Archive for September, 2010

How do you keep an offshore IT relationship fresh

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

By Karl Flinders, ComputerWeekly.com

I had a quick interview with the CIO of Insurer Aegon. Frank Dijkstra is CIO of the non-life business at Aegon.

He was at the event to do a presentation about the company’s software development outsourcing deal with HCL. This is a six year old deal which has been a success and has matured over time.

I also did a blog post on Monday about Morrison Utility Services, which had offshored software development to Zensar, giving its reasons for offshoring.

Both CIOs said of lower cost software development and maintenance were important factors factors such as flexibility and access to skills on demand were also important.

Dijkstra at Aegon said the company first outsourced software work 10 years ago and about six years ago it decided to offshore.

"We saw things happening offshore but our European outsourcing partners did not have an offshore capability then so we signed a ne partner," he says.

The new partner was HCL.

"Cost was one of the drivers but there was also a bit of dissatisfaction with our European partners."

He said as the contract has matured cost is becoming less important. "The main reason for using this model is agility and flexibility. We can react quickly to changing business opportunities.

This flexibility and agility has paid off as the insurance industry has transformed as a result of the web. Today consumers use websites to buy and compare insurance products for example. As a result HCL has been involved in the development of web portals for Aegon.

Offshore service providers are often criticised as not being innovative. Aegon’s experience with HCL is different according to Dijstra. He says HCL is treated as an in-house resource and Aegon challenges HCL with ideas and HCL returns with innovation ideas.

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Why IT is not a department anymore

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

By Jeff Cerny, ZDNET

Julius Tomei has more than 26 years in IT, working his way up through a single Fortune 100 company. He has a wealth of experience in every possible area, including service delivery, automation, batch-process management and operations strategy.

Before there was such a thing as a PC or client-server technology, he started his career as a COBOL and Assembler programmer, became a programmer analyst, then a systems analyst, project manager, applications manager, director of infrastructure, and CIO. His responsibilities these days include global infrastructure strategy for planning and management, overseeing more than 200 locations in 45 countries and more than 50,000 end users.

In an interview, Tomei discusses the acceleration of change he has seen in the IT department and how un-departmental it has become.

Q: For any CIO, mobility continues to be an important issue in terms of what employees can and should be able to do on mobile phones and PDAs. What has been the effect of the power and prevalence of mobile applications on your business?
Tomei: We’ve been able to standardize our mobile platform around smartphones, but we haven’t put a lot of emphasis on developing our own custom mobile applications yet. Most of the heavy applications we use are back-office systems and CRM systems, so the applications that are appropriate for smartphones right now are at the departmental level.

People are excited, and rightfully so, about each new generation of devices and what they can do. But securing both the application and the data is still a primary concern for us. For example, any data that gets transmitted in or out on a mobile device is going to have to be encrypted. It’s not that we’re unaware of the value of smartapps. I just came back to Chicago on a flight and checked in by scanning the electronic boarding pass with a bar code on my phone into the console, which worked very well. So it’s not something we won’t be pursuing. But the concern to protect the data in transmission and the ability for people to take data with them are still the sticking points when you’re talking about taking it to the enterprise level.

What about the new enterprise apps like Google’s? Have you been able to take advantage of any of those tools?
I see small and midsize businesses (SMBs) using Google Enterprise Apps very effectively to customize their unique business situations and creating competitive advantage with them. But it’s a different situation for a larger company. If you remember, applications like C++ and Visual Basic as the back-end SQL server were very big in their heyday, and people started building their first client-server, multi-tier, N-tier infrastructures and applications. That allowed people to build applications that weren’t available off the shelf at the time.

Today those applications you need are pre-built. Coming right out of the box they are beefed up with a broad selection of enhancements, so we’ve been able to focus our energies more on developing business process than on building custom applications. The ones you find with Google or in the Apple and Droid environments are making headway in SMB organizations, but at the enterprise level, the emphasis is still going to be on the large-scale, blocking-and-tackling apps.

