Archive for the ‘Trends’ category

Trends for early 2010

December 28th, 2009

Has anyone noticed that the old model is still working? Savings have become the key factor while chosing a vendor in late 2009 and are likely to stay the key factor in early 2010.

While people have harder access to money they still need to keep their businesses running and that makes the growing trend. 5,3% average growth in the past 3 months, with normally less active January and February are still expected to result in a good 12-15% growth in the first quarter of 2010.
Software Discussion at Beta Release expect startups to be in less favor as the desire to spend less is still limited by the simple common sense and therefore it would be a hard time for those who have just appeared on the market. However, large players are to become even larger as the reputation and the predictability of the final result of the project are the key factors in the troubled times.

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Concept change

December 17th, 2009

Starting from today, 17th of December 2009, this blog’s concept will change. Rather than posting lengthy vague articles we will be posting quick thoughts and suggestions on the software development, IT and infrastructure outsourcing on a regular basis. We will also focus on helping people out with advising on the right strategy in their current or future outsourcing projects. Questions are more than welcome!

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On the software development outsourcing.

November 9th, 2009

Five years ago, that kind of outsourcing was already at the limit, it was noting new, and all indications were so that it will change. It had to change, but this just didn’t happen…

Who would want to restructure and change the business which earned so much money by applying so little effort? The cost of entry into the market was minimal, the cost of average quality resources – very low, customers stood in line. When crisis hit, that army of semi-professionals rushed to the market, ready to work for food, but not being able to unite and act as a powerful force, covering only the very bottom of the outsourcing market, that service could not be of any serious threat.

Now, when the business once again gained access to money, it would seem everything should be back as before, but attitudes have changed.

Here are three main points that catch the eye:

  1. Investors are not ready to invest in expensive business ideas without a clear monetization roadmap, and what’s particularly new , they want to participate in selecting a vendor to be confident, not only in idea, but in its implementation.
  2. Market actively explores and uses ready-made solutions. People are no longer willing to pay for infrastructure, either you have picked a set of open-source ready-made solutions and gained expertise in their customization, or you have built once of your own, or you risk to be out of business.
  3. Experience in development or customization of ready-made solutions in vertical industries. Previously, who would actually check whether you are a CRM guru, document management or travelling business automation? Times have changed and it’s not enough just to put references from satisfied customers on the table.

Let’s consider these three points in more detail.

  1. It is clear with the monetization, people become less willing to invest in bright heads, hoping to attract the enterpreneur and get their profit on the second or third project. People who are willing to get into this business should think about multiplying each dollar invested. New trend here is that investors, successful business people, believe that their business experience, plus the enterpreneurs motivation will result, all together, in a more predictable and high quality result. It covers all areas from design to marketing the product, all channels of promotion, logistics, etc.
  2. With the rapid technology development and a qualitative leap every two years, it was easy to convince the customer that the ready-made solutions are not the panacea that the rapid development of technology market will make outdated in a year, only fresh thoughts and ideas are good for their business. But let’s face it, properly designed applications can remain at the peak for a very long time, simply by substituting low-level processes and technologies with more modern, without modifying or rewriting the business logic of applications. Are there new improved methods of working with databases? New ways of dealing with Rich User Interface? Rewrite database and presentation layers, and live on. And when it comes to this, the question arises whether or not the developer with whom you have worked a year ago will be willing to understand their old approaches to revitalize your product and make it up to date, and all that for a modest fee? He has gone far ahead, he is ready to offer you a completely new, advanced solution (all that you have already heard a year ago, right?). Picking right solutions (whether open source or commercial), customized properly (maintaining backward compatibility and upgrades) is the key to solving this problem.
  3. Marketing does wonderful things. Especially online marketing where no one can make a person responsible for what’s written. Enterprise management software? Here you are! We just take that CRM, bolt this document management here, online planning tool, duplicate remover for outlook and where was that accounting and warehousing? Here you go. All on different platforms? So what … Having experience with each of these solutions may not even represent what you could face by tying to stick them all together, both in technological sense and in terms of processes / business. Vendors who are able to show a commercial solution, or a set of compatible open-source tools that solves specific problems of the customer will be more and more preferred over those who just talk.

Selection as before remains with those who are holding the money. Just now it is a more balanced, more reasonable choice, it is result-oriented rather than process-oriented. Outsourcing is increasingly becoming a working tool, with its pros and cons. The fewer conditions taken into consideration when choosing a vendor, the more it resembles a professional tool, not an amateur, suitable for a narrow range and able to cripple, if not properly used.

Next week will continue to develop the idea of working with ready-made solutions and talk about different approaches of using open source and commercial products for the custom works.

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Outsourcing Trends for the Nearest Future

September 4th, 2009

Outsourcing, as the global business tendency, can be predicted as any other business process according to the current economic climate and prospective changes. On the basis of these predictions and the today’s state of the BPO market it is possible to outline some outsourcing trends for the nearest future.

Outsourcing companies’ consolidation

The fierce competition on the outsourcing market driven by the flattening economy will cause the consolidation on the global outsourcing market as many offshoring companies are ceasing to exist while more suppliers are emerging. Industry experts foretell merging of outsourcing companies and the acquisition of smaller ones by bigger players.

Outsourcing business globalization

The number of the countries offering effective outsourcing services is rising. By recent, India and China have been the main outsourcing destinations. However, recently the countries of Eastern Europe, Brazil and Mexico have joined the outsourcing race and now are considered very serious competitors of India and China. The growing number of the players on the global outsourcing market inevitably leads to the narrower specializations of outsourcing. This specialization will help smaller players distinguish themselves on the global outsourcing market.

Outsourcing will be closer to home

Outsourcing market globalization is assisting companies in outsourcing closer to their homes and obtaining better communication and better project management opportunities. Outsourcing destinations that include India and China will be challenged by the locations that are closer to US and European companies.

outsourcing destinations

Shorter outsourcing contracts during the recession

In this harsh economic climate when many businesses are forced to leave their markets, companies are striving to seek shorter outsourcing contracts that provide more space to adjust volumes and service level terms.

Personal offshoring (P2P offshoring)

Offshoring is normally associated with big and middle-size businesses. The new trend in outsourcing evolves person-to-person offshoring, when outsourcing services are provided by individuals. Often these services are associated with freelance services. Such services don’t require team engagement and can be done by a single professional. These services may include but not limited to:

- Web design
- Web creation and maintenance
- SEO
- Copywriting, editorial and translation services
- Online tutoring services
- Marketing services

Green IT outsourcing

With the rising concern of environmental protection more and more companies today include the paragraph of environmental protection into their outsourcing contracts. Moreover, environmentalism is becoming a real trend in the world of IT outsourcing and now is often treated as the quality evaluation criteria.

Outsourcing services integration

More and more businesses prefer to work with outsourcing companies that offer complete packages of outsourcing services like network monitoring. That helps prevent from spreading different isolated businesses tasks to several offshoring companies. Thus, the prioritized companies will be those that can deliver all aspects of outsourced processes in one service package. Web development is the simple example. As a rule, IT outsourcing companies that specialize on web-sites creation also provide web-design services, maintenance and SEO for their clients.

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