Industry news

  • 31 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Polish Tech Day - one of the most prestigious events covering new Polish technologies outside of Poland – will be taking place on Thursday 23rd June at Google Campus London this year.

    The mail goal of the day is to foster bilateral relations between Polish and British technology sectors.

    Polish Tech Day gathers in one place some of the hottest startups from both countries, Polish companies interested in establishing themselves in the UK, British companies interested in partnering with or investing in Polish technology sector and – last but not least – PLUG community members. This day-long event takes place during the London Technology Week and is organised in partnership with the Trade and Investment Promotion Unit of the Polish Embassy in London (WPHI) as well as Invest in Poland (PAIiIZ).

    The first Polish Tech Day, which took place at the Polish Embassy in London in June 2015, gathered nearly 200 people, including some of the best known Polish startups and investors, among which were representatives of: Azimo, Oktawave, Jivr, Oort, SMT Software, SpeedUp Venture Capital Group and Swimmo, as well as his Excellency Ambassador of Poland who provided they keynote.

    For further information on Polish Tech Day and how to attend, email Jacek Ratajczak at jacek@weareplug.in or visit:

    www.polishtechday.com

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    Related: Poland quietly powers its way to the top

  • 31 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    When stakeholders in the fast-growing CEE (Central and Eastern European) ‘nearshoring’ market talk about optimal destinations or partner countries, the same names do tend to crop up, you will probably have noticed: Bulgaria, Slovakia and the Czech Republic are the dominant players.

    At the centre of the ICT market in Eastern Europe and significant neighbour to Austria and Poland, Hungary by rights should be much higher on any such list than it seems to be. Is there some fundamental reason why this nation of just under 10 million isn’t winning more market share here?

    The balanced answer is that that can only really happen when the country deals with a couple of concerns in the minds of at least some possible customers’ minds – but that once it does, there’s no reason at all the land of the other great capital on the Danube can’t get a lot more of this sort of development and service business.

    Let’s look at the positive factors first. Hungary enjoys a flourishing economy and has a strong tourist sector, while its lively capital, Budapest, with its 1.8m inhabitants has been seen as one of the most promising locales for business start ups in the whole of Europe, let alone just the CEE. The country also prides itself on a highly-competitive corporate tax regime, while a very high 85 percent of all its 25-34 year olds have educations at university or roughly equivalent level. And Hungarian young professionals are in undoubted demand, without a doubt, as employment rates of graduates in 2013 was 85.6 percent, compared to the European Union average of 80.7, and with 1 in 4 of all students majoring in business and administration, and a further 13,200 specialising in IT specifically, the Magyars have, on paper, a large pool of graduates with a good understanding of international business processes.

    Nokia: a strategic research facility

    But we need to balance this great starting point with a few doses of reality, I’m afraid. Those nice taxes? They’re not so low if you are a bigger company in key sectors – especially if you’re foreign-registered. That business regime has some real possibility, but most objective observers worry that there’s still a bit of a lag in any kind of native enthusiasm for the risk taking a real entrepreneur thrives on. And in education, there’s admitted to be a lot of work still needing to be done to get the country up to full internationally-recognised levels, says the government, while language skills (Hungarian being notoriously impenetrable to non-speakers) just aren’t as impressive here as in other CEE territories.

    But that same government is trying hard, having recently set, for example, a national goal to boost Hungarian digital literacy in order to increase competitiveness in jobs that demand good tech skills. This will be done, says Budapest, in support for more training of its ICT professionals to high standards and CEE market level aptitudes as soon as possible.

    That doesn’t mean there isn’t any nearshoring sector here – far from it. Hungary got a very respectable 31st in AT Kearney’s Global Services Location Index for desirable locations for business to outsource/offshore in 2014, after all. That same study also gave the country a pretty decent overall metric in terms of competitiveness, financial attractiveness and people skills; at 5.28, it came definitely within sight of top-tier outsourcer India, intriguingly.

    Multinationals have taken note, with brands like Audi, Mercedes Benz, Lego and Nokia Networks already with satellites here – while confirmed outsourced work’s being done already by blue chips like Lufthansa, BT, Vodafone, General Electric and Deloitte. IBM employs 1000 professionals at its local system solutions centre, meanwhile, HP about half as many and Nokia made a big splash when it a strategic co-operation agreement with the Hungarian government in 2011 to build a big R&D lab here.