One of the priorities General Motors’ new CIO Terry Kline pointed to recently is creating a consolidated, common view for employees, particularly the view of their customers. Is that an important area for you?
It absolutely is. One of the key advantages I’ve seen in having a common framework is that you can shift the thinking in the organization from reactive to proactive. You see that most dramatically in companies that spend a lot of time in break-fix, where they are constantly in the firefighting mode. When you have a common perspective, it enables people to change from firefighters into business managers. They see the bigger picture, and they can begin to work with the business on process improvement and adding value.

Getting to a single view of our customers and our employees was important, but we had to have buy-in and agreement on a lot of cross-functional data. We had to migrate the data, the ownership, and the processes. We inventoried thousands of applications across our business, many of which were redundant or overlapping. It was more than just a convergence of the applications, but also a consolidation of the processes that support them. Once you bring all those independent internal data applications together, you have things in place for implementing single sign-on, which is a major step toward getting the house in order.

What have been the biggest changes in the role of IT and its effect on the business over the course of your career?
From where I sit, IT doesn’t look like it once did at all. Over the last 30 years, IT has come from being a back-office, data processing organization to a center of information management and influencer of the overall decision-making process. IT plays a role in the services that are brought to the company, the infrastructure and applications, where to make investments, and its perception and understanding of the marketplace. The role we are playing now is much more as an ally and partnership with the business in a more consultative function.

The other transformation is that we’re getting thinned out; fat IT organizations are becoming very rare. The question now is what goes in the cost bucket and what goes in the commodity bucket in ways that make the most of our technology investments.

How do you see the transition from enterprise software providers to enterprise service providers affecting your business?
Like most of the companies I am talking to, we are exploring the cloud-services path more and more. Businesses are asking how much they should continue to invest in their own infrastructure and building all that capability in house versus a service level, possibly even a better one, provided externally at a reasonable price. I don’t know any large companies that have just jumped into the deep end of the pool, because they need to make sure they get it right. The software side is what the business sees and what it runs on, so the business process requires the service levels to be right. The other factor is that going to SAAS should not only be about improving service and speed, but also agility. That is a critical piece of our investment picture. It’s a maturing industry. I don’t see it as fully matured at this point.

As you look at outsourcing and cloud services, are there specific things you will always want to keep internal?
The data ownership and the business process optimization still happen inside the four walls. Those are things you can’t hand over and say, "We outsourced it; now it’s yours." There is a relationship and a process of learning to work in a different way that is more efficient. Someone else can be managing the application and the infrastructure, but no one will ever know the business better than you. The change going on and the improvements as a result of acquisitions of companies with different processes are going to make you better, but it’s going to require work only you can do. Those are the things that have financial consequences if they are not done properly. The oversight of all the key processes that lie beneath the services is still what makes things work. Whether it’s a ticketing system or a "service bus", there’s a cohesive plan that keeps these pieces working together. No one service provider is going to bring all the applications, data center, help desk, desktop services. The gluing together is what IT is going to continue doing; managing that service layer that connects all the pieces that make up IT services.

What kinds of changes have you seen specifically in the data center?
I started out in the days when data centers were running on mainframes. Then we went to the client-server world and became very distributed. Now what I’m seeing is distributed systems that are becoming more centralized. Back in the old days, we didn’t call it cloud computing. It was timeshare for the mainframe. You went to the green screen and keyed in a command, and it went out and got the information.

What I think we’re seeing are familiar concepts reinventing themselves with more speed, processing power and storage space, but the data requirements are also growing astronomically in most organizations. Our retention policies, for example, how long we are required to keep which data, are coming to the forefront. Most companies have been virtualizing for a while and I see that continuing to be the case. I also see IP telephony playing an increasingly bigger role, and the need for conference bridges from CSP’s declining. I want to be able to use my existing network with any number of subscribers.

