Tuesday, July 21, 2009

TV Giants Are Outsourcing More Manufacturing

To outsource or not to outsource. That's a question TV manufacturers face these days as they revamp their supply chains to cope with the drop in demand caused by the global downturn.

The trend is toward outsourcing. Market researcher DisplaySearch says one in four flat-panel TVs sold globally from January to March were made by a contract manufacturer, not the company whose brand is on the set. By next year nearly a third of all TVs will be outsourced, DisplaySearch predicts.

TV makers are betting they can save a lot by letting someone else spend huge sums on new factories filled with state-of-the-art equipment. They figure it doesn't make sense for top brands to add factories only to sell small, low-cost liquid-crystal-display TVs—the sector of the market where TVs are a commodity, competition is the most cutthroat, and prices are most attractive to consumers.

Ramping Up ProductionConsider the diverging paths of two companies: Sharp and Sony. On July 9, Sharp said it was ramping up production in Japan of LCD panels for flat-screen TVs. By August, the company will boost monthly output by 11% at one of its panel-making plants in Kameyama, in central Japan. That plant is already running at full steam, producing 90,000 of the huge specialized glass sheets each month. Each of the 2.2-meter-by-2.5-meter sheets is cut to make 18 32-inch, eight 46-inch, or six 52-inch displays.

Sharp wouldn't specify how the company expects to accomplish this feat. But a company spokeswoman did say why: We've been getting requests from other LCD TV makers, says Miyuki Nakayama. Sharp realized that its current output falls short of meeting those demands. By October, Sharp will rush a gargantuan new factory in Osaka into service to keep the supply of panels flowing to its customers.

Sharp has said its unit sales of TVs will be flat at 10 million this year despite its panel-making buildup. That's partly because roughly half of the panels Sharp will make are expected to end up in other companies' TVs. Last year the company sold 20% of its panels to others. The focus on panels helps to blunt the declining volume sales and sinking prices that have hit every TV maker in the industry. Here's the evidence: Sharp expects revenues from LCD panels to dip 5% from last year but predicts that revenues from TVs will fall 10%. (Analysts expect operating losses from TVs of nearly $350 million but $250 million in operating profits from LCD panels.)

Sony  sells more TVs than Sharp—and is less insulated from the pain. Although the panel factory it runs in a joint venture with Korean rival Samsung Electronics is thought to be profitable, Sony has to share the output, unlike Sharp. And Sony's TV business continues to lose money: A DisplaySearch graph showed that Sony likely outsourced about 15% of its TVs in the first quarter of 2009. In recent months, Sony and Samsung added an assembly line to their factory in Korea.

Coming WaveBut unlike Sharp, which makes nearly all of its own sets, Sony appears to be looking to outsource more of its TVs. Macquarie Securities analyst David Gibson has done some digging and has come up with an estimate: Sony could outsource as much as 50% of its LCD TVs, compared with 10% to 20% last fiscal year.

Outsourcing won't solve all of Sony's problems. Although last year's $1.32 billion loss from TVs could shrink this year, it won't disappear. Gibson predicts that this year's loss is likely to be $580 million.

Source: http://www.financial24.org/asia/tv-giants-are-outsourcing-more-manufacturing/

Canonical Releases Launchpad Source Code

A major advantage of open source software development is the communication between the members of any given project. But what happens when communication must take place between projects? That's where a web-based collaboration service like Launchpad comes in.

Today, over two years after it was launched as a public beta, Canonical, Ltd. has released the source code for Launchpad, which will allow the development community to work on the Launchpad tool itself.

Launchpad not only allows project teams to work with each other, but also facilitates upstream and downstream communications between different projects. The service helps projects collaborate through a set of six integrated tools: team management, bug tracking, code hosting, translating, blueprint tracking, and answer tracking. The service can be examined and used at Launchpad.net.

Using Launchpad, developers host and share code for free--using the Bazaar version control system integrated into Launchpad. Translators can collaborate on translations across many different projects, and end-users identify bugs affecting one or more projects so developers can then triage and resolve those bugs. Contributors can write, propose, and manage software specifications.

In addition, Launchpad erases barriers to collaboration and enables people to support each other’s efforts across different project hosting services--essentially making Launchpad a social network with a purpose. Launchpad has everything software projects, open source or not, need to be successful.

“Launchpad is designed to accelerate collaboration between open source projects,” said Canonical founder Mark Shuttleworth in a press release. “Collaboration is the engine of innovation in free software development, and our intent in creating Launchpad is to support one of the key strengths of free software compared with the traditional proprietary development process. Projects that are hosted on Launchpad are immediately connected to every other project hosted there in a way that makes it easy to collaborate on code, translations, bug fixes and feature design across project boundaries. Rather than hosting individual projects, we host a massive and connected community that collaborates together across many projects. Making Launchpad itself open source fulfills a long term intention to give the users of Launchpad the ability to improve the service they use every day.”

Launchpad hosts open source projects for free, but closed source projects use the service for a fee. This means that projects can utilize the features that Launchpad provides but do not need to share code if that is not desirable. The privacy features are currently in beta, and will be added to the commercial service as these become available.

Source: http://www.linux.com/news/software/developer/29342-canonical-releases-launchpad-source-code

Gomez aims to simplify RIA scripts

Web application company Gomez has added a new performance metrics recorder to and increased the mobile capabilities of its namesake platform.

The Gomez Platform Summer 2009 release, announced today, has a new feature called Gomez Recorder, which is aimed at simplifying the maintenance of test scripts for Web transactions, including rich Internet application transactions. The recorder automatically collects performance metrics of each transaction.

“With the new recorder, you can quickly record multi-step business processes and more easily update and maintain scripts when applications change,” said Imad Mouline, CTO of Gomez. “You can insert measurement points to create precise performance timing data and easily set up custom content validation for objects and third-party content.”

There are new testing agents that reveal data on how Web applications perform in different browsers. Users can now test and monitor mobile applications and resolve performance problems for those applications. Gomez claims its platform can now work with 5,000 mobile devices in addition to more than 500 combinations of standard browsers, devices and screen sizes, according to company executives.

Mouline said software developers today must deal with more complex Web applications and the emergence of multiple browsers with different performance characteristics. They must be able to “ensure quality Web application performance along the entire Web application delivery chain, from the data center to the browser, which also includes getting an accurate read on how load will impact end users' response times,” he said.

Source: http://www.sdtimes.com/link/33626

Cobra Announces Partnership with ProMiles and TruckDown On New Navigation System for the Professional Driver

Professional Driver Navigation & Routing Device Available in September 2009

Cobra Electronics today announced a partnership with ProMiles(R) Software Development Corporation, in association with TruckDown Info International, Inc., in the development of a new navigation system specifically for the professional driver. With this agreement, ProMiles’ and TruckDown’s national database of vendor and professional driver-specific Points of Interest (POI) will be available in the new Cobra navigation unit.

Available in September 2009 at travel centers nationwide, the new Cobra navigation unit designed specifically for professional drivers will include ProMiles and TruckDown vendor locations and POI data. Important information such as routable travel center locations including an extensive list of travel center amenities, fueling stations, restaurants, heavy duty towing, truck repair, trailer shops, truck friendly hotels, welding and weigh scales to name a few will be available as part of the product.

“As a leader in the professional driver market, we want to provide drivers with the highest quality of products that aid them in their everyday business,” explained Tony Mirabelli, senior vice president of marketing and sales, Cobra Electronics. “With ProMiles, a leader in professional driver-specific data, we are providing drivers with the information they need to optimize their routes and get them to their destination the fastest and most profitable way possible.”

“The Cobra name is synonymous with quality among professional drivers,” said Tim Pilcher, president of ProMiles, “and we are looking to forward to working with Cobra on developing this new GPS unit and making drivers’ already tough job a little easier.”

The Cobra Professional navigation unit will be available for a sneak peek at the Great American Trucking Show in Dallas, TX at Cobra booth, #13098 and the ProMiles booth, #14065.

Source: http://www.truckdriversnews.com/2009/07/21/cobra-announces-partnership-with-promiles-and-truckdown-on-new-navigation-system-for-the-professional-driver/

BizCom Releases Update to Website Content Management Tool

Content Management System Gives Non-Technical Users the Ability to Manage Their Sites

BizCom Web Services, a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner, announces the release of version 2.5 of their website Content Management System (CMS). The new system utilizes the Microsoft .NET 3.5 framework and SQL Server 2008 to provide a powerful, lightweight and user-friendly toolset for complete website management.

“We’ve implemented several new tools in this release, including full audit trail cataloging for businesses that must meet strict compliance requirements, an Event Registration System (w/ multiple merchant system plug-ins), enhanced Search Engine Optimization tools and a powerful new Form Builder,” said Don Rodger, VP of Technology and Principal of BizCom.

