Posts Tagged ‘Opportunity’

Infosys converts cloud threat into opportunity

March 1st, 2011

The cloud computing model has been widely perceived as a threat to the growth of the software outsourcing industry. Here is how Infosys came up with an answer

ShareThis A recent Gartner report predicts that 20 percent of businesses will own no IT assets by 2012 – a significant shift that the research firm predicts will be caused by cloud computing. For Indian IT service providers – this is a massive shift as the traditional sources of revenues – application development, application maintenance and implementation will be massively impacted.

As there is no software to install, maintain or develop – the cloud model has the ability to threaten the main sources, that Indian software service players typically derive their revenues from. Infosys saw this development almost two and half years ago, and\ accordingly started analyzing how cloud computing could be a possible threat, and how it could be converted into an opportunity by strategically positioning itself into areas where it could leverage the cloud computing model.

To better address the opportunities provided by the cloud computing model, Infosys also opened a Cloud Center of Excellence (CoE) that enables enterprises adopt cloud-based capabilities on public as well as internal private clouds. The software giant has already created three cloud-based business process-specific platforms – HR, procurement and processes specific to the advertising industry. The HR platform, which Infosys calls as HR-in-a box solution, has already been adopted by two customers.

With enterprises wary about adopting solutions on the public cloud, Infosys is seeing huge traction from enterprise customers who want its consulting expertise for building private clouds. The firm has close to 25 customers who are using its consulting services to adopt cloud computing solutions.

“Enterprise customers face several challenges in cost effectively migrating to the cloud. In addition to providing specialized frameworks and accelerators to help customers effectively adopt cloud computing solutions, we will also provide the specialists who can deliver the full potential of cloud-based solutions to end users,” says Raghavan Subramanian, AVP, Cloud Computing, Center of Excellence, SET Labs, Infosys Technologies.

This approach is perfect for Infosys and its customers. Customers can outsource their entire business process functions such as HR, and only pay for what they use. Infosys will not only supply the technology platform, but also the people to run it. So one side, it will leverage its traditional skills in helping organizations build private clouds, and on the other side, it will provide the business process management platforms that will be run in the cloud.

“We are naturally built for the cloud as we have similar experience in ramping up and scaling down teams and providing on demand models for our customers,” says Subramanian, pointing out to the synergies that exist between the outsourcing model and the cloud.

The cloud – an alternative delivery model
Almost a decade back, Infosys started laying down the foundation for its Global Delivery Model. This model fundamentally changed the dynamics of the software delivery model, and forced other global competitors to come up with remote offshore-based models.

It also significantly changed the way IT services were delivered. Today, the offshore outsourcing model is standard and most global competitors have perfected the art of providing software services from remote locations. It also significantly changed the way IT services were delivered.

With the advent of the cloud, Infosys has a similar opportunity. The cloud gives it location-agnostic capability to deploy services. It also gives it the capability to rollout services at a faster pace. For example, Subramanian points out that deploying business process platforms in the cloud from a vendor like Infosys will easily give a customer up to 40-50 percent reduction in deployment time.

The seriousness of the firm’s intent can be seen from the fact that till date the firm has filed seven patents related to cloud computing technologies. The world of private cloud deployment offers Infosys opportunities that are much larger than the traditional space that it operates. Infosys is also in talks with a pharmaceutical alliance for setting up a federated cloud – this will allow individual pharmaceutical companies in the alliance to securely select a computing environment on demand on Amazon for a particular workload.

Infosys also has a similar opportunity to offer cloud-based platforms on a pay-per-use model. Besides business processes on the cloud, Infosys is also experimenting with cloud-based app stores. For example, Aircel has used Flypp – a cloud-based application platform from Infosys that allows mobile operators to use ready-to-use experiential applications across devices.

Taking traditional services into the cloud
Besides creating cloud-based IPs, Infosys is also relooking at how traditional services can be delivered via the cloud.

“Traditional services such as testing and business intelligence (for unstructured data) have a clear advantage when delivered via the cloud route,” opines Subramanian. The CoE is actively working with the respective service lines on how existing IPs can be cloud-enabled. It is also simultaneously looking at offering its core banking solution, Finacle on the cloud – targeted at co-operative banks.

While it is still early days before cloud computing actually starts to impact the traditional IT software services ecosystem, Infosys’ approach shows how the cloud can be effectively leveraged as an alternative delivery model.

