Posts Tagged ‘Gartner’

Industrialised Low-Cost IT Services to Transform the IT Services Market , Says Gartner

September 27th, 2011

Chief information officers (CIOs) should consider adopting industrialised, low-cost IT services (ILCS) to reduce the cost of “running the business”, while controlling the risk, integration and customisation issues, to increase the business value of IT and enhance its perception by the business, according to Gartner, Inc. CIOs said that delivering differentiation and additional business value, while reducing the cost of IT will be their business and IT priorities in 2011, according to the Gartner Executive Program (EXP) 2011 CIO agenda survey*.

“While there are multiple ways to reduce the cost of IT delivery, as well as to increase the value of IT, the trend towards ILCS will become paramount for end users to trade nonessential customisation for better and less expensive services,” said Claudio Da Rold, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. Gartner predicts that despite being an embryonic market, by 2015 industrialised services will represent more than 30 per cent of the IT services market and cloud services are expected to become a $177 billion market by 2015, of which $77 billion is based on advertising business models.

ILCS as managed, multitenant, ready-to-use IT services (infrastructure, applications or business processes). They are designed and offered as no-frills services with optional add-ons. Implemented as standardised, automated, configurable and scalable services, their entry-level price — expressed as price per user per month or price per unit per month (PUPM) — is very low and attracts a high number of prospects. The combination of industrialisation and cloud computing has significant potential to deliver ILCS.

A historical analysis of IT services pricing showed that organisations tolerate high IT usage costs, for an activity, capability, deliverable or outcome, only if there are no alternatives. Now, thanks to new delivery models, industrialised services and cloud computing, Gartner analysts see increasing numbers of low-cost offerings in which the price of specific unit of function (such as email or software as a service) is instead measured in PUPM (per user or per unit, per month).

Gartner has evaluated clients’ cost levels and estimated prices for industrialised low-cost services. It found that an email configured as ILCS should realistically be about $6 PUPM and is today approximately $8 to $10 PUPM, and entry-level offerings are advertised today at $3 to $4. With the email market in flux and the price of traditional in-house/hosted/outsourced mail under pressure by the lower price of cloud email available in the market, the email service is an area in which clear signals of industrialisation and low price points are emerging. Another example includes the use of the infrastructure utility for SAP (IU4SAP). IU4SAP is an outsourced platform that runs often highly customised clients in SAP application environments. Built on industrial principles (standardisation, virtualisation, automation) these offerings provide good service quality at low price points as companies like Areva, Oxea, Keiper, Rio Tinto and around 500 others have already discovered. This represents one of the earlier, and, so far, the most important cases of ILCS for business-critical and core functions and should realistically be delivered for around $17 PUPM.

Infrastructure utility services (IUS) are one aspect of the evolution toward industrialised services, which Gartner predicts will have a compound growth rate of more than 30 per cent for the next three years.

While the price of ILCS offerings be can much lower than internal costs, the total cost of ownership of ILCS can be higher, depending on retained costs such as transition, customisation, integration and risk management. Despite this, there are some early IUS and cloud-based solutions that were successfully evaluated, selected and implemented and promise much for the future of ILCS solutions.

EasyJet is a good example of an end-user company that is using cloud computing first as a way to minimise costs and then exploiting cloud services to extend and complement its internal systems. EasyJet wanted to extend its existing reservation and departure control system to agents using mobile devices and built cloud-based solutions using Microsoft Azure. Azure managed the connectivity to the myriad endpoint devices in a manner that was less expensive and less complex than what would be required if EasyJet created it in its existing internal systems.

“Not all corporate IT will be delivered through ILCS and many “good-enough” services will remain in-house,” said Frank Ridder, research vice president at Gartner. “However, industrialised services represent the destiny of the IT services industry. They are, in fact, the next step in outsourcing and managed-service provision, and they span all layers of the IT services value chain: infrastructure, applications and business processes. Overall, we believe that, from a pricing perspective, the IT services industry is where the airline industry was in 2000. It is ready to be transformed — and disrupted — by an ILCS model.”

Source:http://www.daijiworld.com/news/news_disp.asp?n_id=117163

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Growth is back on the agenda for IT outsourcing providers:Gartner

September 6th, 2011

Gartner conducted an online survey in the first quarter of 2011 among 47 ITO providers, accounting for 62 percent of the total ITO market.
Growth is back on the agenda for IT outsourcing (ITO) providers, according to a recent survey by Gartner, Inc. Sixty-two percent of respondents identified growth as the top strategic goal this year, with aggressive marketing plans and investments in cloud, utility and “as a service” offerings.

“It is clear that providers are optimistic despite considerable uncertainty in the global economies,” said Rolf Jester, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. “However, we predict the ITO services market will reach $313.2 bn in 2011, a growth of 6.9 percent from 2010, and will reach 4.6 percent compound annual growth rate through 2015.”