Rodger continued, “This new version of our CMS software makes it even easier for non-technical people to manage the most complex websites with just a few clicks of their mouse. We added valuable features that allows the customer to effectively manage their site rather than having to depend on a developer.”

“Since December 2008, we have engaged the services of BizCom for the design and hosting of our program’s website, TAP-IN.ORG. The success of our site can be directly tied to the efforts of BizCom and their innovative Content Management System toolset. With relative ease and speed, we are able to distribute our organization’s message throughout the Internet. We effectively manage site content by simply utilizing the BizCom CMS facility,” said Joseph Petrino, Information Technology Manager, American Health Initiative (http://www.tap-in.org).

BizCom’s Website Content Management System comes standard with every website designed and built by BizCom. Their base CMS includes a single user account, text editing, change audits and a file manager. Additional modules can be added to expand functionality - such as Timed Content Management, Event Registration system and page versioning with roll-back.

BizCom Web Services, a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner and a full-service Web Design and Development company, offers custom website design and web application development services. Additionally, they offer web and email hosting services and a full line of hosted Microsoft solutions, including hosted Microsoft Exchange, SharePoint, Office Communication Server (OCS) and Customer Relationship Management (CRM). Additional services include Email Archiving and various SaaS products.

Source: http://www.ereleases.com/pr/bizcom-releases-update-website-content-management-tool-23268

Monday, May 25, 2009

IT firms find payroll outsourcing a good bet

Amid the ongoing slump in the financial service industry, payroll outsourcing has emerged as a better bet for Indian IT firms looking to provide the entire gamut of HR solutions to the US and European clients.

Companies like Infosys, TCS and Caliber Point are relying on pay roll outsourcing to achieve faster growth. No wonder, payroll outsourcing has tipped its subset human resource outsourcing in terms of growth.

A recent study shows that while payroll outsourcing registered a growth of 50 per cent, HR outsourcing grew only at 12 per cent.

“We have started to see payroll services getting more interest from larger and organized suppliers,” Gaurav Gupta, principal and country head of Everest Group.

Payroll outsourcing market pegged at $250 million is much smaller compared to HR outsourcing market at $1.3 billion.

But a large part of HR outsourcing requires onshore or near shore presence for understanding tax and regulatory issues, negating the cost advantage.

In contrast, payroll outsourcing provides immediate and quick cost reduction. It also provides simplification and standardization of the payroll process with quicker access to information.

Out of 104 multi-country, HRO deals signed as of December 2008 only 30 deals included Asia Pacific, but out of 78 multi country payroll deals, 58 were signed in the Asia-Pacific region. Realizing the opportunity Indian players are now getting aggressive to acquire more deals.

“Infosys has partnered with a niche player for providing these payroll solutions in many different geographies and that is the trend going forward,” Gupta said.

The US recession has proved that dependence on just one vertical, BFSI, which accounts for 50 per cent of the outsourcing market can be risky.

So, payroll outsourcing is now emerging as the new opportunity for Indian BPO/ITO companies to leverage on.

Source: http://profit.ndtv.com/2009/05/24212809/IT-firms-find-payroll-outsourc.html

Friday, May 22, 2009

Airline Rule Threatens Pact With EU

The US House of Representatives passed a measure aimed at boosting air safety that threatens to disrupt cooperation with Europe.

The provision, passed as part of a bill to fund the Federal Aviation Administration, requires for the first time that FAA experts inspect at least twice annually any overseas maintenance facility handling American airliners. Currently, the FAA relies heavily on inspections by its foreign counterparts.

The bill's sponsor, House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure Chairman James Oberstar, said he added the provision because US carriers are increasingly outsourcing maintenance work overseas. Inspections of these facilities would "ensure that foreign entities conducting repair work on US aircraft adhere to US safety standards and regulations," he recently told a gathering in Washington.

Opponents say the current system works fine, and the provision is an effort to protect US jobs. They say it will duplicate inspections.

Final passage of the FAA act could take months, as it must next go to the Senate, which could remove the inspection provision.

But the new provision has already prompted the European Union to freeze enactment of a safety accord signed last June with the US And EU officials say that if the US demands FAA inspection of European repair stations, they will respond by requiring European inspections of repair facilities in the US The overlapping inspections could cost millions of dollars for each side.

The new provision "goes against the spirit and the wording of the US-EU Aviation Safety Agreement," said Daniel Hoeltgen, spokesman for the European Aviation Safety Agency, or EASA, the EU's counterpart to the FAA. The accord would boost cooperation, in part by establishing a joint US-EU board to oversee maintenance and certification. EU officials say such mutual assistance can't work if the US is acting unilaterally.

An FAA spokeswoman declined to comment.

Air safety is a delicate topic now, as accidents in the US and Europe -- two of the world's safest aviation markets -- killed 220 people and destroyed seven airliners between August and February, significantly more than in recent years.

Backers of the provision say that maintenance outsourcing poses big safety risks. Robert Roach Jr., general vice president of the International Association of Machinists & Aerospace Workers, which represents US maintenance workers, recently told a congressional hearing that his members had repaired planes returning from overseas flights that had "departed with obvious mechanical problems."

Under current rules, the FAA works with foreign air-safety regulators to ensure their inspections of local repair shops are on par with what the FAA would do. FAA experts then use the foreign reviews -- plus FAA spot checks -- to certify repair stations for US airliners.

Some 700 facilities outside the US now maintain American planes, about 400 of them in Europe. In the US, more than 1,200 repair shops have certification by foreign aviation authorities on top of that from the FAA.

Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124291388570643335.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Upset with outsourcing, union won't give up raise

One major state workers union is saying "no thanks" to Gov. Jim Doyle’s call for them to give up a promised raise to help fill a gaping state budget hole.

The workers won’t give up the 2 percent raise scheduled for June as long as the state continues to outsource additional work to contractors, said Bryan Kennedy, president of AFT-Wisconsin. The union has roughly 10,000 white-collar state workers including computer staff, public defenders and university teaching assistants.

"As long as the state continues to contract out, we will not discuss giving back the pay increase," said Kennedy, arguing that state workers are cheaper for taxpayers than contractors. "It’s a non starter."

Earlier this month, Doyle said he would rescind a pay raise for 9,500 non-union state workers to help fill a $1.6 billion hole in the state budget opened by falling tax collections and the struggling economy.

If the state’s 38,600 union workers don’t agree to give back their pay raises as well, Doyle has said that he could seek the savings by laying off up to 400 of them. Those layoffs would come on top of up to 700 layoffs and 16 days of unpaid leave for state workers also being sought by Doyle to solve the budget gap.

Department of Administration spokeswoman Linda Barth on Wednesday repeated the possibility of added layoffs if unions don’t go along with the pay cuts. She said state agencies are also looking at cutting spending on contracting.

As recently as April and early May, state agencies without enough staffing have taken steps toward possible contracting for computer work in spite of cost figures that show state workers would could do the projects for hundreds of thousands of dollars less, according to documents provided by AFT-Wisconsin.

If all union workers give back the 2 percent raise, that would save some $30 million in state and federal money spent on salaries. Marty Beil, executive director of the 20,000-member Wisconsin State Employees Union, didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Source: http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/local/451976

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Toshiba says to end cellphone output in Japan

Japanese electronics group Toshiba Corp said on Wednesday it would end production of mobile phones in Japan in October and outsource some output to overseas manufacturers to cut costs as demand slumps.

Cellphone sales in Japan tumbled about 30 percent last financial year as a new business model came into effect that led to handset price hikes, prompting consumers to hold onto their phones longer, while the economic downturn also weakened demand.

Toshiba's mobile phone unit sales halved last financial year, causing it to log its first annual operating loss on these operations in five years.

The company, Japan's No. 6 cellphone maker with a 7 percent market share, said it would continue to make smartphones in China on its own as it shifts focus to the growing segment of phones with computer capabilities.

The planned outsourcing would help it cut 4.5 billion yen ($47 million) in annual fixed costs, a Toshiba spokesman said.

Toshiba has forecast it will return to an operating profit this financial year as it pushes ahead with a $3 billion cost-cutting plan. It logged massive losses last year after sharp price falls and sluggish demand battered its main chip business.

Toshiba shares closed down 1.9 percent at 355 yen, against a 0.6 percent rise in the benchmark Nikkei average .N225.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssConsumerGoodsAndRetailNews/idUST19832520090520

Monday, May 18, 2009

Hynix raises US$300 million in IC packaging outsourcing deal

Hynix Semiconductor is to establish a back-end IC packaging joint venture in China with Wuxi Industrial Development Group Company Ltd. Certain equipment currently owned by Hynix in both Korea and China will be purchased Wuxi Industrial Development Group, for approximately US$300 million.

