Posts Tagged ‘Nokia’

Nokia Signs Software Development and Support Outsourcing Deal with Accenture

October 4th, 2011

Nokia has closed a Symbian software development and support services outsourcing deal with Accenture.

The deal, which was first announced on July 22nd 2011 states Accenture will provide software development and support services to Nokia until at least 2016. Nokia said Accenture will also be the preferred supplier for Nokia as it moves to Windows Phone.

Under the deal, 2,300 Nokia employees in the UK, China, India, United States and Finland will be transferred to Accenture.

“We are focused on growing our business in mobility and embedded software. The addition of these highly skilled technologists and engineers to Accenture will strengthen our capabilities in these areas,” said chief executive, Accenture Communications, Media & Technology operating group, Marty Cole.

“We look forward to supporting Nokia in the execution of its strategy,” he added. Accenture also plans to work with Avanade, a technology services company that Accenture has a majority share, to provide other services to the mobile phone giant.

The deal was announced shortly after Nokia stated it would abandon Symbian and work with Microsoft to develop smartphones based on the Windows Phone 7 platform.

Source:http://www.itproportal.com/2011/10/03/nokia-signs-software-development-support-outsourcing-deal-accenture/

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Nokia, Accenture close Symbian outsourcing agreement

October 3rd, 2011

IT consulting company Accenture and Finnish mobile maker Nokia have closed the agreement for Nokia to outsource Symbian software development and support activities to Accenture.

The agreement was originally announced on 22 June 2011, after Nokia announced that it will outsource its Symbian OS development along with some emplyees to Accenture.

With the closure of the agreemnet, Accenture will provide Symbian-based software development and support services to Nokia until 2016 and also become the preferred supplier for Nokia in its transition to Windows Phone, said Accenture.

Accenture said under the agreement, approximately 2,300 employees from China, Finland, India, the United Kingdom and the United States are transferring from Nokia to Accenture.

Accenture Communications, Media & Technology operating group chief executive Marty Cole said Accenture is focused on growing their business in mobility and embedded software.

“We look forward to supporting Nokia in the execution of its strategy,” said Cole.

Accenture said it works with Avanade, a technology service company and focuses on Microsoft technologies, to provide further services to Nokia.

Source:http://outsourcingbpo.cbronline.com/news/nokia-and-accenture-signs-symbian-outsourcing-agreement-031011

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Nokia completes transfer of 2,300 jobs to Accenture

October 3rd, 2011

The world’s largest mobile phone maker Nokia said on Friday that it had finished outsourcing 2,300 engineers to US-based global consulting firm Accenture.

“Nokia announced today that it has completed the transaction to outsource its Symbian software development and support activities to Accenture,” the company said in a statement.

Nokia chief executive Stephen Elop announced in February the company would phase out Symbian as its smartphone platform in favour of a partnership with Microsoft, resulting in the loss of 4,000 jobs and the outsourcing of around 3,000 Symbian developers.

The number of outsourced jobs is fewer than the 2,800 that Nokia estimated in June.

The engineers will continue to develop Symbian software for Nokia through 2016, according to the company.
The news that Nokia and Accenture completed the transfer came just a day after the Finnish mobile phone giant announced it was slashing 3,500 jobs in Romania, Germany and the United States.

Those job cuts came on top of the 4,000 Elop announced in April, when he said no more layoffs were expected “for as far as we can see into the future.”

Source:http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jLhVDsrZ4SJBWge3hJ446YoOtZww?docId=CNG.d5da9c3e980f229e1b5b0dbbd6839895.5d1

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Nokia to shift 800 staff to Accenture

June 30th, 2011

Nokia India is about to shift 800 employees working on the Symbian platform at its R&D unit in Bangalore to management-consulting firm Accenture, a senior executive said.

Last week, the Finnish handset maker inked an outsourcing deal with Accenture wherein the world’s largest IT consulting firm will provide software development and support for Symbian till 2016. Discussions with the employees will begin next week and carry on till Octoberend. Majority of the employees are expected to shift to Accenture; the process will be completed by the year-end. Some of them are working on Nokia projects, they will finish them and move to Accenture,” a company spokesperson told ET.

