Industry news

  • 14 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Tesco Bank is using Attachmate's Reflection 2008 to support general insurance calls in its customer service systems.

    The new system will ensure general insurance calls from Tesco Bank’s 6.5 million customers are received without unnecessary interruptions. Attachmate have also stated that the new system will be enable issues to be resolved without the customer being passed between agents.

  • 14 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    A strategic approach to managing information is increasingly on the agendas of IT and business leaders as a growth economy re-emerges, according to Gartner, Inc. Gartner analysts have identified a set of key innovation forces that can be exploited by IT leaders to mitigate the challenges they face in managing information.

    "These innovation forces provide significant changes in the way that information management technologies and competencies will be focused and delivered, with the goal of radically improving the cost-effectiveness, agility and transparency with which information assets are managed and leveraged," said Ted Friedman, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. "Organizations that focus only on tools and technology, without increasing their information management competency or changing their culture, are unable to fully achieve the benefits of information infrastructure."

    The four innovation forces in information infrastructure include:

    The information-centric organization

    Information management leaders spend most of their time on technology because they usually come from a technology background and have been hired to work on technology projects. However, innovations with information infrastructure depend on making the organization itself information-centric and getting both IT and business staff to adopt new behaviors. Gartner believes that CIOs, information management leaders and HR professionals need to understand what kinds of "people" changes must be made to create the next generation of information infrastructure.

    Information as an asset or liability

    Business and IT leaders know that a huge amount of value remains locked inside their masses of information, but they cannot capture this value simply by implementing more technology. Gartner analysts believe that CIOs and information management leaders must set aside their traditional engineering mind-set. Instead, they must take a new approach by focusing on the value of information itself, rather than the value of information systems. This will require strategies and techniques for assessing the value and risk of information assets.

    Adaptive information infrastructure

    With adaptive information infrastructure techniques and supporting technologies, the discovery of meaning and relationships across the entire content continuum — from highly structured to loosely structured — can be automatically inferred, and decisions about information delivery can be made at a more abstract level. In addition, techniques of dynamic optimization will limit the need for hard-coded and static data delivery mechanisms. Gartner maintains that through such approaches, a substantially higher degree of agility in adapting where, how, and in what form and context information is delivered can be achieved.

    Alternative delivery models for information infrastructure

    Enterprises have quickly started to adopt new deployment models in many IT domains, and the use of alternative deployment models will continue to grow quickly. In particular, appliances and cloud computing allow IT organizations to implement new capabilities quickly, with minimal upfront cost. Gartner asserts that these benefits are beginning to be seen in the information infrastructure domain, as more capabilities for persisting, integrating and delivering data and assuring its quality become available via alternative delivery models, ranging from appliances to cloud-based services.

    Analysis of the implications of and pre-requisites for harnessing these four innovation forces is available in a recently-published body of research summarized in the Gartner report "Gartner Analysts Explore Innovation Forces in Information Infrastructure," which is available on Gartner's website at http://www.gartner.com/resId=1459613.

  • 14 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Southwest One – the joint venture between Somerset County Council, Taunton Deane Borough Council, Avon and Somerset Police and supplier IBM – will not make the original £172 million savings target, according to Somerset.

    Source: http://www.publictechnology.net/sector/local-gov/southwest-one-denies-outsourced-venture-may-miss-savings-target-30m

  • 14 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Town halls in England will face no more than an 8.9% reduction in their spending power next year, Communities Secretary Eric Pickles has announced.

    The spending cuts will be a driver for councils to outsource more of their back-office functions as well share services in the form of “a duty to co-operate to ensure that local authorities and public bodies co-operate with each other”. Pay for all senior offices – including ICT leaders – must also be public in both local authorities.

    Lady Eaton, the Conservative chair of the Local Government Association, said: "Councils now face incredibly tough choices about the services they continue to provide and those they will have to cut. This is the toughest local government finance settlement in living memory.

    "We have been clear that the level of spending reduction that councils are going to have to make goes way beyond anything that conventional efficiency drives, such as shared services, can achieve. We have to face the fact that this level of grant reduction will inevitably lead to cuts in services."

  • 14 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    A growing GDP, significant tax benefits and a burgeoning trade relationship with the UK are just some of the reasons why Sri Lanka has overcome the shackles of civil war to be listed by The Economist Intelligent Unit as one of the top ten fastest growing economies worldwide, the Sri Lankan Association for Software and Services Companies (SLASSCOM) has revealed.

