Industry news

  • 25 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has awarded a contract to CSC for monitoring their critical infrastructure. This contract was procured via CloudStore and is expected to save DWP £1m over two years. The value of this deal has not been disclosed but does not require any investment in hardware or software.

    DWP sign with Atos

  • 25 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Swiss Chemical production and life science company announced that first half profits had trebled. The rise in Lonza’s profit is believed to be due to the increase in outsourcing of production by drug makers. Lonza produces dugs for such companies as Roche.

    Pharmaceutical giants announce joint enterprise

  • 24 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Skills Funding Agency (SFA) has awarded a £35m SIAM contract to BAE Systems Applied Intelligence. BAE Systems will manage all the SFA’s ICT services allowing the agency to work in a more agile way. Moving to a new SIAM model is reflecting how the government is aiming to make technology cheaper and more transparent.

    Capita is selected by BAE Systems to transform IT Services

  • 24 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The NOA surveyed 158 of its members with partners Polaris to assess the benefits beyond cost savings. The report tracks the results of the survey and questions weather value beyond cost saving is a myth or reality? NOA_Research.pdf

  • 24 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    We Brits are an ethical bunch: a recent study by McCann Truth points out that UK consumers are more much likely to consider the behind-the-scenes ethics of a product than our global counterparts. According to the “Truth about Shopping” survey, two-thirds of us take a keen interest, compared to the global average of 50% …yet we face a stark reality of numerous corporate scandals: Horsemeat. Prawns. Bangladeshi factories. Tax and Transfer Pricing. Accounting discrepancies. Prisoner electronic tagging. BNP Paribas’ “complex and pervasive scheme to illegally move billions through the US financial system,” which according to US Attorney General Eric Holder "deliberately and repeatedly violated longstanding US sanctions.”

    Deliberately and repeatedly are the key words in any ethical scandal. Mistakes will be made, errors are a prevailing factor of the human condition. But when does a mistake become a scandal? Where are the lines drawn? And how can you avoid inadvertently crossing them, and becoming the next big “outsourcing failure”?

    Most outsourcing companies have not suffered intense media criticism, but those that have found themselves branded “murdering scumbags” or the subject of Select Committee inquiries. Milestones - or millstones - that live long in the memory.

    Some politicians with their eye on ministerial roles have already adopted an anti-outsourcing stance - and you can bet they’ll get louder in 2015. The anti-outsourcing tar brush is a broad one; this is why the NOA believes all its members should work together to offer a unified response on the question of ethics. With a general election coming up, it’s worth letting the ethical British public know that outsourcing is big on ethics too.

    In response to a recent government report entitled Ethical Standards for Providers of Public Services, the NOA has begun gathering members’ opinions about how ethical guidance and codes of conduct could help protect the reputation of our industry. Please join our survey here.

    Outsourcing is batting on a slippery wicket from the off, because many people only associate the word with offshoring and privatisation. Many of these people think making any sort of profit on a government contract is wrong. Others think that civil servants are honest by default, and that private sector companies are by their very nature, underhand and greedy. None of the aforementioned notions are true, or even as black and white as that, but this doesn’t stop their proponents being extremely vocal…and you never know who they’re convincing.

    Ethical Standards for Providers of Public Services recommends that future public sector contracts reflect the Seven Principles of Public Life, and ethics are built into the deal, with providers required to prove that they have the structures in place to support this. The Crown Representatives - ‘minders’ in newspaper parlance - who govern the deals are set to have increased focus on championing ethical values and aligning them with best value for money.

    The NOA believes all suppliers of outsourced services, whether dealing with the government or not, should have in place the right frameworks, checks and balances to ensure that mistakes do not repeat themselves often enough to be accused of something more sinister. It also appreciates the value of the 7 Principles of Public Life: selflessness, integrity, objectivity, accountability, openness, honesty and leadership…provided that “selflessness”, in this instance, can be defined as “unselfishness”, that is, not working in unremitting enthrallment to short-term shareholder returns, but rather a top-to-bottom dedication to delighting customers: a stance that will better serve buyers, sellers, workers and end-users much better over the long term.

    There are still copious growth opportunities out there, particularly in public sector service delivery, where austerity is the new normal and will remain so for the foreseeable future. A strong united response on Ethical Standards will go a long way to ensuring a bright future for the outsourcing industry, and maybe just a little recognition from the government for the value we create, rather than far-reaching public criticism.

    A little arguing back might go a long way. As McCann Truth found, 66% of British people are big on ethics: today’s ethical consumer/ flabbergasted reader could well be tomorrow’s outsourcing buyer, particularly with the zeitgeist for entrepreneurship and record numbers of start-ups being launched en route to economic recovery.

    To join the debate on the values our industry needs to align with if it is to continue to grow, please join the NOA ethics survey today.

  • 23 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Capita is one of the largest UK Outsourcing providers posed an 11 percent rise in first-half revenue. The announcement boosted shares by 2.7 percent making it the biggest rise on the blue chip FTSE 100 index. The 11 percent growth is thought to have been aided by 1.3 billion pounds of major contract wins prompting CEO Andy Parker to predict full year growth of at least 8 percent.

    Share price up at Capita

  • 23 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Reliance Communications has shortlisted IBM and Wipro among five companies each for two contracts worth a combined Rs 1,200 crore. The contracts are to upgrade technology across its call centre operations as well as to outsource back office operations.

    The other companies shortlisted include Tech Mahindra, Aegis and Vertex for the call centre outsourcing contract, and for the running of the technology upgrade Cisco, Genesys and Avaya join IBM and Wipro in the running.

    IBM wins six-year outsourcing contract

  • 23 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Proxima, the largest procurement services provider in Europe, is to create up to 68 jobs in Cwmbran, Wales with financial backing from the Welsh Government. The London based company has said that it has chosen Cwmbran for its strong track record and calibre of staff. With clients ranging from BA to Universal Music, the welsh hub will also be used to serve their north American clients.

    Procurement Outsourcing shows 12 percent growth

  • 23 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The National Audit Office has published a report into spending on HMRC’s Aspire contract, which was awarded to CapGemini and sub-contractor Fujitsu, in 2004 to run HMRC’s ICT services. The report acknowledges that Aspire has been successful in reducing costs and improving services to customers. It did however highlight concern over significant scope creep which took the initial contract value of £4.1 bn up to a total £10.4 bn spend. The NAO questioned whether the additional work – which again was largely very successful – was paid for at above market rates, due to HMRC’s over reliance on its ICT suppliers. HMRC needs to skill up, both technically and commercially, to reform before the Aspire contract ends in June 2017.

    Former HMRC IT leader goes to Specsavers

  • 22 Jul 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    According to ISG’s Outsourcing Index, global outsourcing has reached its highest level in a second quarter which is contributing to one of the strongest first halves of the year on record. ISG has found that companies are awarding shorter and lower value contracts to more providers which is driving growth. 340 contracts were signed in the last quarter which is the most ever recorded, which generated $6.4 billion in annual contract value. EMEA has recorded its best first half in the last six years with an annual contract value of $6.3 billion.

    EMEA outsourcing reaches four year high

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