Wednesday, November 23, 2005

A dramatic shift to more business process outsourcing (BPO), an increase in the number of players, and a reduction in total deal value



IDC Reveals Fundamental Changes in the Outsourcing Marketplace: More BPO, More Players, Reduced Deal Value



22 Nov 2005

FRAMINGHAM, Mass., November 22, 2005 – An IDC study of the top 100 outsourcing deals in 2004 reveals fundamental changes in the outsourcing marketplace, including a dramatic shift to more business process outsourcing (BPO), an increase in the number of players, and a reduction in total deal value. These developments reflect increased competition and expansion in the marketplace, and create pressure for traditional outsourcers to alter their business models in order to successfully compete in the coming years.

The value of the top 100 outsourcing deals in 2004 decreased by 1.2% from $69.1 billion in 2003 to $68.3 billion in 2004. However, qualifying for the top 100 in 2004 required a minimum deal value of $184 million, a 5.1% increase from 2003. The study also found that the share of BPO and processing services deals in the top 100 outsourcing deals increased from 15.2% in 2003 to 25% in 2004, while the share of IT outsourcing services suffered a decline to 75% of the 2004 market.

"The world of deal making for large outsourcing contracts in 2004 saw a slight decline in signings by total value, a reduced number of megadeals valued at $1 billion and higher, an increase in the number of players competing in this segment, and a shift to more business process outsourcing deals as part of the mix," said David Tapper, director of IT Outsourcing, Utility, and Offshore Services research at IDC. "These shifts, along with other key trends in the market, such as customer need to lower costs and increase productivity, are creating fundamental changes in the outsourcing marketplace. In order to compete, players need to radically alter their business models to include newer service capabilities, involve different ecosystems of partnerships, target 'non IT' opportunities, and seek new customers in the SMB and consumer spaces as well as emerging markets."

The study found that the number of players participating in the top 100 deals increased from 26 in 2003 to 34 in 2004. While just three players captured 55.6% of the contract value for the top 100 deals in 2003, seven were needed to reach roughly the same amount (55.9%) in 2004, with IBM leading the way followed by CSC, EDS, Atos Origin, HP, Accenture, and Fujitsu.

Geographically, the value of deals captured by Asia/Pacific (APAC)-based contracts, though still small, showed a jump from 0.7% of total deal value in 2003 to 3.9% in 2004. EMEA-based players, as determined by headquarters, increased their take of these deals from 21.7% in 2003 to 38.9% in 2004, while Americas vendors saw a decrease from 76.7% to 56.3% during this same period.

The study, IDC’s Top 100 Worldwide Outsourcing Deals of 2004 (IDC #34024) provides an overview of the top 100 worldwide outsourcing contracts of 2004, ranked by total contract value, and examines the trends and characteristics of outsourcing contracts signed in 2004 valued at $184 million or more. The study presents the outsourcing contract winners, outsourcing contracts by vendor headquarters, contract values, contract lengths, quarterly view, geography, and industry. IDC gathered information for this report from the outsourcing vendors themselves, vendor web sites and other industry sources.

Thursday, November 10, 2005

TPI predicts decrease in IT deal values this year

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Article Title: TPI predicts decrease in IT deal values this year
Article URL: http://www.ciol.com/content/news/2005/105110906.asp

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TPI predicts decrease in IT deal values this year
BPO deals fell by 42 per cent, with the exception being in HR outsourcing
Priya Padmanabhan
Wednesday, November 09, 2005

BANGALORE: With many global IT services increasing their offshoring operations to provide cost-effective services to customers, this year would see a 10-15 per cent reduction in the value of contracts across both IT and BPO sectors, says technology advisory firm TPI.

Speaking to CyberMedia News, Siddharth Pai, Partner, TPI Inc, attributed this to the dwindling value of BPO contracts. This year, BPO deals fell by 42 per cent, with the exception being in HR outsourcing. � This is the first time in the last four-five years that such a dip is occurring,� he said. The overall annual market size is around $72 billion.

Mega deals (deals worth more than $ one billion) also saw a decline. �But they are not dead yet,� he said. Tracing other notable trends, Pai said that this year, many clients were restructuring and renegotiating their existing contracts.

�Customers are now preferring to go for multiple-vendor deals instead of going with the same service provider, and would like to sign on best-of-breed providers for new deals.�

He said that splitting the deals among various players helped clients maintain �competitive tension� among the service vendors.