Gartner conducted an online survey in the first quarter of 2011 among 47 ITO providers, accounting for 62 percent of the total ITO market. The respondents represented the full range of providers, all major geographies and all types of ITO services including infrastructure (data center, desktop, storage and network), applications and cloud services.

“Many ITO providers are intending to commit serious marketing funds and target new accounts to outgrow the market,” said Bryan Britz, research director at Gartner. “The survey found that at least 50 percent of outsourcing providers said they’ll be spending 2 to 5 percent of revenue on marketing in 2011, which is higher than the historical norm for marketing expenditure as a percent of revenue (which has tended to be 1 percent to 3 percent for IT services providers). At the same time, ITO providers continue to invest significantly more in sales than marketing as demonstrated by two-thirds of providers indicating sales expenses are greater than 6 percent of revenue.”

With growth on the agenda, ITO providers will prioritize the pursuit of new clients. Forty-five percent of all ITO providers indicated that winning new clients is the top priority for 2011. At the same time, they recognize that the bulk of this year’s actual revenue growth will continue to come from existing accounts. Overall, between 66 percent and 70 percent of expected growth in 2011 will be generated by existing clients.

In terms of the ITO providers’ strategy on delivery models (such as utility services, cloud services and “as a service”) the survey found that broadly-defined “cloud” investments are top priorities for 2011 — especially investments in infrastructure utility or infrastructure as a service, but also private, community or government cloud services and software as a service. Between 60 and 64 percent of providers nominated cloud investments in the top three ITO investment priorities for 2011.

Gartner also asked providers to identify the percentage of ITO deals that will include delivery models as part of the contract. Overall ITO providers are realistic about their expectations for cloud deals in the current year and in 2012. The average percentage of deals expected to include cloud services and utility services or “as a service” delivery models is 18 percent for data center deals in 2011, growing to 24 percent in 2012.

However, ITO providers are conservative in their views of how the cloud phenomenon will affect their ITO deals by 2015. Only 34 percent of respondents said that their data center ITO deals will incorporate cloud/utility/as-a-service by 2015, but 26 percent don’t believe they will be involved in any of these deals.

Similarly, the growth implications from cloud-based services evoke mixed reactions among ITO providers. Fifty-six percent of ITO providers expect these alternative delivery models will drive overall ITO revenue growth by 2015, while 29 percent believe it will essentially cannibalize some ITO revenue.

“There is no going back to business-as-usual for ITO providers,” said Allie Young, vice president at Gartner. “Traditional business models are being turned inside out: it has started with the new business models and cloud ecosystem, and these trends will continue to impact the outsourcing business. “Providers that ignore those trends could find themselves stuck with yesterday’s delivery models and high cost structures as the market moves on around them.”

Source:http://www.indiainfoline.com/Markets/News/Growth-is-back-on-the-agenda-for-IT-outsourcing-providers-Gartner/5236106337

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Worldwide BPO growth continues despite mixed fortunes in developed countries: Gartner

August 22nd, 2011

Gartner estimates that North America’s BPO market will grow 3.8 percent in 2011.
The worldwide business process outsourcing (BPO) market is forecast to grow 6.3 percent in 2011 and 5 percent in 2012, according to Gartner, Inc. The outlook for BPO is mixed in developed economies, and this has resulted in a tempering of growth expectations.

“While growth remains strong in developing economies, the United States, the world’s largest BPO market, presents a mixed picture for the global market,” said Cathy Tornbohm, research vice president at Gartner. “Emerging markets are faring far better and, generally, multinational companies continue to look to BPO as a means both to reduce costs and to buoy their business operations during the protracted return to a growth environment. We also see an increase in transaction volume, especially in payroll, recruiting, accounts payable, and customer data analytics and knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) activities.”

Source:http://www.indiainfoline.com/Markets/News/Worldwide-BPO-growth-continues-despite-mixed-fortunes-in-developed-countries-Gartner/5226338425

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Gartner Announces Outsourcing and IT Services Summit 2011

August 3rd, 2011

Gartner Outsourcing & IT Services Summit is the must-attend event for outsourcing professionals. The Summit will be held from 26-27 September 2011, at the Park Plaza Westminster Bridge hotel, London.

The Summit is an intensive, two-day programme to prepare outsourcing professionals for the next economic cycle and develop new approaches to service aggregation and management. “More buyers are asking for concepts and clarity for using cloud services as part of their sourcing mix,” said Claudio Da Rold, research vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. “We’ll help organisations to understand the options for cloud services and evaluate organisations’ readiness to adopt cloud services,”

In addition, Gartner analysts will provide practical guidance to implement and improve end users’ vendor management programmes and build their expertise in negotiations and renegotiations. Gartner predicts that by 2016, 50 per cent of service providers who fail to deliver higher value at lower cost will see revenue drop by 20 per cent.