Symbian is Nokia’s legacy software and one of the most widely used mobile phone operating systems, with an installed base of over 225 million phones. Earlier this year, Nokia said it would switch to Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 software from Symbian, which will be phased out in about two years.

At the same time, Nokia will continue to invest in Symbian by bringing software upgrades and launching more smartphones on the platform, said Nokia India marketing director Viral Oza. On Wednesday, the market leader launched Symbian Anna, the upgraded version of Symbian, and two smartphones based on the new platform. Over the next 12 months, the company will introduce 10 new smartphones on the Symbian platform.

By August the company will ensure all existing Nokia smartphones users can download Symbian Anna for free and in July, the company will begin to ship the N8, E7, C7 and C6-01 phones embedded with the new software to India.

“We’re not going to stop support to Symbian overnight because the ambition is not just to cater to existing users but also selling 150 million more Symbian devices globally. We will continue to invest in Symbian till 2016, improve the S 40 series and in parallel introduce the Windows Phone,” Oza said.

The company’s strategy has some criticism from analysts but Gartner’s principal research analyst Anshul Gupta said it may be a perfect fit for India and China, its key growth markets.

“Nokia is significantly losing market-share globally and in India but Symbian is still in great demand in India. Nokia has around 40% market share in smartphones segment in the country. It plans to sell 150 million handsets on Symbian globally, a large part of that can come from India and China because of its brand recall and prices at which it retails in these markets,” Gupta said. Nokia faces tough competition from Samsung, Apple and Blackberrymaker Research in Motion (RIM) across the world while domestic and Chinese handset makers are eating up market share in India. The world’s largest phone maker by volume in April overhauled its phone business, announced to reduce its global workforce by 7,000 apart from outsourcing Symbian software to Accenture. Nokia will launch the Windows Phone by the end of the year but the India launch has not been finalised.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/nokia-to-shift-800-staff-to-accenture/articleshow/9046499.cms

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Nokia completes outsourcing deal with Accenture, including transfer of 2,800 personnel

June 23rd, 2011

Nokia Corp. said Wednesday it has completed a deal to outsource Symbian software development to Accenture, including the transfer of 2,800 workers to the global management-consulting firm.

The announcement came two months after Nokia disclosed the plan as part of its aim to cut costs by $1.5 billion (€1 billion) by 2013, including 7,000 global layoffs, and catch up with top rivals in the tough smartphone market.

The Finland-based company faces strong competition from Research in Motion’s Blackberry, Apple’s iPhone and Google’s Android, as it continues to see market share fall. Last month it issued a big profits warning.

Nokia’s share price has plunged in recent months and recently has been trading at multiyear lows of around €4.20 ($6.05). Its stock closed at €4.21 ($6.06) in Helsinki — unchanged from Tuesday’s closing rate.

Nokia said Accenture PLC will provide it with software services through 2016 with the personnel transfer expected in October when the deal closes. Half of the workers are based in Finland with another 1,400 in China, India, Britain and the United States.

Besides the personnel transfer, Nokia has said it plans to lay off 4,000 people by the end of 2012, mostly in Denmark, Finland and Britain.

In another move to improve services, Nokia announced Wednesday that it will integrate its NAVTEQ mapping unit with social location services operations to develop “a new class of integrated social location products and services for consumers.”

The struggling company, which claims more than 1.3 billion mobile customers, said it wants to provide new products and support for bringing the Internet “to the next billion.”

It said the plan includes to develop platform services and local commerce services for device manufacturers, application developers, Internet services providers, merchants and advertisers.

CEO Stephen Elop said that focusing on location and commerce was “a natural next step” for the company.

“We will provide next generation social-location applications and commerce to differentiate Nokia,” Elop said. “We also aim to extend our content and services offerings to all consumers by making them available to partners and customers on a wide variety of devices and operating systems.”

Since 1998, Nokia has been the biggest seller of cell phones, but in the first quarter of this year Apple overtook it as the world’s top handset vendor in revenue terms — reaching sales of $11.9 billion on shipments of 18.6 million devices against Nokia’s revenue of $9.4 billion on shipments of 108.5 million units.