According to the TPI index, this year the offshoring component of contracts has grown to 44 per cent from 40 per cent last year. He added that Indian service providers like TCS, Infosys, Wipro and Satyam were getting more visible both in terms of winning bigger value deals and number of contracts. He cited the recent ABN-AMRO deal as an example.

However he also warned that most Indian service providers doing mere lip service by saying they are global. �Indian service providers need to expand not just in India but in other geographies as well. This is important because the global top tier service providers are now providing a choice of offshoring locations such as Latin America, Eastern Europe and Philippines, for their customers,� he said.

Pai said that the Indian service providers would need to replicate the offshoring capabilities built in India across other geographies. He predicted that Indian players would adopt inorganic and organic strategies in the coming years to get a better global footprint.

TCS' recent acquisition of a Chilean BPO is a step in that direction. �Today it is just not labor arbitrage that's driving offshoring. There are other factors such as being in the similar time zone (as in Brazil) as the US customer, and cultural affinity and language (which matter a lot in Europe),� Pai said.

He also said that the next 18 months would see an increase in offshoring.
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Wednesday, November 09, 2005

A dailymail.co.uk article from A dailymail.co.uk article from Elite

Why back injury boy must fly to India for cure
A mother whose son was crippled by an ice skating injury is flying him to India for an operation after being told he would have to wait a year for NHS treatment.

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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/health/healthmain.html?in_article_id=358148&in_page_id=1774

9 November 2005
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/

Monday, November 07, 2005

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NEW DELHI, NOV 6: US court battles are now being outsourced to India. In a fiercely- competitive market where cut-throat deals have slashed voice BPO rates to $5-6 per hour, a segment of the industry is making a niche for itself in the name of legal BPO. An estimated 35,000 US lawyer jobs will move to low-cost destinations like India by 2010. The number will reach 79,000 by 2015. Just 700 people, employed across 50-60 companies in the country command up to $125 per hour to generate business worth $70 million per annum. That\'s higher than the 2004 revenues of $60.5 million genera ted by EXLServices, one of the largest BPOs in India employing 5000 people. Ads By Google Reduce your legal spend Resources/stats/news for GCs and law firms that need to reduce costs www.offshore-legal-services.com BPO Companies BPO companies and their services listed here from across the globe. www.techle.com Training Outsourcing Top 20 Training Outsource Companies Outsource news, articles, big deals www.TrainingOutsourcing.com Quality BPO Resources Find the top BPO companies and their services listed here. www.e-isn.com Major third-party players in legal outsourcing in India include Evalueserve, Pangea3, Lawwave, Manthan, Lexadigm, Atlas, Integreon and Office Tiger. In-house (captive) legal outsourcing by MNCs like GE, Oracle, Sun and Cisco has also been very successful. Subsidiaries of large US law firms in India like Intellevate (Noida) and IPPRO (Bangalore) are also successful. In fact, for the sector, legal outsourcing is one of the most lucrative businesses. At an average billing rate of $75 per hour, just 700 LPO employees generate a business of $420,000 (Rs 1.8 crore) every day. Drafting patent applications and conducting infringement studies attract billing rates of $25-80 per hour. Proof-reading contracts and providing legal counsel via phone or email attracts high billing rates of $30-125 per hour. Paralegal services like document management, archiving and XML tagging are billed at $12-25 per hour. It\'s well paying too. Sanjay Kamlani, Co-CEO, Pangea3 told FE: \"Lawyers can earn between Rs 1-10 lakh per annum. Engineers, medical practitioners and PhDs are in great demand as they are required for filing patents related to their fields. They earn between Rs 4-8 lakhs per annum depending upon experience.\" Outsourcing legal work to India helps US law firms operate 24x7. Not to forget the cost savings. Said Ashish Gupta, country manager, Evalueserve: \"Drafting a patent in US costs around $8-10,000. In India, it can be done at less than half the cost. There is huge market potential as more than 300,000 patent applications are filed in the US every year.\" Sunil Mehta, Vice-President Nasscom told FE: \"Legal outsource-able market from the US alone is pegged at $ 3-4 billion. Only about 2-3% ($60-80 million) of the potential market has been tapped so far.\"


