Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Software development firm CEO settles in Deerfield Beach

David and Roberta Noderer bought a three-bedroom, two-bath home at 1968 N.E. Seventh St. in Deerfield Beach from 1521502 Ontario Limited for $355,000 on July 6.

1521502 Ontario Limited paid $460,000 for Unit #2-3 in May 2006. The 1,374-square-foot home was built in 1995 in the Deerfield Beach East neighborhood.

Noderer has served as the president, chief executive officer and founder of Computer Ways Inc., a software development firm which specializes in Microsoft technologies, and the founder and treasurer of the Florida Dot Net User Group. He has held technical, management and marketing positions at Prime Computer and Encore Computer and managed architecture, hardware and software design teams. He was also the director and treasurer of the Florida Chapter of the Internet Society, a founding board member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and a former Trustee of the Greater Fort Lauderdale Chamber of Commerce.

He received his B.S. from the Rochester Institute of Technology and completed continuing education courses at the University of Rochester and Northeastern University.

There were 1,064 sales in Deerfield Beach in 2008, with a median sales price of $51,000.

Source: http://southflorida.blockshopper.com/news/story/300028786-Software_development_firm_CEO_settles_in_Deerfield_Beach

Engine Yard launches robust Ruby cloud-based deployment platform service

Engine Yard is working to make life easier for Ruby on Rails developers. The San Francisco-based application automation and management start-up rolled out two new products on Monday with an eye toward the cloud.

Ruby on Rails is a Web programming framework that’s rapidly emerging as one of the most popular ways to develop Web sites and Web applications. Popular Web 2.0 applications like Twitter, Hulu and Scribd are built using Ruby on Rails, and Ruby usage has increased by 40 percent in 2009 alone, according to Evans Data. Even though only 14 percent of developers are using Ruby, Evans predicts 20 percent will adopt the technology by 2010.

Engine Yard is preparing for Ruby growth in the next 12 months and beyond with its latest offerings: Engine Yard Cloud and Flex. Engine Yard Cloud is a services platform that leverages 100 man-years of experience deploying, managing and scaling some of the world’s largest Rail sites and makes that know-how accessible to companies looking to run Rails in the cloud. Meanwhile, Flex is a cloud service plan for production-level Rails applications.

Tackling Tough Issues

What Engine Yard is, in effect, taking Ruby a step beyond application development. These new tools tackle tougher issues like deployment, maintenance, scalability, uptime and performance — skills most developers either don’t have or don’t want to acquire. Cloud management solutions abound, but Engine Yard charging forward with a platform to specifically address the needs of developers building applications in Rails.

Unlike an infrastructure cloud, Engine Yard Cloud provides application-aware auto-scaling, auto-healing and monitoring and a highly optimized, pre-integrated Rails runtime stack. Engine Yard Cloud is also backed by 24×7 Premium Support from Engine Yard. It runs on Amazon EC2 infrastructure cloud.

Pricing for the Flex Plan starts at $349 per month. Pricing for Engine Yard Premium Support starts at $475 per month. Engine Yard Cloud will be generally available in August.

“Companies like Amazon and Rackspace are doing a good job at the hardware resource provisioning level,” said Tom Mornini, CTO of Engine Yard. “But they don’t actually help you with assembling your raw virtual machines, storage, object stores and file systems into an application architecture. Engine Yard Cloud is the layer on top of the hardware that helps you get from raw resources to functioning application architecture.”

Under the Hood

With its Flex plan, Engine Yard Cloud serves customers running production applications that want to leverage the on-demand flexibility of a cloud but also need application-level scaling, reliability and support. With developer features like automated deployment from source check-ins, handling rapid application changes driven by agile development is easier for developers.

Behind the scenes, Engine Yard Cloud is automatically scaling applications. Engine Yard can come to the rescue of a site that’s under stress or low in memory by adding more application capacity on the fly. Here’s how it works: Essentially, the technology provisions a new Amazon virtual machine, lays down the operating system, lays down Ruby on Rails, lays down the source code, hooks it up with a load balancer, and assembles the monitoring so the developer — who is not a systems administrator — doesn’t have to.

Engine Yard Cloud also offers reliability features to make sure sites don’t go down, such as an automatic database replica and an auto-healing capacity in case a server fails in the application tier. Engine Yard Cloud even offers what it calls “one-click cloning” that lets developers duplicate production sites — even if they are running 15 or 20 or more servers — in order to perform testing or stage new code.

This is all coming together for integrated app-stack in one cloud automation. I expect this will also be of interest for private clouds. And I’m hip to the notion of personal cloud as a means to ease the deployment of robust apps.

Competing in the Cloud

On the Ruby front, Engine Yard has a strong position in the market. Engine Yard’s competitors are Joyent, Rails Machine, Devunity and RailsCluster, among others.

But Engine Yard isn’t just competing with vendors in the Ruby space. It’s competing with other platforms. Google App Engine is doing something similar for Java. Microsoft is shipping Azure in November. Even if Engine Yard dominates on the Ruby front, there’s still a battle for market share in cloud platforms.

Source: http://blogs.zdnet.com/Gardner/?p=3083

Monday, May 25, 2009

AT Kearney: Bulgaria holds ground in office outsourcing

The latest rating of the global business consultant AT Kearney indicates that Bulgaria still has positive potential for outsourcing of offices in spite of the economic downturn. It is still an attractive destination, especially in the financial and accounting sectors, maintenance and development of computer systems and databases, client support, research and development and labour intensive services.

Office building investors have an increasingly arduous task in the midst of the downturn: finding tenants for hundreds of thousands of sq m of office space at a time when managers are trying to cut costs.

According to the latest edition of global management consulting firm AT Kearney’s Global Services Location Index (GSLI), deteriorating cost considerations and improved labour quality are driving a dramatic shift in outsourcing locations.

The GSLI report shows that once competitive central European countries have yielded ground to countries in Asia, the Middle East and North Africa. India, China and Malaysia retain the top three positions they have occupied since 2004.

The downturn has been particularly marked in central and eastern Europe where established premier outsourcing destinations have slumped in popularity. The Czech Republic, for example, has fallen to 32nd place from 16th, Hungary to 37th place from 24th and Slovakia to 40th from 12th. Meanwhile, Bulgaria has also registered a decrease, albeit a significantly milder one - from ninth down to 13th place.

Reasons for the decline of central and eastern European countries were said to be the drastic escalation in costs driven by wage inflation. Meanwhile, low-cost countries in Southeast Asia and the Middle East have made substantial advances as the quality and availability of their labour forces improve. Egypt, Jordan and Vietnam ranked in the GSLI’s top 10 for the first time ever.

In Bulgaria, in particular, according to Stroitelstvo Gradut, the market has been facing increasing pressure over the past few months due to economic weakness. This forces companies to reduce spending on office space, so releasing more unused areas.

Vacancy rates in Sofia have soared up to double digit percentages while rent levels have regressed to the values of two years ago. A few major property transactions like Hewlett Packard Global Delivery Bulgaria Centre, which completed a 8 000 sq m move in an office complex in Kambanite business centre, and the VMWare software developer with five storeys in the East Tower at GM Dimitrov Boulevard, have been hailed as positive indicators for the future by local analysts.

Source: http://www.sofiaecho.com/2009/05/25/724507_at-kearney-bulgaria-holds-ground-in-office-outsourcing

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Infosys hiring 100+ in Bellevue, CEO sees rebound in '10

Bangalore-based outsourcing giant Infosys is hiring - in Bellevue.

The company plans to add more than 100 new employees as part of a big US expansion in anticipation of growth resuming in 2010.

Altogether, Infosys plans to hire about 1,000 people across the US over the next 12 to 18 months, according to Chief Executive Kris Gopalakrishnan, who is in town for Microsoft's CEO Summit this week and who sat down for an interview before making a presentation there.

Already, 14,000 of the company's 104,000 employees are based in the US. It remains to be seen whether the hiring will blunt concerns about outsourcing during a time when the US is spending billions to create and preserve jobs.

But Infosys isn't trying to score publicity points with the jobs as much as finding more people to work with its big customers such as Microsoft.

"We believe business will be there if we add capabilities, more services and solutions to our portfolio and increase the business volume with the existing customers - that's how we see growth coming to our business," Gopalakrishnan said.
Since it was started in 1981, Infosys has grown to become one of the top three outsourcing firms in India, where its stature is comparable to Microsoft's.

Gopalakrishnan said the CEO Summit is "a good way to network with the leadership in the industry, especially in times like these."

"It's important to understand and get to know different perspectives, what everybody thinks," he said. "A lot of impact and influence is because of the collective thinking of people, right? If everybody believes things are going to become better, they do become better."

Gopalakrishnan also is hoping the gathered executives will have insights into what fundamental changes will result from the downturn. To figure that out, you need to distinguish between the greed that marked the financial meltdown and innovations that were happening, he said.