    It’s been eighteen months since the Sri Lankan government defeated the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam, putting an end to 30 years of conflict in the northern and eastern parts of the country. In that time, and despite the conflict, the Sri Lankan ITO/BPO industry managed to grow by 23%, with a range of government incentives introduced to foreign investors in a bid to highlight the real advantages of Sri Lanka as a global sourcing destination.

    Sri Lanka has also seen a 2% increase in its GDP (from 4% to 6%) since the end of the conflict, as a result of a number of high profile businesses such as HSBC, London Stock Exchange, Aviva, Microsoft, Motorola, Amba Research and Virtusa all taking the decision to outsource services to the region, and with the current influx of investments and existing growth, Sri Lankan industry is estimated to grow 26% during the year 2010.

    “There are a number of reasons why the Sri Lankan economy has experienced growth in the months since the civil war,” said Dinesh Saparamadu, Chairman of SLASSCOM. “Not only does Sri Lanka have the highest literacy rate in South East Asia, but it is also endowed with a high quality talent base and offers a very attractive cost base for business.

    “Sri Lanka has come a long way in the past 18 months and we are excited to see how business, investment and infrastructure develops here over the next couple of years.”

    Sri Lanka was ranked 16th in the 2009 AT Kearney Global Services Location Index which ranks the Global Top 50 for global sourcing destinations. The ranking jumped 13 positions from 2007 and is expected to further improve even further over the coming months and years.

  • 14 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Accenture and Hilton Worldwide announced today a multi-year agreement to provide the global hospitality company with application development and support services for its property management systems and multi-brand, transactional websites covering more than 3,600 hotels worldwide. As part of the agreement, Accenture will also be supporting Hilton Worldwide with a global service desk for the company’s hotels.

    “We are excited to welcome Accenture, one of the world’s leading technology companies, to the Innovation Collaborative,” said Robert Webb, Hilton Worldwide’s Chief Information Officer. “Accenture’s global experience in the hospitality industry and existing knowledge of Hilton Worldwide’s systems will allow us to further explore our next-generation system capabilities.”

    This agreement makes Accenture a founding member of the Hilton Worldwide Innovation Collaborative, a consortium of technology leaders working together to deliver cutting-edge solutions for varied business needs. With its partners, Hilton Worldwide will enhance its operational efficiencies and continue to provide a world-class experience for guests.

    “We are proud to support Hilton Worldwide’s global network as the newest member of their Innovation Collaborative,” said Michael Boushka, Accenture’s North America Transportation and Travel Services Lead. “We will leverage our leading-edge services to strengthen the company’s technological capabilities and improve efficiencies, while freeing up Hilton Worldwide’s workforce to concentrate on innovating in the hospitality arena.”

    This work will be performed across Accenture’s Global Delivery Network. Accenture will deliver the services in collaboration with Avanade, a business technology services provider majority owned by Accenture that connects insight, innovation and expertise in Microsoft technologies to help customers realize results.

  • 14 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    In the first webinar we set out the importance of having a good operations strategy, and gave detailed guidance on the level of resources to be devoted to developing and updating a strategy. The second webinar looked at the important topic of managing the outsource suppliers that are an increasingly large part of most asset management operations.

    In our third webinar we looked at Managing Major Change. Change in asset management is constant and pervasive; new products must be launched to respond to changes in customer preference, service features must be added in line with demand for more tailored service and service levels need to be continually upgraded to keep pace with customer expectations, at ever lower costs.

    However the change process can fail if some basic tenants are not followed; requirements must be properly understood, scope must be fully defined and accurate estimates of the resources required must be produced. Moreover stakeholders must be fully engaged and the acceptance criteria defined.

    So what do we mean by major change and why is it different to the change we see every day?

    Major change takes an extended period of time to implement or requires a reallocation of tasks between teams or organisations and many projects combine both these elements.

    With these elements bring a unique set of problems which needs to be analysed in isolation in order to present a solution frameworks and present solution frameworks.

    The first of these two challenges is managing change that is delivered over an extended timeframe. The problem that many encounter is that although activities need to take place, the benefits can seem distant and remote. Particularly at the front end of a project, the impact of any delay or lack of clarity can be difficult to ascertain.

