Industry news

  • 12 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    MITIE Group PLC, the strategic outsourcing and energy services company, has announced that it has acquired the leading energy and carbon management specialist Utilyx Holdings Limited.

    Utilyx provides a number of services relating to its clients’ energy demands including strategic planning, procurement and risk management, all of which are designed to manage the business impact of energy consumption and rising energy costs.

    MITIE is ranked as the second largest energy services company in the UK, providing a full range of integrated services that help its clients manage their energy use and carbon footprint. MITIE’s energy services proposition supports all the key energy issues facing businesses and public sector organisations across the UK.

  • 12 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Spanish banking giant BBVA is switching its 110,000 staff to use Google's range of enterprise software.

    The deal is the biggest that the search giant has signed with one company for its cloud-computing services, where software is offered as a service via the internet.

    The bank told the BBC it would use Google's tools only for internal communication.

    But the deal can be seen as a breakthrough in corporate adoption.

  • 12 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Philippines Trade and Industry Secretary Gregory L. Domingo is alarmed by the anti-outsourcing sentiment in the Obama administration even as he vowed to mount a strong lobby in the US Congress against a proposed bill that seeks to ban outsourcing and offshoring activities of American companies of their non-core functions to other countries including the Philippines.

    “We are very concerned about it and we will lobby in the US Congress primarily through our embassy led by Ambassador Jose Cuisia Jr. and also through the Filipino communities in the US,” Domingo said.

  • 12 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Recognising innovation as a systematic business process is far more important than just creating “an innovation”. If a company is to be a market leader, it must set the “pace of innovation”. To become a serial innovator, a company will need to view innovation as an ongoing business process that spans all the dimensions of the business innovation.

    Most companies equate innovation with the development of new products. But creating new products is only one of ten types of innovation, and on its own, it provides the least return.

    Doblin, the renowned design firm started by Jay Doblin of Chicago’s IIT Institute of Design, works with clients using a framework of Ten Types of Innovation, which can help to identify new opportunities in finance, process, offering and delivery. Companies that are able to simultaneously innovate across multiple innovation types will develop offerings that are more difficult to copy and that generate higher returns.

    There are two types of innovation that can present new opportunities in finance, business model and network and alliance innovation. Business model innovation is about how businesses make money. For example, Dell revolutionised the personal computer business model by collecting money before the consumer's PC was even assembled and shipped, resulting in net positive working capital of seven to eight days. Networks and alliance innovation is where businesses can join forces with other companies for mutual benefits. By outsourcing operations that are not part of a business’s core competencies, organisations can spend more time on the things that matter.

    New opportunities in process can be identified through enabling process and core process innovation. Enabling process innovation is how businesses support the company’s core processes and workers. For example, Starbucks can deliver its profitable store/coffee experience to customers because it offers better-than market compensation and employment benefits to its store workers-- usually part time, educated, professional, and responsive people. Core process innovations help to create and add value to your offerings. In the retail sector, real-time inventory management systems, aggressive volume/ pricing/delivery contracts with merchandise providers, and systems that give store managers the ability to identify changing buyer behaviours and respond quickly with new pricing and merchandising configurations, are all core process innovations that can all help to create and add value.

    There are three types of innovation which can help identify new opportunities in offerings, product performance innovation, product system innovation and service innovation. Product performance innovation aids businesses in designing their core offerings.

    The VW Beetle (in its original and its newest form) took the market by storm, as it combined multiple dimensions of product performance. Product system innovation is how businesses link and/or provide a platform for multiple products. This can be achieved by bundling a variety of specific products into a package that benefits the customer. Service innovation helps businesses provide value to customers and consumers beyond and around their products. This is going above and beyond for the customer providing them with the best services possible throughout the product lifecycle.

    New opportunities in delivery can be obtained through channel, brand and customer experience innovation. Channel innovation is how businesses get their offerings to market. Businesses must ensure that they pick the right routes to market by understanding their customer’s needs and where they purchase products. Brand innovation is how businesses communicate their offerings. Absolut conquered the vodka category on the strength of a "theme and variations" advertising concept, strong bottle and packaging design, and a whiff of Nordic authenticity.

    How your customers feel when they interact with your company and its offerings is called customer experience innovation. Harley Davidson has created a worldwide community of millions of customers, many of whom would describe "being a Harley Davidson owner" as a part of how they fundamentally see, think, and feel about themselves.