The IC packaging JV will support production at Hynix-Numonyx Semiconductor facility in Wuxi. The new JV reduces the Korean based memory manufacturers back-end operations by 20%, resulting in Hynix now outsourcing 50% of back-end operations

Source: http://www.fabtech.org/news/_a/hynix_raises_us300_million_in_ic_packaging_outsourcing_deal/

Outsourcing American dreams and Hollywood endings

America was always wearing a big smile when it strode into our living room in damp and ghostly England: Lucille Ball, the Beach Boys, a shining young president with two small kids, all stepped down from the screen in the days just before the convulsions of Vietnam, and summoned my Indian-born parents and me to the Land of Promise and Unending Sunshine.

It would never seem quite so rosy after we knew it off screen, but Ronald Reagan or Julia Roberts -- even Bruce Springsteen, at times -- ensured in later years that America still meant to the outside world possibility, freedom, the perpetual future tense. It was, everyone knew, the home of the Hollywood ending: the final clinch, justice restored by the lone hero, the dawning of a bright new day.

Or so, at least, ran the self-fulfilling myth of the last 100 years, rightly called the American century.

In 1890, as the global columnist Fareed Zakaria points out, the United States had only the 14th-largest army in the world, and its navy was an eighth the size of Italy's. By the late 1940s, it controlled 50% of the world economy.

The growth of technology meant that the American dream got turned into a global cottage industry that everyone longed to feed on. It was the vision that drew millions of dreamers up from south of the border, over from East Asia and my parents' Bombay, and as these migrating dreamers raised the country to even greater heights, they made it their business to spread rags-to-riches stories to the world (on screen) and to tell their friends back home that you really could find new beginnings in America.

As soon as the new century began, though, we were not so quietly reminded that dreams at some point bump into realities. America's very youthfulness, its remoteness from the tragic lessons of history, seemed to render it more vulnerable to terrorists than even the victims of later (and much smaller) attacks in London or Madrid or Mumbai (the former Bombay) would be. It was as if endless summer had no way of dealing with darkness and cold. Hell, to adapt Shakespeare to America, hath no fury like a dreamer scorned.

Yet as the seasons have continued turning, and as we have adjusted to a new vision of reality, that initial shock has matured into something much more promising. Returning to America this spring, after many months in Japan and India and Europe, I am struck by how much the country, in the wake of its latest attack (from the treacherous cycles of the market), seems in tune with the rest of the world, at last.

Our new president smiles less than did his predecessor, and many of us feel better for it. On a recent episode of the Japanese version of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire," one question noted that the ringing word Barack Obama kept out of his inauguration address was not "freedom" -- or "peace" -- but "dream."

It has long seemed to some of us that America could best play a part in the new global order once it had older hands, from more seasoned cultures, to help direct its evergreen energy and hopefulness. Youth, as wise men have it, is wasted on the young. As soon as the New World was ruled by people from Iran and Vietnam, bringing us their own, more weathered sense of history, the land of happy endings would have both the experience to see what was realistically possible and the freshness to make it happen. The American dream would have less to do with conquering the world than -- as seems to be happening already -- with living in something like harmony with it.

To the planet as a whole, our new president speaks for the hope and opportunity, the youthfulness of America, which is what most of the planet craves. But to anyone who's met him on the page, he comes from some much older and more qualified place. His memoir is not about finding his roots and bringing "closure" to his search for identity but, rather, about being unsettled and even shocked by what he found out about his father and his legacy in Kenya, and being haunted by Indonesia even in the born-again sunshine of Hawaii. His tone in recent months has been prudently sober, refusing to talk too easily of happy endings or quick victories.

At times this looks like the best, and most unexpected, new development of the century: What's being outsourced now are American dreams and Hollywood endings. After all, this year a British film from my parents' Bombay about the victory of hope and rags-to-riches dreams got the top Oscar, eclipsing our home-grown movies about doubt, a murdered San Francisco revolutionary, a "dark knight" and a prematurely old little boy.

I'd never have guessed it in rainy old England: The Old World is becoming new, even as we -- at last -- are getting a little older.

Pico Iyer is the author, most recently, of "The Open Road: The Global Journey of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama."

Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-iyer17-2009may17,0,2715857.story

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

TCS bags outsourcing deal from Volkswagen

Tata Consultancy Services has bagged a five-year IT outsourcing deal with Volkswagen (VW) Group UK which for the first time will use a mixture of onshore and offshore services for managing its software infrastructure.

As part of this engagement, TCS will manage the corporate IT systems, data centres and applications of VW, Mr A. S. Lakshminarayanan, Vice-President and Head of Europe, TCS, told Business Line from London.

“Due to the economic downturn, facilities of auto companies in the UK are not running at full capacity. Hence they are keen to reduce variable operational costs as much as possible. Partnering with companies such as TCS helps them in doing that in addition to improving work efficiency,” he said. TCS will help in virtualization of VW`s servers and consolidate them on a single platform, added Mr Lakshminarayanan. However, neither company disclosed the overall deal size or the number of people to be deployed for the engagement.

TCS’s services will cut across the VW group’s operations including brands such as Audi, SEAT, Å koda, Volkswagen Passenger Cars and Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles. Volkswagen Group UK Ltd is a wholly owned subsidiary of German carmaker, Volkswagen AG, which produces one in every six new cars sold in the UK, according to a press release from TCS.

The global auto industry is facing a huge crisis because of a drastic fall in sales volume due to the ongoing recession. In spite of the downturn, companies still need IT services to manage their day-to-day operations, said Mr Lakshminarayanan.

“Moreover, the positive thing is that the UK Government is giving incentives for consumers to buy cars,” he added.

TCS has several high profile automobile customers such as Ducati and Ferrari in Europe. The company’s scrip was down 2.36 per cent and closed at Rs 622.5 on the BSE.

Source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2009/05/14/stories/2009051452490100.htm

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Unisys Wins IT Outsourcing Contract Extension From LANDIS+GYR

Unisys Corporation today announced that its Unisys Switzerland subsidiary has secured a five-year, multi-million dollar extension to its IT outsourcing contract  with Landis+Gyr, one of the world’s leading providers of advanced metering and integrated energy management solutions.

Building on the existing relationship, Unisys will continue to provide end-user support and data centre services, SAP solution management and a range of additional IT services to more than 5,000 Landis+Gyr employees. Unisys will provide the services from its global services centres, as well as on-site.

“The difficult global economic situation has reinforced how important it is to have long-term partners who add value to the business,” said Dieter Hecht, Executive Vice President & Chief Procurement Officer at Landis+Gyr. ”Our decision to renew our contract with Unisys is based on the quality of the company’s services and the return on our investment they provide. With Unisys driving forward the implementation of our global IT strategy, Landis+Gyr can respond effectively to the business challenges we face now and in the future.”

The services provided by Unisys under the contract extension include:

Round-the-clock system management and SAP operations
Unisys will provide the entire Landis+Gyr server environment with a 24-hour service, covering both physical and virtual servers, including monitoring and automatic reporting of problems and failures. The support service extends to all servers, from backup and web servers to print servers. Unisys will continue to run and provide support for the Landis+Gyr SAP system in Switzerland, Italy, Spain and Greece. The entire Landis+Gyr infrastructure runs on Unisys servers, with a virtualized environment based on a VMware ESX system.

Virtualization and consolidation with best-of-breed IT technologies 
Unisys will continue to support Landis+Gyr with virtualization and consolidation programmes to meet the needs of the business and reduce costs where possible. The Unisys range of virtualization and consolidation services includes IT consulting, concept development, implementation and provisioning of hardware for the entire infrastructure.

International service desk outsourcing 
Unisys provides the service desk for all Landis+Gyr employees in Switzerland, as well as some members of staff working in other countries across Europe. Through this service, Unisys provides assistance on specific applications such as the mail system, wireless infrastructure and CRM system. Unisys supports Landis+Gyr’s local-area networks (LANs) in Switzerland with the latest, round-the-clock management tools. Landis+Gyr’s wide-area network (WAN) is run by a global provider, while the Unisys team is the first point of local contact, co-ordination and service.

Extensive desktop services
Landis+Gyr staff benefit from the entire range of desktop services from Unisys, both remotely and locally. These include desktop software services, equipment installs/moves/adds/changes (IMACs) and de-install services (IMACD), hardware maintenance and break/fix services.

Unisys also provides asset and programme management. A strict governance structure helps to ensure that all processes are controlled and all activities meet the service levels agreed to in the contract.

Source: http://www.1888pressrelease.com/unisys-wins-it-outsourcing-contract-extension-from-landis+gy-pr-118555.html

ATM Outsourcing for State Bank of India

State Bank of India has agreed to outsource the management of some automated teller machines.