You were leading the pack in ITIL adoption and transformation a few years ago. Has that continued to be a part of your strategy?
ITIL remains an integral part of everything we do; it’s embedded in our processes. As an IT organization, if you can’t establish a framework of best practices, you are destined to become very inefficient. ITIL allows us to be good at what we do and be a better ally to the business. You have to consider all the components of ITIL and apply the ones that make sense for your organization.

It’s also still the best tool out there for giving us all a common language and understanding of defined processes. Even as more processes are outsourced, you still need people to facilitate the information management at a higher level across the organization. IT brings the discipline to break down the business silos by using frameworks like Cobit and ITIL.

Have you looked at any other sources of best practices and benchmarks?
SAP has its own set of best practices, so we did use those in the implementation of its solutions and systems. But in terms of infrastructure management, we have continuously stuck with the industry standards of ITIL and COBIT, and in fact, they are embedded in the tools we use off the shelf.

Over the next few years, it sounds like a leaner IT department will become even more central to the business.
For those companies that are really going to transform themselves to the next generation, the IT shop is doing more than just crunching numbers, spitting out reports, and building applications. Particularly as business applications become smarter, they will need to be deployed at the product level in many cases. That’s an opportunity for IT to become even more embedded in the business.

The main difference is that IT used to be a department. You could go to the IT floor and find the IT people there. Now information technology is everywhere. It permeates everything the company is doing. Because of that, the IT role has become more of a business role than a technical one. In the 90s and early 2000s, this was happening so fast it looked like the CEOs were going to start coming from the CIO ranks. That level of transformation hasn’t happened yet, but we’ve come a long way from the time when the main reason you talked with the IT guy is to see if he could fix your PC.

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China’s outsourcing market closes in on India

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

By Jamie Yap, ZDNet Asia

China may eventually supersede India as the outsourcing powerhouse in the world, according to an analyst.

China’s outsourcing market is giving India "substantial competition" in terms of "footprint, awareness and capability", said Jens Butler, principal analyst at Ovum, in a statement released Thursday.

India’s possible eclipse by China’s ascension in the outsourcing business has been reported by analysts in recent years. They point to India’s high attrition rates, poor infrastructure, and rising wages as factors contributing to the country’s decline in shared services and outsourcing (SSO) activities.

In a study conducted by Tholons and Global Services, India was the top global outsourcing nation in 2009. China was among the top five.

Butler called the competition between China and India a "two-horse race to the finish".

Both countries, said the analyst, are frequently touted to have low-cost delivery locations, which attract investments from several foreign enterprises to set up operation. Both countries are also becoming increasingly influential global centers of political and economic power, added Butler who is based in Sydney.

Butler stressed the need to consider each delivery location on "an individual contractual demand basis" because each market has its own unique advantages and trade-offs. For instance, India’s maturity of its outsourcing marketing vis-a-vis China’s cost-competitive rates that will appeal to companies eager to tap the huge domestic market.

However, political stability and government support are also key, noted Butler, adding that such factors play a "key role".

In India, there is province-led support for homegrown free-market organizations. In China, under the country’s Five-Year Plans–aimed at turning its economy from mostly manufacturing to including services–the government has given strong supportto boost the local outsourcing industry. It has done this by supporting outsourcing centers, temporarily removing business taxes on offshore local contracts, and opening up more jobs in the industry.

India has non-IT outsourcing to look to
India’s key information technology (IT) outsourcing market may be threatened by China’s, but outsourcing for other industries in the country is on the rise.

Spurred by the high quality of writing and the cost savings of hiring Indian legal writers and editors, there are now at least 140 legal outsourcing companies in India as at end of 2009. In comparison, there were a mere 40 in 2005, according to a report from Indian consulting firm ValueNotes.

Butler also pointed out that there are a host of other countries which provide alternatives to the two current "magnets" of SSO activities, such as the Philippines, South Africa and Latin America.

"These locations may not compete from a pure scale perspective, but they may well continue to extract market share from both", just as China is doing to India, he concluded.

