Industry news

  • 21 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Leading airport company BAA is outsourcing the delivery of its IT services to a consortium led by Capgemini UK plc in a five-year contract valued at approximately £100 million.

    BAA says that the move will be key to improving the airport experience for all its stakeholders, including passengers, staff, airlines and retailers, at Heathrow and the company’s other five UK airports. The consortium, assembled and led by Capgemini as prime contractor, includes SITA, Atkins, Computacenter and Amor Group.

    Capgemini will be responsible for the delivery of BAA’s core IT services on a day-to-day basis, including applications, infrastructure and projects, for some 10,000 users. The service will cover BAA’s six UK airports and will start in May after a two-month transition. BAA will retain responsibility for IT strategy, stakeholder management and ensuring the quality of IT services in collaboration with Capgemini. Some 200 staff will be eligible to transfer to Capgemini and its partners under TUPE conditions.

    Philip Langsdale, chief information officer at BAA, said: "Because our focus is on running airports, it makes sense for specialist IT functions to be outsourced, which is also much more cost effective. We want to improve our resilience and ensure that we have the right systems in place to share the right information at the right time. Capgemini will have a key role in supporting this.”

  • 21 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The National Outsourcing Association has suggests areas it would like to see covered in the Chancellor’s budget.

    Martyn Hart, the National Outsourcing Association (NOA), commented: “In the wake of the government’s Spending Review last year, the Chancellor’s budget will provide an early opportunity to gauge how successful it has been, and which areas will need to tighten their belts as a result. The outsourcing industry is one which seems poised to benefit more than most, but there are still a number of areas which the NOA would like to see the Chancellor supporting in his announcement on March 23rd.

    “Perhaps one of the areas where we could see an increase in funding is training. The government’s recent focus on encouraging smaller businesses to bid for public sector contracts, means that we are likely to see a rise in multi-sourcing in the public sector, with a number of smaller suppliers providing a range of different services, instead of just one large single source supplier.

    “But how well equipped is the public sector to manage multi-sourcing contracts? Very few workers in the public sector will have any experience of how to manage a number of different suppliers effectively, so perhaps we’ll see the Chancellor setting aside some of the budget towards training public sector workers in this respect? They might even feel that it would a good idea to expand this investment in training so that it includes smaller enterprises, who have no real experience in dealing with contracts.

    “In recent weeks, we’ve seen the Prime Minister attacking what he calls the ‘enemies of enterprise’ and pledging to support British entrepreneurs as part of his plan to back small firms. Perhaps, however, the best way he could demonstrate this commitment to enterprise is to introduce incentives to smaller organisations looking to bid, perhaps by making the bidding process itself tax deductible?

    “The NOA would also like to see the government investing in a means of measuring the performance of outsourcing suppliers, to ensure that the best providers are used, rather than just those capable of providing every service as part of a big contract. The government could use the budget to announce a new initiative aimed at kitemarking the performance of suppliers, with the best, most suitable performing suppliers receiving a green kitemark.”

  • 21 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Braintree district council has advertised for an outsourcing company to provide it, three other councils and a housing service with a wide range of ICT equipment and services.

    The contract, with a value of between £14m and £34m over up to seven years, is being set up by Braintree along with Castle Point, Rochford and Colchester councils, which currently have separate deals with three companies.

    The services will also be used by Colchester Borough Homes, a company set up by Colchester to run its housing services.

    A tender notice in the Official Journal of the European Union says the deal will include information systems and servers, PCs, telecoms, networks and audio-visual equipment. Consulting, software development, internet and support, plus business and management consultancy and related services will also form part of the contract.

  • 21 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    HR Steering Committee Summary

    Wednesday 16th March

    Developing talent and encouraging professionalism in the outsourcing sector has never been more important. The recession and subsequent spending cuts have had a serious impact on staff numbers and organisations have had to rethink the way in which they recruit, retain, interact and train their employees with the changing market.

    This steering committee, chaired by Yvonne Williams, NOA Representative for Individual Professional Development, was brought together by the NOA with the objective of creating best practice and recommendations through a white paper.

    Key Points

    • BPO market is growing and the government is placing a lot more emphasis on outsourcing.

    • Indian market is somewhat ‘overheating’ and is not as cost effective as it used to be.

    • Latin American is proving to be a competitive offshoring destination, the central USA market is emerging while the Nordic market is also opening up.

    • Growth potential in HRO but it can bring a lack of intimacy.

    • HR aware that each department in an organisation has its own culture.

    • More HR operational functions are being outsourced especially from companies who want to grow quickly.