Source:http://www.iewy.com/31486-gartner-announces-outsourcing-and-it-services-summit-2011.html

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Indian BPO market to grow 23 %: Gartner

April 13th, 2011

The Indian domestic business process outsourcing (BPO) market could reach $1.4 billion in 2011, up 23.2 per cent from 2010, according to Gartner estimates. It says it will grow into a $1.69-billion market by 2012 and further to $2.47 billion by 2014.

The BPO market in India totalled $1.139 billion in 2010, a 28.6 percent increase from 2009 revenue of $885.6 million. The market’s growth was driven primarily by increasing volumes in existing BPO engagements, clients expanding the scope of existing BPO relationships, and a number of new BPO deals in 2010 were from pent-up demand from 2009.

The BPO services market in Asia-Pacific and Japan is made up of a good mix of multinationals, regional and local pure-play BPO service providers; IT service providers with BPO assets and capabilities; and telecom vendors. Though the BPO market is dominated by global and India-based service providers, there are also a number of fast-growing regional and niche BPO service providers.

“Changing demographics, increasing affluence and economic growth in Asia-Pacific continues to drive shared services and BPO adoption, especially in Australia, India, Southeast Asia and China,” said T. J. Singh, research director at Gartner.

“There is growing demand for multi-country shared services and BPO services within Asia-Pacific. Buyers continue to invest in services that deliver scalable, high quality and consistent services across their geographical presence. There was significant consolidation in the global and regional BPO market in 2009 and 2010 with some large merger and acquisition (M&A) deals impacting the regional BPO service provider landscape.”

The BPO services market in Asia-Pacific (excluding Japan) reached $8.6 billion in 2010, a 21.5 per cent increase from 2009 revenue of $7 billion.

The largest BPO country market in the region is Australia, which is more than three times larger than India, the second-largest consumer of BPO services. By verticals, banking and financial services, communications, government (local and federal), technology and travel and transportation were the largest consumers of BPO services in the region.

India is one of the fastest-growing BPO market in Asia-Pacific. This segment was earlier dominated by small service providers with some local companies, such as Magus Customer Dialogue, Infovision and Andromeda. Over the past three years, many established India-based BPO service providers and U.S and Europe-based multinational BPO service providers have started focussing on the Indian domestic market. These include Omnia, Kenkei, Androemeda, Genpact, Magus, MphasiS, Intelenet Global Services, Tech Mahindra, Aegis, Spanco and HTMT.

“This phenomenon has been accentuated by the advent of the global slowdown in the U.S. and Western Europe, in which service providers who were focussing solely on the international market realised that there is merit in the Indian BPO market, given the fact that it grew rapidly even during the global economic crisis. The large and midsize players have now stepped up their activities,” said Mr. Singh.

Source:http://www.thehindu.com/business/Industry/article1691251.ece

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Gartner IT services summit gets brighter start

September 21st, 2010

Just arrived at the Gartner Outsourcing and IT Services Summit at the Park Plaza in Westminster. As you can see it’s a bit brighter than yesterday.

I have just arrived at the press office. I am alone and there are plates of breakfast goodies and lots of coffee (see picture below). This is the life. I could have been stuck in Sutton.

When I finally stop stuffing my face I will be blogging a bit more. So keep an eye out.

Yesterday had a heavy focus on how we are entering an era of IT service industrialisation. This is where suppliers will build a service and many customers will use it. “One to many” to be more concise.

Today I have a few customer interviews and other interestiung facts to write about.

Source:http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/inside-outsourcing/2010/09/gartner-it-services-summit-gets-brighter-start.html

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Gartner talks outsourcing industrialisation

September 21st, 2010

I have just watched the first couple of presentations at the Gartner Outsourcing and IT Services Summit.

Just to get started here is a little post. I am hoping to blog throughout the event so will keep posts short.

On Friday I blogged about Gartner’s prediction that 30% of IT services, in Western Europe, will be industrialised by 2015.

The keynote and the presentation that followed had a strong focus on industrialisation. Basically these are standardised services that can be offered to multiple customers. They will often be delivered via the cloud and will be paid for in relation to their usage.

Analysts Claudio Da Rold and Ian Marriot did the opening presentation.

Here are some of the sound bites. Sorry if some are obvious.

“The European economy is moving.”

“Cloud computing is reshaping the services market.”

“We are moving very fast to industrialised services. Cloud computing is accelerating this.”

“The economic crisis lead to the development of industrialised services.”

“There is a slower recovery in IT services and revenue growth for suppliers will be low for several years.”

“It is possible for service providers to develop, implement and deliver a one to many service.” This could mean 60% to 80% cost cuts.

Source:http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/inside-outsourcing/2010/09/gartner-talks-outsourcing-industrialisation.html

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