"If you look at the Internet boom, everybody jumped in, many of those companies got funded, lots of money was poured in," he said. "Of course many of those companies failed, lots of money was lost but some good things happened - some companies emerged very strong, became the leaders in that space. In telecom, the same thing - a huge amount of money was spent creating bandwidth. A lot of us are benefiting from that.

If there was no expectation of higher returns, that money would not have been spent. Because of the higher returns, a lot of people jammed in, a lot of risk is taken, but I think everybody benefited out of that. Then there was a period of consolidation, a lot of players dropped out. A few companies survived and it goes on."

What's next?

"I think we need to figure out what is the role of regulation in this and how we can manage it better."

Has the recovery begun in India?

"Very early stages," Gopalakrishnan said. "I hope it is sustained and picks up. The difference with the US is in the US it has gone from 2, 3 percent in GDP growth to approximately zero, about a 3 percent decline. India has also declined 3 percent - it's gone from 8 to 9 percent growth to 5 percent to 6 percent.

On the positive side it's still 5 to 6 percent growth, but the decline is similar, actually."

How concerned is Gopalakrishnan he about US perceptions of outsourcing, especially now that the country is spending heavily to create new jobs?

"I'm concerned," he said. "It is a very important question to be addressed. There is a short-term and a medium- to long-term issue. Short term, it's about job losses and what are the right things to do. Medium to long term, you need to focus on the underlying causes, the underlying issues related to that.

If we talk about our industry - if we look at medium to long term - there will be shortages of people in this industry for multiple reasons. If you look at the people coming into this industry, it has been declining in developed countries and increasing in developing countries."

Source: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/technologybrierdudleysblog/2009244972_infosys_hiring_100_in_bellevue.html

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

HCL inks outsourcing deal with MTV

HCL Technologies, part of the Rs. 24,000 crore HCL Group, today announced that it is entering into an outsourcing services engagement deal with MTV networks. MTV or Music Television is owned by US-based Viacom.

HCL will provide technology solutions to MTV in digital content creation, media asset management, community networking and cross brand programming on different platforms.

The platforms include media player development, sites development, social networking site development, games development, application and data support and platform development.

The offshore development centre will be based in Chennai, while the user interface design services will be located in Noida.

Source: http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/hcl-inks-outsourcing-dealmtv/62422/on

Monday, May 18, 2009

E-learning Outsourcing in India to be Worth $603M

ValueNotes Outsourcing Practice has published a report on the Indian e-learning outsourcing service provider landscape where it has revealed that revenues from the latter will touch US $603 million by the end of 2012. At present, the Indian e-learning outsourcing segment has reported to have earned approximately US $341 million at the end of 2008. Titled 'E-learning Outsourcing 2009: Advantage India', the report documents the competitive landscape of providers in the e-learning space in the country.

Market will Recover

According to ValueNotes, the economic recession will continue to impact growth in the industry for the next six to eight quarters. The market will recover and grow much faster until 2012. As a result, according to ValueNotes suggests that the e-learning offshoring industry will grow at a CAGR of 15 percent till 2012 -- though this growth will be more subdued till 2010. This 'growth' will be to the tune of US $603 million by the end of the calendar year 2012.

According to ValueNotes, since companies are forced to make their 'training dollar' last longer, outsourcing e-learning operations to countries such as India are a more viable solution. Realizing the cost advantage and service expertise available India, companies will move from international e-learning service providers to Indian ones.

The E-Learning Outsourcing Industry in India

According to the report, today the Indian e-learning outsourcing industry consists of third-party providers, offshore delivery centers of international e-learning providers and consulting firms. In the last decade or so, apart from 'pure-play' e-learning firms, companies from fields such as IT, BPO, publishing and domestic retail education have also made a foray into the market.

At the same time, Indian e-learning providers are now moving on from doing low-end outsourced work for international providers to rival international standards in emerging technologies like Web 2.0 applications, high-tech learning environments, and tools to develop better, faster and economical learning. This includes small, niche providers that are now developing specialized applications such as rapid mobile learning tools.

ValueNotes estimates that there are no more than 35 e-learning providers who have more than 100 employees and there are well over a hundred other smaller providers in this space.

Source: http://www.enterpriser.in/India/Know_It/E-learning_Outsourcing_in_India_to_be_Worth_603M/551-102071-449.html

General Motors Leaves US Workers by the Wayside as it Accelerates Operations in China

For decades, General Motors Corp. was an icon of American industry. But over the past decade its sales in China have steadily increased, while dwindling sales at home have turned the company into a relic.

Now facing bankruptcy, GM has an opportunity to shift its operations to China, its fastest growing and most profitable market. The company is already attempting to move its manufacturing operations to the Asian powerhouse, and that has given rise to speculation that it will move its headquarters as well.

Of course, if GM – which has already received $15.4 in government loans – were to pick up stakes, the political fallout would be epic. What could be more “un-American” than a 101 year-old American automotive company that’s being propped up by taxpayer dollars moving to a communist nation?

But the reality is that American consumers aren’t buying GM vehicles and Chinese consumers are. That means if the company is going to remain viable, China, not America, is GM’s land of opportunity.

GM CEO: Bankruptcy ‘Probable’

GM still has two weeks before the government imposed deadline to demonstrate sustainable viability expires on June 1. But even GM Chief Executive Officer Fritz Henderson has admitted that bankruptcy is “probable” at this point. And in the minds of analysts, it’s almost certain.

“[Bankruptcy] is looking like a real high probability,” Brett D. Hoselton, an analyst with KeyBanc Captial Markets, told the New York Times. “Chrysler is the best indicator at this point of where we’re heading with GM.”

GM reported a first-quarter net loss of $5.98 billion, compared to a loss of $3.3 billion a year earlier. Revenue fell to $22.4 billion, a 47% drop from 2008. The company burned through $10.2 billion in cash in just three months. GM has now lost $88 billion since 2004.

Last year, GM lost its crown as the world’s largest carmaker to Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp. And a company that 40 years ago produced one out of every two vehicles sold in the United States, has seen its US market share slide to just 19%.

On Friday, GM notified 1,100 of its 6,000 US dealerships that it is terminating their contracts, and it plans to cut its network down to 3,600 dealers by next year.

“This company is sick,” Charles Ballard, an economics professor at Michigan State University told Michigan NBC television affiliate WILX 10, “they’re likely going to file for bankruptcy.”

Investors are equally pessimistic. GM stock has plunged 70% since the Obama administration announced it would give the company 60 days to restructure outside of bankruptcy court. GM has lost 94% of its equity value in the past year.

Is China the Right Cure for GM?

So if GM is sick, what then is the medicine? Many analysts believe it’s a healthy dose of China.

While its US sales have plunged, sales in China continue to grow exponentially. In fact, GM sold more vehicles in Asia in the first quarter than it did in the United States. Only 26% of GM’s first-quarter sales came from the US, a 36% decline from a year ago.

And while global car sales continue to plunge, auto sales in China are expected to grow between 8% and 9% this year. China actually overtook the United States as the world’s largest auto market for the first time in history in the first quarter.

And unlike the United States, there is actually a strong demand for GM model cars. In China, where the company is neck and neck with Volkswagen for the market-share lead, GM set a monthly sales record of 151,084 vehicles in April. That’s a 50% increase from its April 2008 results.

“Within 10 years, this will be our largest market in the world,” Kevin Wale, president of GM China, told TIME magazine.

GM has been so successful in China it is reportedly negotiating plans with US lawmakers that will send the carmaker’s production overseas, the UK’s Telegraph reported.

GM will start shipping cars to the United States from Shanghai in 2011. The company plans to export slightly more than 17,000 vehicles in the first year before ramping up to 50,000 by 2014.

Backlash from GM’s China Plan

While many carmakers import components from China to save on labor costs, GM would be the first company to import whole cars from the Mainland.

Of course the plan doesn’t sit well with unions.

“GM should not be taking taxpayers’ money simply to finance the outsourcing of jobs to other countries,” Alan Reuther, a Washington lobbyist for the United Auto Workers (UAW) union wrote in a letter to US lawmakers.

Indeed, the UAW and others argue that the whole point of bailing out the US auto industry was to save American jobs and help prop up the sagging economy.

Two weeks ago, GM CEO Henderson said his company would cut an additional 21,000 factory jobs, close 13 plants, eliminate about 2,600 dealerships and close its Pontiac division. GM aims to shed 23,000 jobs – 38% of its workforce – by 2011.

But the company expects to open a new factory in mainland China within the next few years and continues to build upon its 21,000 Chinese employees.

“I think that’s wrong,” Keith Pokrefky, a Michigan autoworker, told NBC’s WILX. “I think that’s wrong for America. I think it’s wrong for American jobs. It’s un-American.”

