Industry news

  • 2 Mar 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Central government spent an unprecedented £11.4 billion with small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in 2013 to 2014. The figures show that 26.1% of government spend went to SMEs; 10.3% directly and 15.8% indirectly.

    According to the Cabinet Office website, they have launched a refreshed free to use Contracts Finder website, which helps find current and future public sector contracts above £10,000 in central government and above £25,000 in the wider public sector.

    Plus, the Cabinet Office website states that a new legislation (which came into force on 25 February) means that:

    • everyone in the supply chain must comply with 30 day payment terms, including suppliers and sub-contractors

    • public bodies must publish an annual late payment report, making their accountability more transparent

    • the bidding process is simpler across the wider public sector – complex forms, such as Pre-Qualification Questionnaires, are now abolished for low value contracts

    • the procurement process for public sector contracts will be quicker

    The regulations implement new EU rules for public sector contracts which will speed up the procurement process. The UK is the first EU member state to implement these rules, doing so in just 10 months, 14 months earlier than the EU deadline.

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    Read this next: The New EU Public Procurement Laws: What you need to know

  • 2 Mar 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The cabinet office has released data showing that local government spend for January 2015 is £464,537 down from December 2014.

    Sales through G Cloud including local government has fallen from £30.3m to £26.8m during the same period, meaning that local authority sales on G Cloud have fallen to 2.4% over the past year.

    This drop in sales has followed a strong growth on G Cloud over 2014.

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    Read this next: Over A Quarter of the Government’s Procurement Budget Spent with SMEs

  • 2 Mar 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    As of 14th July 2015, Microsoft will no longer offer support for Windows 2003 users with upgrades and computer defence.

    It appears that many IT departments at certain companies are entirely unprepared for the July deadline. Insight UK – the worldwide technology provider of hardware, software and service solutions – has identified five key areas of trouble that these struggling IT operations are likely to face. These are:

    - Short-term administration

    - Comprised coalitions

    - Regime Change and artificial barriers

    - Weak new administrations

    - Ungovernable new environments

    Takeshi Numoto, Corporate Vice President, Cloud and Enterprise Marketing, Microsoft, warned at the beginning of this year, ‘If you are still running Windows Server 2003, I want to remind you that now is the time to migrate… even a single unpatched server can be a point of vulnerability for your entire infrastructure.’

    Any Windows 2003 related IT disasters post-July could well lead to a spike in popularity for IT outsourcing by the end of this summer.

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    Read this next: Dramatic Drop in Local Government Spend on G Cloud

  • 27 Feb 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Culture, Media and Sports Committee have called for a “more symbiotic relationship” between the BBC and news providers, through measures which could effectively result in the outsourcing of local news delivery to smaller publishers.

    In the run up to the renewal of the BBC Charter in 2016, the committee’s report encouraged the BBC to embrace an increasingly collaborative culture with smaller press organisations, through the allocating a portion of the licence fee to “public service journalism”.

    In recent years the BBC has piloted schemes to both share stories with local papers and provide links to local news reports from the BBC’s own webpages, however the latest committee findings encourages a more extensive and deeper relationship between the BBC and local organisations going forward.

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    Read this next: Better and Leaner BPO in the 21st Century Requires a Holistic Approach

  • 27 Feb 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Xchanging PLC - the international provider of business process, technology and procurement services - saw the value of its shares drop on Thursday. The drop is most likely due to the dramatic decline in profits that the company experienced in 2014.

    It is thought that the regulator review into Xchanging's Agencyport Europe acquisition had the biggest impact on the company's profits last year. The prolonged operations revamp allegedly caused revenue to drop by over 20 per cent.

    The company reported revenue of £573.5 million in 2014, down from £685.9 million in 2013, causing pretax profits to drop by £45.8 million.

    Xchanging has since predicted renewed profit growth in 2015, now that its business transformation process is finally complete. If this is the case, it is hoped that Xchanging shares will return to their originally value around the time of 2016.

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    Read this next: Xchanging signs new deal with Brambles

    (All facts and figures were adopted from this article.)

  • 26 Feb 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Over the past decade, we have seen business process outsourcing (BPO) grow into a major global industry. Favoured offshore outsourcing locations in Asia, such as India and the Philippines, originally benefited from the growth of BPO the most, but now Mexico is becoming an increasingly important player.

    There are plenty of obvious advantages to outsourcing business processes to Mexico, especially for companies looking to impact on the North American market. Mexico has very similar time zones to the US, it is only a quick flight away and the country has a surprisingly advanced telecom infrastructure. Mexico also has a booming population, a high proportion of which are ICT professionals.

    Recently, the Asian outsourcing market has fragmented. India - once the supremely dominant offshoring location - has lost business to China, Malaysia and the Philippines. Now would be the perfect time for Mexico to emerge as offshore BPO location of choice.

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    Read this next: Better and Leaner BPO in the 21st Century Requires a Holistic Approach

  • 26 Feb 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    In the aftermath of the recession, BPO providers managing key processes such as customer service or technical support, have had to focus relentlessly on improving service levels, often on a lower budget.

