Daily Archives: August 16, 2012

IT outsourcing mega-deals slated for the scrap heap

We need to talk... Is your company rethinking long term outsourcing deals?

There is a quiet revolution in the technology corridors of some of the world’s largest corporations.

Traditional five-year, outsourcing mega-deals – whereby companies delegate the running of information technology (IT) functions to a third party – look set for extinction.

The reason is a pressing need for more flexible, short-term arrangements from newer, nimbler players promising business benefits as well as lower fixed costs.

Although global spending on IT outsourcing is set to hit $US251.7 billion in 2012, an increase of only 2.1 per cent on the previous year, according to figures released by analyst firm Gartner last week, one outsourcing category is set to take off: the cloud.

Cloud computing refers to third-party computer resources that can be turned on or off and scaled up or down, depending on demand. It is compatible with consumer services – such as Hotmail and iCloud – and many IT services, from applications such as online accounting to basic infrastructure such as the provision of computer servers.

The emerging infrastructure-as-a-service sector alone is set to hit $US5 billion this year, up 48.7 per cent on 2011′s figure of $US3.4 billion.

Applications outsourcing is predicted to hit $US40.7 billion – an increase of 2 per cent on 2011, as organisations look for external help to manage older bespoke programs and off-the-shelf software packages. Data centre outsourcing, which represented 34.5 per cent of the global market in 2011, is expected to decline by 1 per cent in 2012.

Gartner research vice-president Jim Longwood said the cost of cloud-based outsourcing contracts was less predictable than traditional outsourcing deals and IT buyers were having to alter their buying patterns accordingly.

Old style set-and-forget deals where costs and service levels were agreed at the outset by the finance and IT departments, then health-checked every two years, did not suit the demand-based cloud pricing model, Mr Longwood said.

"Cloud based deals require more frequent monitoring," he said.

"One of the challenges for clients in this area is that costs become more unpredictable. It’s an evolving area so the benchmarking data is not there. Clients need to become better ‘demand managers’ and learn to manage demand up and down."

Australian companies had become sophisticated IT outsourcing customers over the past 15 years but a rash of new vendors, many promising large savings, meant many first-generation buying mistakes were likely to be repeated, Longwood predicted.

"Infrastructure as a service is a high growth market," he said.

"It’s very dynamic and there’s the usual issue of a lot of new players. Traditional vendors like HP, CSC and Fujitsu are investing heavily in this area and a lot of non-traditional vendors are entering the space.

"It’s not a high cost of entry so it’s easy for new providers to create infrastructure as a service – to build it and entice [clients] to come."

IBM Australia cloud engagement and strategy executive Simon Kaye said the IT outsourcing market was becoming increasingly fragmented, as new players fought for a foothold in the cloud space.

Traditional technology behemoths IBM, HP, Fujitsu and CSC held the top four spots in 2011, with just over a quarter of the global outsourcing market between them, according to Gartner.

Their growth rates of 4 to 10 per cent remained in the healthy but steady class, compared with cloud-focused players Rackspace and Amazon, which grew 31.5 and 66.5 per cent respectively for the same period.

Subcontinental vendors, including WiPro, Infosys and Cognizant, also saw above market growth of between 12.3 and 32.2 per cent.

"At least in the last year, 2012 and beyond, we see that concept of the outsourcing mega deal that used to exist with large organisations is largely disappearing," Kaye said.

"It’s being replaced by a rich tapestry of deals."

While traditional outsourcing deals were predicated solely on the bottom-line boost of contracting out work once done in-house, buyers of cloud outsourcing services had begun focusing on broader business benefits, Kaye said.

"When it comes to the cloud area and mobility, we’re seeing the CEO and marketing directors taking an interest – it’s not just the CFO and CIO looking to save money."

The traditional way of measuring performance was about how much downtime was acceptable, whereas today’s customers were more concerned with how well their applications were performing, Kaye added.

source: http://www.smh.com.au/it-pro/business-it/it-outsourcing-megadeals-slated-for-the-scrap-heap-20120813-244qx.html

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IT, outsourcing firms take second look at responses to calamity

The Business Processing Association of the Philippines, the umbrella organization for the IT-BPO industry, said on Wednesday that it will review its response to calamities to strengthen its efforts to safeguard the well-being of its employees.

“We’ll continue to work closely with the government to ensure employee safety, enhance disaster preparedness, and mitigate service disruption,” BPAP president and chief executive Benedict Hernandez said.

A large part of Luzon was inundated during last week’s surge of monsoon rains. Metro Manila, which hosts hundreds of the country’s information technology and business process outsourcing companies, was not spared.

When Malacañang suspended work in public and private offices on Aug. 7, Presidential Spokesperson Edwin Lacierda said that employers in the private sector who requested or allowed employees to work must be able to ensure and be responsible for their employees’ safety and to grant premium pay.

In an initial survey conducted by BPAP late last week, other IT-BPO companies had reportedly granted monetary relief for affected employees consisting of interest-free loans, 13th-month pay advances, and outright grants.

IT-BPOs also implemented business continuity plans, several of which included provision of safe, shuttle transportation to employees.

BPAP said in many instances, employees used these systems to request assistance from their employers. Companies alerted private-sector and government rescue organizations when employees required urgent assistance.

Employees who worked on Aug. 7 received a 30-percent premium on basic pay in compliance with a directive from the Department of Labor and Employment.

BPAP particularly cited Sitel Philippines Corp.’s memo to its employees issued Aug. 7, which stated, “You are very much welcome to stay in our sites until it is safe for you to go home, and we have also made arrangements for accommodation for those who cannot go home yet. Food shall also be provided, and you will continue to have the assistance of your support teams.”

Others, like Maersk Global Services Centers, provided an emergency assistance program, including emergency loans and an advanced payroll run on Aug. 11 already.

source: http://manilastandardtoday.com/2012/08/16/it-outsourcing-firms-take-second-look-at-responses-to-calamity/

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