Growing environmental concerns, an increasingly mobile workforce and a
renewed thirst for access to services will drive enterprise outsourcing
decisions in 2008.
Joe Hogan, vice president of strategic outsourcing programmes at
Unisys,
believes that cost savings, formerly the key factor in outsourcing decisions,
will now be a given and not the sole driver, or in many cases even a primary
driver.
"A profound transformation in how people work and do business is driving a
new set of service requirements and imperatives," he said.
"Accommodating these new user demands will be the main challenge for
outsourcing providers in the coming year and beyond."
Hogan cited the arrival of "must-have" consumer technologies such as
Apple's
iPhone, and the desire for employees to use them for business as well as
pleasure, especially in sales, customer service and other revenue-generating
functions, as key drivers.
Forward-thinking enterprises will add support for these technologies into IT
outsourcing agreements, and many companies will encourage their use by
subsidising employee purchases.
"Next-generation devices, which have a tremendous capacity to revolutionise
productivity, should go to employees whose jobs touch customers every day, and
who require real-time information to capture those customers and keep them
happy," said Hogan.
Enterprises that have traditionally hosted data centres in house will
increasingly look to outsourcing providers to take care of the centres off site,
helping companies to decrease capital expenditure and reinvest the difference to
drive innovation.
Concerns about data centre power usage will also encourage companies to push
outsourcing providers to invest in green IT in 2008 in an effort to appease
shareholder concern as well as recognising the need for energy conservation.
Servers using multi-core processors, the use of virtualisation, more
efficient storage and improvements in power facilities will continue to feature
in outsourced data centres, Hogan predicts.
2008 will also witness greater popularity of service oriented architecture
(SOA) as enterprises look to modernise legacy applications.
"SOA offers a way to modernise applications more effectively, while making an
organisation more flexible and responsive," explained Hogan.
"Given the potential benefits, we believe that more organisations will choose
outsourcing providers which can offer this kind of modernisation along with
infrastructure management and data centre services."
Top outsourcing predictions for 2008:
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