Industry news

  • 6 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) is hoping to save over £100 million through a new shared services system, according to Justice Secretary Kenneth Clarke.

    The news comes following previous criticism of the MoJ’s £14 million per annum spend on implementing enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, a huge figure compared to the Department of Health (DH), that declared a spend of only £1.4 million per year on ERP.

    The MoJ’s comparatively high spend is borne out of having three separate ERP systems from the prison, probation and court agencies. The three systems are set to be replaced in 2013 by a single shared service and the move is expected to save £102 million over ten years in costs.

    However, the introduction of the new system is also expected to make huge ‘real’ savings in efficiencies. Clarke said “The new solution will deliver significant savings of £40m per annum through increased efficiency, reduced systems maintenance and support and improved management information. These benefits are quoted excluding any sharing of our platform by other departments and will increase should this occur.”

  • 5 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Global business outsourcing partner arvato, has expanded its Supply Chain Solutions leadership team with the appointment of Joe Fogg as UK Business Development Director.

    Joe Fogg has over twenty years’ experience in the supply chain sector, gained during business development and management positions at DHL, TNT Express Worldwide, and most recently at Norbert Dentressangle. During that time, Fogg developed large turnkey and end to end solutions for leading international brands.

    Based in the UK, Fogg will focus on developing arvato’s existing supply chain relationships and generating new business in core growth markets such as technology, telecommunications and healthcare/beauty as well as e-commerce fulfilment. The company has recently won new contracts for clients including Bosch Power Tools UK, and has expanded several of its client relationships, including Sony Music UK and Universal Music UK to roll out e-commerce fulfilment solutions.

    Markus Schmücker, Managing Director, Supply Chain Solutions at arvato, said: “Joe’s appointment strongly supports our business development strategy. He has an extremely impressive track record in the industry – his insight and expertise complement our strong heritage and will enable us to accelerate our growth in the supply chain market. I look forward to working closely with Joe to develop our business.”

  • 5 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The government has pledged £100,000 to the Council of Europe's Global Project on Cybercrime.

    The funding was announced by foreign secretary William Hague and forms part of the nation's commitment to help tackle cyber crime.

    William Hague said: "At the London Conference on Cyberspace I made clear that the rapid rise of cyber crime is a growing threat to people across the world and the need for co-ordinated response to improve security, enhance co-operation between states and ensure a collective undertaking to address this threat."

    "I am therefore delighted the UK will be supporting the Council of Europe Global Project on Cybercrime. This will bring real benefits - including by working together with entrepreneurs and companies whose innovation is as crucial to the future as it has been to our past."

  • 5 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Senior police officers have strongly defended the radical extension of the role of private companies in policing, saying they should be involved in protecting the public and bringing offenders to justice.

    The comments from the Association of Chief Police Officers follow the disclosure by the Guardian that the West Midlands and Surrey police authorities have invited private security companies to bid for a wide range of services, including criminal investigations, patrolling neighbourhoods and detaining suspects.

  • 5 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    ZTE Corporation, a leading global provider of telecommunications equipment and network solutions, has announced the company will deliver the next stage of the LTE infrastructure network rollout for operator Hi3G in Sweden as it builds out the industry’s first LTE TDD/FDD dual-mode network.

    ZTE has delivered and installed the first stage of the network since it was first announced in March, 2011. This was the world's first commercial network of green dual-mode LTE base stations.

    For the contract extension, ZTE will deliver the SDR-based infrastructure equipment to upgrade the operator's 3G network in Sweden.

  • 5 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    CA Technologies has announced that Simula Research Laboratory will standardise on the CA AppLogic® turnkey cloud platform to accelerate and streamline the deployment of cloud services.

    The Norwegian state-owned research organisation will use the platform to enable research staff to quickly and easily deploy scalable Web applications with minimal intervention from IT staff. This approach to CA Technologies Business Service Innovation will help Simula drive faster, more efficient basic and long-term research in the fields of networks and distributed systems, scientific computing, and software engineering.

    “The CA AppLogic cloud platform will allow Simula to provision and deploy research-based applications in hours instead of days,” says Gunnar Carelius, IT manager, Simula. “Previously, the IT team devoted a large amount of time and resources to configuring servers and infrastructure at the request of researchers, in support of their individual research applications. Using the CA AppLogic platform, the researchers will have self-service access to cloud computing resources, core computing power, storage, operating systems, and applications. This will help ensure that underlying technology does not delay Simula’s research programs.”