On the other hand, GM argues that it is only logical to produce cars where they’re going to be sold.

“GM’s philosophy has always been to build where we sell, and we continue to believe that is the best strategy for long-term success, both from a product development and business planning standpoint,” GM’s China office said in a written statement to the Associated Press.

Plus, GM already imports cars from other countries, just not China. The Chevrolet Aveo and Pontiac G3 come from South Korea. The Pontiac G8 comes from Australia. The Saturn Astra comes from Belgium, and the Vue from Mexico.

Harvard Business School professor Clayton Christenson – who was also a consultant to Richard Wagoner, the architect of GM’s China strategy – told TIME that inexpensive, Chinese-made Chevys, exported to the United States could be the “disruptive” force the company needs to resuscitate North American sales.

“It’s exactly the right thing for them to do,” Christenson said.

While China keeps its data on labor costs under lock and key, analysts estimate that wages and benefit payments per factory worker are less than a tenth of what they are in North America, TIME reported.

MSU professor Charles Ballard says that while the notion of outsourcing more jobs to China may not be pleasing, it is also in GM’s best interest.

“I think everyone needs to keep in mind that if this company fails, that’s the worst case scenario," Ballard said. "It would be really good for the people of Michigan and for Lansing for GM to become a viable company. Right now, it’s not."

And perhaps that’s the root of the issue. There was a time when what was good for GM was good for America. But somewhere along the line, the interests of the two diverged. Now, they’re too far entangled for there to be an amicable solution to this problem, and the Obama administration is left with a political powder keg.

The government stepped in to fire former GM chief Richard Wagoner, but it doesn’t want to be too heavy-handed in its treatment of the private sector. It has already spent months sidestepping questions about whether or not it would nationalize US banks.

“We didn’t think in America that the President could fire the CEO of a private company,” one Chinese executive told TIME. “For us Chinese it was very confusing.”

But if the Obama administration lets GM move ahead with its plans, it must confront the unpleasant reality that it is subsidizing the outsourcing of US jobs with taxpayer money.

“Production location is a corporate decision, but when it’s on the taxpayer dime, there are different sensitivities, so the notion of billions for a rescue package and offshore production, I think, could be politically combustible," Harley Shaiken, a professor at the University of California at Berkley who specializes in labor issues

Source: http://www.moneymorning.com/2009/05/18/general-motors-china/

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Guide to a Perfect Offshore Outsourcing Vendor Deal

Cost-cutting: Beleaguered companies see it as the only sure action in an uncertain world. They think that if they cut costs beyond the bone, surely profits will seep from the wound.

During times of economic turmoil, when the pressure to cut costs is most intense, many companies turn to offshore outsourcing. They see it is a quick way to reduce IT and other back-office expenses.

Under financial strain, however, companies-even those that are experienced with offshore outsourcing-make knee-jerk decisions, and in their haste, they fail to consider provisions in outsourcing contracts that would protect their staff, give them more control over the staff the outsourcing company allocates to their projects, or safeguard their intellectual property. The outsourcing deals they ink end up doing much more harm to their bottom lines than good.

Richard Green, partner at law firm Robinson & Cole LLP, spent a good part of the previous recession as an in-house lawyer with a business process outsourcing (BPO) provider, where he witnessed first-hand the bad contract negotiation decisions clients made under cost and time pressure.

He says customers made concessions on operating level agreements (OLAs) and service level agreements (SLAs) after only a round or two of negotiations.

"If an issue [with an SLA or OLA] wasn't going to save the customer money in the short term or speed up deal closing, we on the supplier side needed only to dig in [our heels] for a bit to get our way," says Green.

Green cites the offshore outsourcing engagement Lehman Brothers entered into in 2002 with Spectramind (now owned by Wipro) to have the Indian company manage its internal help desk as an example of a deal that a customer didn't give due consideration.

"The function Lehman outsourced was universally viewed as too complex and immature within Lehman's own organization to be a good candidate for outsourcing," says Green. "Yet, driven by dollar signs, Lehman did it anyway with disastrous results. The performance and the feedback from internal company customers was so terrible they shut it down a few months later." Lehman had to bring help desk management back in house.

Conseco had a similar experience when it outsourced a contact center to India in 2001, says Green. Customers were so up in arms over the move that Conseco brought the contact center back to the US in 2003, he says.

Lehman's and Conseco's experiences make it clear that the biggest offshoring mistake companies can make in this environment is moving too quickly. Besides proceeding too fast, companies should make sure they avoid the following eight pitfalls that thwart companies' best efforts to save money through offshore outsourcing.

1. Don't let offshore outsourcing vendors pad contracts with initial set-up fees.

Vendors realize that most outsourcing deals are price-driven. Therefore, some take dubious measures to ensure that they are the lowest bidder. Their low bids are often an illusion because they add costs elsewhere to make the deal more profitable for themselves in the end.

"This practice has been perfected to an art by some offshore vendors," says Anupam Govil, chairman of the Global Sourcing Forum + Expo, a trade show focused exclusively on outsourcing. Consequently, he adds, customers are often struck with a "nasty surprise" when unreasonably high set-up fees suddenly appear in the final contract.

To avoid such surprises, Govil recommends that customers ask prospective offshoring partners for fully loaded cost estimates. This way, when prospective buyers match quotes from different outsourcing companies, they can make apples to apples comparisons, he says.

2. Don't give more work to your outsourcing provider just because of a pre-existing contract.

Robinson & Cole's Green sees many companies pile work on an existing offshore outsourcing partner for convenience's sake.

"The thinking has been, 'Well, we already successfully outsource function X to supplier A, why not just throw another statement of work on supplier A's master agreement and outsource functions Y and Z too,' " he says.

That's a mistake because your existing outsourcing partner may not be the best vendor for those new functions, says Green. Your vendor might not offer the best price for those functions, or they might not have the expertise or experience managing those functions. What's more, the new functions you're thinking of outsourcing might not even lend themselves to offshore outsourcing.

Before you fork over new work to your outsourcing provider, consider if the work is best suited to your vendor.

3. Don't lose control of change management.

Diana J.P. McKenzie, partner and chair of information technology law at Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg LLP, sees too many companies treat outsourcing deals as static.

"All of these deals will change over the time," she says. "This is the nature of IT."

McKenzie advises offshore outsourcing customers to make sure their contracts include a process for handling changes to the contract as business conditions necessitate. (See also How to Renegotiate an Outsourcing Contract.

4. Don't depend on a foreign judicial system for relief.

When disputes between a customer and offshore outsourcing partner arise (as they often do when deals are rushed), customers can't depend on a foreign judicial system, particularly in India, to help settle the dispute.

"In India, it can take longer to get something through the court system than it does to raise a child," says McKenzie. "A contract must have an arbitration provision to have any hope of getting a timely resolution. Better yet, insist contract disputes be resolved in the USA."

5. Don't fail to validate the credentials of the outsourcing staff.

Unfortunately, it's not uncommon for staff at offshore outsourcing firms to fake their professional and educational credentials-and for their employers to let them get away with it.

"In India, one can easily obtain credentials through a variety of means, such as fake mailing addresses and fake phone numbers," says Mike Drips, a Microsoft SharePoint consultant who has worked on multi-million dollar projects for a variety of Fortune 500 companies including American Express, Verizon, Microsoft and GE.

If your offshore provider's staff isn't above board, you can't expect to get quality service, so make sure to perform background checks on staff.

6. Don't let your staff burn out.

In the heat of contract negotiations, it can be easy to forget certain provisions that will keep your staff sane, such as having your offshore vendor tailor its work hours to yours so that your staff doesn't have to work through multiple time zones.

"You are paying them money, so you should not be getting up at 3 AM for a conference call," says Drips. "The vendor's staff should be getting up [early or staying up late] to talk to you."

Another way to lower your and your staff's frustration is by adding a clause that demands English speakers, recommends Drips. English-speaking contacts may not automatically be provided to you if you have not added this provision to the contract, even if the overall outsourced function requires English-speaking roles.

7. Don't accept your domestic project manager's recommendations without evaluating the details of the deal yourself.

Offshore outsourcing providers will sometimes try to influence deals by wooing project managers with exotic trips and gifts, says Drips.

"Be wary if your domestic project manager suddenly has the funds to go on a three week visit to the country that your offshore vendor is located in," warns Drips.

Because enticement is not uncommon, scrutinizing deals yourself is critical. Also essential: Double checking all staff recommendations to ensure their opinions haven't been unduly swayed. If you don't vet your staff's recommendations or review outsourcing deals on your own, you risk entering into a disadvantageous contract.

8. Don't get caught in a data security trap.

Many outsourcing deals stipulate that the client is responsible for data security and require the client to secure its data before delivering it to an outsourcing partner.

"This makes sense until you realize that the entire goal of the outsourcing arrangement is to move as much work as possible to lower cost resources," says Mike Logan, president of Axis Technology, an IT consulting firm.

