Industry news

  • 8 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    WNS (Holdings) Limited has announced it has entered into a strategic partnership with GT Nexus to deliver platform-based BPO services and solutions to the Shipping and Logistics industry.

    According to the agreement, WNS and GT Nexus will jointly work towards providing shippers, forwarders, 3PLs and carriers with improved quality of service for their end-customers and reduced costs in areas such as documentation, freight management, contracts, pricing and analytics.

    “The shipping and logistics industry has been facing multiple pressures created by unfavorable economic conditions,” said Keshav R. Murugesh, Group CEO, WNS. “There is a strong need within the industry for managed services to help shift inefficient and manual transactions onto a global digital platform. We believe that the integration of GT Nexus’s proven cloud-based technology platform with WNS’ deep domain knowledge and operational process excellence will help companies effectively manage this transition.”

    “One of the big opportunities for BPO providers is to build entire practices and services around existing, mature cloud technology platforms,” said Aaron Sasson, CEO of GT Nexus. “Through this partnership, WNS is taking advantage of our cloud supply chain platform and offering a much needed new service for the international logistics industry. WNS has made it simple for companies in shipping and logistics to move to a complete digital transaction business process.”

  • 8 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Innovation is required if the United States is to regain the level of productivity that it enjoyed toward the end of the 19th Century through the mid-20th Century. However, innovation by itself is not enough. Just as our parents and grandparents adopted electricity, the automobile, credit cards and airplanes in the period from 1870-1950, businesses and organizations of the 21st Century must embrace change.

    This is one of the conclusions of the McKinsey Global Institute Report on Productivity, prepared by McKinsey & Company in February 2011. “U. S. infrastructure is not only inadequate to meet the needs of a dynamic, growing, and productive economy, but its quality has been in relative decline. The United States today ranks 23rd (among worldwide economies) in the quality of its infrastructure. There is major scope for the United States to identify and implement leading-edge practices from project selection to financing and delivery, sometimes through public-private partnerships,” the report stated.

    An area that is singled out by McKinsey as a potential significant contributor to greater productivity is the implementation of business and technology innovations that will improve supply-chain integration and how goods and services are provided to customers. Integral to this are best procurement practices.

    These practices must facilitate communications and collaboration, in a transparent way, between the buyer and vendors. They also must automate workflow and establish accountability among all participants, and they must be adaptable to a customer’s changing needs.

    To be more specific, timely processing and production must be ensured from the moment an idea is conceived to when the finished product is packaged, delivered and invoiced. Delays must be avoided. Duplication of orders and tasks also must be avoided by using one communications and workflow system. The same system, with related processes and procedures, must make it possible to maximize efficiencies so work can be done by the vendor during peak and off-peak periods. Throughout, communications must be clear to avoid wasting time and inventory and service errors.

    Fundamental to the success of such a procurement approach is establishing trust between the buyer and the vendor. This is one of the problems with traditional procurement methods because often the buyer is simply making a decision based on pricing or perhaps a personal relationship. Through procurement innovation, such as the automated vendor selection technology, the buyer thoroughly screens each vendor. Approved vendors then are added to the buyer’s pool of vendors. Once in the buyer’s vendors pool, the vendor remains to compete for all job opportunities for which it is qualified. The ideal number of vendors in a pool is a couple of dozen with varying capabilities so all the buyer’s job needs will be met at a moment’s notice.

    Automated vendor selection is a process that is as quick as the click of a computer mouse. The computer then compares the buyer’s detailed job specifications with the capabilities of vendors in the pool, and, subsequently, the vendors best qualified to do the work are invited to bid realizing that low bid wins. Bids of 25% to 50% lower than standard rates are typically submitted because the winning vendor has identified non-scheduled production time during which the job can be done at lowered rates. All tasks and communications are managed and archived by the web-based communications and workflow system that powers the automated vendor selection process.

    This is the type procurement innovation that organizations must adopt if productivity gains are to be realized.

    While procurement by itself will not boost U. S. productivity, procurement is an important ingredient if the United States is to regain productivity levels with fewer workers, less investment capital and growing worldwide competition – all pressures never before experienced to the degree that they are being felt today.

  • 4 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Insourcing and outsourcing within the service supply chain are still not working, so how can the eternal problem be solved?

