Industry news

  • 4 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Payroll is one of those business functions that, while absolutely crucial, lacks some of the glamour and excitement that gets the attention of CEOs and the board, until it goes wrong that is. Few businesses question the importance of paying employees correctly – just think about the reaction of otherwise placid employees when their monthly pay is late or incorrect – but few think about how the process runs; how behind the scenes complexity is managed to ensure employees are paid, tax is calculated correctly and HMRC regulations are adhered to.

    It’s because of its almost Cinderella like role that questions such as how payroll is managed, where it sits within an organisation, whether it is outsourced or not and how much a company should spend administering it are often neglected. Indeed, a study by ADP found that over 55% of companies fail to measure the true cost of payroll. Meanwhile, there is disagreement amongst HR and finance professionals as to who should have responsibility for payroll, the research has found that a quarter (25%) of finance professionals in charge of payroll would actually rather it was part of HR and almost that many (22%) of their HR counterparts say they would rather it was part of finance.

    Despite being somewhat unloved, payroll is far from a process driven back office function that can be ignored. Whilst the roles and responsibilities of payroll haven’t changed much, businesses are demanding more strategic support from their teams and many are finding great value in the people data that payroll teams hold.

    It’s for this reason that an increasing number of companies, led by HR and finance directors, have outsourced some or all of their payroll management to a third party. Companies want access to the rich information that payroll holds but don’t necessarily want to manage the administration needed behind the scenes themselves, preferring to task HR teams with far more strategic, value added activity: from retaining top employees and developing skills to employee engagement and culture change projects.

    The options available for organisations looking to outsource have increased dramatically in the past ten years, as technology has developed to allow real flexibility in the offerings available. In the past the choice was fairly simple, manage payroll in house via ‘off the shelf’ payroll software or outsource entirely to a third party. Now the range of options available are more nuanced, with cloud based solutions supporting a software and service mix that provides real flexibility, depending on what an organisation is trying to achieve through outsourcing.

    A common fear when considering outsourcing is that a company will lose control over a function and important data. However, cloud based solutions mean that an HR or finance director and their management team can actually get more, not less control over their data by outsourcing.

    Both HR and finance teams, as well as line managers, can interact much more closely with the system through a user friendly interface than they would previously have been able to. As systems are cloud based they are also accessible from anywhere and at any time, something that is useful for companies with a large geographic footprint or with part time, flexible or mobile workers. Modern systems also allow for manager and employee self-service, enabling employees to access online payslips and tax information as well as request annual leave or change their address or contact details. Because of these factors, the positive visibility of payroll within an organisation can increase substantially.

    There are strong risk-management and cost control arguments in favour of outsourcing too. An organisation’s IT risks and costs can be significantly reduced by using a third-party to host the payroll on its behalf - eliminating the need for servers to support payroll software and store data or costly upgrades. Relying on busy in-house teams to keep up-to-date with ever-changing legislation and HMRC regulations is also a risk for organisations that outsourcing can help them manage, as well as saving costs on staff training in this regard.

    There is also inbuilt scalability when outsourcing using the cloud, as the subscription model creates predictable cost modelling - as costs are calculated per employee. Therefore, if headcount rises, the business is aware of cost implications. Likewise, if headcount reduces, costs also reduce – a major benefit for businesses of all sizes.

    So, while the cloud delivers system interaction that is comparable to an ‘off the shelf’ solution, administration and compliance complexities are outsourced, delivering multiple benefits.

    ADP undertook research to find out the true cost of payroll software as opposed to using cloud based outsourcing solutions. It estimated that based on managing a payroll for approximately 1,000 payslips a month, the average annual cost of maintaining software, combined with the cost of administration, is as much as £104,280.

    Perhaps most importantly of all, outsourcing payroll can have a positive impact on people within the organisation by freeing them up to carry out value-added activities that have a positive effect on the business, such as analysing employee data and providing management information to the organisation. Modern payroll solutions allow in-house teams access to a rich seam of information that is available throughout the month allowing managers to keep constant track of payroll costs, absence data, holiday entitlement, employee working etc as the month progresses and take appropriate remedial action. Again, in this way, outsourcing is actually giving organisations more control, not less.

    Despite these benefits, there are a number of important considerations when outsourcing payroll. Organisations should be absolutely clear from the start what they are trying to achieve. Whether it is cost savings, redeploying staff or a combination of factors, there needs to be clarity.

    Once this is clear, finding the right outsourcing partner is key to ensuring a smooth running payroll function. Organisations need to consider the outsourcer’s track record and whether they are financially stable. The HR team should ensure they have seen case studies from other satisfied clients to prove this. Organisations should also check the outsourcer thoroughly understands their business and is able to integrate well with established in house systems. It is vitally important, for example, that organisations check their outsourcer has the infrastructure and resources to support future growth as well as offer a multinational solution if global expansion is key.

