Industry news

  • 14 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Beijing Construction Engineering Group has agreed to invest in Manchester airport as part of a joint venture to create an ‘airport city’.

    The ‘city’ will see the creation of offices, hotels, manufacturing and warehouses.

    The joint venture project, involving Beijing Construction Engineering Group (BCEG) Manchester Airports Group (MAG), UK construction group Carillion, and the Greater Manchester Pension Fund, is expected to create 16,000 jobs.

    The development of the site will help to increase links with China with the announcement coming as the chancellor George Osborne continues his five-day trade mission to China.

    Charlie Cornish, chief executive of MAG, said: “"The inclusion of BCEG is significant because as a group, we have been keen to forge greater links with the far east and this gives us an opportunity to strengthen vital business links with China".

    UK economy needs further flight links outside of London according to Birmingham airport

    Edinburgh Airport outsources IT services

  • 14 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The demand for IT security specialists has outpaced supply, with a lack of skilled technicians preventing businesses and governments from effectively securing services against cyber threats.

    The limited talent has created a bidding war as companies seek to attract talent, with private enterprises able to poach skilled staff away from public sector departments.

    Colonel Gregory Conti, head of the cyber Security Department at the U.S. Military Academy, West Point, said: “We are at the very beginning of this process and we are building it brick by brick", adding that it would be, “a process of several decades getting the right people and structures."

    Major security and technology companies have all moved to undertake recruitment programs, with Google, Lockheed Martin and BAE systems all looking to increase their cyber protection talent pool, with this trend being seen all over the world including Russia and China, as countries seek to take the edge in cyber technology.

    Deloitte launches cyber security centre

    Banking security is questioned after significant losses in India

  • 14 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Contract says no: Many businesses are considering edging further into the Cloud, but today's ITO contracts are not always written with this new commercial model in mind. John Sheridan, Director – Head of ITO at Alsbridge, comments on the key considerations for businesses entering and renegotiating their ITO contracts.

    The results of our recent study, Terms of Endearment, shows that IT leaders across Europe are unhappy with their ITO contracts for a variety of reasons including the lack of flexibility to fully exploit new technologies or business models.

    It also concludes that, whilst most organisations (92%) polled are using ‘Cloud’ in some form or another, most are focusing exclusively on SaaS business solutions and relatively few have yet to adopt compute or storage based IaaS solutions.

    The report highlights that Cloud initiatives are failing to deliver expected levels of operational cost savings or IT efficiency. Unsurprisingly, the principal barriers to Cloud adoption are data sovereignty and privacy, regulatory compliance and risk of vendor lock-in.

    What did surprise us was that key criteria such as cost of entry, complexity of current legacy estate and level of appropriate in-house skill-sets were scored as mid to low in terms of importance. In our recent experience, these are primary risk areas and the ones that have caused the greatest challenges for clients.

    Successful companies will be those that embrace this journey as a major business change programme and not a technology change project. When planning a renegotiation or future sourcing strategy, businesses should be thinking more broadly across a wider range of challenges including:

    • Future vision and strategy: How will your business objectives influence what you require from your IS service and can the vendor(s) that you are considering commit to that same roadmap?

    • Demand management: Being able to deploy just the compute or storage resources your business needs to meet peaks and troughs in demand is one of the key benefits of Cloud. However, this places a whole new emphasis on capacity management, demand management and intelligent forecasting, as well as the need for constraints on automated provisioning.

    • Commercial management: On-demand services require an entirely new commercial, allocation and/or cost recovery model mapped to business usage. This is something that the current IS model may not be geared up to support and must be considered as part of a wider business change programme around Cloud adoption.

    • Compliance management: Organisations need to balance the desire for true on-demand private Cloud utility computing with the constraints of dedicated (private) solutions (either on or off-premise). These can include complex security, regulatory, compliance and other ‘legacy’ regimes.

    • Service integration and management: In a multi-source world the boundaries of responsibility (provider to client and between providers) become very blurred. This, coupled with more complex service management and integration challenges, means that the IS operating model will inevitably change and much greater clarity of ownership and accountability will be needed.

    • Total cost of ownership: Consider the whole deal lifecycle, not just building and implementing a platform. The business case must factor in the cost of future support, maintenance, upgrade and change, not just the retained costs and investments. Also, what kind of flexibility are you looking for and how will it be funded?

    • Change management:

    o Technology change – understand how new technologies will be integrated into a complex ‘legacy’ environment.

    o People and organisational change – your retained organisation will inevitably require new skill-sets, capabilities and ‘management’ disciplines to operate effectively in the new world. Can you develop/retain them and are they affordable?

    o Process and operating model change – New models will be required to manage an ‘on-demand’ service together with clarity in ownership and accountability across the supply chain.

    o Business engagement and change communications – get early buy-in from business owners who will have to change the way they consume technology.