He adds that outsourcing customers can find themselves in a Catch-22 situation where they can't realize the cost savings from offshoring because they have to invest extra money in data security. And unfortunately, he says, there's no easy solution to the conundrum.

Exercise Discipline

The best safeguard against all these pitfalls is to take your time. "Companies that are successful at outsourcing will often dedicate years before a contract is even signed," says Robinson & Cole's Green. "They do financial modeling, risk identification and mitigation planning, technical, financial and reputational due diligence on potential suppliers, and head-to-head contract negotiation to force suppliers to cough up the best terms."

Source: http://news.idg.no/cw/art.cfm?id=3B98AA64-1A64-67EA-E440A83D4FD905A0

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

HP moves OpenVMS dev to India

The companies that create and modernize operating systems are under the same economic pressures as the IT departments of corporations - large and small - that create and maintain their own applications atop those operating systems. And it comes as no surprise that the development of the venerable OpenVMS proprietary operating system - under the control of Hewlett-Packard since its 2001 acquisition of Compaq - is moving largely to India.

The news of the changes in the OpenVMS development organization came to light when Ann McQuaid, general manager of the OpenVMS platform, sent out a letter to AlphaServer and Integrity shops that have applications running on OpenVMS. In that letter, which you can read on the OpenVMS newsgroups hosted by Google here, McQuaid said that Sue Skonetski, manager of engineering programs for the OpenVMS software engineering group, will be "pursuing new opportunities" after 15 years as the main advocate of the OpenVMS platform inside Digital Equipment, Compaq, and then HP over those years.

McQuaid added that Sujatha Ramani will take over the Skonetski's responsibilities, including what HP called technical customer programs and communications. Ramani has spent 11 years at HP in its PC, printing, and corporate IT businesses in various sales, marketing, operations, and channel and account management jobs. But as you might imagine, that's not the same thing as being the OpenVMS standard bearer advocating for the platform inside the HP corporate behemoth.

On the OpenVMS newsgroup, there were rumors flying around that not only was Skonetski leaving HP, but that OpenVMS development and maintenance was being shifted to the software development lab in Bangalore, India. According to those rumors, all but about a dozen HP employees are being let go from the OpenVMS labs in Marlboro, Massachusetts, and those employees will interface between the Indian development team and HP's corporate offices and, presumably, OpenVMS customers.

An HP spokesperson said that OpenVMS has been developed in facilities around the globe, including the Marlboro and Bangalore labs, for years. Digital did a lot of OpenVMS work in Nashua, New Hampshire, but that facility was shuttered in December 2007.

HP, as you might imagine, doesn't want OpenVMS customers freaking out over the loss of Skonetski and the move of the development efforts to a new team. "HP continues to be fully committed to the OpenVMS operating system and its future development," explained Brian Cox, director of software planning and marketing for Business Critical Systems in an email exchange. "The mix of HP resources is adjusted from time to time as we utilize engineering resources from around the world. This provides the highest level of support for our customers with the optimal business model for HP."

Cox did not provide any details on layoffs in the Marlboro lab or where the OpenVMS development lab would be located, if indeed it is in India as the rumors suggest.

OpenVMS and its predecessors for VAXen and their kickers are coming up on 31 years in commercial and technical computing, and like all proprietary systems, they're under great pressure from the large Windows installed base and cast Windows ecosystem of applications. Just like HP's MPE/ix platform, which will be supported until December 31, 2010, and IBM's OS/400, which has been renamed "i" (and is i 6.1 in its latest release) and which runs on its latest Power Systems iron.

HP ported OpenVMS to its Itanium-based Integrity servers - a process that took a lot longer than many customers had hoped, especially since Compaq was working on a port of its OpenVMS, Tru64 Unix, and NonStop platforms before HP came a-wooing in September 2001 - and finally delivered OpenVMS v8.2 on selected models in January 2005. In September 2006, OpenVMS v8.3 was launched at the same time as Integrity machines using HP's "Arches" chipset and the dual-core "Montecito" Itanium 9000 processors. The current OpenVMS, v8.3-1H1, was tweaked to support the dual-core "Montvale" Itanium 9100 processors and added support for the BL860c and BL870c Itanium blade servers so OpenVMS shops could move to blades instead of rx Series rack servers.

If you look at the most current OpenVMS roadmap, OpenVMS v8.4 is in development now and will make use of new Integrity servers (presumably those based on the quad-core "Tukwila" Itaniums, which are way late to market) and will include improvements for virtualization and disaster tolerance clusters (including the support for VMSclusters over TCP/IP). OpenVMS v8.4 will run inside HP's own Itanium-based hypervisor, IntegrityVM, as a guest operating system, much as Windows, Linux, and HP-UX already do.

With Tukwila pushed out, OpenVMS development has been pushed out too, and in this case, OpenVMS v8.4 is now being promised for the first half of 2010, somewhere between 6 and 12 months after the Tukwilas take the field at HP. And beyond that, OpenVMS v.next is on the roadmap for the "next wave of enterprise computing." That probably means "Poulson" and "Kittson" Itanium support - and maybe not much else if you are cynical about IT suppliers putting proprietary operating systems into maintenance mode. As many OpenVMS shops will be, by the way. If this isn't the case, now would be a good time for HP to start talking a little bit more for its plans for OpenVMS.

It will be interesting to see where HP-UX and NonStop development end up.

Source: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/05/12/openvms_to_india/

Monday, May 11, 2009

NASA Makes Space for Open Source Software

Space Shuttle Atlantis launched today on its way to the final Hubble telescope repair mission. There's an old joke originally quipped by astronaut Wally Schirra that NASA spacecraft really is a modern marvel, especially when you consider it's built by the lowest bidders. It's the government's tight purse strings, however, that has helped open source software put its fingerprints all over the space agency.

NASA says it has four main reasons for promoting the use and development of open source software:

  • To increase NASA software quality via community peer review
  • To accelerate software development via community contributions
  • To maximize the awareness and impact of NASA research
  • To increase dissemination of NASA software in support of NASA's education mission

NASA's CosmosCode program, launched in 2007, brings open source developers together to create space exploration software. It also opens the door for individual coders to get involved in the space industry and a offers a way for space companies to partner with NASA to develop mutually beneficial software. The CosmoCode project is currently open for internal alpha testing and looking for volunteers.

To aid in software development, NASA created CoLab, a blend of virtual and physical coworking environments. Since community members are spread out all over the globe, a lot of collaboration activity takes place on a private island in Second Life, a virtual world built around an open source framework. NASA even has its own OSI-approved software license, the NASA Open Source Agreement, to apply to software created for the agency.

NASA's Ames Research Center recently developed a bug tracker written with open source Bugzilla tools. The Problem Reporting Analysis and Corrective Action (PRACA) system provides a single trouble ticket database that's available to everyone involved in the Shuttle program, clearly a better solution than the 40 different databases it has amassed over the last 30 years.

Open source software played a critical role in the Mars Rover program, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux turns up all over NASA, from the computers streaming spacecraft video to the server managing its mission countdown clock.In fact, Red Hat Community Engineer Jack Aboutboul got a behind the scenes look at just how prevalent open source is at NASA. Space junkies beware, the photos will make you green with envy.

Source: http://ostatic.com/blog/nasa-makes-space-for-open-source-software

Knowledge Haus Selects Neubloc for Expert Software Development

Knowledge Haus has teamed with Neubloc, a US-based global software product development services and consultancy provider, to help launch their StoryDeck application by mid-year 2009. The partnership makes it possible for Knowledge Haus to bring their product to market faster, which translates to increased revenue and market share opportunities. Neubloc's "follow the sun" 24/7 schedule strategy provides expert software product developer teams located around the globe to shorten development cycles and reduce costs for Knowledge Haus.

The StoryDeck application from Knowledge Haus, an online community startup based in California, enables users to create, edit, and publish collaborative videos categorically over the web. Teaming with Neubloc creates a relationship with shared interests along with essential capital and expert development resources to get an innovative, quality product to market.

Neubloc is the only software developer solutions provider that is offering a unique equity option program aimed to provide early-stage companies access to low-cost capital and software development resources. The investment program lowers cash burn by 50 to 70%, alleviating economic pressures and providing a foundation for sustainability and growth.

Neubloc's Equity Option Program provides access to financing for angel and early-stage enterprise, while also retaining Neubloc's expertise in software design and product development. By offering critical onshore and offshore software development services for cash and equity payments, Neubloc is a vendor of choice for business owners because of the dual benefits of significantly reducing costs and lowering requirements for immediate cash expenditures.