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China to overtake India in offshoring by 2011

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

By Farihan Bahrin, ZDNet Asia

Affordable rent, low-cost labor and population literacy are the main reasons why companies still prefer to set up their delivery centers in Indian cities like Mumbai and Bangalore. But this offshoring trend is likely to change in the near future, according to a study by IDC.

The analyst group forecasted that Chinese cities will soon overtake their Indian counterparts as top destinations for offshore global delivery by 2011, based on the results acquired from its Global Delivery Index (GDI).

The GDI compares 35 cities in the Asia-Pacific region as potential offshore delivery centers based on a set of criteria such as labor and rental costs, language skills and turnover rate. Cities covered by the index include Adelaide, Bangalore, Dalian, Hanoi, and Kuala Lumpur.

According to IDC research manager for Asia-Pacific BPO Research Conrad Chang, what differentiates the leading cities from the rest is "the focus on deal-clinching factors", including agent skills and political risk.

"There are different risk factors to consider when evaluating outsourcing, offshoring, onshoring, and nearshoring," explained Chang in a statement Tuesday. "Some factors are obviously more critical than others."

Chang also noted that while Indian cities scored high on the criteria set by the GDI, the picture could well be different four years from now.

Although the top ranked Chinese cities–Beijing, Shanghai and Dalian–trail their Indian counterparts in the GDI this year, they are expected to overtake the competition by 2011.

IDC attributed this to China’s massive investments in areas favorable towards offshoring, such as infrastructure development, technical skills as well Internet connectivity.

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Clouded in Mystery – Part 4

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

By Zachary Ochieng, CIO

ASSESS YOUR CLOUD SERVICE PROVIDER

"It is important to go through the normal business matrix of assesing or evaluating the company that is going to provide you with the cloud. You need to run the necessary checks; who are the directors of

this organisation? Are they sustainable financially? What do their bankers say about them? You also need to get one or two references in the industry."

Longwe adds: "Apart from the basic checks, you also need to assess that this cloud service is operating according to industry best practice. That will seal your job. As a CIO, you are employed to ensure that the organisation’s information is secure at all times and that the organisation will be able to run its affairs continuously without being tampered with."

Quintica’s Mr Purdie advises: "When it comes to the technology component, look for redundancy, resilience and process. With regard to redundancy, your vendor needs to be able to show you evidence of fail over systems, and third party support contracts that support your actual needs. Finally, for resilience ask about the security framework that the vendor has in place. If they cannot show you 5 levels of security then walk away."

MARKET IS READY

The challenges notwithstanding, the East African market is certainly ready for Cloud computing.

"We are 100 per cent ready. I would say this because we have generated so much intellectual capacity in nterms of technology-Facebook, Twitter, all the web 2.0 applications that are being utilised even by our own very young people who have just graduated from universities . The only problem is the platform on which to develop some of these applications but Cloud computing will now make this easy", says Longwe.

With the East African integration and the recent coming into effect of the Common Market Protocol, the region couldn’t be more ready. The arrival of the undersea cables has enhanced communications as the high Internet connectivity will enable even those living in rural areas to access powerful compute and storage platforms.

But Adnet’s Mr Mwaura has a different view. He feels the region is not ready and businesses have to weigh the pros and cons of Cloud computing. He says it will take some time before the networks are trusted.

"We need to be cautious. We are adapting a lot of technology from the West without considering whether it is relevant to us. Though we have fibres, the redundancy level in Africa is still very low. Personally, I feel Cloud computing is something we need to adopt cautiously. We also need to consider what aspects of our IT information need to go to the cloud. The technology is ripe but Africa is not ready. It may be catching up and people like the phrase but I think it’s too early to say it’s right for us at the moment", Mwaura observes.

FUTURE LOOKS VERY BRIGHT

That notwithstanding, Longwe says the the future looks very bright for Cloud computing in the region.

"Over the next 12 months initially, we are going to see a number of large players offering cloud services, initially starting at basic level i.e IT as a service; later on we will see Software as a Service (SaaS), infrastructure as a service and disaster recovery as a service. Later on, the industry will begin to grow and become more intricate and start offering CRM as a service", says Longwe.