  • 11 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    18 councils have received a total of £6.9 million by the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) in recognition of the success of transformation projects.

    The 'Transformation Challenge Award’ provides funding to councils who have displayed excellence in delivering transformation programs that provide service development with efficiency savings.

    The funding will be used to create and develop further transformation projects as the public sector seek to encourage efficiency and cost savings to reduce budgets.

    Borough of Harrow named best for SME procurement

    New public sector rules focus on encouraging SME procurement

  • 11 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Danish wind turbine manufacturer Vestas has moved to reduce costs by turning to outsource key

    The move to reduce costs comes after Vestas was hit by government cuts to renewable energy subsidies, resulting in reduced profits and two years of losses.

    The manufacturer has sold manufacturing units to German based group VTC Partners GmbH, with around 1,000 staff transferring under the deal to the new owners, and has completed multiple factory closures over recent years in a bid to reduce losses.

    The outsourcing programme, which will cover manufacturing and casting process, is expected to deliver significant savings, with around €30 million saved over a two year period.

    BP prioritises gas and oil as it places its US wind power business up for tender

    Chancellor accused of driving off investment

  • 10 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The UK government have moved to invest £100 million into the countries enterprise zones, in a bid to encourage private investment through infrastructure development and available financial support.

    The 24 current enterprise zones are allowed to submit competitive bids for the available funding, with a deadline of the 18th of November, alongside local enterprise partnerships.

    The £100 million investment in enterprise zones will help to back business creation in local economies according to Eric Pickles, with the government communities secretary saying that the zones were: “at the centre of our plans to back business, help local economies grow stronger and give the UK that competitive edge.”

    SMES to receive lending boost

    SMEs forced to adapt to economic pressures

  • 10 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Metropolitan Police have revealed plans to update its IT infrastructure after being criticised for outdated legacy systems.

    The move to update IT services, comes after the police force was criticised by London Assembly’s Budget and Performance Committee, for the high maintenance costs and limited capability of the current IT framework.

    The Metropolitan Police have now placed a tender for a £44 million IT framework, which will provide control room and surveillance capabilities.

    A deadline of the November 4th has been given for tender applications to be submitted to the Met for the new framework, with contracts available for supply, support and maintenance.

    BT awarded police PSN contract

    South West Wales police drives savings through shared service centre

  • 10 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    A new skills survey has found that adults in England are performing poorly in ICT skills competence compared to other countries.

    Countries including Australia, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Japan, Austria, Korea and the Netherlands all outperformed England with greater mean score rankings in the survey.

    The report revealed that men continued to outperform women, with this trend being seen internationally, and that the survey might have unfairly represented England due to the high participation of older age groups in the study.

    The report stated: “Although the average score for problem solving in technology-rich environments was lower than the OECD average, this must be seen in the context of the far higher participation in this domain compared with other countries, which was particularly marked among the older age groups”.

    The report added that the: “majority of the population in England now has access to ICT and this new domain recognises its increasing importance in all aspects of people’s lives and its implication for future national policy and planning.”

    Welsh government invests in IT skills as market grows

    UK economy being driven by IT despite existing skill gaps remaining

  • 9 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO) have awarded a five year £40 million service management contract to BAE Systems Detica, which will see the information services provider delivering end-to-end IT services to the department.

    The contract will see BAE Detica manage the FCO’s suppliers while implementing efficiency savings, as the department looks to reduce ICT costs by 40 per cent, and improve on existing user experiences.

    The conclusion of the tendering process comes after BAE was selected as the preferred bidder for the program in the first quarter of 2013. The programme is due to go live in spring 2014.

    BAE awarded $7 million contract as it moves to consolidate systems

    BAE Systems terminate Logica HR BPO contract

  • 9 Oct 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The UK e-borders scheme has been criticised in a new report, with recommendations for a ‘total re-think’.

    John Vine, chief inspector of borders and immigration, said that the e-borders, despite being positioned as a globally advanced system, had failed to effectively alert border staff, without a single person having been stopped by the scheme so far.

    The data currently being collecting by the e-borders program according to the report, currently failed to effectively allow border staff to monitor foreign nationals entry and exit from the UK, with this functionality not being available until 2018 at the earliest.

    The scheme has been hampered by only screening airports and not including train and ferry passengers , in addition only two airlines have signed up for the pre-departure screening checks.

    The report also revealed that the e-borders system is under pressure, demands on the system have resulted in more than 640,000 drug and tobacco alerts being deleted in order to prioritise immigration alerts.

    Accenture led consortium wins national border control system contract

    UK Border Agency closed down

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