    • Outsourcing issues include length of contracts and exit strategies. Industry is nervous about long contracts but they are needed to gain trust and build relationships.

    • Benchmarking is becoming more commonplace.

    HRO Processes

    • RPO - tendency for a single source supplier and this can be based offshore. Senior hirers generally have been kept onshore and most firms use Executive Search for this through their PSL.

    • Payroll – traditionally outsourced, sometimes offshore.

    • Learning and Development Training – delivery and development is rightshore and local.

    • HR Operations – majority can be outsourced. Complex case management usually internal due to potential damage to branding. For example: Disciplinary / Grievance – usually internal.

    • Reporting – usually internal

    • Business Intelligence – data capture/mining – specialists used

    • Vendor Management – internal to keep control

    • Pensions / Admin – specialists used

    • References / Security – specialists used

    • Wellness / Staff Welfare – internal or specialists used – can effect branding

    • Mobility / Tax / Visas - specialists used

    • Repatriations – specialists used

    • Psychometric Testing – specialists used

    HR Challenges

    • Branding

    • Grievance / Discipline

    • Motivation

    • Cultural Awareness

    • Legislation – pensions, employment rights, pan-European diversity, visa schemes, immigration.

    • Work Councils

    • Data Protection

    General Challenges

    • Supplier attrition

    • Client Relationship Management

    • Service Delivery Management

    • Vendor Management (individual)

    • Acquisitions / Mergers (of suppliers) and corporates

    Action Points

    • First Q2 steering committee to be organised mid-April focused on the HR outsourcing contract.

    • Details of CSC research into employability and job creation to be sent to Yvonne.

    • Steering committee notes / insights to be included in the upcoming lifecycle update.

    • HR suppliers to present at next steering committee. Even balance of suppliers, end-users and analysts.

    • EOA / Events calendar to be sent to all attendees.

    Attendees

    Yvonne Williams – NOA, Paul Corrall – Sourcingfocus.com, Anita Tilly – Capgemini, Diana Leleja – Runway, Rachel Lord – RPC, Jim Brannan – Bcerta, Kristina Holland – Bleum.

  • 21 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The new UK government’s decision to reduce the huge budget deficit by cutting £6.25bn of expenditure immediately, while tackling social problems such as long term unemployment, calls for radical thinking and action. The real challenge though is to figure out how to do this while improving the services delivered to tax payers.

    While I may be expected to espouse the outsourcing of the UK government’s back office operations as part of the proposed solution to this challenge, I fundamentally believe that simple wage arbitrage will not deliver the long term results they need. Nor will it guarantee the provision of what citizens are demanding; effective government services that are delivered efficiently.

    Doing more with less is a problem that the private sector has been familiar with for many years; but never more acutely than through the recent recession. In fact, the downturn forced businesses to rethink every element of their operations and take unprecedented steps such as organizational restructuring, process standardization & centralization and increased globalization to manage their financial health. Businesses that adopted such measures, with the CFO most often driving the charge, emerged stronger and leaner with more effective operations and enhanced business performance, while continuing to deliver higher customer satisfaction.

    The Chancellor, like a CFO in the private sector, faces the same complex situation of cutting expenditure, increasing savings and reducing debt, as well as increasing efficiency of existing departments to deliver more effective services to the citizens, thereby meeting the Governments’ stated objectives.

    This may sound like management school talk, but it is something best in class companies do achieve. In the process of analysing over 3000 business processes that we have managed for more than 400 clients since 1996, it has become clear that the only way to achieve true long term business outcomes is to make the leap from seeking ‘efficiency’ to seeking ‘effectiveness’. What I mean by this is changing the mindset to think about maximizing output and delivering superior quality by looking at a process end-to-end, fixing gaps and leakages and achieving a desired outcome such as decreasing cost, increasing revenue or improving customer satisfaction vs. simply maximizing output of a particular process.

    This shift in thinking can deliver not just incremental savings but up to 5 times the value in terms of the defined outcome. For businesses this translates into millions of pounds worth of top-line or bottom-line impact for businesses. For a government it means money and resources saved. In public services for example ‘effectiveness’ could equate to cutting waiting time for diagnostics and treatment in the healthcare system , thus delivering better patient care and long term savings by reducing the need for more aggressive treatment later.

    Let me take a few examples to better illustrate what I mean.

    A real world example of how the NHS, with a budget of £94.5 billion, may be able to learn from best practice is the Miami Children’s Hospital (MCH) where a recent redesign of processes, achieved by working with the staff, enabled MCH to achieve a 4x return on investment through increasing utilisation of equipment and infrastructure, thus generating additional capacity and decreasing in-patient wait times by 18%.