Those with big money will invest in creating Cloud computing platforms for their own internal use as well as offering services to the outside world. In the next year or so, multinationals will begin to pool their resources as they begin to use Cloud computing facilities within the region given that they are already targeting Kenya due to the availability of the undersea cables.

Longwe says that in the next five years or so, we are going to see a lot of federated clouds, where one cloud can move and grow into another. Initially, this will be seen in Kenya, with the Kenyan private clouds beginning to mesh with the Ugandan, Tanzanian and Rwandan clouds and create larger pools of resources that people are able to share. Private clouds will eventually become public clouds.

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India, China hold offshoring ground

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

By Joel D. Pinaroc, ZDNet Asia

India and China continue to lead in Asia’s offshoring activities, while Philippines’ growth has exceeded analyst expectations, reveals a new market report.

According to XMG’s latest study on the onshore and offshore delivery of outsourcing services, India will account for 11.5 percent of the global market in 2007, compared to China’s 4.4 percent share.

India, the world’s top offshore outsourcing destination, will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 29.5 percent to reach US$34.1 billion in revenues by the end of 2007.

The research firm also said India will continue to lead the offshore segment through 2010 with at least 15 percent share.

China’s 2007 revenues are forecasted to hit US$13.1 billion, registering a compound annual growth rate of 47.9 percent.

However, India and China are not the only markets to watch.

Lauro Vives, chief analyst at XMG, said: "While it is no surprise that India and China continue to lead amongst the offshore countries, our study also showed a noteworthy insight to those following the growth of other offshore countries in Asia.

"The Philippines is experiencing an unprecedented growth rate of 62 percent [which] will surpass Malaysia in 2007," he added.

According to the XMG study, Philippines’ revenues are expected to grow to almost US$4.1 billion, garnering 1.4 percent of the global market.

"The Philippine industry has far exceeded all analyst expectations," Vives said.

In comparison, Malaysia’s revenue forecast by year-end is estimated at US$3.6 billion, or 1.2 percent market share.

In 2006, Malaysia and the Philippines were neck and neck with 1.04 percent and 1.02 percent share of global revenues, respectively, XMG said.

Despite a projected 38 percent growth this year, Malaysia’s growth is being outstripped by other markets, primarily due to the country’s lack of manpower to sustain the growth of its offshore and outsourcing industry, the report noted.

"Locators are turning to other countries where there is headroom for further growth and expansion," Vives said.

Looking forward to 2008, the study predicted "turbulence but continued strong growth in the offshore markets", citing the rising costs and the continuing depreciation of the U.S. dollar.

The report also noted the rise in real estate prices and the rising cost of operations in India and the Philippines due to wage rate hikes. Both India and the Philippines are expected to experience continuing general wage increases of 11 percent and 8 percent, respectively, due to the talent supply challenge.

According to XMG, the global outsourcing market for IT, business process outsourcing, and call center services is expected to grow by 19.3 percent to top US$297 billion this year. By 2010, the market is projected to be worth US$450 billion.

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Clouded in Mystery – Part 3

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

By Zachary Ochieng, CIO

NO STANDARDS IN PLACE

"With no standards in place, it takes time to convince people that they can actually store their data remotely. It is also a catch 22 situation for vendors who don’t want to release information on their infrastructure lest a prospective client opts not to use their services", says Kikuyu.

The reality is that a lot of people have traditionally felt that if they are paying for something, they need to see the actual evidence of the product, instead of accepting the value of the service. But Quintica’s Mr Purdie sees this changing soon.

"I am, however, very pleased to report that the tide is turning and business managers and Information Technology managers are now realising that it is a better choice to take advantage of services; and not to have to worry about how they are delivered", says Purdie.

According to Mamdoo, the issue of uptime also remains crucial, given the power situation in the region.

