The reasons why organisations engage in outsourcing relationships are
changing, said Forrester at the firm’s
Services
and Sourcing Forum 2007. This is because those involved are beginning to
understand its real value.
Stephanie Moore, Forrester vice president and principal analyst, said “Today
people are realising that process improvement, standardisation, innovation or
transformation benefits are much more valuable than pure cost savings.”
Malcolm Frank, Cognizant vice president of marketing and strategy, said 80
per cent of an average IT organisation’s budget is caught up in “dead money,”
such as spending on maintenance and infrastructure, but firms are trying to
change this profile by outsourcing to free up the budget to drive new capability
for users. Frank pointed to the chief information officer at HP who has
committed to transform the 80/20 rule to 20/80.
“Offshoring is no longer about just providing operational efficiencies, but
is engaged to create process level efficiencies and effectiveness at the
application level,” Frank said, adding that this is a “clear breakthrough.”
Moore said the need to innovate is as important as cutting costs in
industries such as retail and media, and advised conference attendees to look
for “deep, vertical expertise” when looking for innovation in a service
provider.
Moore pointed to companies like IBM that invest millions of dollars in
research and development as one avenue for innovation. In a later discussion,
Moore also mentioned the Indian provider Infosys’ programme; SETlabs, which has
500 people in the group that are not sent out on client projects.
“The group selects industries or selects problems in industries and then
tries to create solutions using the most bleeding edge and advanced technologies
and this way Infosys can move up the stack and create more value,” Moore said.
“This is unusual for IT service providers,” Moore said, and generally when an
organisation requires innovation, they will need to request it.
Frank explained that in the competitive bids Cognizant has been involved in,
all the providers have been thought capable of delivering high quality at a good
price. “Now the hallmark of the relationship is can you help me move the
business forward, whether the provider has certain domain insights, and how they
can help with the innovation agenda.
More that 50 per cent of Cognizant’s work is now spent “doing real domain and
process issues,” said Frank.
Frank said “offshoring” is likely to disappear as a term, and pointed to the
fact that Accenture has more Indian than American employees in its business, and
that IBM is the largest private employer in India, with 70 to 80 thousand Indian
associates. “When those multi national firms have moved to that footprint, it is
just sourcing for the industry,” Frank added.
During this year’s National Outsourcing Association Summit, Adrian Quayle,
Gartner vice-president, also discussed key trends he saw developing in the
outsourcing market.
“The service provider market is changing dramatically as the service
providers’ move to a global delivery model, whereas in the past the focus was
around offshore and onshore structures,” Quayle said.
“There is a convergence happening between offshore providers and traditional
service providers…occurring through big deal pursuits, the range of services on
offer and their global coverage area,” Quayle said, pointing to the headquarters
of Fujitsu in Tokyo, Capgemini in Paris and TCS in Mumbai.
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