    As we can see, innovation can take many forms and by using this framework, businesses will be able to identify new opportunities in finance, process, offerings, and delivery. However businesses should not focus on one area or type of innovation but should ensure that this entire framework is woven into the fabric of the organisation to achieve the best results and biggest return.

  • 12 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Outsourcing these days is synonymous with cost-cutting – in the face of economic down-turn, reducing costs is the main motivator. Sending your non-core work out to a specialist third party will inevitably save you money, and will also will free up resources to concentrate on the business you are truly in. ‘Sticking to the knitting’ will make you more nimble in your core markets, which in turn, should increase revenue. So outsourcing is an effective strategy for growth, as well the obvious cost benefits of letting experts optimise your back office.

    Outsourcing is even more beneficial for small businesses. Smaller teams, and less capital to invest, amplifies the impact of the benefits. SMEs employees’ time is better spent on activities that bring money into the business, and factors such as costs of software can prove prohibitive to buying outright.

    This advice focuses on sending work out, but should help SME supplier companies understand their customers better as well.

    When sending work out, it is important, right from the outset, to know exactly what you hope to achieve, for you cannot outsource until you have clearly defined business objectives and an idea about how outsourcing fits into your existing strategy. For sometimes outsourcing is not the answer at all. Many organisations decide to outsource first, then decide who talk to, without deciding what they actually want. This is a recipe for disaster. Before you speak to suppliers, you must be clear about what you want to do. For example, you want a faster network. More first time resolutions on customer service issues. A slicker supply chain.

    Once you know where you want to be, you need to assess where you are already. A comprehensive as-is assessment allows you to establish the clear baseline of performance data. How fast is your network? How many faults? It will help you understand your current weaknesses, and might give you an opportunity to fix them without outsourcing. Even if you feel sure your issues cannot be fixed without outsourcing, preparing a business case for both routes – in or out – will forearm you for the request for proposal stage.

    Before you set about preparing to solicit tenders, you need to assemble your deal team. Ensure all key stakeholders are represented here – their motivations may well be at odds. Only by communicating business objectives and involving all groups from the outset will you achieve the universal buy-in required to make your outsourcing deal work.

    The next step is to find the right vendor. Engage the market with an attitude that gives the supplier the freedom to succeed. It is the results you should focus on, the innovations and processes that the vendor will use is up to them.

    When selecting a vendor, closely examine their credentials. Do they have a track record of successful delivery of similar projects? All backed up by references? Thorough checks need to be made on financial stability, technical competence, infrastructure and working practices. Meet a selection of companies face to face; invest time assessing the various proposals. Rigorously explore the range of operating and commercial models on offer. Find the one best-equipped to deliver your needs.

    Another thing to consider at the tender stage is cultural fit. Management teams will be working together on a daily basis. Employees may be transferred to the partner organisation as part of the contract. It is absolutely vital that the values and culture of the organisations are aligned. The only way to truly assess this is to spend time with the team and monitor the chemistry. Speaking directly to managers already dealing with the vendor is another great way of getting a feel for their working culture. This is particularly pertinent when considering offshoring, where you can often find differences extend much further than the challenges of being in different time zones.

    When negotiations begin, focus on getting to the right contract. By that, I don’t so much mean the legal document as ‘the deal.’ But, as the actual legal written agreement will form the basis of the on-going relationship, it’s crucial to get it right at its inception. The Service Level Agreement sets out the expectations of both parties in detail. It should clearly define success and failure, but should not be overburdened with excessive metrics. Some outsourcing contracts have about 80 metrics. Truly optimised contracts have less than 10. Less is definitely more; there is a tendency, under a deluge of information, not to use it wisely. Concentrate on the big issues at the centre of the original business case. Also, beware ‘real time reporting,’ which can lead to rash decision making.

    Before you sign the contract, consider your exit strategy. All too often, exit doesn’t get the attention it deserves until it is on the horizon – when it’s too late, and you are painted into a corner, surrounded by exit charges. That’s when costs can skyrocket. Although it is not possible to design a detailed exit strategy at the signing stage, a good contract includes covenants to test and update exit clauses throughout the outsourcing life cycle. The full plan will include provisions for replacing supplier-owned technology, secure transfer of intellectual property and avoiding supplier lock-in, keeping your options open on a re-tender.

    Beware contracts stating ‘no additional costs on exit’ – these regularly lead to suppliers under-servicing at the contract’s end, incurring additional, unplanned for costs.

    Although the SLA is not something to wave in your vendors face, you will require strong governance through the life of the contract. Build in incentives to reward positive behaviour. This is the best way to ensure supplier compliance, and get the best out of the deal through the outsourcing life cycle.

