| Telecom outsourcing: global calling |
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| Thursday, 19 July 2007 | |
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IBM (NYSE: IBM) has recently won contracts with Vodafone (NYSE: VOD) in Ireland, Idea Cellular in India; Convergys (NYSE: CVG) won a contract renewal with Alltel, Ericsson is in talks with Vodafone in India, Huawei with Reliance India… all pointing to accelerating telecom outsourcing activity.
The global telecom industry is embracing outsourcing in a big way. But, interestingly, telecom outsourcing is driven by divergent business conditions in different parts of the world. Companies in mature economies in the US and Europe are outsourcing to tackle cost pressures and saturating markets. On the other hand, telecom is growing very rapidly in developing countries in Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America and the Middle East. As wireless subscriber growth is hitting newer highs, companies are struggling to retain customers and stay ahead of cutthroat competition and are therefore resorting to outsourcing. Whichever the geography, the resultant cost-pressures, coupled with rapid proliferation in technology have made outsourcing inevitable for telecom companies. Unlike that in banking and financial services, insurance, healthcare, etc, outsourcing in telecom is relatively less influenced by buyers in the US and Europe. Also, due to the inherently technology dominated nature of the industry, it is relatively easier to outsource certain functions increasing the prevalence of outsourcing, compared with other industries. A majority of the contracts have been mega-deals for long durations, as economies are driven by scale in this space. The global vendor landscape is highly specialized, due to the need for domain expertise and technology.
Typically, network management comprises around half the cost of a telecom company’s operations, making it the segment with the largest potential for outsourcing to a third party. IT infrastructure management comes next as a rapid growth area. Some telecom companies have outsourced most of the functions in the value chain to specialist vendors. For instance, Vodafone Ireland has recently announced plans to outsource IT functions to IBM. Its systems integration and managed services functions are being handled by eLoyalty, a consulting firm, since 2005. Earlier in 2004, it signed a three-year contract with Rigney, a recruitment services provider. Likewise, Bharti Telecom, an Indian telecom company has signed on Ericsson and Nokia-Siemens in separate contracts for its huge network expansion plans. Earlier in 2004, Bharti outsourced its IT infrastructure transformation and management to IBM for at least 5 years. In fact most Indian telecom companies have outsourced or are looking to outsource network management and IT infrastructure, and the front-running vendors are large, global players with specialized technology offerings like Nokia, IBM and Ericsson. The action is clearly in the high-growth telecom markets, where technology and management skills are in short supply. Further, companies in these markets are looking up to the specialist vendors to help spread costs and shoulder some of the risks over the contract duration. Going forward, we also expect a large number of business process outsourcing contracts to be signed alongside technology contracts, as subscriber numbers rise and competition intensifies further.
ValueNotes Outsourcing Watch: Insights for Investors is a unique news and analysis service from the ValueNotes Outsourcing Practice, focused entirely on outsourcing; This weekly publication analyses events in outsourcing, outsourcing companies, trends in the sector, impact of global competition from offshoring to established US companies, and emerging investment opportunities. No responsibility is accepted for errors of fact or opinion. Neither the analyst nor ValueNotes has a position in the stocks covered above, or has received any payment in any form for this report. ValueNotes does not own or trade in the stocks of companies under coverage. ValueNotes does not provide investment banking services or investor relations' services to preserve the independence of its research. Neither ValueNotes nor the analyst incurs any liability arising out of use of the above information/ report. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. ValueNotes Outsourcing Watch articles are distributed through FinancialWire, an independent, proprietary news service of Investrend Information, www.investrend.com |