    As official GDP figures show, the UK is once again in recession, businesses are looking to strip waste wherever possible to remain buoyant and profitable.

    The insource versus outsource debate has long been discussed across all industries, but neither has become the defacto as both have continued to encounter problems. As a solution to this, a new proposition being brought to the market; leansource.

    Mike Heslop, founder of Centrex Services and creator of the new concept, argues that combining sourcing principles and applying lean methodology provides the key to successful supply chain management.

    Lean on me

    When Toyota first brought lean principles to the manufacturing world they created a revolution in the way waste and value were approached. Essentially focussing resource only on goals which create value for the end customer, lean principles strip processes and expenditure which don’t work to achieve that value.

    In all businesses, the stripping of waste is key to maximising profit margins and outsourcing has been a key bone of contention in the waste debate for many years. Outsourcing often seems like the logical option for business but the decision to outsource is too often based on short-term benefits such as cost reduction, with no assessment of the long-term impact of the decision.

    The same principles apply to insourcing, which may seem like a quick fix in the short term, but ultimately ties up valuable staff resource which could be focused on other core business critical tasks, and is not scalable.

    It is vital that a business considers the impact of decisions such as outsourcing on its customers and the business’s effectiveness. In my view, any change in the supply chain that doesn’t add value to the customer is a waste. Much like the traditional lean principles, the leansource methodology questions what, where, when and why sourcing decisions are made from this very simple but effective standpoint.

    Changing times

    Traditionally within the service supply chain, the two options available to businesses have been either to outsource to a third party or in-source to a standalone team. However, the rapidly changing world of technology has surpassed the traditional supply chain model, which is not designed to keep up with these rapid changes. Equally management structures and practices, and even the boardroom are often not equipped to react to these increasingly complex supply chains. The answer to this is an approach which takes the core principles of lean manufacturing and applies them to service supply chain solutions, to eliminate waste and improve service, simplifying the whole process.

    Over a number of years, I have come to the firm conclusion that we should not outsource or insource – but leansource. It’s a methodology within the supply chain that delivers remarkable cost and service advantages, through a single touch supply chain solution. The issue with the traditional outsource supply chain model is that with multiple suppliers come multiple opportunities for disconnects within that supplier infrastructure.

    For example if one outsourced supplier is waiting on parts delivery with which to repair an item, and the delivery is delayed, they will not only fail to meet their service level agreement (SLA), but the end customer’s business will also be impacted by equipment down-time.

    The logical solution to this problem is to implement a simple end-to-end supply chain solution which incorporates initial call handling, stock management, field service, logistics, repair and close. By closely coordinating these elements of any service supply chain, (as this doesn’t only apply to the IT sector), not only is the potential for delays and disconnects removed, but the ‘blame culture’ which can often form part and parcel of these supplier infrastructures is eliminated. This is what we term as connected process thinking, essentially the antithesis of supply chain silos.

    Lean mean machine

    The sheer labyrinthine size of the traditional supply chain model has left the industry fragmented and confused with little or no accountability. By implementing a complete end-to-end solution which incorporates a single point of contact for service, repair and disposal, the time-span for this process is also reduced. As there is no multiple party liaison required between out-sourced providers there are no delays related to communication breakdown, or jobs being passed back and forth between those providers.

    Perhaps most importantly of all from a business perspective, the leansource approach reduces costs associated with the service, maintenance and disposal of parts within the service supply chain. The multiple outsourced supplier model results in costs growing exponentially in parallel with the number of suppliers, and by reducing the number of suppliers the costs are in turn reduced.

    The leansource approach increases the level of responsibility the supplier has for a client company and as they are responsible for all aspects of the service supply chain will provide the best solutions available rather than the cheapest or quickest. Advocation of replacement rather than repair when repair is an option so a complex or unprofitable job can be passed to another supplier, is also eradicated with leansource.

    Leansource eliminates waste and improves service. It radically changes the mentality that is applied in the typical supply chain and allows manufacturers to reach customers in a different way. By identifying the inefficiencies in supply chain silos, leansource challenges each process, culminating in a chain that is valuable, capable, available, adequate and flexible. The leansource supply chain exceeds service level agreement and removes inefficiencies, placing the customer at the heart of the service. Using leansource enables companies to easily manage service supply chains by simplifying the complexities of hardware maintenance and add value to their service supply chains, enabling them to rise above the competition.