    As increasing numbers of businesses look to outsource many of their processes, such as sales, marketing and revenue generation, within tighter margins, there is an inevitable push for greater streamlining among providers. This all too frequently means that technology or process improvement is put under the microscope, without achieving the end-to-end view that reveals other fertile areas for optimisation.

    A scan of the wider horizon reveals that major BPO providers are not only able to match these gains, but also to exceed them by boosting their capacity management capability.

    Fundamentally this is about being able to target resources in a more efficient way after examining workload holistically right across an organisation. This approach means the volume of work is more fully understood and far more efficiently forecast.

    Very frequently, outsourced operations such as customer service for example, are held back from pursuing this path to efficiency gains because they lack the ability to measure their own performance at a granular level. They are unable to build a detailed picture of how much time is spent on back office tasks and cannot precisely predict when demand will peak.

    Back office operations become frozen into compartments with little or no flexibility of resource management because the organisation’s goggles are misted and nobody can see the entire process from one end to the other. The complex construction of SLAs can also be a significant factor that leads to this organisational rigidity.

    However, experience of many projects in this sector shows that there is often a hidden 20% of capacity waiting to be extracted from most BPO operations that have not adopted leading practices in back-office capacity management.

    Since efficiency savings are now the battleground for obtaining new business – and keeping it – organisations are increasingly looking to secure the same visibility, productivity and performance for their back office operations as for their front-line functions, such as contact centres.

    This kind of positive change comes through the blending of back office workforce optimisation software with work and capacity management and training. When combined with the necessary visibility, this produces a significant shift in attitudes that leads to real improvements.

    This holistic method was adopted by the Multi-Client division at Capita, a leading UK provider of business process management and integrated professional support service solutions. The new approach to demand and capacity management within the back office enabled the firm to enact radical improvements in the way it plans, controls and delivers services.

    A number of factors were behind the requirement for change, including new contractual terms obliging the division to deliver the same quality of service at the same cost, while shortening service levels from five to three days. Effectively, the same number of people had to deliver an enhanced service.

    The challenge was to meet an ambitious deadline for the controlled transition to operational practices that would enable the division to work with more demanding service levels. In response, Capita prioritised the development of the current operations management approach and the need for “a shared solution across accounts”.

    The organisation made doubly sure that operations performance management software was installed and fully functioning, along with training and the adoption of suitable methodologies. As a result, Capita is now able to plan, control and deliver its services with greater confidence and exploit opportunities as they arise. Regulatory risk, for example, has been mitigated by cross-training staff in critical specialisms and thoroughly preparing staff about to work with new clients.

    “It’s a mistake to think this was all about throwing more staff at the problem in order to achieve the required service levels and avoid fines,” said Capita Multi-Client MD Mark Randall. “Nor was it about reducing quality. What we have done is get a better understanding of team and individual performance. We have thereby driven –and continue to drive – performance improvements.”

    Following this successful transition, productivity has ramped up the speed of service delivery, with work delivered in three rather than five days. It has also overhauled individual performance management and reduced overtime by 50%.

    Now that we are in an age of heightened expectations about what enterprises can derive from outsourced contracts, the truth is that professional support firms can no longer perform conjuring tricks when faced with the need to reduce costs, maintain the quality of their services and increase the speed of delivery. The quick move to a system or process solution can certainly be helpful. However, as providers such as Capita are able to show, impressive progress is also being achieved through intelligent, people-focused approaches to capacity management.

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    For more information, please visit the AOMi website.

    Twitter: @AOMintl

    Linkedin: Active Operations Management International (AOMi)

  • 25 Feb 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    South Yorkshire Credit Union (SYCU) - the savings and loan cooperative - has overseen a complete overhaul of its customer service operations, thanks to the input of Unify's OpenScape Business platform.

    Unify provided SYCU with this all-in-one communications solution with the help of Active Voice & Data, winner of the Unify Private Cloud Solution of the Year Award 2013-14.

    Due to a steadily increasing yet sporadic number of calls per day, SYCU recognised its need for a flexible communications solution, hence why they sought Unify's input.

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    Read this next: PeopleTECH Launches Contact Centre Evaluation Service

  • 25 Feb 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    In the latest outsourcing news, HP has been selected to modernise Deutsche Bank's global IT infrastructure in a 10-year multibillion dollar contract.

    Deutsche Bank will continue to keep IT architecture, application development, and information security in its own hands, with HP running the bank’s IT infrastructure, including storage, platforms, and hosting.

    According to an article in ZDNet, the bank wants to prioritise sorting out its banking infrastructure so that it can prepare for the next stage in banking.

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    Read this next: BancTec wins Bank of Ireland Outsourcing Contract

  • 25 Feb 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Japanese startup IQP has partnered with with three Japanese giants - Fujitsu, NEC Engineering and KDDI - with the hope of bringing its Internet of Things (IoT) technology to the USA.

    IQP has created a platform which allows the quick, easy creation of web applications without the requirement of programming knowledge. The company is now the midst of its first external fundraising round, with the hope locating new US-based customers and partners.

    The company has already established a presence in New York City and has plans to set up a branch in Silicon Valley by the end of 2015.

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    Read this next: NASSCOM Warns that the Growth of IT in India is at Risk

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