    HR teams looking to outsource also need to make sure that their outsourcer has effective change management procedures in place to help drive the transition and keep costs firmly under control. Clarifying these points early on in the process ensures the outsourcer is an expert in the field and understands the specific requirements of the HR team.

    Conclusion

    Not many people think about what goes on behind the scenes to make sure they are paid on time. However, all organisations need to have a system in place to make sure this happens; otherwise they may find they have staff shortage issues! Companies looking at how they manage their payroll now have more options than ever available to them, thanks in large part to technological advances that now making complex payroll software available to businesses of all sizes through the cloud. This technology is likely to progress still further allowing for ever more flexible and bespoke approach to payroll outsourcing.

  • 4 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    ITC Infotech to provide Engineering Services to Norway-Based Firm

    ITC Infotech, a global IT services company and a fully owned subsidiary of ITC Ltd., is partnering with Bergen Group Rosenberg, a Norway based firm to provide value added engineering services.

    ITC Infotech will be providing engineering services in the area of Piping and Structural Design as well as analysis for the group’s EPC (Engineering Procurement and Construction) contracts. The four year contract will be delivered by ITC Infotech’s PLM and Engineering Services Division based in Bangalore, a unit that employs over 400 people.

    Speaking on the occasion, Mrs Kristin Færøvik, EVP of Bergen Group Offshore and CEO Bergen Group Rosenberg said, “Bergen Group is expecting future growth within all our business areas, and therefore we want to strengthen our engineering capacity – both in-house and through international partnerships. We look forward to working with ITC Infotech. The company has displayed deep expertise and has vast experience of working with leading companies in Scandinavia. This blend of documented technical skills and industry knowledge has made ITC Infotech the preferred partner of choice.”

    Mr. Bala Subramanian, Vice President - Europe, ITC Infotech, commented on the significance of the partnership and ITC Infotech’s increased focus on delivering engineering solutions; “We are happy to partner with Bergen Group Rosenberg and are confident that our relationship will create significant value for the company. Engineering Services is one of the key focus areas for ITC Infotech and we have a strong and experienced team of engineers who have specialized in this domain.”

    “This partnership will further consolidate our position as one of the leading players in the Nordics market”, Mr. Nagendra Siddoutam, Nordics Regional Manager for New Business, , ITC Infotech.

  • 4 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    MphasiS, a leading IT services provider, has announced their strategic intent to augment their near-shore presence with the inauguration of a new delivery centre in Wroclaw, Poland.

    MphasiS Poland will be operational by mid-2011. The company has hired Mr. Slawomir Kiedos as the Centre Head and plans to hire over 100 employees in the first year and double it over the next three years. The core principle of this centre is to provide near-shore services to UK as well as Eastern European customers. MphasiS Poland is poised to meet customer needs with support in the European time zone, European language capabilities and MphasiS’ tenured global expertise.

    This centre will support existing clients, as well as attract new ones in the region. Wroclaw delivery centre will offer clients business process outsourcing capabilities, high-end application development and maintenance across all verticals.

    “Poland offers the ability to service clients in most continental European languages and is well connected with other Western European business centres. The availability of talent, language skills and an established business infrastructure in Poland made it a natural choice for us,” said Gopinathan Padmanabhan, Head Global Delivery Unit, at MphasiS. He went on to say, “Europe is an important and fast growing geography for us with a mixed portfolio of some large strategic relationships and mid-sized accounts. We are envisioning scaling the value chain for customers and their clients through the metamorphosis from a cost effective supporter to a thought leader in continental Europe. Thus, strengthening our relationship with clients in the Banking & Capital Markets, Insurance, Healthcare and Telecoms space.”

    The centre will join MphasiS’ network of Global Delivery centres providing best-in-class IT/ITes services to clients worldwide. Employees at the Poland centre will be part of MphasiS Global Talent Pool and mentored as part of the MphasiS Talent Development Programme.

  • 4 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Leaked documents suggest ministers have decided the "wholesale outsourcing" of public services to the private sector would be politically "unpalatable".

    The documents detail a meeting between Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude and the Confederation of the British Industry (CBI). Ministers instead want to use more charities, social enterprises and employee-owned "mutual" organisations.

    Outsourcing was meant to be a key part of the government's drive to cut costs and reduce the UK's budget deficit. The shift in policy will raise questions about whether the government can make the savings it has promised - or deliver the services it is committed to - just by using charities and mutuals.

    The change will also raise questions about whether the Conservatives are bowing to Liberal Democrat pressure to focus more on delivering public services locally rather than privately.