SECURITY BIGGEST CONCERN

But in the words of SST’s Mr Longwe, the first biggest and primary fear is security. "We live in a market where if somebody captures your idea and they go to the market first, then they have beaten you to the business. So, I think security is the biggest concern for anybody moving into the cloud." Organisations are afraid that their information may be tampered with by their competitors.

Dimension Data’s Mr Murage concurs: "The fact that you are pooling resources brings a lot of security concerns. For silos it is easy to separate them by putting firewalls. But cloud infrastructure allows you to move your computing resources from one geographic location to another. A cloud user is never sure whether using shared infrastructure is secure", Murage observes, adding that if no disaster recovery measure is put in place, the failure rate becomes very high, with many applications running on a single server.

LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL

But there is certainly some light at the end of the tunnel, with a few organisations already coming up to address security concerns. One such organisation is Adnet, that focuses on IP security, besides offering tailormade enterprise solutions that works for its customers.

"Obviously we realise that the landing of cables at the Kenyan coast has really opened up the region in terms of metro, Internet and WAN. The whole region is opening up to what we call parallel access to content in terms of voice, video and data. The whole idea of Cloud computing is to find more effective ways of managing this content in a safer, less expensive way", says Norman Mwaura, Adnet’s General Manager.

According to Mwaura, security is actually a strategy and not a product. "Every organisation needs IT security, not just a firewall.

You need an end -to -end enterprise wide solution. In that way, the organisation will be able to secure data and also to minimise threats."

Ultimately, the onus is on the CIO to choose the best loud service provider. So what should CIOs look for?

"Because you are a CIO, your first and primary concern is going to be security; you need to ensure that the levels of encryption technology that are being provided by your cloud service provider are adequate. They should meet global standards for security with in the cloud", says Longwe.

CIOs should also ensure that the cloud service providers they engage have all the necessary facilities to enable them maintain and sustain operations.

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Clouded in Mystery – Part 2

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

By Zachary Ochieng, CIO

BRINGING INFRASTRUCTURE INTO A COMMOM POOL

"Cloud computing changes all that by bringing the infrastructure into a common pool. By pooling and sharing, you are reducing costs and getting a higher return on investment (ROI)", says George Murage, Line of Business Manager, Data Centre Solutions, Dimension Data East Africa, a specialist IT services and solutions provider.

Since Cloud computing is a service provided on demand, the speed of provisioning IT services increases tremendously.

Jude Kikuyu, Chief Technology Officer, Alliance Technologies, a Kenyan-based software engineering company, says that besides saving on costs, Cloud computing allows accessibility of data from wherever one is.

"Other benefits would be availability of tools or software that you need for developing your application. Like if you want to develop a CRM, there is a tool you can use", says Kikuyu.

CLOUD COMPUTING ENHANCES E-COMMERCE

There is no doubt that Cloud computing also enhances e-commerce. Kenya has a thriving intellectual base of up and coming "Information Technology Visionairies". These (typically young) people have embraced technology from an early age and are now seeing how computer systems and access devices can be applied to everyday activities.

With this talent, organisations are now able to quickly and easily gain access to literally hundreds of thousands of new customers that want to shop, but may not have the access or time on their hands. Quintica, for instance, is currently working on a project that is set to revolutionise the shopping industry in Kenya.

Perhaps the most widely known example of cloud computing asssisting e-commerce is the ability for businesses to gain access to online merchant facilities. These facilities can be integrated into an organisational web site so that people can browse through a virtual store and then purchase goods and services using a credit card, Paypal or even a cheque. Other cloud based systems that have been around for years are Salesforce.com, Google (GOOG) and Amazon. Such systems are pervasive and people’s concern about online buying is rapidly evaporating.

Kiilu Longwe is optimistic that with very many bright minds in the region, Cloud computing is soon going to start acting as a catalyst to e-commerce, as the primary driver of e-commerce is the correct type of infrastructure.

CORRECT TYPE OF INFRASTRUCTURE

"Whereas previously many individuals and firms were not able to leverage off the correct type of infrastructure, Cloud computing is going to make this happen", says Longwe.