    Proving the transferability of the approach, this model has been replicated successfully in two Indian public sector hospitals, where the projects were aimed at enhancing patient access to the hospitals’ casualty departments. The process improvements led to a 30% increase in patient flow and a 20% increase in doctors’ capacity over a period of 12-14 weeks.

    Procurement & supply chain functions across government departments can no doubt similarly benefit from consolidation and better processes. If you visualise the government as a group of large enterprises, business experience looks immediately relevant. When you consider how a $5 billion turnover manufacturing company, reduced its purchase spending by $50 million from $150 million over three years, applying this approach to even part of the £6.1 billion of spending on military equipment, or the £18.91 billion of NHS supplies, let alone the rest of the central and local government administration, it is clear optimising purchasing practice could significantly contribute to ongoing savings. Reducing waste helps meet environmental targets too.

    Income as well as expenditure needs to be tackled with fresh thinking. As the taxation system is revamped, improving collection efficiency could cut both administrative and borrowing costs. Using the latest business analytics techniques to deploy citizen-specific collections strategies based on their payment behaviour could improve outstanding cash due rates by about 20%. Currently the treasury estimates that it is owed £15.8 billion in income tax and national insurance revenue, £8.9 Billion in corporation tax and £15 Billion in indirect taxation benefits (i.e. VAT, Diesel duties etc).

    In every area of public services, there are private sector parallels where commercial pressures have led to the refinement of operations. Optimizing deeply entrenched ways of working is not as simple as it sounds in concept. It requires deep knowledge of the domain , focused technology solutions, targeted analytics ,pragmatic re-engineering and a clear roadmap to be able to attain the desired benefits. It also requires artful management of change. And most importantly an experienced partner who can not just identify the solutions, but help implement them.

    The UK today faces an almost unprecedented challenge to cut fat, not muscle from its public services. However, with a new coalition approach to politics and recognition of the absolute imperative to reduce the deficit, there is a unique opportunity to reinvent its thinking and redesign its services. The government needs to think like a business that is facing tough times. There should be no lines in the sand; centralising & sharing functions such as human resources and payroll through all departments - mirroring the shared services model that several European business giants have so successfully deployed, unifying purchasing and deciding to stop providing some services at a national level, all need to be evaluated. Old style bureaucracies need to be challenged, staff empowered with knowledge through better systems and analytics, and given the authority to make decisions.

    In my opinion, if the UK government can carry through its commitment to change by learning from the many new, innovative and tested lessons from the best companies in the world; it can emerge with a lean, effective public sector and achieve the herculean task of cutting the budget deficit down while keeping citizens happy. Is outsourcing the best answer? Only if that is the most effective way to achieve long term effectiveness in public services. If the UK government were to outsource just one thing, I believe it should be the re-design of its processes and services.

    Pramod Bhasin is President and CEO of Genpact (formerly GE Capital International Services) which, under his leadership, pioneered the Business Process Outsourcing industry in India, China and Eastern Europe. The company is acknowledged as a global leader in business process and technology management. Mr. Bhasin also served as the Chairman of India's National Association of Software & Services Companies (NASSCOM) for the year 2009-10.

  • 18 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    António Horta-Osório, the new chief executive of Lloyds Banking Group, has angered unions by announcing plans to cut 570 jobs and outsource up to 600 roles.

    The upcoming plans by Lloyds will increase total job losses since HBOS rescue to 27,000 as the management cuts staff to reduce costs and try to bolster profits.

    António Horta-Osório stated that the job cuts were a direct result of the integration of Lloyds and HBOS. Jobs in the wholesale, retail, insurance, group operations and human resources divisions will be lost.

    Unions said that up to 600 jobs were to be outsourced. Lloyds announced 450 of those positions when it said roles inside its cheque and credit processing division would move to iPSL, a joint venture set up a decade ago by Unisys, Barclays and Lloyds TSB. HSBC is also a part-owner. The outsourcing specialist already handles such tasks for the bank and it is understood that another 110 people are likely to be transferred to other outsourcing companies shortly.

  • 18 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    CSC has announced that a U.S. life insurance company ranked in the top 20 by A.M. Best, according to assets and net premiums written, has licensed CSC’s nbAccelerator to manage its new insurance business. This license marks the fourth nbAccelerator contract signed by CSC over the past nine months.

    nbAccelerator is a complete new business risk assessment and process management system that enables straight-through processing to speed underwriting and issuing new life insurance and annuity contracts.

