Industry news

  • 20 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Bidders have moved to offer bids for the rollout of smart meters across the UK, as industries gear themselves for the transfer to the new national measuring process.

    The deployment of smart meter across the UK has now entered the pre-rollout stage, with tenders submitting offers for the delivery of new services.

    While smart meters have been in operation in the UK for some time, industries have only implemented meters sporadically, often based on user choice.

    Contracts up for biding include management of the overall project, data services provider and communications provider. Companies that have entered the bidding process include Capita, G4S, IBM and Telefonica.

    The national implementation of smart meters is set to begin in autumn 2015, with 50 million meters expected to be installed by 2020.

    Ofgem calls for competition measures to be enforced on energy giants

  • 19 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    IBM has revealed that cloud services and platforms are finally showing signs of strong uptake across Australia.

    Despite a lot of talk and hype surrounding the impact and employment of cloud and service based on the platform, past uptake of the services had been slow, however a new report by IBM suggests change.

    IBM has released a report entitled ‘Truth Behind the Trends’ which saw the IT giant question IT executives across Australia.

    The report found that past concerns regarding risks relating to data regulation and security had limited uptake, but that an increase in infrastructure had reversed this trend.

    IBM cloud expert Anton Lak said: “It's only in the last 12 months that we've seen an increased amount of infrastructure based in Australia, hence it is easier for Australian organisations to do it without concern".

    T-Mobile Austria moves to the cloud

  • 19 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Research by IDC market has revealed that an increasing number of high performance computing (HPC)sites have moved to employ big data within analytics, with more than two thirds now employing macro analysis.

    In 2013, 67 percent of HPC sites worldwide said that they carried out bid data analytics, with an average of 30 percent of computing processing power being devoted to the analysis of big data.

    The rise of big data usage within HPC sites is related to use in fraud detection programs, medicine and genomics, as well as increasing use in commercial analytics.

    The report also looked to the future of the market: “Data-driven businesses with a constant thirst for storing and analysing large quantities of data will force suppliers to develop big data–friendly solutions — solutions that are designed to minimize the movement of data and at the same time provide the economies of scale needed to store this data”.

    Banks move to enhance analytic capabilities

  • 17 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    A recent series of takeovers by Indian firms of foreign businesses has been fuelled by the availability of cheap loans from international banks.

    Low levels of inflation on loans from banks have allowed Indian business to pursue a model of rapid expansion in foreign sectors. Banks including Citigroup, Deutsche Bank and Standard Chartered have all moved to provide loans to Indian businesses, in a move that buckles the trend set in 2012 of moving away from providing loans to the country during the economic slump.

    Examples of the level of foreign investment in India can be seen in the acquisition of American based Cooper Tire & Rubber Co, by the much smaller Apollo Tyres Ltd for $2.5 billion, with investment from the banking sector funding the purchase outright.

    With expectations of a global financial recovery, Indian businesses are moving to capitalise on the future growth potential of foreign business. Foreign investment has become more important for long term expansion as the domestic market slows and the Indian economy begins to slow.

    Indian IT companies faced with rising U.S. costs

    India and Germany boost links through language education program

  • 14 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Ministry of Defence have undertaken the largest recruitment drive in the department’s history, with a target of 180 new staff to increase purchasing roles throughout varying different levels of seniority.

    The new procurement staff will be involved in making military purchases from everything from first aid equipment to heavy weaponry, with the majority or roles in the departments Defence Equipment and Support (DE&S) arm.

    The new staff will be also be used to fill gaps made from compulsory redundancy and retirements.

    Recruitment is set to be focused on professional candidates from within both the public and private sectors.

    MoD awards information management contract to existing suppliers

    MoD joins radio spectrum auction

  • 14 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) today has come a long way from where it started more than 20 years ago. Accenture has identified six distinct generations that cover the past, present, and future of the industry. Companies that want to get the most out of their BPO relationships should seek to understand this evolution and make sure they are at the forefront of the next generation of BPO.

    The Past

    Back in the early 1990s, the first generation of BPO was focused on cutting costs. Companies tended to outsource what were perceived as non-core operations, often around human resources, or finance and accounting. This outsourcing was characterised by the rebadging of organisations’ people and technology from client to provider in the same locations.

