leading solutions that meet customer needs, so they can manage their IT most efficiently,” said Peter Altabef, president of Dell Services. “The Dell Services and Perot heritage of strong customer focus positions us extremely well to help customers of all types and sizes use IT to solve problems and derive the best value for their technology investments.”

According to Mr. Altabef, Dell Services is focused on combining its knowledge of different industries and requirements, together with Dell’s technology-platform expertise, to help customers succeed in:

Dell acquired Perot Systems on Nov. 3, in the process extending the reach of Dell Services into consulting, applications, business-process outsourcing and hosting. The combination immediately expanded Dell’s already significant range of managed and modular services, and makes all existing and future capabilities available to Dell’s large global customer base.

Mr. Altabef; Brian Gladden, Dell’s chief financial officer; Steve Schuckenbrock, president, Large Enterprises; and Paul Bell, president, Public, are to update investors and equity analysts on the progress of the integration in an 8 a.m. EST conference call today.

Dell will consolidate financial results from Perot Systems beginning with Dell’s fiscal fourth quarter, which ends Jan. 29. The company expects Q4 revenue from the former Perot Systems business to be similar to what Perot reported in its third quarter, though there is typically some seasonal softness in the fourth quarter.

Dell expects to recognize an estimated pretax expense of $120-130 million in the fourth quarter, and about $20-25 million per quarter throughout fiscal year 2011, for costs related to the Perot Systems acquisition. Dell anticipates amortization of intangibles related to the acquisition will be about $40-50 million in the fourth quarter as well as in each quarter of fiscal year 2011, in addition to the $40 million in amortization Dell typically reports in a quarter.

Separately, Dell said it will incur combined, pretax organizational-effectiveness expenses of $80-120 million in the fourth quarter resulting from the transfer of its Poland manufacturing facility, together with additional optimization of facilities, products and processes.

Additional information about the integration of Perot Systems and separate organizational effectiveness is available in the conference presentation.

Source:http://dallas.dbusinessnews.com/viewnews.php?article=bwire/20091216005107r1.xml

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