The Mumbai banking company, India's largest, operates 1,200 ATMs throughout the country. It said last week that it would hand off network management duties for 500 of its ATMs to the telecommunications firm and broadband operator Tata Communications Ltd. and the payments technology vendor C-Edge Technologies, both of India.

Weeks ago the Reserve Bank of India, the country's central bank, mandated that Indian financial companies offer free ATM withdrawals to their own customers who use debit cards.

Banks can still earn surcharge revenue from noncustomers who use their ATMs, which will likely prompt banks to expand their ATM networks, said Prathima Rajan, an analyst based in India with the Boston market research company Celent.

"Many banks have adopted the pay-per-transaction model, as that works out to be more feasible for banks," Rajan said. Surcharge fees have "generated a new revenue stream for the banks who have installed a large number of ATMs across the country."

Tata and C-Edge confirmed the contract but would not discuss their ATM management operations.

Source: http://www.americanbanker.com/article.html?id=20090511XL4UU2HO

Monday, May 11, 2009

QLD Performing Arts strikes outsourcing deal

The Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC) has inked a three year hosted virtualization deal with Macquarie Hosting to monitor network traffic and link its ticket bookings with flights and accommodation.

The outsourcing deal, the first for the QPAC, follows a $34.7 million upgrade of the Brisbane Concert Hall and Lyric Theatre last year and is set to make the centre more competitive with rival ticketing outlets such as Ticketek.

QPAC information services manager Chris Holder said it decided to outsource services after a large growth in network traffic.

“Services have been rolling over into the environment over the last eight months as we naturally outgrew internal management,” Holder said, adding the old environment was in place for about five years.

“We have plans to tie our ticket sales in with our restaurant to offer deals to our customers and we have partnerships with some of the local hotels... tieing qtix [ticketing system] with flights is still a possibility.

Holder said most systems have migrated to the virtualized environment, along with test servers running micro-sites for theatre campaigns including the Paris Opera Ballet La Bayadère.

Most services will operate on Citrix virtual VMWare hosts, alongside a single dedicated server, and use reporting systems and SSL load balancing to monitor and control network traffic. Its mission critical applications like the qtix ticketing system will be housed in the $35 million Macquarie Hosting Intellicentre in Sydney.

Holder said the hosted service, introduced in October last year, has reduced time to market for new offers and applications. Network traffic spiked at some of the highest levels during the launch of Miss Saigon and the Phantom of the Opera.

The centres' eight IT staff are also developing a new Web site, Holder says, adding that the QPAC has no plans to outsource further services.

The QPAC would not disclose the value of the deal.

Source: http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/302662/qld_performing_arts_strikes_outsourcing_deal

Thursday, May 7, 2009

IBM Named Innovation Leader for Outsourcing

IBM today announced that The Bathwick Group has declared IBM the leader for building innovation into large-scale outsourcing contracts. The standing is a result of recent research as part of the Bathwick Services Index, conducted by The Bathwick Group on prominent outsourcing vendors in Europe.

"Innovation in outsourcing is particularly crucial in this very tough economic climate as it can help the IT function to run more cost-effectively and more efficiently," said Kate Hanaghan, Senior Analyst, The Bathwick Group Ltd. "Equally, we know that clients who work with IBM value being able to tap into IBM's deep R&D resources and broad industry expertise in order to experiment beyond the confines of traditional outsourcing agreements. Overall, IBM heads the services pack with an innovation strategy that is mature, well funded and very well received by its customers."

According to the Bathwick Group report, IBM can build innovation projects into existing outsourcing contracts by allowing clients to work with leading IBM researchers and become part of the think tank, dispatch innovation experts to meet with clients a few times a year or dedicate scientists on a full-time basis. IBM also has the systematic capability of creating and tracking innovation progress in outsourcing contracts.

IBM innovation partnerships leverage the company's extended resources including research laboratories, technology development, information technology (IT) and business consulting practices to help clients innovate. Innovation partnerships can be formed to address broader business challenges and visions and to increase the value derived from their outsourcing relationships.

"Innovation partnerships are a natural extension of outsourcing relationships, giving clients direct access to IBM's extended capabilities including research and development as well as our own transformation experience, best practices and lessons learned," said Dave Liederbach, IBM general manager, strategic outsourcing.  "Providing experts from IBM's vaunted Research arm to address strategic client challenges and deliver innovative breakthroughs extends the core value IBM delivers through IT outsourcing. IBM is uniquely positioned to deliver this kind of higher-value engagement."

Source: http://www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/news/Stock%20News/2315734/

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Hewitt Associates To Provide Benefits Outsourcing Services To FSBA

Resources consulting and outsourcing company Hewitt Associates, Inc. Wednesday said it signed a contract with Florida State Board of Administration or FSBA, an agency of the Florida, state government, to provide benefits outsourcing services. The agency provides various investment services to governmental entities.

According to the five-year agreement, effective January 1, 2010, Lincolnshire, Illinois-based Hewitt will act as record keeper for the FSBA's $3.8 billion Florida Retirement System or FRS Investment Plan. The FRS Investment Plan is a member-directed 401- a- defined contribution program.

Jay Rising, Hewitt's president of HR outsourcing said "We look forward to serving this new set of participants and retirees with our enhanced set of retirement tools that consider the diverse needs of the plan population. Our relationship with the Florida SBA marks a new foray into serving state governments, and it's one we will continue to pursue."

http://www.rttnews.com/ArticleView.aspx?Id=938462&SMap=1

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Obama unveils anti-outsourcing policy, Indian BPOs to be hit

In a move that will hit some 10 lakh Indian IT professionals and a sizable chunk of the country's BPO industry, President Barack Obama has unveiled new proposals to end tax breaks for American companies that shipped jobs overseas to countries like India.

Meeting one of his major election promises, Obama said he will end the tax incentives to those US companies which created jobs overseas in places like Bangalore. Instead, the incentives would now go to those creating jobs inside the US.

"For years, we've talked about ending tax breaks for companies that ship jobs overseas and giving tax breaks to companies that create jobs here in America. That's what our budget will finally do," Obama said yesterday at the White House announcing the international tax policy reform.

"We will stop letting American companies that create jobs overseas take deductions on their expenses when they do not pay any American taxes on their profits," he said.

Obama said his administration will use the savings to give tax cuts to companies that are investing in research and development in the country to jump start job creation, foster innovation, and enhance America's competitiveness.

Source: http://www.ptinews.com/

Monday, May 4, 2009

Mexican outsourcing delivery could be impacted by swine flu

Courtesy: http://www.pharmaceutical-business-review.com/

Concerns over swine flu outbreaks in Mexico have led to many governments issuing warnings against non-essential travel to the country. Considering the existing worries over ongoing border violence, as well as potential agent absence, this virus could have a negative impact on the Mexican contact center outsourcing sector.

The recent outbreak of the virus commonly known as swine flu should be cause for concern among contact center outsourcers based in Mexico looking to grow their business from the US and abroad, should the spread of the disease not slow in the immediate future. With Mexico seen as the global epicenter of this illness and its capital city currently in the midst of a five-day shutdown, the potential damage in the near-to-medium term could be very serious.

To date, medical research has shown that swine flu is most commonly transmitted in areas of limited air circulation and close human proximity. For a location like Mexico, in which contact center agents frequently use public transportation to travel to and from work, it is very possible that many could choose to stay at home rather than risk contracting the virus during regular commutes. This is also the case in regard to the contact center facilities themselves, in which large numbers of individuals share common space.

In addition to concern among agents going to and from work, Datamonitor believes that the current swine flu outbreak in Mexico could also slow investment due to the health-related fears of business people from North America and beyond making them unwilling to travel into the country. With the US and Canadian governments issuing warnings against non-essential travel to Mexico, and some operators temporarily halting flights into Mexican cities, prospective investors may decide to examine other delivery locations that are perceived to be safer from a health standpoint.

The current outbreak of swine flu, furthermore, is only one of a number of challenges facing the Mexican contact center outsourcing space, the most notable of these being that of ongoing border violence. Earlier this year, Datamonitor commented on the negative impact that drug cartel wars with authorities could have on the investment climate in Mexico, in regard to attracting foreign clients. Concerns over swine flu will only exacerbate worries associated with this location, and make other offshore markets potentially more attractive to investors.

In conclusion, Datamonitor maintains that Mexico, given its cost effectiveness, remains an excellent option for US firms looking for a bilingual or Spanish-speaking, sizable labor pool from which to draw and a diverse choice of urban centers. Considering the existing challenges faced by vendors based in Mexico coupled with the current worries over swine flu, however, outsourcers based in that country are likely to find it more difficult to attract offshore investors than they have in recent years. Therefore, Datamonitor encourages outsourcers based in Mexico to consider the impact of swine flu on their operations and ongoing business development efforts, and to develop contingency plans to mitigate these risks.

