Industry news

  • 19 Jul 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    A new study by Civica showed that councils are moving forward in the digital era. Instead of only cutting costs through digital services, councils are now raising revenue through charging for service provision. This would help them cope with lower funding they have been receiving from the central government.

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    Related news: Capita - Salford City Council partnership extended for three years

  • 19 Jul 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    It may come along as a surprise, but in a report by AT Kearney’s Consultancy, Kazakhstan’s retail market was placed in fourth place out of developing countries markets, ahead of Indonesia and behind China, India and Malaysia respectively.

    According to the report, the retail growth in developing countries “has far outstripped GDP and population growth”. Which has led to big brands like Adidas, Carrefour, Leroy Merlin and numerous food chains opening in the country or are in current negotiation.

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    Related news: Philippines ousts India for outsourcing top spot

  • 18 Jul 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    A new report by the BBC has showed that a NHS outsourcing contract in Cambridgeshire wasted millions of pounds of taxpayer’s money - £726m to be more precise.

    UnitingCare, the outsourced service provider, was meant to offer care for older and mentally ill people in the area, but claimed the contract was not financially viable.

    The National Audit Office's (NAO) investigated the contract and found several mistakes. For instance, the consortium had not taken account of VAT costs and underestimated both the changeover and running costs of delivering the service, which led UnitingCare to ask for £34m in extra funding one month after the contract was signed triggering fresh negotiations. They pulled out of the deal in December.

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    Related News: Coperforma underperforms delivering transport services for NHS patients

  • 18 Jul 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Brexit Referendum results has sparked a number of changes in Whitehall. Members of existing miniseries are being told to send teams of officials to the Brexit ministry (or the Department for Exiting the European Union) in order to give continuity of negotiations of Britain’s withdrawal.

    According to the FT “Britain has few trade negotiators because policy has been outsourced to the EU for the past 40 years. According to a recent report by a committee of MPs, Britain has between 12 and 20 officials ‘with direct knowledge of trade negotiations’. Canada, which recently negotiated a free-trade agreement with the EU, has 830.”

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    Related News: Brexit continues to impact IT contracts

  • 14 Jul 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Unilever has chosen Webhelp to handle customer contact services across Europe. The contract will cover voice and email in around 40 of Unilever’s products across the UK, France, Germany, Holland and Italy.

    Olivier Duha, co-founder of Webhelp said in the official announcement:“This is a terrific contract for Webhelp and it is a real coup for us to be able to add such an illustrious brand name as Unilever to our growing list of leading global clients. Webhelp’s ability to offer a consistently high quality customer experience across a wide range of geographies and languages has been a key factor in our ability to secure this contract with Unilever.”

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    Related: Webhelp showcases start-up talent

  • 13 Jul 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Today, companies can accomplish more with ten employees than they would have been able to with a thousand workers fifty year¬s ago. Underpinning this shift is the increasing focus on strategic sourcing of essential IT services.

    Automation and computerisation are¬ key elements in this change, as is the move to third-party service providers, as-a-service software and infrastructure, and reliance on remote IT job shops. Each of these factors enable organisations to consolidate and take a more tactical approach towards their IT services.

    Companies are looking for agile, cost-saving solutions and service providers are responding well to their demands. However, many enterprises are undertaking sourcing without a centralised strategy, working on the assumption that efficiency and cost savings will naturally follow. Steadily decreasing contract durations, from between an average of five to seven years to three, is resulting in frequent contract renewals, and also requires far more rigorous management of contracts and greater due diligence around sourcing and renewals. However, without the requisite monitoring or evidence, there is no guarantee that the benefits of a strategic IT set-up will come to fruition.

    Technology Business Management (TBM) demystifies the sourcing processes, helping enterprises determine whether sourcing ¬arrangements will benefit them, both now and i¬n the future.

    The effects of shadow IT

    Sourcing ecosystems, even in small and midsize organisations, are often sprawling operations comprised of multiple (often dozens) of service providers reporting into multiple managers. This can result in ‘shadow’ or ‘stealth’ IT, whereby IT solutions are deployed and used within organisations without the knowledge or approval of the IT department. While not always negative, when allowed to run unchecked, these structures can seriously undermine the would-be benefits of sourcing. By its nature, shadow IT negates efforts to have full oversight and unified management, which can lead to subpar or duplicated services.

    Enabling transparency

    TBM provides enterprises with a transparent, consistent and ongoing ‘system of record’, which not only tracks IT spend but monitors and benchmarks on a continuous basis so that buyers and IT service providers alike can track the value being delivered throughout the duration of a contract. Additionally, the TBM Unified Model standardises operational and financial information, creating a taxonomy which facilitates ongoing comparisons of infrastructure IT costs against industry peers and gives enterprises a baseline for internal and external costing discussions. All stakeholders within a business can benefit from this dynamic, real-time tracking environment. While the IT department serves as a broker to guard against redundancies, ensure the best deal and track return on investment, individual line managers retain their authority to source services.

    When properly managed, sourcing ecosystems allow enterprises to obtain the best possible services, software, talent and infrastructure that may not otherwise be available to them. But to get the most out of sourcing arrangements, companies must truly understand their IT environments and investments. TBM safeguards qualify and cost-effectiveness. The outputs of TBM – visibility into the total cost of ownership and the productivity and quality indicators from individual applications or services – will help enterprises make the best choices when restructuring their sourcing agreements.

  • 12 Jul 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Computer Weekly has noticed a freeze on IT spending in the wake of the UK’s decision to leave the European Union, but it believes the freeze will “thaw” eventually.

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    Related: “Brexit” Decision Contradicts Beliefs of Britain’s Outsourcing Industry

  • 12 Jul 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    As reported in the Forbes, Chinese officials “encouraging” companies in the southern and eastern parts of China, where wages and other production costs are highest – Guangdong, Jiangsu, Shanghai and Zhejiang, in particular – to move their production facilities inland, where costs are lower, rather than outsourcing to countries such as Vietnam.

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    Related: China’s outsourcing grows in early 2016 despite economic difficulties

  • 6 Jul 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The ramifications of the referendum continue as the Pound dropped against the Yen and temporarily hit its lowest level in 31 years against the Dollar. There are talks that the London Stock Exchange may now need to share its HQ between the City of London and somewhere in the EU and Aviva and M&G suspended trading on their property funds as investors pulled their money out at speed. The Governor of the Bank of England intervened by cutting its capital requirements for banks from 0.5% to 0% in an effort to stop a dramatic slowdown of the UK economy.

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    Related: “Brexit” Decision Contradicts Beliefs of Britain’s Outsourcing Industry

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