    To provide some focus there is a need to present a timeline, so that the impact of any delay is visible which allows the necessary analysis to be performed. There is also pressure to create a detailed plan and project reporting structure. One should also bear in mind this may create a large spend ‘burn rate’ that achieves little whilst decisions are made, and multiple stakeholders are mobilised.

    There are project methodologies, for example, that seek to insulate the project from

    uncertainty. A complete plan is produced at the start, and each project stage is strictly gated. This approach is needed for large monolithic projects that could be likened to building a tower block. Each stage clearly supports the next, and the building of the top story must be planned in full detail before breaking ground.

    However, many major change projects resemble the building of a town, rather than a tower block. It is important that an overall framework exists, but there is no need to plan the design of every building before constructing the first road. What companies need to be wary of is business change projects can often start to seem like public planning processes, taking years to be decided before being cancelled due to lack of funds.

    What is needed is an approach that delivers the required flexibility, whilst preserving rigour and urgency. It is also important that there is an understandable language to ensure the right tools are used in the right circumstances.

    To solve this apparent paradox, here at FusionExperience we use two complementary tools, the Roadmap and Sprint.

    At the beginning of a programme of work it is not possible to write a plan. It is often not even possible to write a plan for a plan. However, work does need to be coordinated. A roadmap does not aim to set out the sequence of projects, neither does it aim to set out the duration of projects. What it does is set out things that need to be achieved and enable tactical projects to understand how they relate to each other.

    A clearly articulated Roadmap that is kept up to date and communicated to all stakeholders is a powerful tool for ensuring that the strategic direction is maintained, whilst accepting that progress will always be driven tactically.

    To inject urgency into processes we organise work into a series of ‘sprints’. A sprint has three components, a start line, a finish line and a duration that is as short as possible. Each of these three aspects is vital and needs to be properly structured. At the beginning we have a set of criteria that must be fulfilled before the sprint can start. Ensuring all entry criteria are met before starting a sprint ensures that resources will be best used, and project execution time will be predictable. Here at FusionExperience we have a comprehensive checklist to ensure we are ready to start a Sprint, but all organisations will develop their own approach.

    A Sprint has a clear finishing line. There will be an unambiguous definition of success, endorsed by all stakeholders. Once a Sprint has started, the project team has only one goal. To get to the finishing line as fast as possible. The project team must be empowered to use whatever tools they think fit to achieve the defined objectives. Sprints can be used at any point in a project, but are of most use at the front end, when the environment is far from controlled and a schedule of activities difficult to derive. Examples include: Developing a business case for one element of the roadmap or achieving contract signature

    The second feature that sets major change apart is that is reallocates tasks between teams.

    Organisations grow organically and by acquisition. Scale benefits can only be realised by implementing best practice across the organisation. Further to this, processes can be rationalised into centre of excellence. However, these benefits can be difficult to achieve, difficult to implement quickly, and difficult to sustain. Again standard project methodologies help us with monitoring a schedule of activities to produce defined deliverables, but give little guidance in transforming organisations.

    For this kind of project we advocate process driven transformation. In to many cases a firm attempts major organisational change by documenting the current state, mapping this to a future state, closing gaps, and then deriving a migration plan. In some cases however, the project is executed – maybe even to time and budget – but the expected benefits are not achieved. In this case companies need to ask themselves why.

    If a firm tries to implement major process change without thinking about how it manages its processes, it is unsurprising that the change does not pan out as expected. It is therefore central when embarking on major process change, for a firm should consider how well it manages its processes

    A firm’s ability to manage its process can be described in capability maturity levels:

     Level 1 - processes are ad-hoc.

     Level 2 - processes are well understood and managed.

     Level 3 - processes are established and improved.

     Level 4 - processes are quantitatively measured against customer relevant metrics

     Level 5 - continual improvement is part of the DNA of the organisation.

    What are the implications of this for major process change? If an organisation is not at least level 2 then the project will be required to invest a lot of resource in determining what the current state actually is. Furthermore, the investment in defining the target state will be quickly lost as ad-hoc process change renders this static document obsolete. So the project is simultaneously made harder, and delivers less value. An approach which has a much more certain outcome is, to develop the organisation to capability maturity level 2. Process change can then be implemented quickly, and above all confidently, with accurate prediction of the benefits to be achieved.

    Managing major change requires an open minded approach. There must be an honest assessment of not just the ‘current state’, but the current capability of the organisation. No methodology is effective in all situations. Successfully managing major change requires the use of the most appropriate approach at each stage of the process.