"StoryDeck has a lot of moving parts and the development of the site required a clear user design and strict project management of the development effort and the fact that Neubloc is an equity partner going forward gives me complete faith in the deal," says Rebecca Bohms, Managing Director of Knowledge Haus. "Neubloc came highly recommended as the best partner for providing complete back office new product development, capable of handling the complexity of the project and to deliver it on time and on budget and they have delivered every step of the way."

"It's a win-win for both Knowledge Haus and Neubloc. Economically, now is to the best time to invest in early and growth stage companies and our program provides an extension of expert software development services tethered to critical capital resources necessary for start-ups and entrepreneurs to succeed," said Armando Viteri, president and CEO for Neubloc.

Source: http://pr-usa.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=207962&Itemid=33

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Study: US companies eye home soil for outsourcing

A recent study by BDO Seidman LLP, an accounting and consulting organization, finds that nearly a quarter of the chief financial officers at US technology businesses who outsource plan to consider the United States as the main outsourcing destination in 2009.

Twenty-two percent of the chief financial officers surveyed pegged the United States as an outsourcing destination; 16 percent named China and 13 percent named India. These were the three top countries named in the survey.

China takes the number two position with 16 percent, followed by India with 13 percent. Nineteen percent say they have no plans for further outsourcing, according to the study

“While last year may have produced an outsourcing bubble, 2009 will see companies retrench to survive in the face of reduced demand. The United States has become a far more viable option for them,” said Douglas Sirotta, a partner in BDO Seidman’s technology practice.

“This year we are seeing three global factors that are causing US technology companies to pull back from traditional outsourcing locations, led by the recent boom and bust of the worldwide economy. Satyam’s fraud case and the terrorist attacks in Mumbai are causing a lot of companies to reconsider operating in India. And supply chain and shipping cost issues in China are negatively impacting the attractiveness of outsourcing technology operations to the Far East,” Sirotta added.

Higher shipping costs from China to the United States may also weigh into decisions about whether the United States is seen as an attractive alternative to farming out operations to China.

The cost of shipping a 40-foot, standard container from East Asia to the eastern seaboard of the United States has tripled since 2000, according to a late 2008 report from CIBC World Markets in Toronto.

Other findings from the study include:

  • The most common non-US locations for outsourcing are India, at 50 percent; Southeast Asia, including the Philippines, at 31 percent, down from 50 percent in 2008; China, at 19 percent, down from 46 percent in 2008, and Western Europe, at 19 percent.

  • Economic climate affects international growth plans. Less than half, 42 percent, of the CFOs surveyed indicate that they have operations outside the United States, compared to nearly double that amount, 79 percent last year. Nearly a third, 29 percent of respondents, said their primary concern regarding international growth is an uncertain business or political climate. Twenty-six percent cite international business and tax regulations, with 21 percent citing currency risk, 14 percent intellectual property risk and exploitation, and 10 percent training of international employees as their primary concern.

  • Of those outsourcing, the most common functions being off-shored currently are: manufacturing, at 54 percent; information technology services and programming, at 46 percent; and research and development, distribution and call centers, all at 35 percent.

Source: http://www.indusbusinessjournal.com/ME2/dirmod.asp?sid=&nm=&type=Publishing&mod=Publications%3A%3AArticle&mid=8F3A7027421841978F18BE895F87F791&tier=4&id=884EBE4DDA734BD5BDFAA9E8C533BCDA

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

China to Fund Software-Information Service Projects

US President Barack Obama's announcement to end tax sops to those US firms outsourcing jobs to countries like India has come under lak from Phil Harkins, a leading US management expert and chief executive of Linkage Inc, a global firm specializing in leadership development.

"What Obama is doing is just politics. It's the arrogance of the US to think creating jobs overseas will result in job losses back home. Such measures (offering tax sops) will not stop US firms from outsourcing talent where it's available at a best cost," Harkins told IANS Tuesday on the margins of a news conference here.

Terming Obama's observations on outsourcing as political posturing, Harkins said in a globalised world, companies look for sharing resources, be they human or investments, to remain competitive and sustain growth even in a downturn.

"I don't think American firms will stop outsourcing jobs overseas for availing tax incentives at home in a global economy. By outsourcing jobs where they are beneficial and cost-effective, they actually protect jobs back home and stay competitive," he said.

Clarifying that Obama's proposal had to do more with the international tax policy reform than creating jobs in the US, Harkins said those US firms with global operations outsource jobs where they make business sense.

"By outsourcing manufacturing of goods to countries like China, the US economy benefitted a lot. Similarly, by outsourcing services or back-office operations to overseas firms located in countries like India, US firms benefit a lot more," Harkins said at the launch of his firm's India operations here.

The Massachusetts-based Linkage offers corporate clients the world over with integrated solutions, including strategic consulting services, customized leadership development and training experiences, tailored assessment services, executive coaching and benchmark research.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Obama-stand-on-outsourcing-is-politics-US-expert-/articleshow/4487816.cms

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Obama stand on outsourcing is politics, says US expert

US President Barack Obama's announcement to end tax sops to those US firms outsourcing jobs to countries like India has come under lak from Phil Harkins, a leading US management expert and chief executive of Linkage Inc, a global firm specializing in leadership development.

"What Obama is doing is just politics. It's the arrogance of the US to think creating jobs overseas will result in job losses back home. Such measures (offering tax sops) will not stop US firms from outsourcing talent where it's available at a best cost," Harkins told IANS Tuesday on the margins of a news conference here.

Terming Obama's observations on outsourcing as political posturing, Harkins said in a globalised world, companies look for sharing resources, be they human or investments, to remain competitive and sustain growth even in a downturn.

"I don't think American firms will stop outsourcing jobs overseas for availing tax incentives at home in a global economy. By outsourcing jobs where they are beneficial and cost-effective, they actually protect jobs back home and stay competitive," he said.

Clarifying that Obama's proposal had to do more with the international tax policy reform than creating jobs in the US, Harkins said those US firms with global operations outsource jobs where they make business sense.

"By outsourcing manufacturing of goods to countries like China, the US economy benefitted a lot. Similarly, by outsourcing services or back-office operations to overseas firms located in countries like India, US firms benefit a lot more," Harkins said at the launch of his firm's India operations here.

The Massachusetts-based Linkage offers corporate clients the world over with integrated solutions, including strategic consulting services, customized leadership development and training experiences, tailored assessment services, executive coaching and benchmark research.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Obama-stand-on-outsourcing-is-politics-US-expert-/articleshow/4487816.cms

Monday, May 4, 2009

Plan an Outsourcing Deal's End at Its Beginning

For whatever reason, you are terminating a contract with a key outsourcing vendor . Perhaps their prices are too high, or they failed to meet performance goals. You look over your contract and-surprise! Very little is said about what happens when the deal ends and you need to transition to a new vendor.

Contracts often do not address this critical issue in sufficient detail, making a difficult situation even worse. Instead of focusing on the new vendor, CIOs find themselves negotiating with both vendors to avoid a service interruption or other adverse effect on business.

The time to set the groundwork for a termination transition plan is when you negotiate the original contract. No one likes to do this -- focusing on a relationship's end before it starts is viewed as bad karma. But unless you do so, the vendor has no incentive to do more than the contract requires when it comes to transitioning out of a deal.

How can you mitigate this risk? Start by making sure your contract addresses the minimum requirements for a termination transition plan. The plan should provide a detailed rule book for doing this in an organized way.

To begin, the vendor should be contractually obligated to aid in the development of a transition plan. The vendorand customer should review and approve the plan as part of the initial contract or right after it begins. Basic requirements should be specified, such as requiring details of activities performed by the vendor, the customer and affected third parties, as well as a process allowing activities to be validated and updated during a transition.

Key issues include: ownership and return of data, documentation and intellectual property created or used to develop the services and knowledge transfer; determining whether a new vendor may obtain hardware, software, staff and business procedures used by the incumbent; and detailing the incumbent vendor's obligation to perform the steady-state services during transition. All relationships have a beginning and an end. A well-designed contract ensures a successful exit for everyone.

Source: http://www.itworld.com/

Obama takes first step in tax overhaul

President Barack Obama's move to curb overseas tax havens and job outsourcing was his first major proposal in what promises to be a broad overhaul of the US tax system.

Obama chose a relatively populist initial step.

Americans have little sympathy for companies that park their money in places like the Cayman Islands in order to avoid paying US taxes.

And they are even more fed up with companies that have benefited from tax incentives for shipping jobs overseas, blaming these policies for a broad erosion of the US labor market.

Not everyone agrees with his salvo at tax havens.

Daniel Griswold, an expert at the Cato Institute think tank, said locating affiliates in foreign markets is now the chief way that US companies reach new customers outside the United States.

"This demagogic grab for more revenue will only cripple the ability of US companies to expand their sales in global markets, putting in jeopardy the US-based jobs that support their foreign affiliates," he wrote in a blog.

Demands for more revenues to close a widening budget deficit and pay for government programs are driving what could turn out to be the biggest overhaul in the US tax code since 1986.