Source:http://informationweek.in/Cloud_Computing/11-02-28/Infosys_converts_cloud_threat_into_opportunity.aspx?page=1

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Opportunity comes knocking on outsourcing firms’ doors

March 23rd, 2010

The outsourcing industry received its biggest bonanza yet with the US healthcare bill being passed by the House of Representatives. Theopportunity that it throws up for outsourcers is huge and far bigger than the Y2K, which included only changing code, said experts. When the bill becomes law, it will bring around 32 million more Americans under insurance cover, pushing healthcare providers and insurance firms to become more efficient and opening up demand for less-expensive services, better technology and business intelligence.

“The opportunity is not at a company-level but at an industry level,” said Milan Sheth, partner, Ernst & Young, indicating the scale of opportunities that is expected to unfold over the next 10 years. Nearly all top IT firms and BPOs have been anticipating the move and preparing for it by pursuing contracts and acquisitions giving them a footprint the US healthcare provider and insurance segment, estimated at around $ 30 billion.

A significant amount of business will come from enrollments, claims processing and providing customer services with technology and tools helping insurance providers get more customer insights and price their products appropriately. “Universal access to insurance increases the risk to insurance providers, forcing them to become more efficient by lowering costs,” said Suresh Ramani, COO, Intelenet Global Services, a BPO provider. From no revenues from healthcare providers and payers, Intelenet now gets 10% of its revenues from this segment.

Mumbai-headquartered IT services provider, Patni Computer Systems, announced a strategic deal with a US-based healthcare insurance provider that involved taking over part of its operations in El Paso, US, only last week. “Patni sees significant healthcare outsourcing opportunity both in IT and BPO areas. The additional enrollees will need to be administered and this means a lot more work in areas of claims processing, enrollments, underwriting support, customer support et al for insurance carriers, which is outsourced to companies such as Patni,” said Sanjiv Kapur, senior VP and head – BPO, Patni.

“There will be increased volumes both on the provider and payer side. It is a big positive for us because the big part of what we do is eligibility services, where we assess eligibility and enrol people into medicare programmes… I expect a bulk of business to come in 2014,” said Ananda Mukherji, CEO, Firstsource Solutions, which will gain from its MedAssist acquisition done in 2007. This kind of opportunity will require players to also have an onshore presence, in some cases, because of regulatory requirements and in others, because of the high-end processing involved, said industry executives. A few like Firstsource and Cbay already have an onshore presence and while others are building it.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/ITeS/Opportunity-comes-knocking-on-outsourcing-firms-doors/articleshow/5713526.cms

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Turn the Recession Into a Marketing Opportunity

November 28th, 2009

Have you noticed how quickly so-called “business leaders” can turn into wimps? They strut their stuff when the economy is booming, making it clear their success is of their own making. But when things turn sour, they run for cover, blaming company failures on circumstances beyond their control. Out of desperation, they lay off workers, cut benefits and slash budgets – including marketing. Not every company capitulates in the face of an economic storm. Take, for example, Wal-Mart, Hewlett-Packard, Proctor & Gamble and Apple. All have one thing in common: They are excellent, unrelenting marketers – and they lead the competition in their categories. In other words, they refuse to hunker down.

It isn’t just big companies, either. There’s Florida-based Optimal Manufacturing Engineering. It’s a small firm that beats the competition by telling its story of offering better solutions faster and at a lower cost with its 24/7 outsourcing engineering services.

Here are steps companies can take to make sure they continue to thrive:

1. View your business as a marketing organization. Whatever else this recession may prove, it will dramatize the difference between companies that see themselves as marketing organizations and those that don’t.

Two retailers make the point. One is a somewhat upscale men and women’s shop in Newport, R.I., where the experienced owner takes a personal interest in serviceing his customers. Unfortunately, he does no marketing. Although there are twicea-year sales, they aren’t promoted. As might be expected, same-month revenues have plummeted compared with previous years.

Then there is the upscale women’s clothing shop in Hingham, Mass. The owner, a marketing-driven retailer, constantly gathers contact information, including e-mail addresses, from her customers and keeps them informed by e-mail and direct mail. She didn’t just start when economic conditions changed. This shop is busy.

One sells clothes and the other creates customers.