    The government's plans will be unveiled in the long-delayed Open Public Services White Paper which is expected to be published later this month.

  • 4 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    GXS has announced that it has acquired RollStream, a software-as-a-service (SaaS) leader of enterprise community management. This acquisition accelerates GXS’s strategy to speed and simplify the integration of global business communities. By combining the RollStream solution with GXS Trading Grid®, the world’s largest integration cloud, GXS expects to enhance the performance of global business and supply chain operations for its customers. The acquisition deepens GXS’s long-term commitment to the Social Supply Chain, a vision that brings together information flows and information workers to break down barriers hampering supply chain efficiency.

    “Our customers realise they need a balance of people, process and technology to compete on a global scale, and they know that the human side of B2B integration matters,” said Bob Segert, CEO, GXS. “RollStream is one of the more innovative startups to enter the B2B integration market in recent years. At GXS, we are firm believers that integration belongs in the cloud and the RollStream acquisition enables us to accelerate this vision.”

    The acquisition builds upon the companies’ business partnership that began in 2009 and helps accelerate the rollout of RollStream’s products across the GXS portfolio. The GXS RollStream service is available today and will be internationalised and available with local language support by first quarter 2012.

    RollStream’s SaaS platform benefits global procurement teams by:

    - Accelerating supplier setup by up to 60 percent, from months to weeks.

    - Simplifying social exception handling and supply chain collaboration.

    - Improving supplier contact accuracy with self-service updates.

    - Providing a single source for sales forecasts, supplier communications, and project rollouts.

    - RollStream is also known for its Web 2.0 user experience and interface, developed on the Ruby-on-Rails (“Rails”) Web development framework.

    Terms of GXS’s acquisition of RollStream were not disclosed. Both companies are based in the Washington DC area.

  • 4 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Martyn Hart, Chairman of the National Outsourcing Association (NOA), has commented on the leaked documents between Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude and the Confederation of the British Industry (CBI) which suggest that the government is scaling back plans to use the private sector to deliver public services.

    “The National Outsourcing Association (NOA) is interested to learn of the leaked documents suggesting that ‘wholesale outsourcing’ of public services would be ‘politically unpalatable’.

    “It’s clear that the jury is still out on how effectively charities and social enterprises can deliver public services, and it would be a surprise if the government is able to achieve the level of cost reduction it is seeking by just using charities and social enterprises, particularly as most of the examples of this we’ve seen of this working already have been small and isolated.

    Perhaps this will mean an increased opportunity for service providers to deliver outsourcing in a number of different ways, and we could see more examples of joint ventures and partnerships as a result?

    “Nonetheless, it’s clear that apart from outsourcing or shared services the government has few other options and they can still play a significant role in adding value and helping to drive down costs for the public sector. Perhaps the government should work to identify the areas where outsourcing can best add value, and use this as the basis for determining which services are outsourced or shared?”

  • 3 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Data Shows Resurgence of Business Process Outsourcing

    Fueled Solid First Quarter in European Sourcing Market

    1Q11 EMEA TPI Index: BPO total contract value hits 2-year high

    TPI, an Information Services Group company and the largest sourcing data and advisory firm in the world, today released data showing relative strength in the outsourcing market in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) during the first quarter, primarily as a result of the recovery of business process outsourcing (BPO) and some significant mega-deals awarded in the region.

    The 1Q11 EMEA TPI Index recorded total contract value (TCV) of €8.1 billion, down 28 percent quarter-on-quarter but just 5 percent year-on-year, making it one of the stronger first quarters of the last decade. In comparison, with just €14 billion in TCV awarded, the global market turned in its worst first-quarter performance in a decade.

    The BPO segment awarded €3.2 billion in TCV, more than triple the total during both the prior quarter and the first quarter of 2010 and the highest in two years. While that total included a €2 billion Contact Centre deal in Saudi Arabia, BPO contract volume still rose by 65 percent.

    “The resurgence of BPO activity during the first quarter of 2011 is a very encouraging sign for the outsourcing market in EMEA,” said Duncan Aitchison, Partner & President – EMEA, TPI. “If the tempo of awards continues throughout the year, BPO activity will easily surpass the region’s 2010 results.”

    Now in its 34th consecutive quarter, the TPI Index provides a quarterly snapshot of the sourcing industry for clients, service providers, analysts and the media. It is the industry’s authoritative source for marketplace intelligence related to outsourcing transaction structures and terms, industry adoption, geographic prevalence and service provider metrics.

    Overall, despite the drop in TCV, the number of contracts signed during the first quarter remained steady year-on-year in both EMEA and globally, reflecting the ongoing trend toward smaller awards.