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NEW DELHI, NOV 6: US court battles are now being outsourced to India. In a fiercely- competitive market where cut-throat deals have slashed voice BPO rates to $5-6 per hour, a segment of the industry is making a niche for itself in the name of legal BPO. An estimated 35,000 US lawyer jobs will move to low-cost destinations like India by 2010. The number will reach 79,000 by 2015. Just 700 people, employed across 50-60 companies in the country command up to $125 per hour to generate business worth $70 million per annum. That\'s higher than the 2004 revenues of $60.5 million genera ted by EXLServices, one of the largest BPOs in India employing 5000 people. Ads By Google Reduce your legal spend Resources/stats/news for GCs and law firms that need to reduce costs www.offshore-legal-services.com BPO Companies BPO companies and their services listed here from across the globe. www.techle.com Training Outsourcing Top 20 Training Outsource Companies Outsource news, articles, big deals www.TrainingOutsourcing.com Quality BPO Resources Find the top BPO companies and their services listed here. www.e-isn.com Major third-party players in legal outsourcing in India include Evalueserve, Pangea3, Lawwave, Manthan, Lexadigm, Atlas, Integreon and Office Tiger. In-house (captive) legal outsourcing by MNCs like GE, Oracle, Sun and Cisco has also been very successful. Subsidiaries of large US law firms in India like Intellevate (Noida) and IPPRO (Bangalore) are also successful. In fact, for the sector, legal outsourcing is one of the most lucrative businesses. At an average billing rate of $75 per hour, just 700 LPO employees generate a business of $420,000 (Rs 1.8 crore) every day. Drafting patent applications and conducting infringement studies attract billing rates of $25-80 per hour. Proof-reading contracts and providing legal counsel via phone or email attracts high billing rates of $30-125 per hour. Paralegal services like document management, archiving and XML tagging are billed at $12-25 per hour. It\'s well paying too. Sanjay Kamlani, Co-CEO, Pangea3 told FE: \"Lawyers can earn between Rs 1-10 lakh per annum. Engineers, medical practitioners and PhDs are in great demand as they are required for filing patents related to their fields. They earn between Rs 4-8 lakhs per annum depending upon experience.\" Outsourcing legal work to India helps US law firms operate 24x7. Not to forget the cost savings. Said Ashish Gupta, country manager, Evalueserve: \"Drafting a patent in US costs around $8-10,000. In India, it can be done at less than half the cost. There is huge market potential as more than 300,000 patent applications are filed in the US every year.\" Sunil Mehta, Vice-President Nasscom told FE: \"Legal outsource-able market from the US alone is pegged at $ 3-4 billion. Only about 2-3% ($60-80 million) of the potential market has been tapped so far.\"


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Saturday, November 05, 2005

Reuters.com - Rival tech towns may outrun India's Bangalore - Fri Nov 4, 2005 8:53 AM ET

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BANGALORE (Reuters) - There's a punchline going around in India's high-tech capital: Bangalore may be Bangalored.

"Bangalored," a word invented in the United States to describe those whose jobs were lost because their work was outsourced to low-cost India, could well apply to the city, whose rivals are wooing investors as it chokes on its own growth.

An infrastructure crunch threatens Bangalore's prospects and those problems were compounded in October when a influential politician raised doubts about government support for industry in the form of cheap land and subsidies.

Monsoon flooding added to the city's overcast mood.

As red carpets soaked up water at Bangalore's annual industry conference, places ranging from the desert state of Rajasthan to beach haven Goa pitched stalls, wooing investors, not tourists.

"Suddenly with all the noise, the investor says: 'I am going to check out the other cities'," said V. Ravichandar, a business consultant and former member of a government infrastructure panel. "You can't rest on old glory."

A talented pool of workers, especially for microchip design, is still a big advantage for Bangalore, a city of 6.5 million people which has more than 1,500 technology firms.

But experts say lower-end software coding or back-office work could easily go to other Indian cities.

Ajit Isaac, head of Adecco PeopleOne, the Indian arm of Swiss Adecco, the world's largest staffing group, said he had seen three investors in the past quarter choose other cities over Bangalore.

Bangalore's woes could hurt India as a whole, he added.

"It is a showpiece. Once you let it go down, the magnet of attracting investment could become weaker," Isaac said. Continued ...

Reuters.com - Rival tech towns may outrun India's Bangalore
http://today.reuters.com/news/NewsArticle.aspx?type=reutersEdge&storyID=2005-11-04T135304Z_01_ROB449914_RTRIDST_0_PICKS-INDIA-BANGALORE-DC.XML

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