    These guys know something that maybe the rest of the market hasn’t woken up to yet, perhaps – that Hungary is catching up with its neighbours and rivals. Perhaps not as fast as that lovely blue river…

  • 24 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Mitie has announced that “Brexit jitters” have taken a toll on business as clients delay or cancel contracts due to uncertainty regarding the referendum outcome and its aftermath.

    The outsourcing giant, who provides a wide range of services from pest control and cleaning to government detention centres and care services, saw its profits more than double in the year leading up to March 2016.

    The company’s profit rose by 133 per cent to £96.8m, but profits had previously been expected to hit £105.2. During the same period of time, Mitie’s total revenue fell by 1.8 percent to £2.23bn, below the £2.29bn forecasted.

    According to Mitie, “In the second half of the year, our markets experienced general uncertainty, following the government’s decision to hold a referendum on the UK’s membership of the EU. Together, these factors combined to cause a number of our clients to either delay or cancel projects until after the referendum.”

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    Related: Mitie to power Lucozade environmental drive

  • 24 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Aecus has just announced the launched of its new service line – Aecus Interims. The new practice will provide experienced interims to take on key line roles in the business services domains that Aecus operates in (outsourcing, shared services and automation).

    The new service is aimed at companies experiencing spikes in demand and which, as a consequence, need key line roles to be filled.

    According to the company, Aecus interims have previously provided consultancy services with Aecus to a wide range of blue chip clients. In a press release, Aecus says its interims have the advantage of having accumulated experience in the Aecus family and have access to the Aecus knowledge base.

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    Related: Aecus Announces Innovation Awards 2015 Winners

  • 18 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    G4S is planning on expanding its business to include the management of bank branches. The security giant sees this as a valuable business opportunity at a time when many banks are leaving the high street, prioritising services offered online or via mobile.

    The service provider is in talks with the main banks across a number of European countries including the UK, the Netherlands and Belgium.

    According to Graham Levinson, European CEO for the company, “It is clear from the number of closures that banks don’t want tellers to be counting cash inside branches. It is simply uneconomic for banks to keep staffing bricks and mortar buildings but it makes sense for us.”

    In the past year alone, the UK’s six top retail banks have closed over 600 branches. The move is part of a wider strategy on the part of G4S to rebuild its business and reputation after a number of disastrous incidents related to their handling of a series of contracts globally.

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    Related: G4S and Walmart sign a multimillion pound deal

  • 18 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The National Outsourcing Association has confirmed that R Chandrasekhar, President of NASSCOM, has joined the speaker line-up for the NOA Symposium in June.

    India has reinvented itself in order to win in the Digital Age. Mr Chandrasekhar - the man presiding over a $150bn IT industry - will reveal how the nation’s government and service providers are adapting themselves to suit the new outsourcing ecosystem.

    Prior to being NASSCOM’s president, Mr Chandrasekhar was secretary to the Indian Department of Information Technology.

    The NOA Symposium takes place on Wednesday 22nd June in London. Speakers also include Vested Outsourcing author Kate Vitasek, and consultant and Power of Soft author Hilary Gallo. 2016’s Symposium focuses on the recent collision of the digital outsourcing worlds, and the technologies, skills and standards required in order to stay on top.

    Tickets are still available for purchase, while buyers of outsourcing and public sector employees attend for free!

    Find out more / Register now

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    Related: Vested Outsourcing author Kate Vitasek confirmed as keynote speaker at the NOA Symposium

  • 17 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The National Outsourcing Association has confirmed that Kate Vitasek, author of Vested Outsourcing, will be giving a keynote address at the NOA Symposium in June.

    Kate was recently described as “one of the 50+1 most influential people impacting global commerce” by World Trade Magazine. Her book Vested Outsourcing imparts an innovative new business model for highly collaborative outsourcing relationships – the Vested model is now adopted by Fortune 500 companies globally.