Cities say outsourcing trims lawn costs

Courtesy: http://www.commercialappeal.com/

Despite having a city-operated Parks Department, Southaven pays Green King Spray Services $100,000 a year to keep the grounds at City Hall and some other city properties looking tidy.

In neighboring Horn Lake, the city pays Affinity Lawnscapes more than $140,000 a year to maintain City Hall and the Latimer Lakes Park Complex.

While some may see such fees as a duplication of services in tough economic times, city officials defend the practice of contracting such work because they say it actually saves money.

In fact, of DeSoto County's five incorporated municipalities, a check with officials revealed that a majority of them let private firms perform much of the seasonal work because, officials say, it's cheaper than hiring extra city crews for seasonal tasks.

Like Southaven and Horn Lake, Olive Branch follows the practice. Hernando used to contract with a lawn service for some work but no longer does so, and Walls, with fewer than 1,000 residents, performs all of its own maintenance.

In most of the larger cities, though, officials said outsourcing just makes more sense.

"We contract that work out because we would have to add a lot of people and equipment during the summer months to our regular Public Works crews if we did not," said Spencer "Penny" Shields, Public Works director in Horn Lake.

The city has a three-year contract with Affinity Lawnscapes, at $11,900 per month ($142,800 a year), for grass cutting, tree trimming, mulching, flower bed preparation, debris removal, weed control and fertilization of Latimer Lakes Park Complex and City Hall. The exception to the contract is the ball fields at Latimer, which are maintained by Parks Department crews.

Affinity is required to mow everything as often as is needed during the summer growing season. The contract with Affinity was signed this year.

Olive Branch Mayor Sam Rikard said his city spends about $45,000 annually to cut grass and perform landscaping functions.

He said the services are provided by four vendors.

"Since these are considered services, we do not bid, but we do take quotes for those services. We will be seeking quotes for those services again in September or October of this year," Rikard said.

He said the city outsources some of its grounds work despite having a Parks Department of 12 groundskeepers and two supervisors.

The city employees are responsible for cutting all the grass in City Park, the soccer complex and other smaller parks such as Magnolia, Southcrest and Ivy Trails.

They also prepare every ball field, and they cut grass at three US 78 intersections and the right-of-way along Goodman Road near Eastover subdivision.

Rikard said without getting outside help, the city would have to have more park employees on payroll all year long to perform the services that are only necessary seasonally.

In Southaven, the county's largest city, city officials hired Southaven-based Green King Spray Services for weed control, lawn and grounds maintenance at its City Hall complex on Northwest Drive, Jim Saucier Park, the Police Department and the library.

The city pays the company $100,000 per year for the work. Invoices show that from 2007 to this year, the city paid the company $307,114.73 for work.

The work done by Green King is considered a professional service and does not have to be bid on by vendors, Mayor Greg Davis said.

"Vendor selections come through purchasing and department heads in accordance with state law," Davis said.

He said the city's parks employees maintain all the city parks, including the massive Snowden Grove complex, and cut grass at abandoned or condemned property in the city.

"To do the weed control with spraying the chemicals, a state license is required to do this work and our parks employees do not have certification," Davis said.

Davis said the city also outsources grass cutting of the medians and ramps along Interstate 55 to Reel Neet Lawn Service because the Mississippi Department of Transportation only cuts the grass twice a year. Reel Neet, a Southaven company, receives $100,000 per year.

"Again, it is cheaper to do it this way than in-house," Davis said. "In fact, we used to do the all the lawn maintenance work in-house, but the maintenance of the equipment and personnel costs skyrocketed."

Hernando Mayor Chip Johnson said his city, the county seat, used to subcontract with a lawn service for mowing on- and off-ramps along Interstate 55, the city parks and the cemetery. However, that work is now handled by the Hernando Parks Department.

In Walls, the smallest of the county's incorporated municipalities, Mayor Gene Alday and other town officials pitch in and do all the grass cutting, roadside trash pickup and landscaping at Town Hall and the town's one park.

Last year, the town of 870 residents bought a $23,000 tractor, and Alday can be found on it on any given day, cutting grass in the town.

Dr. John O'Looney, senior public service associate at the Carl Vinson Institute of Government at the University of Georgia, said outsourcing is not uncommon for local governments.

"We see it a lot when new elected officials come in and want to explore it, thinking that the private sector can do it better," O'Looney said.

O'Looney said in 2007 his office conducted a feasibility study on outsourcing for Dawson County, GA, and found that it is a complex issue that does not have a "one-size-fits-all" answer.

"Contracting for services is and will continue to be a major decision task facing public managers," the study stated. "According to the US Government Accountability Office, contracting is the most utilized alternative to direct service provision.

"However, there does not appear to be any single answer to the question of whether to contract out services."

He said individual governments have to decide what is best for their needs.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Outsourcing firm shut down for using pirated software

Courtesy: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/

The Anti-Fraud and Commercial Crimes Division (AFCCD) of the Philippine National Police’s Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) seized a total of 173 computers during a raid against Pinoy Data Capture Inc. in Makati City last week, putting the latter’s operations to a virtual standstill.

The search warrants were issued by Manila Regional Trial Court Vice-Executive Judge Cielito Mindaro-Grulla for the alleged violation of Republic Act 8293 or the Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines.

Pinoy Data Capture Inc. (PDC), with its office at the 30th floor of Burgundy Corporate Tower in Sen. Gil Puyat Ave., Makati City, was reportedly using computers with unlicensed and pirated software in its business operation.

PDC is a business process outsourcing (BPO) company that provides data conversion, medical coding, contact center and software development services for clients in the Philippines and the United States.

The police operation involved the software audit of each computer and server, and then check against software licenses that were presented by the company to determine the legality of the software. PDC had to stop its operation and send home their employees to avoid disruption to the inventory and seizure procedure of the raid.

Anti-piracy operatives found 173 of the company’s computers loaded with unlicensed and pirated copies of Adobe and Microsoft software, with an estimated value of almost P9 million.

“All computers found loaded with unlicensed and pirated software were seized and will be kept in police custody for use as evidence in court,” said Senior Superintendent Joel Orduña, chief of the PNP-CIDG-AFCCD.

He added: “This raid should serve as a warning to other businesses that continue to use unlicensed software. Software piracy may not only result in serious legal consequences, it can also completely paralyze business operations.  That unlicensed software was found in PDC’s business operation truly casts a shadow over the country’s aspiring BPO industry.”

The raid on PDC is part of the Pilipinas Anti-Piracy Team's ongoing nationwide campaign against businesses using unlicensed and pirated software. The PAPT had earlier given businesses 20 days to legalize their software, after which, members of the PAPT including the NBI, OMB and PNP conducted random and routine inspections and raids on businesses that were allegedly infringing on software copyright.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Outsourced Manufacturing Will Have Little Impact on Optical Suppliers' Operating Margins

Courtesy: http://seekingalpha.com/

One of the great debates taking place right now within the optical components industry is whether to outsource production, and move to a fabless model like most logic chip makers. One one side of the argument, Finisar (FNSR) is staying in-house, while rival JDS Uniphase (JDSU) is preparing to send its manufacturing operations to Fabrinet in China.

Advanced Technology vs. Standard Economics

The components industry is littered with penny stocks, and is filled with remarkably intelligent people who can improve the transmission capabilities of fiber optic technologies, but have no idea how to increase operating margins. As a result, all kinds of experiments with different materials and manufacturing processes are taking place now, and the industry is crossing its fingers and hoping something sticks. On one end, silicon photonics vendors like Intel (INTC), Luxtera, and Lightwire are hoping they can match the chip industry's low materials costs, while on the other, JDS Uniphase is hoping it can match the chip industry's low unit manufacturing costs.

The idea to outsource like chip vendors do makes some sense. By concentrating procurement and manufacturing, there should be some savings in material purchases and shipping, not to mention greater leverage with volume purchase arrangements. But outsourcing cannot get rid of onerous VMI (Vendor Managed Inventory) agreements, which force components suppliers to consign inventory at their customer's manufacturing sites, contract or in-house, even when the customer has made no commitment to purchase everything that ships. With inventory cycles that typically last 70-100 days, this forces components vendors to bear most of the risk of unsold and obsolete inventory, and they will need additional mergers to gain more negotiating leverage with big customers like Cisco (CSCO), Alcatel-Lucent (ALU), and Fujitsu.

More important than VMIs though, is the fact that there is no optical equivalent to the dramatically rising lithography and equipment costs seen in the semiconductor industry. With optics, much of the manufacturing cost gets tied up in assembly and testing, which typically means hiring more people, not buying advanced etching machines. This is reflected in the high asset utilization of components vendors. Finisar's Revenue/PP&E of 6 is higher than the 4.6 put up by fabless semi maker Xilinx (XLNX).