Although Nokia sold 432 million devices in 2010 — more than its three closest rivals combined — its market share continues to fall. At 29 percent in the first quarter, it’s at its lowest level since the late 1990s.

Even more damaging has been Nokia’s inability to meet modern challenges of the smartphone market, the lucrative sector in the handset industry, where Nokia used to be the leading innovator. Although it sold 24 million smartphones in the first quarter, 13 percent more than in 2010, its share in the sector plunged to 24 percent from 39 percent a year earlier.

On Tuesday, Nokia unveiled the N9 smartphone, based on its new MeeGo platform, but the handset received mixed reviews as markets are waiting to see the company’s first Windows Phone. CEO Stephen Elop has said the Windows-based phone will be launched later this year with bulk sales expected in 2012.

In February, Nokia announced a major strategy shift when it partnered with Microsoft Corp., saying it will gradually replace Symbian and MeeGo platforms with the Window-based software that will become the main software used in Nokia cell phones.

Source:http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/nokia-completes-outsourcing-deal-with-accenture-including-transfer-of-2800-personnel/2011/06/22/AGntJVfH_story.html

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Nokia announces layoffs and Symbian outsourcing

April 28th, 2011

Nokia is to transfer thousands of its Symbian employees to Accenture, while laying off thousands more staff around the world.
The company said on Wednesday that it will transfer its Symbian software activities to Accenture and move 3,000 staff members to the consultancy by the end of this year, with those affected being located in China, Finland, India, the UK and the US.

Nokia will also make 4,000 people redundant by the end of 2012, with the bulk of the cuts taking place in Denmark, Finland and the UK, Nokia said. A spokesperson told ZDNet UK that around 700 would be laid off in the UK, but no country-specific breakdown was available for those moving to Accenture.

“At Nokia, we have new clarity around our path forward, which is focused on our leadership across smart devices, mobile phones and future disruptions,” Nokia chief Stephen Elop said in a statement. “However, with this new focus, we also will face reductions in our workforce. This is a difficult reality, and we are working closely with our employees and partners to identify long-term re-employment programs for the talented people of Nokia.”

Nokia’s latest moves come after the company formalised its tie-in with Microsoft on Thursday, which involves the adoption of the Windows Phone platform, the phasing-out over two years of Nokia’s classic Symbian OS, and the effective abandonment of MeeGo as Nokia’s next high-end platform.

Symbian transfer

Accenture already handles Symbian Professional Services, which provides engineering and customer support for handset manufacturers and service providers, after Nokiasold the service to the consultancy in 2009.

The outsourcing deal announced on Wednesday will cover Symbian-based software development and support services, Nokia said, adding that Accenture would also “provide mobility software, business and operational services around the Windows Phone platform to Nokia and other ecosystem participants”.

As Symbian is phased out, Accenture and Nokia will “seek opportunities to retrain and redeploy transitioned employees”, Nokia said.

“This collaboration demonstrates our ongoing commitment to enhance our Symbian offering and serve our smartphone customers,” Nokia smart devices chief Jo Harlow said.
“As we move ourprimary smartphone platform to Windows Phone, this transition of skilled talent to Accenture shows our commitment to provide our Symbian employees with potential new career opportunities.”

Source:http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/jobs/2011/04/27/nokia-announces-layoffs-and-symbian-outsourcing-40092621/

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Outsourcing firm picks NC for data center site

November 16th, 2010

A company specializing in managing the high-volume computer operations of other companies is the latest to pick the North Carolina foothills for a data center.

Gov. Beverly Perdue’s office said Monday that Infocrossing Inc. would build a data center in Kings Mountain, about 30 miles west of Charlotte. The $75 million facility is expected to employ fewer than 20 full-time workers.

Infocrossing is a subsidiary of Wipro Ltd., India’s third-largest software outsourcer.

Social networking powerhouse Facebook, Google, and Apple have all picked sites less than 50 miles from Kings Mountain.

Data centers are moving in because of generous state tax breaks and because the textile industry’s collapse left behind a surplus of electric capacity.

Source:http://www.wcnc.com/news/business/IT-services-company-to-bring-17-jobs-to-Cleveland-County-108220144.html

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