  • 4 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) has released further information regarding its Mobile Infrastructure Project (MIP).

    The government has released an online tender for a single vendor, which aims to extend mobile coverage to 60,000 homes and businesses in rural parts of the UK.

    The project aims to deliver the coverage to areas that have been ignored by market driven private investment, due to a lack of business opportunities.

    The contract is estimated to be worth up to £200 million.

    The MIP was first announced in released in the latest budget, which stated that the plans were being executed "support technological innovation and help the digital, creative and other high technology industries".

    Suppliers have until the end of May to register their interest.

  • 4 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The website of the UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) has been taken offline following a cyber-attack.

    Soca confirmed to the BBC that soca.gov.uk had suffered a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack.

    A spokesman said the site was taken offline at 22:30 on Wednesday, but that the attack did not "pose a security risk to the organisation".

  • 4 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    MasterCard today announced several near field communications (NFC) enabled smartphones have been certified for use with MasterCard PayPass technology.

    The technology will provide consumers with devices capable of making fast, secure contactless payments at PayPass merchant locations around the globe.

    The new MasterCard-certified devices include the BlackBerry, HTC, Samsung and Nokia phones.

    The MasterCard PayPass Ready identifier will signify a device is available for commercial deployment of PayPass, and can be included as a sticker on the approved device. Nokia and BlackBerry-maker RIM are among the first handset manufacturers committed to supporting the brand mark.

    “Nokia is honored that the Nokia Lumia 610 NFC will be one the world’s first smartphones to include MasterCard’s PayPass Ready brand mark,” said Andrea Bacioccola, NFC Lead Program Manager, Nokia. “This sends a clear message to operators, banks and other service providers that Nokia is able to quickly enable their payment services on this smartphone.”

  • 4 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    IBM has announced an agreement to acquire analytics software firm Tealeaf Technology. The acquisition is subject to customary closing conditions and regulatory clearance, and is expected to close in the second quarter of 2012.

    With this agreement, IBM extends its Smarter Commerce initiative by adding qualitative analytics capabilities that provide chief marketing officers (CMOs), e-commerce and customer service professionals with real-time and automated insights into online customer buying experiences across online and mobile devices.

    “Tealeaf's patented technology can be deployed into a business’s current environment with no needed modifications so they begin capturing customer data and delivering optimal experiences immediately,” said Rebecca Ward, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Tealeaf. “IBM Smarter Commerce is the perfect fit for Tealeaf and further establishes IBM as the leading partner for businesses looking to succeed in today’s fast evolving environment.”

  • 3 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Google has successfully defeated Microsoft in competing for the US Department of the Interior (DOI) contract worth $35 million to supply email and cloud apps.

    The seven year contract which had originally placed Microsoft as the preferred vendor has been won by Google after a lawsuit claiming bias towards Microsoft. The Google proposal was $14 million less than the proposal offered by Microsoft according to the Wall Street Journal.

    Microsoft have said: “Although we are disappointed by this award, we will engage with our partners and DoI to review and understand the reasons for this decision.”

  • 3 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    BSkyB extends there partnership with global BPO outsourcing company, Firstsource Solutions, in a three year contract to provide and increase customer service management support.

    The contract will cover Sky’s customers of more than 10 million across its TV and broadband services, and will include the expansion of customer service sites to Belfast and Cardiff which will together employ over 900 staff.

    Matthew Vallance, Firstsource’s CEO and Managing Director, said: “Our addition of new facilities to support the expansion of Sky’s business marks an exciting juncture in our relationship, and provides us with a platform for a wider and deeper partnership.”

  • 3 May 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    arvato has won a contract to provide benefits assessment services for Derby City Council. The contract was won based on Arvato’s flexible approach and from the results of an initial contract set up in 2011.

    The contract was tendered in order to combat the rise in benefits application seen by Derby Council of 14 percent in the past four years.

    Kath Gruber, director of customer management, Derby City Council, said: “We were impressed with the close working relationship and best practice shared by arvato in our initial contract.”

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