The US budget deficit for fiscal 2009 could top $1.8 trillion and is forecast to be around $1.4 trillion in 2010. Obama has vowed his economic plan will cut the deficit in half in four years, but many lawmakers express concern about the burden of long-term debt.

Obama has proposed a record $3.55 trillion budget for 2010, which includes billions in support of overhauling healthcare and education and expanding green technologies.

The Democratic-controlled Congress has passed a $3.4 trillion compromise version that sets parameters for spending and tax legislation, with many battles left to be fought.

More changes in the tax system are likely to be proposed in the months ahead.

"It's a down payment on the larger tax reform we need to make our tax system simpler and fairer and more efficient for individuals and corporations," Obama said in making his tax-haven announcement on Monday.

In March Obama formed a White House task force to recommend ways to simplify the tax code, close loopholes and limit tax evasion.

Obama has vowed to increase taxes for Americans making more than $250,000 a year but other Democrats have voiced concern that this may not raise sufficient revenues.

Many voices, including Obama's, are calling for a simpler tax system.

The Center for the Study of the Presidency, a bipartisan think tank, issued a report in March that among other things, talked about the need to reform a tax code that contains 3.7 million words.

Among its conclusions was that: "The tax system needs to strike a better balance between taxing income and consumption."

Source: http://uk.reuters.com/

Russia IT and Outsourcing Industry

According to “Russia IT and Outsourcing Industry Forecast to 2011”, a new research report by RNCOS, the Russian IT & outsourcing market has been growing at a rate of more than 20% since the past few years. The Russian IT hardware market, accounting for more than 50% of total IT spending, continues to dominate the total IT market. However, software spending has reported high growth rates compared to that of hard

According to “Russia IT and Outsourcing Industry Forecast to 2011”, a new research report by RNCOS, the Russian IT & outsourcing market has been growing at a rate of more than 20% since the past few years. The Russian IT hardware market, accounting for more than 50% of total IT spending, continues to dominate the total IT market. However, software spending has reported high growth rates compared to that of hardware and services spending over the recent past. Considering the future market potential, RNCOS believes that software spending will continue to lead the growth patterns in the IT industry during 2008 to 2012.

The Russian software and services market will be mainly driven by the country's emergence as an IT Outsourcing (ITO) center, thanks to its close proximity with Europe, similar time zone, and availability of high quality workforce at low cost. The ITO market is undergoing phased transformation and is progressive from nascent stage to the development stage. Investments are also being phased in from both the government and private sector. The Russian government is increasing its IT investments in order to expand and develop the IT infrastructure in the country. Private sector investments are concentrated into opening of new software development centers in the country and also towards the expansion of the existing software development centers.

The report thoroughly evaluates the opportunities and factors critical to the success of the IT industry in Russia. It underlines the issues related to the success of the industry and provides a prudent analysis on its various aspects. It presents a comprehensive overview on the past and current performance of the IT industry, including software, hardware and services industry.

Industry Forecast till 2011

- IT spending as percentage of GDP and fixed investment
- IT spending in Billion US$
- IT spending by segments in percentage terms
- Packaged software sales in Billion US$
- ERP software market in Billion US$
- Antivirus market in Million US$
- IT hardware spending in Billion US$
- IT services spending in Billion US$
- Computer games market in Million US$
- Retail sales of IT products in Billion US$
- Revenue from printers and multifunctional devices by value (in Billion US$) and volume (in Million Units).
- IT spending on infrastructure by SMEs

Key Players Profiling

This section covers the key players currently operating in the Russian IT and outsourcing market. This section describes the business overview of key players, operating system platforms, technologies used, application and web servers, and their area of expertise. The key players have been discussed under two heads - Domestic Companies (including Reksoft Co. Ltd., Artezio and Aplana Software), and International Companies (including IBA Group, Auriga, and DataArt).

http://www.pr-inside.com/

ware and services spending over the recent past. Considering the future market potential, RNCOS believes that software spending will continue to lead the growth patterns in the IT industry during 2008 to 2012.

The Russian software and services market will be mainly driven by the country's emergence as an IT Outsourcing (ITO) center, thanks to its close proximity with Europe, similar time zone, and availability of high quality workforce at low cost. The ITO market is undergoing phased transformation and is progressive from nascent stage to the development stage. Investments are also being phased in from both the government and private sector. The Russian government is increasing its IT investments in order to expand and develop the IT infrastructure in the country. Private sector investments are concentrated into opening of new software development centers in the country and also towards the expansion of the existing software development centers.

The report thoroughly evaluates the opportunities and factors critical to the success of the IT industry in Russia. It underlines the issues related to the success of the industry and provides a prudent analysis on its various aspects. It presents a comprehensive overview on the past and current performance of the IT industry, including software, hardware and services industry.

Industry Forecast till 2011

- IT spending as percentage of GDP and fixed investment
- IT spending in Billion US$
- IT spending by segments in percentage terms
- Packaged software sales in Billion US$
- ERP software market in Billion US$
- Antivirus market in Million US$
- IT hardware spending in Billion US$
- IT services spending in Billion US$
- Computer games market in Million US$
- Retail sales of IT products in Billion US$
- Revenue from printers and multifunctional devices by value (in Billion US$) and volume (in Million Units).
- IT spending on infrastructure by SMEs

Key Players Profiling

This section covers the key players currently operating in the Russian IT and outsourcing market. This section describes the business overview of key players, operating system platforms, technologies used, application and web servers, and their area of expertise. The key players have been discussed under two heads - Domestic Companies (including Reksoft Co. Ltd., Artezio and Aplana Software), and International Companies (including IBA Group, Auriga, and DataArt).

http://www.pr-inside.com/

Friday, May 1, 2009

Glory Foods outsourcing work on produce line

Southern-style foods producer Glory Foods Inc. has signed on with a third-party logistics firm to handle its fresh produce line as the Columbus company makes a heavier marketing and development push.

The company, one of the largest privately held businesses in Central Ohio, said Friday that it tapped Eden Prairie, Minn.-based C.H. Robinson Worldwide Inc. to oversee distribution, sales and retail customer support for its fresh produce business. C.H. Robinson (NASDAQ:CHRW) is an $8.6-billion-a-year company that serves 32,000 customers around the world.

Financial terms of the companies’ relationship weren’t disclosed.

Glory Foods, which also makes heat-and-serve canned vegetables and other products, said the deal will allow it to focus on developing new products and marketing as C.H. Robinson works with growers, packers and retailers to boost efficiency.

“Working with C.H. Robinson allows us to concentrate on our specialty – developing quality, Southern-style food products that appeal to consumers’ tastes and meet retailers’ needs,” President Jacqueline Neal said in a release.

Glory Foods in 2007, the latest year of data available, recorded $70 million in revenue, making it one of the 100 largest private companies in the region and the third-largest minority-controlled business, according to Columbus Business First research.

Source: http://www.bizjournals.com/

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Outsourcing HR in Recession & Surviving and Thriving in Recession

With recession hitting the market, companies need to be more practical and strategic in their business process. Of late, companies have started realizing that HR recruitment, selection, retention etc., is quite a cumbersome process calling for high amount of time and resources and inflicting cost. Thus, they are warming up to the idea of outsourcing HR function to offshore firms. Multinational companies are saving millions of dollars by outsourcing HR. All cultural differences are addressed while streamlining the work.

Advantages associated with outsourcing the HR departments include:

Great Reduction in Costs

HR outsourcing (HRO) converts fixed cost to variable cost and can produce quality performance in low cost. Companies have started realizing that offshoring HR department to low-cost areas will help in reducing cost while maintaining the quality of performance. Gradually, offshore outsourcing firm becomes an inbuilt function of the organization and the combined effect of their partnership further strengthens the process of the company.

Simple Global Models

Outsourcing takes HR functions to a global scale. With entrance of global service providers in the market competition has become tough; however the service delivery model has become mature and highly satisfactory for global clients. Outsourcing helps in moving HR executives from local role to global. Few advantages of global engagements for HR are:

  • Expertise: HR Managers of varied expertise from all over the globe improves the recruitment process.
  • Cost Effective: As stated earlier, hiring HR personnel from low-cost countries helps in providing same or better service at lower price.
  • Workplace diversity: Globally functioning HR brings employees from across the globe and makes the work environment culturally more diverse.

In a tough competitive global market, the benefits of global HR model are too valuable for a company to miss.

Best of Breed Solutions

With outsourcing talent hunt has become broad spectrum. Now finding the desired candidate satisfying all selection criteria is not the main area of focus, instead, best-of-bread approach is taken to find the leaders in the field.