  • 2 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Alder Hey Children's and Liverpool Women's NHS foundation trusts are in the process of planning what could be a first between NHS Trusts: a major IT outsourcing contract.

    The two trusts already share IT services and a CIO. They are looking for a supplier to provide ICT technology for the new Children's Health Park hospital, due to open in 2014.

    The intent is to engage a single supplier, for an initial seven years but with a possible three year extension. The estimated deal value is £31.5m.

  • 2 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Over 120,000 people have downloaded Barclays Bank’s Pingit mobile banking app.

    Barclays current account holders can make payments worth between £1 and £300 to people in their mobile contact list. Payments clear in seconds.

    The app is hosted in a private cloud that plugs straight into the core IT infrastructure.

  • 2 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    DWP is set to be be the first government department to action the latest Cabinet Office identity assurance guidelines, with universal credit and personal independent payments to be the first affected.

    The framework has been issued in support of the government’s ‘digital by default’ policy. The plan will see all major departments adopt identity assurance plans, for users accessing government services.

  • 2 Mar 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Offshoring is often thought to be a risky business. But risk and reward go hand-in-hand; they’ve been stepping out together longer than Prince Phillip and The Queen. And nowhere in the outsourcing world are risks more prominent.

    For risks in offshoring are manifold – only by deeply understanding the nuances of offshoring can you identify, account for and attempt to minimise the potential for disasters.

    Broadly speaking, the risks associated with offshore are strategic, financial, process and technology, regulatory/legal. Mr Ritesh Gandhi of Infosys BPO ran thorough examples of specific types of risk in these categories and their impact on the wider organisation.

    Mr Gandhi then moved on to how things go wrong, explaining the failure points of neglecting to plan properly and the impact of offshoring on people in your company. When you offshore, staff are either made redundant, or redeployed or rebadged. Mr Ghandi spoke about using external advisors to help with the change management, before moving on to detail how companies offshoring need not just look at the current legal landscape offshore, but into the future, to foresee potential regulatory change. His presentation also covered a host of things to think about when selecting an offshore vendor, and the problems that a lack of experience can bring about. Failing to choose the right mode of evaluation i.e. arm’s length vs collaborative or overestimating an organisation’ delivery competence due to getting sucked in by an expert sales team can be fatal.

    Ashley Winton, Partner at legal firm White & Case was next to present. He opened with a brief run through of Data Protection regulation then moved swiftly on focusing on the intersect between contractual terms and insurance policies. He moved his attention to governance and contractual mechanisms to anticipate of risk and distribute liability, before explaining how best to deal with poor performance. Another key risk in offshoring is law variations, international versions of standards akin to ISOs – Ashley closed his presentation by discussing these.

    Clients often perceive that the client has less control over its data when outsourcing. This was the initial focus of Mark Fishleigh of Detica. Fears of malicious or criminal employees in positions of trust or vendors using IP to enter into direct competition are among the many worries of offshorers old and new. Mark got into the nuts and bolts of security and confidentially metrics, due diligence and insurance. This included a study on insurance clauses account for quality and scope of coverage for all your key risks, and in keeping with Mr Ghandi’s presentation, he talked of looking into the future and predicting changes.

    The final presentation of the day came from Emily Freeman of Lockton International, who compared the client vs outsourcing vendor view of risk. She talked about deals with vendors as the insurance underwriter and paranoia sets in when deep in discussions, that don't translate to contracts. In some situations, IP is not always secure, not just trade secrets but wealth of know-how and sensitive corporate information.

    The group then divided into small teams for a ‘mock’ case study, that focussed upon ‘Peter’ a fictional outsourcer, and wannabe offshorer – the task was to help Peter, by pooling the groups knowledge to prepare a robust offshoring strategy. The interactive facets are always the most popular parts of the session – and the group was highly engaged throughout.

    In summary, it would seem that probability of risk has not changed but impact has got greater.There are many different profiles of risks. Maturer destinations have different risks than less developed ones – risk changes with maturity, and each country has its own culture and characteristics. Take time to get to know the people, and you’ll get to know the financial implications in due course – and due diligence. Never rush. Make sure you study the local laws, and always, always get the contract and the insurance working in perfect synergy.

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