-------Original Message-------
Date: 07/04/05
08:06:07
Subject: Baroni Ltd -
Offshoring Newsletter' - 23/05
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Gartner: Five reasons why
offshore deals go bust
Businesses will spend more than $50
billion on offshore and near-shore outsourcing by 2007,
but many of the offshore projects will fail because of
poor planning, according to a recent report from Gartner
Inc.
Some organizations are rushing into
deals hoping to gain a competitive advantage, often
through cost cutting or a boost in productivity. But the
expected gains can be severely crimped by many factors.
Gartner's report identifies five areas where outsourcers
should apply more thought before taking the
plunge:
-- Unrealized cost savings: Most
businesses push work overseas in the hope of cutting
labor costs. An application maintenance worker in India,
for example, earns about $25 per hour, compared to $87
per hour in the U.S, according to Gartner. But
businesses make a mistake by looking at salaries
alone.
Hidden expenses for things like
infrastructure, communications, travel, and cultural
training take a bite out of the wage differential.
What's more, planning and startup costs are high, so
offshore deals lasting less than a year may not pay off
at all, and savings from longer term deals will emerge
slowly, Gartner said.
-- Loss of productivity: Staff at
an offshore service center probably won't be as
productive as internal staff back at home, at least not
initially. Gartner offers several reasons: Staff
turnover can be high in competitive offshoring markets
such as Bangalore, India, which also means programmers
there may be new and inexperienced. And service centers
overseas struggle with ambiguities in the work they are
assigned and shifting directives. Sending jobs overseas
can also lower morale at home, creating a drag on
output.
-- Poor commitment and
communications: Senior executives often drift out of the
picture once a deal is signed; they need to stay engaged
to keep morale high and strategy on track. And good
communications among all parties is paramount: Projects,
goals and expectations have to be defined clearly and in
detail. And on the home front, managers need to explain
clearly why work has been sent overseas and what
benefits are expected.
-- Cultural differences:
Communication styles and attitudes towards authority
differ from region to region and the differences can
cause problems. In some cultures, questioning authority
is considered disrespectful, so a team may push ahead
with a given plan even if they see a better approach.
Offshorers should get expert advice about a local
culture, provide cultural training and even arrange
exchanges among staff on both sides, Gartner
said.
Gartner also advises outsourcers to
figure out their IT process maturity, often measured
with the Software Engineering Institute's Capability
Maturity Model. Mature processes have standardized
methodologies, established mechanisms for managing
change, detailed service-level agreements and strong
skills in project and portfolio management. Weakness in
these areas can translate into poor results from
outsourcing projects, Gartner said.
-- Lack of offshore expertise and
readiness: Some organizations make the leap before they
are ready. Offshorers need to get everything in place
internally and secure the support of key stakeholders in
the company before launching a project. They should also
figure out the risks and how to mitigate
them.
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Top Stories |
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Wachovia
sending tech work overseas Wachovia has
identified technology functions that can be handled by
vendors, but hasn't started shifting the work yet,
spokeswoman Christy Phillips said. The company has made
no decision on what companies it will use, but the work
will be done in India, she said.
Banks
move to tighten call centre security The
British banking industry, work to restore consumer
confidence and tighten security yesterday, after a ring
of Indian call centre workers was exposed for selling
private information from UK bank accounts.
Esure
to offshore 300 jobs to India The UK-based
insurance company Esure is to triple the work-based
offshore, specifically India, from 100 to 300 due to
problems in recruitment in Manchester. It had received
no objections to the plans from joint-owner Halifax Bank
of Scotland.
Heinz
Wattie signs IT outsourcing agreement with
IBM Global food processor Heinz has signed a
multi million deal with IBM to outsource its
Australasian IT operations
NiSource
awards IBM $6.1bn outsourcing contract The
ten-year deal, slated to begin on July 1, calls for the
takeover of NiSoure’s technology consulting, human
resource management, procurement, customer service,
billing, finance and accounting operations by
IBM.
Convergys
to Acquire Finance & Accounting Outsourcing Business
of Deloitte Consulting Outsourcing Convergys
Corporation, a global provider of customer care, human
resources, and billing services, and Deloitte Consulting
Outsourcing LLC announced a definitive agreement under
which Convergys will acquire the Finance and Accounting
(F&A) Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) business of
Deloitte Consulting Outsourcing LLC, a subsidiary of
Deloitte Consulting LLP.
15%
of Singapore firms engage in offshore outsourcing:
Gartner According to IT consultants Gartner,
some 15 percent of local firms engage in outsourcing IT
services to lower cost countries such as India. This is
much higher that the 7 to 8 percent seen in Australia
but comparable to Hong Kong.
Japan
widens net for IT workers in Cebu THE
JAPANESE government is setting its sights on the Visayas
region, looking for skilled IT workers to be hired by
Japanese companies. |
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Service Provider
News |
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NASSCOM
urges stronger India-RP outsourcing
ties Instead of competing, top executive of
India's National Association of Software and Services
Companies (NASSCOM) called for stronger collaboration
between India and the Philippines to maintain a healthy
offshoring industry between them.
Accenture's
BPO unit builds team on cricket theme Says
the Accenture India's HR Lead, Mr Rahul Varma, 'Employee
referrals have always yielded good results. But combined
with the cricket theme, the success rate has been very
high.'
IBM
to hire 14,000 in India US tech giant IBM
plans to increase its payroll in India this year by
14,000 workers
TCS
to employ 13500 during 2005-06 Tata
Consultancy Services Ltd (TCS) will recruit 13,500
people during 2005-06, including 2,000 from abroad. He
said the recruitment for non-Indian nationality would be
mainly done from East Europe, Australia and U.S.
L&T
Infotech plans Rs 3 B capex L&T to set up
four new centers in FY-06 would be in Powai, Mahape
(Navi Mumbai), Chennai and Bangalore. Planning to hire
at least 3,000 people in the current fiscal (2005-2006
Accenture
Signs Seven-Year Outsourcing Contract with
Elpida Accenture has signed a seven-year IT
outsourcing contract to develop a global supply chain
system and manage enterprise-wide IT for Elpida Memory,
Inc., Japan's leading global supplier of Dynamic Random
Access Memory.
Ciber
buys firm in India after it backed U.S.
jobs The Greenwood Village information
technology consulting firm said it is buying a
Bangalore-based IT consultancy, Knowledge Systems, for
$2.5 million |
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Jonathan Harrison Managing Director
Baroni Limited 68 Penwortham Road Sanderstead, Surrey CR2
0QS |
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VAT Number:
814 6408
Company Registration Number
4741496
Registered
Office: 10 – 14 Accommodation Road, Golders Green, London, NW11
8ED
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