    The second generation of BPO was focused on offshoring, as global labour arbitrage made it possible to move jobs to where they could be done more cost effectively.

    A third generation of BPO saw companies outsourcing an increasingly wide range of functions with providers focused on industrialization and process efficiency. Leading providers began to use process methodologies like Lean Manufacturing and Six Sigma to bring standardisation to their operations.

    The Present

    While cost-cutting remains a valuable outcome from the early generations of BPO, many executives believe BPO can be a more sophisticated tool for driving innovation and business value.

    In fact, a survey by Horses for Sources and The Outsourcing Unit at The London School of Economics in 2011 demonstrated the gap that exists in achieving cost reduction and driving innovation. Respondents felt that 46 percent of outsourcing initiatives were effective at reducing operational costs. Yet only 11 percent of initiatives were seen by respondents as effective in providing new and creative methods of achieving business value.

    Today, in the fourth generation of BPO, leading providers are addressing this gap, mining vast quantities of client data and using analytics to extract actionable insights. This added value includes everything from accelerated speed to market, and stronger customer loyalty, to savvier talent management, and top-line growth.

    This generation of leading BPO providers are combining deep industry expertise with descriptive, and more importantly, predictive analytics to help executives understand exactly what is happening in their businesses at the moment, and what possibilities the future holds. Strategies can then be developed off the back of this insight, and the BPO provider becomes an active partner driving a client’s success.

    Out of this value-creation model, a fifth generation of BPO is emerging. It’s one that embraces not only analytics but software-as-a-service and mobile technology to provide a more flexible, on-demand BPO service, supplied across multiple clients through flexible software platforms. This generation of BPO is evolving and developing at the speed of the technology that supports it.

    The Future

    The history of BPO has been one of progress and development. But what does the future hold for BPO? What is the next generation?

    We believe that the continued adoption of social networking will help BPO move into a sixth generation. Business people are increasingly using such technologies to build networks where members share best and worst practices, and discuss solutions to problems. We envision using social networking as an extension to the fifth generation platforms centred on BPO-provided processes. The platforms created in the fifth generation would be supplemented by integrated online networks linking clients and providers.

    While many BPO providers are still stuck in the third generation, viewing BPO solely as a cost-reduction tool, this is increasingly out of step with what client organizations want from BPO. To get the most value for clients today, providers need to actively bring together the capabilities of fourth and fifth generation BPO to make a difference.

  • 14 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The NOA are happy to announce the shortlist for the inaugural Outsourcing Professional Awards. Those who have the distinction of being shortlisted are now in the position to compete with fellow shortlisted entries at the upcoming ceremony. This year the ceremony is set to take place in London at the Radission Blu Portman Hotel, immediately after the NOA’s Outsourcing Works Symposium on the 4th July.

    These shortlisted entries represent individuals and teams who have gone above and beyond to make outsourcing work. The awards are designed to display that outsourcing isn’t just about contracts, it’s about the people, and seek to recognise the talents of the relationship managers, operations directors, CIOs, consultants, lawyers et al- who drive and achieve outstanding success within the industry.

    -------------------------------------------------------

    Outsourcing Rising Star of the Year

    Christophe Regad, Zurich Insurance Group

    David Lewis - Marks and Spencer

    Dessislava Abbott - 60k

    Juan Crosby - CMS

    Michael Leeson - CGI

    Simon Shenton - Deloitte

    Victoria Kane - Conduit

    Outsourcing Supplier Professional of the Year

    Alan Jaszewski - Stellar Europe

    Javed Golder - Wipro

    Mark Cleary - Conduit

    Best Advisor of the Year

    Barry Matthews - Source

    Juan Crosby - CMS

    Rakesh Sangani - Proservartner

    Award for Academic Achievement

    Amanda Wright - Standard Life

    Christopher Day - The Phoenix Group

    Debbie Tallis - Zurich

    William Carson - Teleformance

    Best Procurement Team

    Centrica (British Gas)

