
Got its sums wrong...
By Tom Espiner
Published: 13 July 2006 08:15 GMT
The National Audit Office (NAO) has revealed the BBC miscalculated the savings it would make through its outsourcing deal with Siemens Business Services (SBS).
The BBC had originally projected the deal would generate savings of £35.2m. It has now admitted it overestimated the cost of running its IT in-house by £7.7m, after mistakenly including a one-off cost in its calculations.
The revelation has angered union officials, who had warned in 2004 the outsourcing deal would not generate the cost savings the BBC claimed.
The NAO said in its report: "BBC Management accepts the savings figure should have been updated, and regrets that this was not identified so that it could be reported to the executive and the governors. Management are satisfied that appropriate controls and processes are in place to ensure this will not recur."
The BBC declined to reveal to silicon.com sister site ZDNet UK what that £7.7m one-off expenditure was for but the NAO report said it was dropped from the baseline as it was a "one-off project which could not reasonably be attributable to the Siemens contract".
The spokeswoman said: "The savings weren't guaranteed, and changed when the baseline changed. The outsourcing deal has still represented huge value for money - £27.5m is a huge saving."
The National Audit Office also criticised the BBC for saying it could "guarantee savings", which the BBC recognised was not apt.
The BBC spokeswoman added: "It's an inappropriate term to use as you can't guarantee in a rapidly changing technology environment what savings can be made."
The BBC said it had invited the NAO to conduct the report as it had "never undertaken an outsourcing deal of this scale", and admitted "some lessons can be learnt about developing large outsourcing deals".
The Broadcasting Entertainment Cinematograph and Theatre Union (Bectu), which represented approximately 370 of the IT staff the BBC sold to Siemens, fiercely criticised the BBC for its miscalculation of cost savings.
A senior BBC official at Bectu said: "The NAO report bears out some of our worst fears. The BBC was grossly optimistic about the level of savings that could be achieved [through outsourcing]. In the heat of the moment the BBC failed to specify a contract which could deliver the alleged savings."
The union said its fear was that in subsequent outsourcing deals "similarly inflated claims have been made for potential savings, to justify these sell-offs".
Siemens controversially won the contract for providing BBC Technology for £150m in 2004, for 10 years. The BBC has signed similar deals with Siemens for BBC Scotland, and is expected to sign deals for Northern Ireland and Wales.
Bectu said it was concerned that the savings for outsourcing in Scotland would be minimal.
The official said: "It has been reported to us that in Scotland the savings will be less than £1m over 10 years. We remain to be convinced that the BBC genuinely does save money through outsourcing."
Tom Espiner writes for ZDNet UK
Deals will be from 100K to 250K, although they get involved in smaller deals of a few thousand pounds. SELLING: Managed services (support and break ...
Scottish region grow and increase turnover About the Candidate * Must have experience of working for a specialist sub contractor * Building envelope ...
This role will involve bidding for large outsourcing deals, pre-sales work, and solution shaping strategies to address the client? A record of ...
Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
William Benn Future-proof your outsourcing: Stay flexible Size demands can fluctuate, scalability is key to success
Saritha Rai Why are Indian outsourcing companies such bashful suitors? No mega-mergers despite billions on hand