Bringing Mundane Inventory Management to Exciting Science

The optical components industry is still having trouble ridding itself of its science fair culture, and this is reflected in the nonsensical argument that outsourcing somehow puts intellectual property at risk. If this were really the case, the entire datacom and semiconductor industries would have been done in by copycats. Nonetheless, it is also poised to resume its revenue growth with the advent of 100 Gigabit transmission, and further advances in DWDM and Fiber-to-the-Home. And with a labor-intensive manufacturing process, outsourcing cannot raise margins to the extent it does in the capital-intensive semiconductor industry. As a result, focusing on the cost effectiveness of what happens before and after manufacturing, including shipping, purchase agreements, and consignment sales, will be just as important as deciding who will be responsible for final assembly.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

4 tasks you fear to outsource but should try

Courtesy: http://www.infoworld.com/

In a sliding market, outsourcing looks increasingly attractive. In this era of drastic cost cutting and budget squeezing, many IT managers facing diminished budgets and frozen in-house resources are exploring ways of sending even more work off site to save money, or at least take capital costs off their immediate plate.

But with traditional outsourcing opportunities all but played out, many enterprises are asking, "Is there anything left to outsource?"

Four critical IT tasks -- project management, e-discovery, regulatory compliance, and environmental activities -- are all ripe for outsourcing. But today, they are generally not outsourced because managers don't think they can send the work off site due to cost, security, and other concerns. It's time to rethink the anxieties in these four areas.

Outsourcing opportunity No. 1: Project management
Project management involves organizing and balancing three basic elements: people, time, and money. Many IT shops would like to unload the nuts and bolts of IT project management onto an outside provider, but worry that the task is simply too big, too complex, and perhaps even too important to outsource.  Managers also fret about losing the precise control and oversight successful project management requires, as well as the ability to turn on a dime if circumstances demand a sudden change in tactics.

Beth Anderson, IT supervisor for Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Co., a specialty tobacco and cigarette manufacturer, overcame her reluctance to outsourcing project management after discussing her reservations with SMBology, a firm that handles project management. After some discussions, the partners decided on a staged approach. "We've given them some technical project management responsibility for a couple of major projects," she says. "So it is significant ... but it's not like we've outsourced all project management." A current project aims to add mobility functionality to a Microsoft Dynamics CRM platform.

Regardless of an outsourcing project's scale or scope, Anderson believes that it's vital for the provider to maintain a physical connection with its client. "[SMBology] is physically here to gather requirements and ... when we're doing user testing, so we've got real quick communications," she notes. "If the user sees something that's not working the way they want it to, then the people are here to fix it."

Justin Singer, SMBology's president, says that many IT shops are reluctant to embrace project management outsourcing because they were soured by previous on-site project management experiences. "They may not have experience with what a really good project can look like," he explains. "It's hard for them to really see what the benefits are going to be."

Anderson says outsourcing benefits have generally met her expectations. "You get elastic access to talent, and you get specialized skills that you don't have a need for 365 days a year on your own internal team," she says. "So you can ramp up and stretch the elastic when you need the resources, and then you can snap it back when you no longer need them."

Outsourcing opportunity No. 2: Electronic discovery
Over the years, e-discovery (sifting through data pertaining to criminal or civil legal cases) has grown into a burdensome task for IT shops working inside law firms or enterprises with corporate legal departments. It would be nice if some or all the responsibility for storing and managing theses important documents could be offloaded onto an outside service provider. Yet IT managers often feel that privacy and security issues, as well as user access limitations, make the effective outsourcing of e-discovery material difficult, if not impossible.

But Seth Row, an associate at law firm Holland & Knight, sees it differently. "There are some things I wish we could do more of in-house, but given the current realities, it's not possible," he says. That's why, like a growing number of IT shops in a similar situation, Holland & Knight is outsourcing much of its e-discovery work. "It's good to have options," Row says. "You need to be prepared for lots of different contingencies, so developing relationships with vendors is very important -- it's important that they're there as a resource."

Row notes that a growing number of legal cases focus on e-mail evidence. "E-mail is usually the largest volume of electronic data that you're dealing with in a lawsuit, particularly in an employment-related lawsuit," Row observes. But Row notes that it's virtually impossible to search e-mail effectively in its native client environment. "That doesn't work very well, so it's got to be processed into a database before you can search it across the different fields," he explains. "It's got to get processed so that I can search all the e-mails and all the associated attachments that contain a particular word, or a particular concept."

Although an IT shop could tie up its servers running lengthy databases searches, and then organize and store vast amounts of e-mails and documents, it's often more cost effective to outsource e-discovery projects. Holland & Knight uses the eClaris e-discovery consultancy to handle much of its work. "eClaris has the capability of setting up the database for me, and I would then access it through the Internet," Row says. "So I go to a Web site -- it's password protected -- I log in, and then I can review [the data] through this Web-based system."

While the Web interface addresses IT managers' user access concerns, what about privacy and security issues? Education is the key to calming managers' fears, says Jacques Nack Ngue, eClaris' CEO. "One effort we do is engaging companies, and just providing as much information as possible about the e-discovery process," Nack Ngue says, such as "what the risks are, how to assess them, and how to handle and manage those risks."

Row agrees that once a manager begins working with an outsourcer and understands what needs to be done to maintain security and privacy, the risks suddenly appear much smaller. "It's a collaborative process," he says.

Outsourcing opportunity No. 3: Regulatory compliance
The financial scandals of the late 1990s and early 2000s led to several new federal compliance mandates, most notably the Sarbanes-Oxley law. These mandates, as well as an array of other state, local, and industry-based compliance measures such as California's privacy breach notification statute and the payment industry's PCI standard, created new record-keeping, document-tracking, and other demands on IT shops that tend to sap productivity and slow other critical work.

Despite the added IT burden, many enterprises have been reluctant to outsource regulatory compliance tasks, believing that the work is too business-critical to place into the hands of an outsider. Many managers also worry about the security and legal implications of sending such work off-site.

Michael Rasmussen, president of the regulatory compliance advisory Corporate Integrity, says the key to successful outsourcing lies in finding the organization that knows the most about the relevant type of regulatory compliance needs. "There are FDA regulations, different elements of privacy regulations, and disaster recovery and continuity regulations, and each of these requires something different," he says.

Christine Applegate, CFO of East Coast Cable & Communications, a firm that provides installation services for area cable companies, got drawn into the regulatory tangle when Massachusetts enacted a customer privacy law. Not having anyone on staff with the skills or experience needed to ensure that the company was living up to its compliance obligations, she turned to East Coast's primary IT service provider -- Boston-based Vitale Caturano & Co. -- to develop a solution.

Applegate says her initial concerns about handing over regulatory compliance work to an outside entity turned out to be mostly unfounded. By working closely with Vitale Caturano, she could define a strategy that would allow East Coast to comply with the new regulations while safeguarding customer privacy. "We probably would follow the same path if starting over again," she says. "We did not understand the depth of our needs."

Outsourcing opportunity No. 4: Environmental activities
Even as budgets are slashed, many IT shops are feeling increasing pressure to pursue "green" business practices. Outsourcing is a potentially cost-saving way to offload ongoing eco-tasks -- such as environmental audits and hardware disposal -- that lie outside of an IT shop's core competency. Yet many managers are reluctant to pull the trigger on environmental outsourcing, believing that the concept is too amorphous to outsource or because they are skeptical of green issues in general.

Bob Brand has a different view, however. Vice president of corporate security at media giant Cox Enterprises, Brand sees one facet of green outsourcing -- hardware disposal -- as both a potential money-saver and as a way of enhancing IT security.

From Brand's viewpoint, routine hardware disposal risks exposing enterprise secrets to recyclers and other unknown parties. By handing the work over to an outside firm -- Redemtech, in his case -- Brand believes that Cox is relieving IT of a time-consuming task, deriving the maximum value out of its IT hardware assets, and guaranteeing that enterprise data is protected as it enters the recycling process. "With Redemtech we will extend the life of computing equipment while ensuring responsible recycling at the end of life and provide secure treatment of customer and company data, which will measurably contribute to this goal," he says.

"In a widely distributed company, [green] outsourcing offers a straightforward means for centralizing, thus simplifying and controlling fragmented practices that represent real inefficiency and risk," says Robert Houghton, Redemtech's president. "Because environmental and privacy laws are proliferating at the state and local levels, a specialist in the field is often better able to protect a company’s interests in such arcane matters than the organization’s own employees, who may lack the essential in-depth knowledge."

Brand notes that Cox's green outsourcing initiative didn't come without effort. "It took us about six months to develop our strategy," he says. "Progress is going well. However, it could be several years before we're able to fully implement our plans across our operating businesses, which are largely decentralized and include nearly 78,000 employees worldwide."