    “In a competitive and uncertain life insurance market, anything that can mitigate the time and cost of issuing a policy but maintain the appropriate level of risk will provide an advantage for insurers,” said Karen Monks, analyst with Celent’s Insurance Group. “Insurers are looking at new business and automated underwriting systems to help address growth, fulfill service and distribution mandates, and reduce the cost per policy issued.”

    “Quick response times are critical to closing new life insurance sales, and profitable new business is essential to achieving carriers’ growth objectives,” said Michael W. Risley, president of CSC’s Life Insurance and Annuity Division. “nbAccelerator positions life insurance and annuity companies to close new business faster by automating repetitive steps and integrating work management, sales and service activities. Intelligent e-App ensures the right information is captured at the point of sale by guiding producers through the data-gathering process.”

  • 18 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Serco shares jumped as it was described as a “winner” in the hunt for public sector outsourcing deals.

    Serco was up 10p at 566p as broker Panmure praised its retaining of a £42million per year prisoner escort contract for London and the East of England from the Ministry of Justice.

    Panmure said: “This will help underpin future organic growth while decisions in the world of public sector outsourcing appear to be gathering pace. Serco is well placed to benefit from greater levels of outsourcing.” Security services group G4S rose 3½p to 256½p.

  • 18 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    MindTree Limited, a global IT Solutions and Product Engineering Service company has announced that it has secured its first major SAP support deal in the UK having been selected by 2e2, Europe’s fastest growing ICT lifecycle services provider, as a long term applications outsourcing partner. MindTree will provide SAP helpdesk, support and development work for 2e2’s clients.

    The appointment of MindTree will allow 2e2 to redirect employees in the UK into more customer facing and consultative roles, providing a sharper focus for the business. A formal inauguration of the 2e2 offshore centre at MindTree Bangalore will take place in April.

    “This will increase MindTree’s reach and ability to service local requirements in the UK and perfectly complements our experience of providing offshore expertise in SAP and other enterprise applications,” said Tridip Saha, MindTree’s UK Head. “Partnering with 2e2 also gives us the opportunity to work with clients in areas new to us such as the construction industry. The complementary nature of MindTree and 2e2’s service offerings in the UK market should mean significant benefits will flow through to both companies.”

    “Partnering with MindTree will improve delivery of our SAP services and will also lead to increased customer satisfaction, said Nick Grossman, Business Development Director of 2e2. “Our experience of working with MindTree has been very positive and we are already looking at expanding the footprint of the offshore development centre into other areas of our business.”

  • 18 Mar 2011 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The NOA has responded to Channel 4’s 'Dispatches' critical report of the UK public sector outsourcing industry.

    The programme called ‘Britain’s Secret Fat Cats’ raised questions surrounding the restructuring of the delivery of public services in the UK.

    Adrian Quayle, Board Member, the National Outsourcing Association (NOA), commented: “The National Outsourcing Association welcomes the interest shown by Dispatches on Monday, 14th March into the relationship between the public sector and outsourcing suppliers, but feels that the outsourcing industry has much more to offer UK business than was suggested.

    “The programme was aired on the eve of the announcement of a major report on public-sector pay and highlighted the multimillion pound pay packages being earned by heads of private organisations which provide public services, and questioned why they should be the ones to benefit, with no reference to the millions of pounds saved by organisations in this country each year as a result of outsourcing and shared services providers.

    “The NOA believes that if private sector companies can achieve cost efficiencies for the public sector, and relieve the financial burden on the tax payer, whilst ensuring that these services are run effectively, then wages of the heads of private sectors are, to a large extent, irrelevant. One of the government’s responsibilities is to cut the cost to the tax-paying public, and stimulate growth in the private sector to help take this country out of the choppy financial waters, and outsourcing can be an effective means of achieving this.

    “Dispatches also asserted that the government’s ‘Big Society’ flagship policy could benefit big business and cause the public and voluntary sectors to feel the strain. However, it made no mention of the government’s recent initiative aimed at ensuring that small and medium-sized organisations are able to bid for government contracts, with a view to increasing transparency and ensure that big businesses are not the only ones to benefit.

    “Outsourcing is a multi-billion pound industry in this country, and leading British suppliers of outsourcing services are amongst the world leaders in their field. The NOA’s view is that as long as deals are tendered, and carried out in the correct way – as the government seems intent on doing – there’s no reason why outsourcing service providers in the private sector should not play their full part in ensuring the government’s success – after all, they could be the most viable and effective solution for us all.”

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