    Passionate in her quest to help companies transform their business relationships, Vitasek inspires and motivates business leaders with five proven rules for achieving transformational results. Following the Vested mindset and methodology shifts a relationships from a “What’s in it for Me” to a “What’s in it for We” foundation and outcome-based business model. Sceptics walk away believers when Vitasek shares powerful, real-world examples of companies (big and small) that have achieved transformational results by adopting a Vested mindset and business model for highly-collaborate, win-win relationships.

    The NOA Symposium takes place on Wednesday 22nd June in London. Speakers also include NASSCOM president R Chandrasekhar, and consultant and Power of Soft author Hilary Gallo. 2016’s Symposium focuses on the recent collision of the digital outsourcing worlds, and the technologies, skills and standards required in order to stay on top.

    Tickets are still available for purchase, while buyers of outsourcing and public sector employees attend for free!

    Find out more / Register now

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    Related: NOA announces plans to “rid the public sector of outsourcing failure”

  • 17 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    In recent years, the charity sector has undergone significant turmoil. And as the media increases its scrutiny of the third sector, charities all across the UK have undergone a crash-course in learning how to grapple with ramped-up regulations and cuts to government funding.

    An increasing number of charities are now looking to outsourcing as a means to tackle shrinking budgets and meet new regulatory requirements. Hence why the NOA, in partnership with DDC Outsourcing Solutions, deemed now the perfect time to launch its brand new series of Charity Sector Special Interest Groups.

    The round table discussion

    The first round table of the series took place on 10th May at Freeths, the UK-based law firm. DDC OS attended, and were accompanied by a charity sector-based client; the two having experienced a highly successful outsourcing partnership over the past couple of years, a case study that served to exemplify many necessary components of successful charity outsourcing.

    Unsurprisingly, supplier-buyer relationships were at the core of the discussion. Trust and good communication were singled out as two of the most important priorities if the third sector’s outsourcing is to work well in the long term.

    Those around the table felt that reputational risk looms very large for charities, especially after the recent media coverage of mismanagement on the part of some charities – the death of Olive Cooke in 2015 and other cases have caused concerns for how charities use their data. Accordingly, it is important that charities work with service providers they can trust their brand with, who put particular effort into understanding and carrying out the charity’s mission. On the other hand, it was agreed that a carefully chosen third party specialist could minimise the risk of charities misusing their own data.

    Communication was seen as key here - DDC OS and the client charity shared how their own experience of how regular and open discussion were vital to the thriving relationship they’d built.

    To read the full blog post here.

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    Related: Event Launched to Help Charities Outsource Effectively

  • 9 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    At a time when public sector outsourcing is simultaneously more prevalent and more widely criticised than ever, leading temporary staffing expert de Poel has worked wonders through its outsourcing partnership with North East Procurement Organisation (NEPO), achieving £1.23 million in savings in less than two years.

    In addition to his, de Poel has also significantly reduced the need for administrative activities and overseen the use of almost 2,000 agency workers per week for NEPO’s customers, equating to over £30 million in spend.

    Andrew Preston, Group Managing Director of de Poel, commented: “It is fantastic to be working with NEPO, offering the very best in temporary staffing solutions to their growing network of North East local authorities and associate members.

    “We are delighted they have decided to extend the contract for a further two years; the target now is to grow the contract to a minimum of £40m in the next twelve months and continue to support NEPO in capturing further areas of their agency staffing spend, which were historically out of scope.”

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

  • 9 May 2016 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Thames Water has chosen Wipro, a major information technology, consulting and business process services company, to execute the transformation of its customer service and retail billing capabilities.

    The move comes in response to the Open Water deregulated market – an agreement which will see 1.2m businesses and other non-household customers gaining rights to choose their water supplier.

    Wipro will help Thames Water implementing a fast-paced SAP® industry solution for utilities billing, along with a new market integration gateway and a cloud-based customer relationship management (CRM) platform using SAP Hybris® Cloud for Customer.

    According to Ian Cain, Managing Director, Customer Service and Retail, Thames Water, “The integrated solution that will be rolled out is intended to help Thames Water capture a single and unified view of each customer and will thereby, provide us with deeper insights about them, through analytics. This will enable us to have more meaningful interactions with our customers and help us serve them better.”

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    Related: Accenture secures lengthy contracts with Wipro and RSA

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