Risk Mitigation

Many a times companies faces crisis due to sudden loss of the key HR person. A tight labor market delays finding a suitable replacement. Hiring and training a new person for knowledge transfer becomes difficult and costly in recession. An outsourced HR engagement helps to almost terminate these problems. In HRO, hiring new replacements and training them are the responsibilities of the service provider, thus, ensuring a continued hassle-free service.

Value Addition

Generally, in-house HR functions are primarily visualized as cost-centre; whereas, HRO models chiefly focus on strategies which would improve business and reduce cost. Unlike in-house HR personnel, outsourced HR team does not get caught up in internal issues and thus can concentrate on cost-reduction, talent acquisition, training and retention. This results in the following benefits:

  • Increases process efficiency by concentrating on important issues.

  • Increases flexibility of business and makes it more dynamic.

  • Increases employee satisfaction and productivity.

  • Increases the business network and help gain market access.

  • Increases sales and business during recession.

In the current volatile market the need to focus on core business activities has become an absolute necessity. To cater to core activities, companies are opting to outsource non-core process like Human Resource management.
Like every process, outsourcing too has its own pros and cons. Few disadvantages of HR outsourcing are:

  • It requires lots of coordination with the service provider.

  • It reduces the scope of learning for an organization.

  • It reduces the control over the support function thus affecting the integrity of the company.

To minimize these disadvantages organizations has to understand their ultimate motive of outsourcing. A clear vision of goal and transferring only the functions and not responsibilities will certainly prove to be fruitful in smooth outsourcing of HR functions. This is no cakewalk and requires a great deal of knowledge, planning, skill and commitment.

Source: http://www.nowpublic.com/

RP set to become global outsource for games

THE Philippines is set to emerge as one of the global outsourcing destinations for the games industry.

Thus declared Manny Ayala, director of MoAnima, a global animation company, after attending the recently concluded 2009 Game Developers Conference in San Francisco, California.

More than 17,000 game-industry professionals took part in the world’s largest industry-only event in San Francisco, where MoAnima represented the Philippines.

MoAnima is a premier 3D-services company offering animation services to global clients in the video-game and entertainment industries. It has over three years of experience in the 3D-animation industry. Its team has experience in triple-A game titles and computer-generated animated feature films.

“We believe that the Philippines is ideally suited to this outsource-gaming industry. We have the creative talent, good English communication skills and affinity for US culture,” said Ayala.

“Although the economic recession has weighed down heavily on other sectors, the gaming industry has proven to be quite resilient thanks to more people investing in home-based forms of entertainment,” Ayala declared.

As a Filipino gaming-outsource company, MoAnima proudly represented the Philippines in a series of side meetings with leading game developers, publishers and other luminaries in the field.

Apart from meeting with key executives from leading game developers and publishers, MoAnima also attended several lectures, panels, tutorials and roundtable discussions in San Francisco’s Moscone Convention Center.

During the course of the meetings with the industry professionals, MoAnima received positive feedback from gaming companies outsourcing to the Philippines, Ayala reported.

“In addition to excellent English-language skills, Filipinos are fast learners when it comes to mastering complex software,” Ayala said. Over the past years, the Philippines has gained a reputation for its dedication and high level of quality when working on 3D graphics and animation.

Source: http://businessmirror.com.ph/

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Li & Fung sees more outsourcing deals, US. recovery

Consumer goods exporter Li & Fung Ltd, which manages supply chains for retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc and Target Corp, expects to sign more outsourcing deals within months as cash-strapped retailers in the United States look to cut costs in the economic downturn.

Despite the slump in the economy, Li & Fung President Bruce Rockowitz said he is optimistic that the current retail environment in the United States is close to a bottom, adding the company snapped up more orders from existing customers in the past six weeks.

The outsourcing deals in 2009 could be similar in size to the one the firm signed with fashion retailer Liz Claiborne Inc, Rockowitz told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday.

"Some will be surprisingly big," he said, but declined to be more specific.

In 2009, Li & Fung could sign a similar number of outsourcing deals to the four signed last year, Rockowitz said. The 2008 deals included those with Sanrio, Timberland and Mexx.

On February 23, Li & Fung agreed to pay $83 million to become fashion company Liz Claiborne's primary global sourcing agent for apparel and accessories. In return, Liz Claiborne will pay an agency commission of its product purchases through Li & Fung.

Li & Fung expects to sign an outsourcing deal with loss-making US retailer Talbots Inc within the next 45 days, Rockowitz said.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/

Monday, April 27, 2009

Outsourcing in India calls for custom software

Custom software development has gained tremendous vitality in the light of increasing global demand for new software outsourcing solutions. The article outlines the new phenomenon, which is benefiting India and western countries.

Custom software development depends on adept software developers who use the latest web technology and testing skills for web design development solutions and web-enabled IT services. Developed countries on the other hand, like UK, are following a lucrative outsourcing policy which places them at the behest of enormously skilled technicians and developers along with a competitive IT infrastructure. This has led to a surge in the number of providers of IT development in the second most populated country in the world, ie India.

Most established businesses in western countries need solutions and there is no actual shortage of software outsourcing firms today. There are lots and lots of programming experts who are involved in testing, development and different validation tests. Thousands of western countries and companies are harnessing outsourcing services for the execution of their projects. Even though IT development and outsourcing has increased manifold in India, people are still skeptical about the working and viability of custom software development in offshore centers.

Nevertheless, the option of offshore software development has already commanded huge popularity to help satiate rising software related needs. Many small and large companies have invested substantially in offshore software development so that they can cut costs by outsourcing their non-core functions. In fact, outsourcing software requirements regulates and saves time for focusing on core functions.

Consider this, according to several research reports, 40 per cent of the Fortune 500 companies including Microsoft, General Electric, Oracle, etc are outsourcing much of their work today and this list is consistently growing in the field of custom software development.

Many of them have started with the aim of yielding the maximum ROI by reducing costs extracting work from low-cost areas like India, China, and Philippines. Majority of them stand to save in the range of 40 per cent - 70 per cent. However, choosing an offshore software provider is not an easy task; it demands proper synchronisation between the client and the provider. India proves to be an ideal destination for the outsourcing process as they possess adequate knowledge of English, and are also skilled in various areas of software development and research.

Indian companies today have rich experience in providing offshore software development and focused not only documenting the required solutions but also for providing support. Their work quality is genuinely improving as per international standards with the emergence of innovative solutions from the developers themselves. Most of them are well-versed in different custom programming languages such as PHP, JAVA, .NET, Perl, Flash, Oracle and many other upcoming languages like Ruby on Rails (ROR) for custom software development.

Source: http://www.merinews.com/

Banks to submit annual report on outsourcing

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has advised banks to submit an annual compliance certificate underlining the risk management practices adopted in overseeing and managing outsourcing arrangement of banking services.

The new norms form part of a review of the guidelines issued to banks on managing risks and code of conduct in outsourcing financial services.

The certificate provided by the auditor should give the particulars of outsourcing contracts , prescribed periodicity of audit by internal / external auditors, major findings of the audit and action-taken by the bank boards. Thus, regular audits by either internal or external auditors of the bank should assess the adequacy of the risk management practices adopted by the banks and their outsourcing partners.

As per the guidelines issued in 2007, banks were advised to review the financial and operational condition of the service provider and to assess its ability to continue to meet its outsourcing obligations at least on an annual basis. Such due diligence reviews, which can be based on all available information about the service provider should highlight any deterioration or breach in performance standards, confidentiality and security, and in business continuity preparedness.

According to the RBI guidelines, outsourcing is entirely an independent decision wherein the bank would be required to take a view on the desirability of outsourcing related to financial services with regard to all relevant factors, including the commercial aspects. Banks would not require prior RBI approval for outsourcing of financial or other services except where the service provider is located outside India or when the outsourcing is in relation to doorstep banking. However, the banks will have to keep RBI informed of all the financial services outsourced by them.

Banks cannot outsource core management functions such as corporate planning, organization, management and control and decision-making functions such as determining compliance with know-your-customer (KYC) norms for opening deposit accounts, according sanction for loans and management of investment portfolio.

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

Friday, April 24, 2009

Crunch will fuel outsourcing

Recession-hit councils look to outside suppliers

Local government expert Tony Travers has predicted that the recession will lead to much more outsourcing, in some cases involving all services provided by organizations.

"There will be a major move to outsource services to save money," the director of the LSE London research centre told the Society of IT Management's national conference at Stoneleigh Park in Warwickshire on 23 April 2009.

If attempts by some councils to outsource large parts of their functions succeed, "almost every authority in the country will be inexorably pulled" towards this model, he said.

Travers added that this trend is likely to involve different kinds of organizations in an area, such as primary care trusts and police forces, outsourcing services jointly. "It's hard this morning not seeing this occurring," he said.

Travers told the Socitm event that the exact model of outsourcing would depend on suppliers, but he expects it may be far reaching, perhaps involving 'management buyouts' where existing executives join suppliers.

