Industry news

  • 14 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Local authorities have been given access to a £1 million fund by government in order to transform services.

    The fund was established by a joint partnership between the Cabinet Office and Local Government (CO) Association (LGA),

    Authorities which are successful in applying for funding will receive specialist support to transform services according to the Cabinet Office: “by combining the best of the public, private and voluntary sectors through partnering, mutualisation, or other innovative forms of commercial model.”

    The funding comes as government seeks to increase local government efficiencies and the ability of government to generate savings from procurement.

    CO Minister Francis Maude said: “we must transform the way services are delivered and break down the old binary choice between in-house and outsourced delivery”.

    Local authorities failing to collaborate on procurement

    Calls for shorter public sector procurement processes

  • 14 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The City of Sydney is looking for a new datacentre provider as part of the cities move to a complete infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) model.

    Sydney council has placed a tender notice for two new datacentre facilities as part of a five year contract with options for future extensions.

    The tender notice specifies that the new facilities must provide increased security, 24 hour access, future expansion capacity and green credentials through reduced power consumption.

    Sydney city currently operates two data centre facilities, with a new provider needing to establish compatibility with these existing facilities with high speed links between all facilities.

    The tendering process is expected to be completed by the end of March.

    Global IaaS service launched by Telefónica Digital

    HCL awarded council SAP contract

  • 13 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    G4S and Serco have been criticised by the government’s spending watchdog for failing to provide adequate housing to vulnerable asylum seekers.

    The National Audit Office has revealed that the government will seek to recover £3million and £4 million G4S and Serco respectively in the form of rebates.

    Both outsourcing companies have been involved in providing services to Compass, a outsourced system set out by the home secretary to provide housing to asylum seekers.

    A G4S spokesperson said in response to the report released this Friday: "We agree with all recommendations made and many of these have already been implemented as part of our on-going commitment to service improvement."

  • 13 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The UK government has revealed plans for a workforce management framework, worth anywhere between £200 million and £1 billion.

    The project will be rolled out to the NHS initially before being expanded out to other public sector departments.

    The brief tender is looking for a framework supplying management software amd e-rostering services, with expectations that a preferred bidder will be announced later on in 2014.

    Francis Maude calls for SMEs to put pressure on the government procurement process

    Cabinet Office plan for new procurement service

  • 13 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Accenture has been awarded an extension to its service contract with RBS 6 Nations, providing digital services.

    RBS 6 Nations has extended Accenture’s 2 year contract, with the technology partner contracted until 2017 to provide analytics and social medial services focused on mobile technology.

    Accenture will utilise analytics in order to provide game predictions to spectators with social media functionality.

    Services included under the contract include the development of the RBS 6 Nations app, which provides news, video highlights and commentary to viewers in 80 countries.

    Accenture to move into Sri Lanka’s outsourcing sector

    Accenture moves to increase Brazilian investment with acquisition

  • 13 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Airbus has overtaken rivals Boeing according to the aerospace giant’s latest announcement of record sales for aircraft delivers despite a 9 year backlog.

    The company reported a 53 per cent revenue and net orders market share, having won orders in Asia including the Japanese and Chinese markets.

    2014 will also see the introduction of the A350, Airbus’ challenge to the Boeing Dreamliner which has been beset by problems including a period of service withdrawal.

    Despite the success of 2014, the back pile of orders is likely to see a reversal in the company’s position as market leader.

    Atos awarded five-year contract to transform Airbus content management system

  • 10 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Marks & Spencer has revealed a decline in overall like–for-like sales following the Christmas period, despite a strong performance by the retailers’ online platform.

    Increases in mobile uptake have helped to drive traffic with more than 100 per cent increases in tablet orders and more than 80 per cent growth in mobile orders, helping online sales to grow by nearly a quarter.

    M&S chief executive, Marc Bolland, said: “M&S.com had a great quarter with sales up 23 percent, strongly ahead of the market. Our strategy to transform M&S into an international, multi-channel retailer, will keep on improving our .com service with the launch of our new platform and our new warehouse at full capacity.”