    Over the years, we have learned that optimal collaboration needs to be taught. To level the outsourcing playing field, we created the post-grad NOA Pathway Programme. Honing outsourcing relationships for true partnership is never easy. Accreditation will smooth the way; it engenders trust and respect, fostering the spirit of collaboration and shared values required for true outsourcing excellence. For outsourcing relationships must never be one-sided. By their very nature, successful contracts are a joint effort, designed for mutual satisfaction.

    Working together to create value for each other.

    Remember – outsourcing is a relationship. There will be good days and bad days. There will be teething troubles. There may well be arguments. Resolving issues, quickly and amicably, is all about communication. Regular meetings - both formal and informal – should be a feature of the relationship, and, therefore, should be built into the contract. Signing the contract is just the beginning – think of the SLA as a living document, to be amended as circumstances change throughout the outsourcing life cycle. For more information on the National Outsourcing Associations Life Cycle Model, visit www.noa.co.uk

  • 11 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    AstraZeneca reaffirms outlook after a leak to sell-side analysts

    AstraZeneca reaffirmed short and medium-term forecasts this morning after an inadvertant leak of an out-of-date spreadsheet templeta to sell-side analyst community in connection with a routine consensus estimate collection process had raised some questions. AstraZeneca maintains 2011 expextations communicated on December 20th.

  • 11 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Havering Council reports cost savings of £1.5 million per annum following a transformation of its back-office IT systems and business processes carried out through partnering with Capgemini UK plc. The Council says that the savings will rise to £2.5 million per annum once the second and final phase of the transformation is completed in April 2012. Havering Council is the local authority for the London Borough of Havering, which has a population of 230,000, and Capgemini UK plc is part of the Capgemini Group, one of the world’s foremost providers of consulting, technology and outsourcing services.

    The first phase of the transformation project, completed in just ten months, encompassed the majority of back-office functions at Havering including finance, payroll, HR and procurement, and has resulted in a significant reduction in paperwork and bureaucracy. A multiplicity of complex procedures has been replaced by simplified and standardised business processes based on proven international best practice. The project also involved migrating the Council from ageing earlier-generation IT systems to the latest Oracle enterprise-wide suite of business applications, custom-designed for UK local authorities.

    Andrew BlakeHerbert, Group Director of Finance and Commerce at the London Borough of Havering, said: ‘Working with Capgemini, we have transformed our back office from being a largely paper-driven bureaucracy into a focused, modern and efficient business model - saving millions of pounds in the process. The first tranche of savings resulting from this transformation is already in the bank. Over the next five years we expect to save at least £15 million in back office cost, helping us protect frontline services for local people while managing large reductions in Government funding. We don’t know of any other local authority in the UK that has successfully managed such a wide-ranging change programme in such a short space of time.’

  • 11 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Accenture plc will now provide information technology support services to the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Financial terms of the deal were kept confidential. The IT support services contract includes one base year with four option periods.

    As per the agreement terms, Accenture will install, test and supervise an enterprise resource planning system to support the FBI’s Human Resources Information System. The new system installation will help FBI to modernize its HRIS unit and make its operations more effective and streamlined.

  • 11 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Eduserv has launched the Education Cloud – a suite of cloud services that will help universities and researchers combat the peaks and troughs in compute and storage requirements, meet the flexible demands of researchers and provide off-site disaster recovery facilities.

    Eduserv’s Education Cloud features compute and storage offerings under both VMware vCloud and OpenStack, and supports virtual machines running Windows and Linux.

    Andy Powell, Eduserv Research Programme Director, comments: “Funding from the University Modernisation Fund enabled us to develop cloud infrastructure to host a number of SaaS pilot projects. We have used what we learnt during the pilot to develop a cloud offering that we believe will meet the specific needs of Higher Education Institutions professionals and students. It has direct connectivity to the JANET backbone, which is dedicated to education and research, and all data will remain in the UK at all times.”

  • 11 Jan 2012 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    A US bill has caused an uproar in India and the Philippines for punishing American companies for sending their customer call centres overseas.

    The legislation, pushed by Republican Tim Bishop and the Communications Workers of America (CWA) union, states that companies who outsource their contact centre requirements are not eligible for guaranteed federal loans and grants for a period of five years.

    Politicians and corporations fear lost business due to the US bill's protectionist measures. The "US Call Centre Worker and Consumer Protection Act", would also require those companies to report themselves in advance to the Labour Department, which would maintain a public list of the companies that outsource.

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