Still, one cannot talk about Cloud computing without virtualisation. In server virtualisation for instance, we are looking at server consolidation which basically means getting majority of the physical servers and consolidating them into one and their applications used in a virtual server environment.

"From a cost persepective, we are reducing power and cooling needs, and from a management perspective, we are reducing the number of people required to manage all these servers. The cost in terms of real estate is also saved. By moving to a virtual environment, you are getting uptime", says Hardeep Sound, Business Productivity Solutions Specialist, Microsoft (MSFT) East & Southern Africa.

In a desktop environment, with virtualisation, the applications do not reside on a desktop. Instead, they reside on a central server. Whenever end users need an pplication, they simply request it from the server.

But despite the benefits offered by Cloud computing, a number of CIOs are still reluctant to venture into the cloud owing to the fears and challenges associated with it. According to Kikuyu, it is expensive to set up cloud services, not to mention that people are very suspicious of their data sitting outside.

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Cloud turning outsourcing ‘upside down’

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

By Vivian Yeo, ZDNet Asia

Cloud computing is set for a bright future and will turn traditional outsourcing "upside down", but the latter is not likely to disappear for "many years yet", according to an industry analyst.

Rolf Jester, Gartner’s Distinguished Analyst and Asia-Pacific vice president for IT services, pointed out that cloud is not yet a major threat to outsourcing because deals that have been struck or are being negotiated, will remain valid for five to 10 years and are delivering value to businesses.

"People aren’t going to change just because something new comes along," Jester said in a phone interview with ZDNet Asia, noting that from a buyer’s point of view, there are still concerns over security and privacy of data in cloud computing.

In a traditional outsourcing contract, a company typically signs a multiyear mega deal with an IT services vendor which will manage specific functions for the company. Such large contracts, however, are dwindling, according to a previous Gartner report.

Gartner has predicted that by 2012, utility and cloud-based services will account for at least 50 percent of all new demand for managed IT infrastructure services. Jester explained: "The keyword is new demand…a major IT user [such as] a bank or government department is not going to throw out the outsourcing contract that it already has. Neither is it going to throw out its in-house systems."

That said, the analyst noted that the cloud or utility model will turn outsourcing "upside down" because unlike in the traditional model, where an outsourcer visits the customer IT environment to understand the infrastructure and negotiates the functions to manage, the cloud service provider lays out its capabilities and services from which the client has the option to pick and determine how much to buy.

"Does that mean traditional outsourcing becomes obsolete? Certainly in the long term, yes, but the long term is not necessarily tomorrow," Jester said.

Cloud as future outsourcing leaders
His views contrast with that expressed by two A.T. Kearney consultants, who wrote last month in Bloomberg Businessweek that outsourcing "as we know it" will disappear in the next five years. A.T. Kearney defines the traditional outsourcing model as one that involves long-term contracts, customized software, legacy software and on-site systems integration work.

The writers, Arjun Sethi and Oliver Aries, proposed that Amazon and Google will be the clear-cut winners and "future leaders in outsourcing", while software bigwigs such as Microsoft, Oracle and SAP are "possible winners". Mid-tier Indian outsourcers are predicted as "losers" where even larger players, such as Infosys and Wipro, risk losing their competitive advantage, the consultants said.

Jester, however, argued that competition in evolving outsourcing realm will take place amongst four different classes of services providers: traditional IT players, telcos, Web-based companies such as Amazon Web Services, and business services companies such as Accenture as well as accounting or human resource management software companies.

The Gartner analyst said it remains to be seen if the likes of Amazon will emerge as the forerunners in the new outsourcing age as it will depend on whether customers can trust them as enterprise-class services providers and able to provide and meet the service level agreements to support mission-critical applications.

He believes there is potential for partnerships to be formed among players in competing provider categories, painting a "very fluid picture" in the industry over the next few years.