    Gordon Easden, practice head, FusionExperience

  • 13 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Southend-on-Sea Borough Council is aiming to improve its operating efficiency by moving to a full service management platform from supplier Hornbill.

    The council hope the move will bring significant savings and a proactive service to end users of over 200 applications and the Council network.

    Source: http://www.publictechnology.net/sector/local-gov/southend-moving-itil-improve-service-delivery

  • 13 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Capgemini announce the results of its global study, Collaborating for Innovation, examining evolving trends in product and service innovation across the manufacturing industry, building on the findings of the last edition of the report from 2008.

    The study’s key findings show the extent to which innovation has now become an integral part of corporate growth strategy. However, close to two-thirds of respondents stated that less than half the products launched in the past three years have been successful, despite increased support for innovation at an executive level for innovation projects. One of the main reasons cited for this is failure to meet customers’ needs due to a lack of insight. With customer collaboration highlighted as the least mature area of manufacturers’ collaboration efforts, it is clear that collaborative innovation has a key role to play in manufacturing success.

    Following a period during which the main priority for many manufacturers has been cutting costs, attention is now turning to strategies for growth and as a result, innovation has again become a priority as a key differentiator in achieving top-line growth and maintaining competitive edge. As such, the report reveals 65 percent of all respondents stated that they had received “good support” at an executive level for innovation projects, compared to 50 percent in 2008. Manufacturers are clearly making progress here with an emerging trend for manufacturers to establish a dedicated Chief Innovation Officer role and/or an Innovation Center at the corporate level to better align their strategic approach to innovation with growth strategies.

    The measurement of innovation performance has also become a key priority. While until a few years ago product revenues, development costs and time-to-market had been the primary performance indicators, manufacturers are now applying a more diverse range of Key Performance Indicators (KPIs), for example customer perception, to measure innovation performance. However, there is more that manufacturers could be doing to integrate innovation into their organization beyond traditional methods.

    According to the report, in a sector where margins are traditionally tight, innovation has to be at the heart of strategic initiatives, breaking new ground in product and service offerings, forging cross-boundary partnerships and bringing in new capabilities through mergers, acquisitions and joint ventures. As such, manufacturers are increasingly turning to collaborative business models, processes and technologies to gain competitive advantage in their innovation efforts across all parts of the value chain, including through supplier, R&D and customer collaboration. As highlighted in the report, some of the key ways in which manufacturers can, and indeed in some cases have, achieved improvements in their ability and confidence to develop and promote new services and products using external collaboration are:

    New web 2.0 technologies: A total of 79 percent of respondents said that the use of IT innovation tools assisted in collaboration with external parties. The study found that many manufacturing companies are leading the way in using these new technologies, including social networking sites and virtual worlds, such as Second Life, to drive innovation.

    Targeted outsourcing: The study reveals that companies are increasingly looking externally for help, with 50 percent of respondents leveraging external experts to fuel the innovation process.

    Supplier integration: Suppliers are also helping to drive innovation. Most companies surveyed said they were effectively carrying out a range of supplier collaboration activities, including the use of information systems (89 percent), open-innovation environments (80 percent) and involvement in the innovation process (79 percent).

    Customer satisfaction: While some progress has been made here, manufacturers could do a better job of bringing customer feedback into the innovation process. 77 percent of respondents believed that their engagement with customers was positive. However, almost half of respondents said that less than 20 percent of new products originated from ideas generated or shaped by customers.

  • 13 Dec 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Councils in England are to learn later how much the funding they receive from central government will be cut over the next two years.

    Similar to the spending review, opportunities should arise for various outsourcing partnerships as councils aim to save money by outsourcing some of their back office functions and share services.

    The Localism Bill will lay the foundations for what David Cameron calls "the big society". The bill will also change the role that councils play in finding accommodation for the homeless.

    Communities Secretary Eric Pickles said: "I believe it is possible to cut significant sums out of local authorities by simply improving the way local authorities operate.

    “They've simply got to wake up to the fact that it is no longer viable to have their own chief executives, their own legal departments their own education departments, their own planning departments - they've simply got to put this together and they've got to look for ways to see these services provided in partnership with local communities.

    “I'm expecting local authorities to be able to provide more for less, I'm expecting them to be able to provide a reasonable level of service and I think local authorities shouldn't have some kind of alibi in feeling that these have been imposed from the centre and therefore they've got to provide every single cut on the front line."

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