    Following an unprecedented surge in the fourth quarter, mostly in the Nordics, restructuring activity in EMEA returned to normal historical levels, dropping 76 percent quarter-on-quarter. The decline in restructurings, defined as contracts that are renewed, restructured or renegotiated, hurt IT outsourcing (ITO), which recorded just €5 billion in TCV in the region, down 52 percent quarter-on-quarter and 36 percent year-on-year.

    However, a decline in restructurings means awards of contracts for new scope of outsourcing activity represent a larger part of the market. New-scope TCV in EMEA reached €7.4 billion in the first quarter, up 48 percent year-on-year and down just slightly quarter-on-quarter.

    Among sectors, Telecom & Media and Energy accounted for 66 percent of TCV in EMEA during the first quarter of 2011, predominantly due to the award of large deals. Financial Services, usually one of the region’s strongest sectors, dipped quarter-on-quarter, accounting for just 8 percent of TCV.

    “The outlook for the rest of 2011 suggests a healthy level of contracting activity and a modest amount of restructuring in the mix,” Aitchison said. “Overall, we are cautiously optimistic about next quarter and more bullish about the second half of 2011.”

  • 3 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Britain’s outsourcing industry is now almost as big as the financial services sector, generating more than £200 billion a year, according to new research by Oxford economics released today. The industry accounts for 8 per cent of the UK’s total economic output.

    The report, commissioned by the Business Services Association, encompasses services including information technology and data services, which is the largest contributor to Britain's annual output. This line of business currently employs 340,000 people and makes a net contribution to the economy of £24.7 billion.

    The outsourcing industry is also a huge contributor to the Governments coffers, paying £35 billion a year in taxes – equal to 12 per cent of the total take from business and personal taxes. The outsourcing sector is now the second-biggest employer, behind retailing, accounting for 3.1 million jobs, equivalent to 10 per cent of the British workforce.

    Bindi Bhullar, director of global IT services provider HCL Technologies, said:

    “Successful outsourcing projects have previously been seen so as the elephant in the room. Until now, there has been a reluctance to openly discuss the core benefits outsourcing brings to the UK economy. t is great to finally see credible research highlighting the significance of IT and IT-related BPO into context. The industry has clearly come a long way since the Y2K projects of the 1990s. This report shows how IT outsourcing has fully developed into a mature market.

    “Thanks to this maturity, organisations now have access to new talent, advanced technologies that can deliver additional benefits, and most notably, faster time to market for new applications and upgrades alike.”

    The research comes as welcome news to the outsourcing industry, which has been in the spotlight recently as a result of the governments drive to cut costs and reshape public services.

  • 3 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    HP Enterprise Services has been chosen for a single-award firm-fixed-price, indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity contract worth up to $2.5 billion over a four-year base period with two three-year option periods by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

    HP will provide end-user desktop services and devices that will increase NASA’s efficiency and allow its employees to more easily collaborate in a secure computing environment.

    As a part of NASA’s Agency Consolidated End-User Service (ACES) Program, HP will modernize NASA’s entire end-user infrastructure by delivering a full range of personal computing services and devices to more than 60,000 users. The modernization is expected to deliver significant productivity gains and cost savings to NASA.

    “NASA personnel use IT to support NASA’s core business, scientific, research and computational activities,” said Michael Sweigart, procurement officer, Shared Services Center, NASA. “HP will provide, manage, secure and maintain these essential IT services for the agency.”

    Under the ACES contract, HP will provide a variety of Computing Seat, Tier 2/3 Service Desk Support and Collaboration Services to more cost-effectively manage NASA’s end-user infrastructure at all NASA sites across the United States. Computing seat and cellular seat services are designed with security and collaboration capabilities to help the NASA team safely share information.

    “The ACES contract will help evolve NASA’s IT environment to a centralized, adaptable IT infrastructure to enable economies of scale, agency-wide visibility and improved management and security,” said Dennis Stolkey, senior vice president and general manager, U.S. Public Sector, HP Enterprise Services. “HP will build on our deep industry, infrastructure and end-user services expertise to support this significant work for the agency that is pioneering the future in space exploration, scientific discovery and aeronautics research.”

    The contract will be managed at the NASA Shared Services Center in Stennis, Miss., and will serve all NASA centers and facilities.

  • 3 May 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Shareholders approve Capita's acquisition of health and government divisions of Tribal Group.

    Tribal shareholders have approved the acquisition, by the Capita Group Plc of the health and government divisions of Tribal Group Plc and the acquisition has now completed.

    The cash consideration of £15.8 million on a cash-free, debt free basis for the acquisition includes a deferred consideration of up to £2.5 million. The acquisition adds key new capabilities to Capita's health and consulting businesses, details of which were included in Capita's announcement of 11 April 2011.

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software