The outsourcing market has reached a "tipping point" with regard to utility
delivery models, and change and innovation will take hold and accelerate through
2008 and beyond.
Analyst firm
Gartner
explained that more providers are developing utility-based offerings across
infrastructure, application and business process domains.
"The trend toward software-as-a-service is gaining the most traction,"
Gartner stated.
"Major software vendors, such as
Microsoft
and SAP, and large
internet players, such as
Google and
Amazon, are
announcing new offerings and mass-customised software platforms.
"User organisations need to realise that the utility delivery model is a
viable alternative to traditional outsourcing, and should seriously consider
utilities in their sourcing strategies."
The analyst firm noted that the global outsourcing market continues to grow
at a steady pace, with a forecast growth rate of 8.1 per cent in 2008.
However, Gartner warned that healthy growth rates for outsourcing do not
necessarily mean that organisations signing up for such services will always get
a good deal.
"User organisations often have fundamentally sound procurement organisations
to initiate outsourcing contracts," said Kurt Potter, research director at
Gartner.
"But many IT sourcing strategies and governance structures are still
immature, and are lacking altogether, or misaligned with, enterprise objectives.
"
Potter added that, because these organisations lack the basic building blocks
for successful vendor management and outsourcing success, the expected cost
savings and other benefits are difficult to obtain.
"In extreme cases, the lack of trust and control to optimise the outsourcing
relationship results in deal failure," he said.
"Also, more organisations focus less on outsourcing for cost savings than in
previous years and more on using providers' global delivery models to access the
right skills at a reasonable price, wherever they are."
Gartner maintained that, although outsourcing continues to grow, publicly
reported IT outsourcing and business process outsourcing contract values
decreased overall by 50 percent in 2007.
Part of the explanation for this apparent discontinuity is that there is less
publicity about deals as the outsourcing market matures and becomes more
commonplace.
Companies are outsourcing more, but electing to use a multi-provider
strategy, and more deals are simply not large or ground shaking enough to
report.
"In 2008, we expect to see some early adopters of multi-sourcing to
consolidate around fewer providers to reduce their service integration costs and
harvest the benefits of better relationship management with fewer strategic
suppliers," said Potter.
"Because of multi-sourcing complexities often associated with handoff points
between competing providers and 'unclarified' vendor management processes, some
organisations will consider prime-contractor outsourcing models or the
appointment of new vendor management roles in their retained organisations."
Potter added that buyers are increasingly moving work to lower-cost, offshore
delivery centres.
Although cost remains a major driver for global delivery models, more mature
users are seeking ways to better support their business needs.
Indian providers gained traction in Europe in 2007, but faced strong
competition from more established vendors with global delivery models.
Indian providers are growing approximately 40 per cent annually in the US and
60 per cent annually in Europe .
Although spending on offshore services is three times higher in North America
than in Western Europe , the gap is closing.
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