Yet Brand believes that his company made the right decision. "The icing on the cake is realizing the return on your investment that leads to environmental and economic sustainability," he says.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Leo Burnett to outsource from India

Courtesy: http://www.business-standard.com/

Hit by the global economic slump, Leo Burnett one of the world’s largest advertising agencies, is planning to make India a global outsourcing hub, as clients look at cutting costs.

On a week’s visit to India to plan for business in 2009 and also to attend the wedding of India chairman Arvind Sharma’s daughter, Tom Bernardin, chairman and chief executive officer, Leo Burnett Worldwide, announced changes in its global leadership council for a tighter integration of Asia Pacific with the Chicago headquarters.

Asia-Pacific (APAC) President Michelle Kristula-Green has been promoted to become global human resources head based at its headquarters. Regional President Jarek Zubinski will take the post vacated by Kristula-Green and Arvind Sharma will become a part of the leadership council team to represent India. “We want India and the Asia Pacific region to be very close to us and to have a tighter integration,” Bernardin told.

Document outsourcing 'surging'

Courtesy: http://www.bcs.org/

Outsourcing of strategic documents is becoming more popular as companies look to reduce expenses and costs during the economic downturn.

That's according to industry analyst firm Gartner, which said that any outsourcing of print and online documents should be done in a manner that does not compromise quality or confidentiality.

'Strategic document outsourcing offers organizations the opportunity to eliminate print and mail-related capital expenditures while potentially reducing material and postage expenses," observed Pete Basiliere, research director at Gartner.

'Outsource providers facilitate the targeted, relevant customer communications that can not only retain and grow the client base but also increase revenue.'

Gartner added that outsourcing shifts the costs of labour and material to providers, which is advantageous to businesses, but firms may not always realize benefits.

This is because 'highly customized solutions' could in fact increase the costs of production and not deliver money-saving gains to companies.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Rules Change in the Mobile Handset Outsourcing Business

Courtesy: http://www.cellular-news.com/

With the structure of the mobile handset supply chain upended by the global economic crisis, the old rules for the contract manufacturing of wireless devices have been overturned, leaving new pitfalls for Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) and Electronic Manufacturing Services (EMS) providers, according to iSuppli Corp.

One major rule change is that the contract manufacturing business can no longer count on incremental growth in outsourced production from all wireless OEMs.

“Until recently, the contract manufacturing industry yielded consistent double-digit year-over-year growth rates in mobile handset outsourcing,” said Jeffrey Wu, senior analyst, EMS/ODM for iSuppli. “However, the uncertainty in the marketplace now is forcing some OEMs to not only decelerate outsourcing but also to reclaim production by moving it in-house. Nokia, for instance, is one such OEM.”

Nokia in 2008 decreased the percentage of its outsourced manufacturing volume to 17.1 percent, down from 21.5 percent in 2007. The attached figure presents the balance of in-house and outsourced manufacturing at Nokia from 2005 to 2008.

“This reflects a larger trend in the mobile-handset supply chain,” Wu said. “Decelerating and decreasing outsourced manufacturing by those OEMs that are still operationally competent will hurt the growth prospects of contract manufacturers.”

Thus, as EMS and ODM providers mull their future strategies, they should not fall into the trap of assuming continued strong growth in production outsourcing among mobile-handset OEMs.

Vertical structure goes flat

Looking at another potential pitfall, the success of Foxconn International Holdings (FIH) in recent years has spurred other EMS firms to emulate the company’s vertical supply chain structure, including component procurement. FIH’s extensive integration of various nodes of the supply chain into its operations often was credited as a key contributor to the company’s success and its rise to the leading position in the global EMS market. However, the halo surrounding FIH disappeared in 2008 and was replaced by a series of disappointing financial announcements.

“When the economy is going strong and market demand is vibrant, the vertically integrated model can help an EMS provider grow because the economies of scale can be leveraged internally, and the manufacturing business and the component business can subsidize each other,” Wu said. “But when the order volume drops, this model doesn’t allow a lot of flexibility for the manufacturing arm and prevents it from sourcing to external component suppliers easily. Thus, the vertical integration model is like a double-edged sword, helping an EMS provider to compete better when the market grows, but making it suffer more when the economy stagnates.”

Because of this, iSuppli concludes that EMS firms may want to avoid the hazard of adopting FIH’s vertical structure amid the market downturn.

Getting results from outsourcing

Courtesy: http://www.itp.net/

Outsourcing is the reassignment of the management and/or daily implementation of an entire business function, which may otherwise be conducted internally, to an external service provider. The outsourcer - generally a client company - and the supplier of the outsourced service and/or product enter into an agreement that clearly sets out the services and/or products that are to be outsourced.

Outsourcing agreements are often compared to service level agreements (SLAs) and share a number of similarities. However the main variation that exists is the level of continued support of the service and/or product and the extent of the management control. Consequently, an outsourcing agreement will often contain provisions found in SLAs.

Any well-prepared outsourcing agreement that protects all aspects adequately should consider:

Commencement/Transition Phase

This initial phase includes issues related to the transfer of personnel and ownership concerns of the software and hardware, if any, that are to be an aspect of the services and/or products.

The primary considered aspect is that of the employees. The UAE governs employees through Federal Law No. (8) of 1980 concerning the Labour Law, which states that the primary employer, that is to say the company named on the employee's visa, remains liable for their actions and their remuneration.

Furthermore, UAE Federal Law No. (5) of 1985 concerning the Civil Transactions Law provides under Article 907 that, "The worker may not engage himself in any other activity during working time no shall he work during the period of the contract for another employer."

When outsourcing,  there are two available options for employees. The first includes the cancellation/transfer of the service provider's employee's current visa and its re-issuance to the ‘sponsorship' of the client company, thereby maintaining conformity with the Labour Law by ensuring that employees working at a particular company's premises are sponsored by the client company.

The second option would stipulate which party is liable for the obligations and responsibilities pertaining to the employee's actions and remunerations. Although seemingly convenient, these terms must clearly mention that employees remain the service provider's responsibility and any actions taken against them may only be done through the employee's sponsor.

Management/Operation Phase

Both parties should make certain that the services/products are being managed effectively. This will refer to issues related to the obligations of the parties, financing, insurance coverage and third party licences with reference to intellectual property. Topics such as third-party software can create problems for the client company. It should be noted that licences issued to customers often exclude assignment rights -and this can become a crucial issue.

The choice of implementing software or third party instruments should be made early. If introduced by the outsourcing supplier, then the issue of continuing with the use of such software can be a problem. If left entirely in the hands of the supplier, then upon termination of the agreement it is perfectly possible for them to withdraw the ability to use the third party rights from the company, effectively leaving the outsourced service and/or product virtually helpless.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Outsourcing by another name?

We have all read about the outsourcing trend that is costing jobs to blue collar workers in the US and Europe. However how many of us have cared to voice our disapproval against the kind of outsourcing that is costing thousands of farmers, the poorest of the poor in India, their lives because of huge US farm subsidies on pesticides exported to developing countries that instead of killing bugs ends up as poison in the hands of the debt-ridden farmers.

Log on to award winning journalist P. Sainath’s India Together series for shocking details of the kind of “agrarian emergency” that Prof. K. Nagaraj of the Madras Institute of Development Studies calls, “a predatory commercialization of the countryside,” courtesy the MNC lobby that supplies crop pesticides to farmers in developing economies.

One disgruntled reader of Sainath’s column blames this “suicide epidemic” in India that presently infects the whole of the once green Vidharba belt in Gujarat on the US on the “patents regime that has totally rigged the international trading system again the small and marginal farmers in poor countries,” the commentator minces no words in saying, “the poverty that Mexico and other countries are exporting to US is the poverty that US has created in those countries in first place through its need-of-the-hour fiscal and monetary policies.”

This reader’s point, as he later explains is simple. That the real or imagined advantage that H1B program is giving workers from another country is infinitesimal smaller than the advantage that the US consumer indirectly forces out from other countries, especially third world countries largely because of the policies followed by Western businesses in these countries. Getting an understanding of such double standards in conducting clinical trials outsourcing in developing countries where legislation governing these trials is weak is equally critical.

Courtesy: http://outsourceportfolio.com/

Thursday, April 23, 2009

The Indian Exception Proving the Rule

The Satyam scandal rocked the global business community and threatened to stifle the Indian outsourcing industry. But as the dust settles, the forces driving outsourcing are as strong as ever, with benefits for both India and the West.