"What will undoubtedly emerge from that are not necessarily single-providers but a value chain of providers," Jester said, adding that brokers may even surface to provide aggregate services of various cloud providers.

Traditional outsourcers prep for cloud
IT services providers are also actively reinventing themselves for the cloud revolution, banking on partnerships and customer understanding to emerge victorious.

Rohit Gandhi, Mahindra Satyam’s Asia-Pacific head, said in an e-mail that the company and its parent Tech Mahindra are "evaluating the market very seriously" and have dedicated teams to work on cloud-related offerings.

"There is still a lot of debate on the topic of public versus private clouds and enterprise customers have a lot of complex questions to be answered before they walk the full route," Gandhi noted.

"It is early to say whether size is a liability and whether tier-one players like Mahindra Satyam will lose their competitiveness because of emergence of new players in the cloud," he said, adding that the Indian player has identified innovation, talent, brand and balance sheet as the four critical success factors to succeed in the new outsourcing era.

He noted that Mahindra Satyam views the likes of Amazon and Google as "key partners" in the public cloud space and is already in discussion with some of these cloud vendors "to work as value-added service providers to their stacks".

Wipro’s senior vice president Sanjay Gupta also noted the importance of partnerships.

"Wipro has maintained a vendor-agnostic cloud strategy…by systems integrating best-of-breed solutions to add maximum value to clients," Gupta said, adding that the company has "built a very strong partner ecosystem over the last couple of years" and continues to do so at the global level.

At the same time, enterprises place significant value on unbiased and impartial advice and execution from their systems integrators, he told ZDNet Asia. "Wipro is working toward becoming the unbiased advisor to the enterprise in the migration to cloud."

The executive, however, disagreed that traditional outsourcing services will eventually become obsolete.

"Businesses with different kinds of requirements will maintain a steady balance between traditional IT and cloud-based IT," said Gupta.

"Large enterprises which requirements are very complex and unique, and require a significant amount of customization in applications, will continue to operate in a customized sourcing model comprising in-house and outsourcing to partners. Similarly, critical business applications will not move to [the] cloud in the near term as enterprises are reluctant to move their critical data to a public cloud."

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Take Long Security Look Before Outsourcing Leap

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

 

by Michael Vizard, IT Business EDGE

When it comes to cloud computing specifically and outsourcing in general, there are obviously a lot of concerns about security.

But by and large, the security expertise of IT services providers tends to be greater than that of the internal IT department, so chances are good that security might be better handled by them. Of course, they have to offer to actually manage your security. For instance, Amazon pretty much tells customers that they are on their own when it comes to managing the security of the application workloads running on its clouds.

But before you decide to outsource your IT operations, Rob White, director of IT security services for Fujitsu, says there are 10 questions you should be asking about security. The goal, says White, is not to come up with an argument against outsourcing, but to create a scenario where the cost of security for the outsourced environment is actually less than it would have been to run it in-house.

White says that in the bad old recent days, the best most customers could expect from outsourcing was “their mess for less.” In other words, the service provider would essentially replicate their internal security systems either on a hosting service or manage it remotely at less cost.

But today customers can demand operational excellence. In the case of Fujitsu, that comes in the form of managed security services for both on-premise and hosted cloud computing environments built mostly around security software from Check Point. While Fujitsu will deliver security services around any security software a customer wants, White says Fujitsu prefers Check Point because it’s the only security vendor that offers a complete security portfolio from the data center to the end point. As White notes, if you really want to reduce the cost of security, one of the best places to start is by reducing the number of vendors involved.

So while customers can still get their mess for less, White says the new goal should really be to get industry best practices for less than it costs to manage your own current mess.

That might seem like a radical idea. But given the overwhelming interest in reducing the cost of IT these days, it’s little wonder that there is a phenomenal amount of interest in lowering the cost of security. After all, it’s difficult to prove that there is a return on security investment, so from the perspective of the business, security is a cost of doing business. And like all costs it needs to not only be managed down, but the quality of the service needs to improve as well.

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