In the same way, the owner of regional business reported that sales for a group of peer operators in his industry were down 10%, but his company was up 1 .3%. That spread is no accident, since he maintains a consistent, effective marketing effort, year in and year out.

2. Give customers a reason to buy from you. By the time the public had a good look at the presidents of GM, Ford and Chrysler, only one company came through with a positive image: Ford. While the other two presidents whined, pleaded and characterized their companies as on life support, Ford said its company was sound, had financial reserves, didn’t need a government loan and had significant plans to increase vehicle fuel efficiency and to speed production of electric cars.

Chrysler and GM viewed Congress as their “customers,” while Ford looked beyond the hearings, recognizing it had an opportunity to communicate directly with the public. They know what their customers want, and they are prepared to deliver the right results. Ford stood out from the competition and gave consumers a reason to put a Ford in their future. This is exactly what customers are looking for from every business.

If they don’t have a reason to buy that makes sense, they won’t.

3. Don’t try to outsmart customers. It’s now clear that last November’s “Black Friday” was really “Bleak Friday.” Customers actually “raided” retailers, cleaning out the lowest-priced merchandise and then going home – not to return. The next day, Saturday, was a disaster, indicating that the big shopping was finished.

Macy’s, the nation’s department-store behemoth, flooded its customers with email and direct mail with all types of dollar-off cards and coupons. Its print and TV ads told the same story. Yet, the cards and coupons were fraught with many exceptions. It was clear Macy’s was doing a con job on its customers. It sent a powerful message: “You can’t trust us. All we want is to get you in the door, and maybe you’ll buy something.”

4. Think inside the box. Innovative thinking isn’t about something new and clever that has everyone saying, “Oh, yeah!” Sure, there are few “wow” moments, but to spend time looking for them is to miss what’s right in front of us.

When a San Diego high school calculus teacher had his supplies budget cut, he thought inside the box. With so many quizzes, he uses a lof of paper. To pay for producing his tests, he contacted businesses that might be interested in a one-line sponsorship at the bottom of a test. He needed only about $300, but is on course to collect about $1,000, which he’s using to help colleagues with their supplies.

5. Build customer relationships. An interesting offer of a free report came from a well-known research firm. The subject, “Consumer Interests Drive E-Mcril Opens,” was of interest, so I filled out the e-mail form and downloaded the document. In less than four hours, the phone rang. It was a telemarketer from the research firm. In that instant, the picture became clear. The report was simply a gimmick, a hook to sell something.

A far more productive marketing strategy, for example, is the Wharton School’s “Knowledge@Wharton” eBulletins that contain valuable information. On occasion, Wharton presents opportunities to purchase books and other materials, but it creates so much credibility by sharing knowledge that selling presents no conflict.

Whether business buyers or consumers, everyone wants to be treated with respect, and that comes from being offered value. Everyone talks about building customer relationships, but few are serious about doing it.

6. Have the right marketing message and suck with it. The most efficient way to kill marketing is to put it in the hands of salespeople. Their rightful interest is in the next sale, not in the next customer. Their job is to see the trees, while marketers see the forest filled with customers who can become prospects for the sales force.

This is why companies with a sales mindset tend to falter and even fail in a recession: They run out of leads because they have never made a consistent effort to cultivate customers.

Not so with Wal-Mart. Its fortunes are soaring, while its peer group is not doing nearly as weil. Wal-Mart sends customers a consistent, clear message, one that resonates with stressed, cash- short customers: “Save money. Live better.”

In effect, this is the Wal-Mart customer commitment, and it offers far more than just lower prices and a cash-register receipt. Wal-Mart promises its customers what they really want when they spend their money – the possibility of a better life. That’s what Wal-Mart is selling. And behind its growth is a marketing strategy that attracts and holds customers.

These six concepts lead to one conclusion: While most companies hunker down to ride out the storm, others see an opportunity to build market share. Ironically, it’s much easier to gain attention and make your case with customers while competitors sleep. When the storm inevitably passes, those that market will be ahead of the pack.

What does all this mean? In a February 6, 2008, BNET article, lake Swearingen tells of a conversation with Dr. Gary Lilien of Penn State’s Smeal College of Business about marketing in a recession. Lilien s study showed that those companies that market have an advantage. He said, “Companies that have been looking at marketing as an investment, and not an expense, and have been running their business through customer knowledge are the ones that are going to come out of this [recession] really, really well.”

Source:http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/yb/138339981

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