    Despite the strong performance from online sales like-for-like sales fell 0.2 percent over the festive period.

    The poor Christmas performance reflects the experiences of many high street retailers, with Tesco and H&M recording an overall decline in growth.

    Marks & Spencer suffers from clothing slump

    M&S moves to develop online presence after recognising failures

  • 10 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Indian outsourcing firm Infosys has reported strong fourth quarter profits of £282 million after cost cutting measures.

    The company saw a year-on-year 6.7 per cent increase during the quarter with revenue up by around 10 per cent to £1.3 billion.

    Despite being pressured to create new services focused on cost optimisation for clients, Infosys’ improvement of services and more work being offshored in India had helped to drive growth.

    Reductions in staffing numbers and management restructuring had also helped to reduce overall costs.

    Toyota selects Infosys for applications management contract

    Infosys wins five year BMW IT infrastructure contract

  • 10 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Growth is a positive development for any business sector.

    For the retail industry, though, which places great emphasis on providing a good customer experience, the rapid growth in e-commerce over the last decade has created something of a challenge.

    Keeping track of deliveries direct to customers using a wide variety of different methods and trying to identify and resolve potential difficulties or ‘exceptions’ which may arise in transit – what GFS calls ‘parcel management’ - requires significant effort, especially during periods such as that leading up to Christmas, when volumes may surge many times above their pre-peak levels.

    Furthermore, retailers know that they are at the mercy of social media should there be a problem with any deliveries. A customer’s bad experience can quickly be shared with many others, damaging reputations and leading to custom being taken elsewhere, often due to the failure of just a single delivery.

    However, an increasing number of retailers are choosing to approach the challenge by outsourcing to specialists which are adept at managing every step of the delivery process - from the point at which consumers arrive at the online Checkout with intended purchases through to their receipt of goods.

    We know that consumers’ needs are really quite simple when ordering online. They want their delivery at a time and a place most convenient to them. Having the ability to choose the date, time and method of delivery is a critical factor in ensuring that they do not abandon their online shopping cart in favour of another retailer which offers greater choice.

    Whilst choice is a customer’s basic requirement, achieving it in a simple enough fashion at the online Checkout and in a retailer’s warehouse at the time of order fulfilment is not so straightforward and requires specialist software to bring about.

    In addition, on those occasions when exceptions do occur, retailers want to work with partners which can address any issues quickly and pro-actively in order to maintain a high quality customer experience. That means relying on logistics professionals who have the right contacts and exception management systems to reduce the impact of any true failures while liaising with the retailer and their customer.

    In circumstances where individual issues cannot be corrected, retailers know that explaining what has happened to a customer – and, critically, how the matter will be resolved - rather than having them wait in all day for a delivery which is not going to arrive, can mean the difference between repeat business or not.

    It is far better to be able to get in touch with a customer to advise what is being done in such a situation and what is being done to resolve it than receive a call from consumers unaware of what is happening but upset because a purchase has not arrived when and where it should.

    As some of GFS’s retail clients have found, they can avoid such a scenario by using external partners with truly effective, pro-active systems.

    Outsourcing has delivered e-commerce a stream of benefits, including improved prospects of first-time delivery success, a reduction of inbound calls from unhappy customers and an improved relationship with their supplier partners.

    Of course, this then enables a retailer to concentrate on its core activity and what it does best: selling its products.

  • 9 Jan 2014 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Australian Department of Defence has dropped plans to consolidate critical IT services provided by Fujitsu and Unisys.

    The Department of Defence had originally planned to merge Fujitsu's Distributed Computing Central Services contract with Unisys' regional IT services contract, creating once combined service providing multiple service desk support, networking functions, email, and service management.

    The DoD had planned originally to go to market with the joint service bundle at the end of 2013, but the need according to a DoD spokesman, for a “focused and sustained effort” has resulted in the termination of merger plans.

    Instead the DoD has decided to extend the renewal of its regional ICT support contract with Unisys until October 2016, with the next two years giving the department time to assess the DoD’s long-term IT plans.

    Unisys 3Q Profit Soars On Better-Than-Expected Sales

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software