"A market will emerge, and that mature market will include consortia of providers taking over the whole of what an authority manages," he said, noting that Essex County Council's attempt to outsource many of its functions was given as a case study by the Treasury in documents released with this week's Budget.

He painted a dismal picture of public sector finances over the next decade, referring to an article this week in The Times by Audit Commission chief executive Steve Bundred discussing the possibility of an "Armageddon scenario", in which the government was unable to find lenders to finance its debt. "I think that word, strong though it is, isn't far from the truth," Travers said.

He predicted that schools and the NHS may see cash increases of 2-3% in funding over the next few years, adding "that's for the favoured parts of the public sector. For the rest of the public services, there will be enormous pressure".

He predicted that local authorities could see no real term increase in their income "for 10 years at least", with council tax capping tightened to increases of 1-2% a year and zero grant increases from central government. However, he said that the current spending review settlement, which runs to 2010-11, looks "generous" given zero inflation.

Travers said the recession will produce increased demand for some services, but other factors are increasing costs. These include: those of childcare, as a result of Lord Laming's second review of the sector; more elderly people requiring a range of services; increasing healthcare costs; public sector organizations being encouraged to pay suppliers faster by government; and local authorities receiving less income from fees, charges and investments.

Local authorities may also want to take advantage of low property prices to buy land, either for planned buildings or as investments, creating further pressure on budgets.

Balancing these factors will require major savings elsewhere, Travers said, adding that the cuts required will be greater than those imposed during the 1980s: "Mrs Thatcher will be seen as a guiding light of an expansion in public services. How the world moves on."

Source: http://www.channelregister.co.uk/

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Mincom Signs a Multi-Million Dollar Outsourcing Deal with Xstrata Queensland Limited

Mincom, a leading global provider of software solutions and services for asset intensive industries, has signed a multi-million dollar outsourcing contract with Xstrata Queensland Limited.

Following a competitive tender process, Mincom won the contract to provide managed services to Xstrata's operational sites in north Queensland and the Northern Territory starting next month.

The contract, which covers IT applications, including Mincom Ellipse, and IT operations, also gives Xstrata the option to engage Mincom to perform additional IT project services.

Mincom proved to be a natural fit for the outsourcing contract, having extensive experience in delivering substantial cost savings for other large asset intensive customers in government, public infrastructure, mining, defense, energy and transport.

Mincom's IT services solution is specifically designed to enable customers to focus on their core business, reduce operational costs and minimize risks, while having access to the latest infrastructure and technical expertise with the highest level of service.

Greg Clark, Mincom Chief Executive Officer, said, 'Securing this contract reaffirms Mincom's position as a leading managed services provider to core industries, particularly mining. Mincom's continuing partnership with Xstrata demonstrates that big players in asset intensive industries are choosing Mincom to deliver both products and services critical to their business.

'Mincom understands the complexities involved in all aspects of mining operations and knows that improving productivity, controlling costs and maximizing profits are vital to the success of any operation. IT is a critical part of achieving these core outcomes and Mincom has the experience to ensure that a business' IT is enabling them to achieve these goals.'

Mincom's Global Managed Services business provides a range of outsourced IT services including application management and IT infrastructure outsourcing aimed at reducing customers' operational costs while maintaining high levels of service.

Source: http://tvs.consumerelectronicsnet.com/

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Accounting Outsourcing Services- Economical and Cheap Way to Added Benefits

We all know that the recession has made a negative impact on the economy. Banks are going bankrupt and countries are falling prey to the financial crisis. The shortage of cash has become a world wide problem. Business has tightened up and companies are looking for all sorts of ways to reduce their cost of operations. One such way is to lay off employees in this time and make the cost reduce to half.

With business getting no sales and prices shooting the stars, most business houses are calling it quits, as they can survive the pressure. If you have a business, be it small scale, medium or big scale, you must be worried about its future prospects. One way to reduce the stress and tension is by opting for accounting outsourcing services. The outsourcing services will reduce the cost of operations drastically and make your business attain global standards.

Since we all know accounting services come in very expensive. There is no other alternative than to take help of a CPA. This does not come in cheap and business houses have to shell out a lot to make their financial statements. Since a good financial statement reflects the health of the company, show casing them in a good way has become mandatory.

There are a lot of people who depend on financial statements such as government authority for taxation purpose; shareholders for future stake in business; stakeholders for further investment; prospective investors and employees all want to know if the financial statements are meeting their expectations. Hence it’s important not to fidget with accounting services. Outsourcing them makes sense, since the business gets all the benefits of accounting services at the cost of one/third the amount the business would have to shell out for a CPA. So it’s taken that accounting services are important and companies need to go for accounting outsourcing services for a better future.

Accounting outsourcing services are done by mostly developing nations since only they can afford to bring the prices of these services so down. There are companies which offer these services and the business, should check them out first on the Internet. A good research is needed to select the type of company to do business with. The company should have previous experience in outsourcing and should also meet all the requirements set out by the business.

A good track record is needed for the business to have faith in the company. After all the Internet research is done, the business firm needs to get in touch with the company and ask for a better rate charged. The executives can also go for a check to the location of the outsourcing nation to see the environment and working standards of the company. After due discussions if they come to a settlement the deal can be made.

The business should make sure that they are getting a good service in exchange of cash. They should opt for a firm that gives them good quality and timely delivery rather then one that is the cheapest because seldom do those firms do really well.

Source: http://www.bestsyndication.com/m

Monday, April 20, 2009

India Is Losing Its Share of Offshoring Market, Says Gartner

The growth rate of offshore outsourcing to India is expected to come down considerably, as new clients are increasingly including other countries in their evaluation, according to research firm Gartner.

"In the past, 80 to 90 percent of clients would automatically source from India, when they decided to go offshore," said Gartner analyst Frances Karamouzis in a telephone interview on Friday. "That number is down to 60 percent," she said.

Brazil, the Philippines, Mexico, Vietnam, and some East European countries are getting a larger share of offshore outsourcing, Karamouzis said.

Other emerging offshore locations are cutting into India's share of the offshore outsourcing market, but the loss of share will likely be in single digits, said Siddharth Pai, a partner at outsourcing consultancy firm Technology Partners International (TPI), on Monday. India will continue to retain its position as the largest offshore location, he added.

India has reached a saturation point in outsourcing, and customers are reducing their exposure to risk by looking at other locations, Karamouzis said.

In their comparison of various countries, customers are also addressing concerns such as perceptions of geopolitical risk which was heightened in India by the terrorist attack in Mumbai in November last year, Karamouzis said.

India's infrastructure, which is behind that of China, growing staff attrition rates, wage increases, and the financial scandal at outsourcer Satyam Computer Services also influence their decisions, she added.

"It is not a single event, but a confluence of five to six different things," Karamouzis said.

China is not necessarily a strong alternative to India at this point, because China is facing its own growing pains, she said. The country is however attractive to a number of customers because of its large domestic market, she added.

Customers have to pay a premium of 10 percent to 15 percent in China for English speaking staff, according to Karamouzis. Key locations in China like Shanghai, Beijing, and Dalian are already saturated and prices have gone up, a lot faster than they did in India, she added.

It is the collective impact of seven or eight different countries that is taking away market share that would have otherwise gone to India, Karamouzis said.

One of the benefits touted by Indian outsourcers is that India is the only country where a customer can scale operations easily, because of the large number of qualified staff in the country that graduate each year.

If a customer wants to have an application development center with 1,000 staff set up in six weeks to two months, the only country where it is possible is India, Karamouzis said. It can be done in China or Brazil as well, but it will take nine months to a year, she added.

However the number of new clients that will come to the market asking for 1,000 people is quite low, more like 10 percent of clients. Most clients require 20, 50 or 100 people, and other countries can provide that, Karamouzis said.

Indian outsourcers are already facing a contraction in business because of the economic downturn. Customers are postponing new contracts, and even implementation of current projects, Pai said.

Indian outsourcer, Infosys Technologies, forecast last week its first ever annual revenue decline. Its revenue in the current fiscal year ending March 31, 2010, may decline by 3.1 to 6.7 percent, the company said.

Customers also want to renegotiate contracts and cut prices. A discussion around price presents a large dilemma for Indian outsourcers who have spent marketing dollars for the last three years to try to change their image from price players to value-added providers, Karamouzis said.

As customers look to other countries for offshoring, Indian outsourcers are also setting up operations in these countries, hoping to bag the business, Karamouzis said.

In the last 18 months, 12 Indian vendors have set up operations in Mexico, seven opened facilities in Brazil, and almost all of the large companies have facilities in Eastern Europe, she said.

Indian outsourcers are well equipped to take advantage of low cost resources in other countries because of their experience in India, Pai said.

But Indian companies are taking time to become global companies, continuing to depend more on Indian resources, Karamouzis said.

Source: http://www.pcworld.com/