    Land Registry

    West Sussex County Council

    Best Relationship Management Team

    The Phoenix Group

    Thomson Reuters

    Zurich Insurance Group

    Best IT Outsourcing Team

    HCL Technologies

    Xchanging

    Best Finance & Accounts Outsourcing Team

    Capgemini BPO

    SKS Business Services

    Best Outsourced Customer Service Team

    60k - Thomas Cook

    Conduit - NHS Direct Service Team

    Best Business Process Outsourcing Team

    60k

    SPi Global

    Best Offshored Outsourcing Team

    60k - Thomas Cook

    Aegis

    arvato UK & Ireland

    Award for Skills Development Programme of the Year

    arvato UK & Ireland

    BPeSA

    Hudson & Yorke Ltd

    Further information can be found here.

  • 13 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    When running a business and finding ways to save money, procurement is often not the starting point. It should be. Often organisations, for a number of different reasons, don’t approach their procurement strategically. This is odd, because rationally, it is not hard to see how the way an organisation purchases goods and services can impact a bottom line.

    Procurement is often overlooked, however, because organisations, especially ones that are large and complex, get into a way of doing things and change seems to be a huge undertaking. To continually question the value of all purchases and re-evaluate long-standing relationships with suppliers it does take a change of mind-set. But no matter how much of a mammoth task, investigating your procurement approach can be very enlightening and bring significant financial rewards to your company.

    If your procurement strategy has never been analysed, it might be worth thinking about why not. It’s safe to say the potential risks from ineffective procurement outweigh the reasons for not taking the time and resource to investigate.

    In this series of blogs I will be covering the full procurement process from start to finish. I’ll begin with how to set-up procurement so it has the best possible chance of success.

    My first two pieces of advice:

    1. Procurement can often be treated like a back-office function, hidden away from the consumer-facing frontline of the business, and this is a mistake. Procurement professionals need strong connections and regular interactions with the frontline to check how their buying decisions are impacting customers. Senior stakeholders need to trust their procurement teams to work closely with the people in the businesses that are directly affected by what is bought. In the next blog I will give examples of how this can work in practice.

    2. Someone needs to lead: until the powers that be decide that a function needs to perform better, nothing will change. Targets and objectives need to be set from the top down and senior executives would be wise to realise the potential benefits a more intelligent approach to procurement could bring. One of the quickest ways to understand this is in acknowledging the risks of a poor process.

    In the following blogs, I’ll be giving practical advice using case studies and tips

    about what needs to happen to bring about positive, significant and sustainable changes to your organisation’s procurement processes.

    About Richard McIntosh

    Richard is Managing Director of INVERTO UK, an international management consultancy specialising in procurement. He has led and delivered many procurement consulting assignments, particularly strategic sourcing, organisation and process re-design and people and skills development. He has worked across many sectors, private, public and not-for-profit, leading procurement projects for clients such as Nokia, Visa, Aberdeen Asset Management, eircom, the Ministry of Defence and the NHS.

  • 13 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The decision to proceed with the troubled Lorenzo patient record systems has been heavily criticised by the parliamentary Public Accounts Committee.

    The Lorenzo scheme to be delivered by CSC, has seen repeated and significant delays, with millions spent without targets being met.

    The criticism from the Public Accounts Committee came from a meeting between NHS executives and the committee with the revelation that the NHS is still set to pay nearly £600 million for the patient system.

    The sum was driven by further payments including £100 million paid to CSC to renegotiate on new ‘key milestones’, which drew further condemnation from the parliamentary group, as CSC had failed to deliver on multiple objectives within the original program.

    Public Accounts Committee chair Margaret Hodge called the CSC record system, “hopeless”.

    Negotiations between CSC and NHS extended

    CSC admits NHS account errors

  • 13 Jun 2013 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Ministry of Justice has pulled the plug on its End User Computing £300 million procurement programme.

    The programme was designed to cover 2,300 sites within the UK, but issues including high costs and a divergence between the government’s ICT procurement strategy, which seeks to promote the use of SME suppliers, and the large enterprise level companies that were shortlisted, resulted in the halt to the process.

    The UK government is now expected to seeks to divide the contract into even smaller components and move closer to the over ICT public sector strategy, with the procurement process restarting at a later date.

    Ministry of Justice’s handling of outsourcing is ‘shambolic’

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