On January 7, Ramalinga Raju distributed a four-and-one-half-page letter to members of the Bombay Stock Exchange and then went into hiding. In the letter, the chairman of multi-billion dollar Indian IT company Satyam told of how a small accounting discrepancy, created by a sleight of hand that artificially pumped sales numbers, turned into a gaping hole in the company’s balance sheet. After Ramalinga’s revelation, shares in Satyam plunged more than 80 percent and the Indian government sacked Ramalinga and Satyam’s entire board of directors in a desperate bid to save the company and spare its remaining shareholders. Roughly $1 billion had gone missing and Satyam had been overstating revenues for several years at least, if not more.

Almost immediately, IT executives at US insurance giant State Farm decided to cut ties with Satyam, a significant black eye for the outsourcing firm. Pundits predicted a flood of other foreign companies would abandon not only Satyam but other Indian IT companies large and small.

For critics of outsourcing in the United States, the scandal seemed to confirm something they had long suspected. The Indian outsourcing story was simply too good to be true and here was the evidence. One of the four largest Indian IT companies had resorted to booking fake revenues in order to keep shareholders happy. How many other landmines lurked in the balance sheets of other Indian companies until recently deemed the darlings of Wall Street?

Today it appears that Satyam was the exception that proves the rule. Months have passed since a chastened Raju did the perp walk. Initial concerns that Satyam was only the first scandal lurking have rapidly faded. No other major Indian IT outsourcing firm has found evidence of improprieties, even after hurried deep dives into their books by finance departments and outside auditors.

Even more important, few foreign customers have pulled up stakes based on fraud fears. To the contrary, the National Association of Software and Services Companies, the powerful Indian IT trade group which counts all the outsourcing giants among its members, came out with a bold prediction on February 4 that export revenues to Indian IT companies would reach $47 billion by the end of fiscal year 2009, an increase of 16 percent to 17 percent over the previous year. This growth comes against the backdrop of the worst global recession since the Great Depression and building nationalistic sentiments against shipping white-collar jobs from the developed to the developing world.

True, the dollar may well plunge again if deficit spending runs amok. And the ongoing deep recession in the United States has alleviated some of the economics that spurred outsourcing.  Real estate prices have dropped and wage growth among IT professionals has slowed. But US companies have grown used to the flexibility that outsourcing allows, with the ability to easily upsize or downsize departments or headcount without worrying about paying unemployment or severance, or receiving bad publicity. And the difference in costs between comparable employees based in the United States or India remains stark.

Beyond economics, other forces are at play. Over the past decade, the very same Indian IT companies handling mundane data-centric tasks have watched with interest as US companies such as General Electric, Cisco Systems, Microsoft, Adobe, Motorola, and Google have set up engineering and development centers in the Indian subcontinent. These US companies have placed these advanced and high value added processes in India not only to take advantage of cheap labor but also to put product development closer to fast growing markets. Since the bulk of sales growth for most US multi-nationals is expected to take place in developing Asia, it makes perfect sense to put product development closer to customers. Another key reason for locating R&D in India is to take advantage of the time zone difference and build a 24-hour product development and research cycle.

Not surprisingly, Indian IT and outsourcing companies began developing advanced R&D capabilities that would allow them to compete for this type of work (albeit on an outsourced basis) for foreign multi-nationals. After all, helping to design and plan manufacturing of actual products would surely be a more profitable service than running server farms or tending corporate computing networks.

These types of R&D outsourcing arrangements are rapidly growing in number. In addition to Boeing’s avionics contracts with HCL, the aerospace giant in January 2008 entered into agreements with the Indian Institute of Science and software firms Wipro Technologies and HCL Technologies to create and develop wireless and networking technologies. HCL also has an agreement with General Electric aerospace subsidiary Smiths to set up and operate an R&D center in India. Wipro, MindTree, and other Indian companies are now offering semiconductor chip design services, a high value added activity formerly dominated by outsourced chip design firms in the developed world and in Taiwan. Indian pharmaceutical company Ranbaxy has an agreement with Merck to perform early stage drug development in exchange for downstream royalties. The arrangements listed here are merely the tip of the iceberg. In a study conducted by California management consultancy firm Zinnov, outsourcing of R&D to India (either to regional subsidiaries of multinational corporations or to Indian IT outsourcing firms) should hit $22 billion by 2012. This is a shocking figure considering that dollar value of Indian R&D outsourcing 20 years ago was a tiny fraction of that large sum.

Spurring this rapid rise of R&D is restrictive US immigration policies that have forced many of the talented top-level science and engineering researchers to leave the United States after completing graduate educations and, sometimes, brief stints of employment on H-1B visas. Combined with India’s own efforts to build a strong talent pool in science and engineering specialties, the result has been a deep and relatively inexpensive high-tech work force that rivals that of the best US technology regions such as the Bay Area of California. Aside from disliking the restrictive immigration policies, many Indians studying in the United States now feel that better opportunities lie at home than in America, all things being equal. These opportunities are both professional—with the rapidly developing R&D and science and engineering research complex—and cultural. Family, closeness to friends, and care of aging parents are often cited by Indian students as strong factors behind their decision to return home. The shift of talent to India has made it far easier for multinational corporations to make the decision to relocate research activities there.

BankWest signs $2.5M network outsourcing deal

Sydney data centre to monitor 5000 devices

Courtesy :http://www.computerworld.com.au/

BankWest has a signed $2.5 million contract to outsource network monitoring for more than 1500 devices over two years.

The deal will reduce network problems over the BankWest and St Andrew's networks which connect 200 sites across Australia. Monitoring of routers, switches, WAN accelerators, firewalls and content switches will be outsourced and covered by a new quality of service agreement.

BankWest has more than 5000 staff and operates a Telstra multi-protocol label switching network with Cisco routers and switches, and Riverbed WAN accelerators.

BankWest networks telecommunications and data centre facilities senior manager Adrian Cowman said the network is built for high availability and resilience and has dual routers, switches and Telstra services at each site.

“Network monitoring was outsourced as BankWest wanted to draw on the resources and expertise of an external organization rather than build internal capabilities during a period of business expansion and significant infrastructure changes.” Cowman said.

“This contract reflects an increasing drive to monitor, enhance and protect the technology platform that underpin our entire operation.”

The contract was handed to local IT services company IMC after a tender process which attracted five “leading service providers”. IMC were the incumbent provider for six months prior to the tender.

Monitoring will be handled from IMC's Sydney data centre on dedicated virtualized servers with external disaster recovery, using the company's Netactive toolset.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Patni eyes big in business administration outsourcing space

Courtesy: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/

Patni BPO, a part of Patni Computers, on Tuesday said that it intends to play a bigger role in the benefits administration outsourcing (BAO) space, one of the fastest growing BPO trends globally.

"We provide end-to-end benefits administration services. Our domain expertise on multiple proprietary and commercial platforms come as a value-add for clients. We want to play a bigger role in the area," Senior vice-president and Head of Patni BPO Sanjiv Kapur told PTI here.

Benefits Administration involves a complex set of administrative activities for retirement and health benefits paid by the employers to its employees. These activities are often managed by a third party provider called, Benefits Administrators.

Patni BPO generates a significant part of its revenue from BAO servicing clients across North America, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, UK and Ireland.

According to NelsonHall, a BPO analyst firm, the global outsourced benefits administration market would almost double over the next five years to reach to $22 billion.

Monday, April 20, 2009

India's Outsourcers Should Worry about Delta's Move

Courtesy: http://www.businessweek.com/

Even when times were good and the US economy was humming along at full employment, American companies got some flack for outsourcing jobs to India. Now, with the unemployment rate rocketing toward 10%, the heat is getting to be too much for some US executives. On Saturday came news that Delta is the latest company pulling back from India. As Bloomberg reported, the airline has given up on using operators in Indian call centers to handle inquiries about reservations; customers weren’t happy with the service they got from the operators based in India.

Unfortunately for the Indian outsourcing industry, Delta is just the latest company to have second thoughts about outsourcing jobs to India during the worst US recession in generations. United Airlines has soured on India outsourcing, too, as has Sallie Mae. The student loan company is shifting jobs from India back to the US. As this story from India’s Economic Times earlier this month points out, “Some American outsourcing firms are trying to woo back customers already offshoring to low-cost destinations such as India. Smaller US firms such as Rural America Onshore Sourcing and Xpanxion are attempting to build a sustainable rural outsourcing model in the US at a time when offshore locations such as India are facing a backlash and unemployment rates have touched an all-time high.”

Obligatory note of caution: A few high-profile examples don’t necessarily make a trend. Still, at a time when the big Indian IT companies like Infosys, Wipro and TCS are already struggling as never before as big customers shrink or go belly up, any movement against outsourcing is the last thing Indian executives need. It’s ironic that the backlash against Indian call centers comes even as Americans have embraced a film celebrating the triumph of an Indian call-center worker. The hero of Slumdog Millionaire, which swept the Oscars in February, works in a call center. Unfortunately for some of his real-life colleagues, though, these days Americans prefer their Indian call center workers to be fictional.