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IT Outsourcing

'DIY' offshoring on the increase

More companies taking the captive route

Tags: tpi, outsourcing

By Andy McCue

Published: 12 July 2007 12:34 BST

The increase in the number of organisations setting up their own 'DIY' offshore operations in countries such as India is responsible for the slowdown in the global outsourcing market.

The value of new outsourcing contracts globally has risen by just six per cent for the first half of 2007 compared to the same period last year, according to the latest quarterly market update from outsourcing advisers TPI.

The slowdown is particularly bad in the US where the value of new contracts is down by almost 50 per cent this year, with only €6.3bn of contracts for the first six months of 2007 - the flattest six months of outsourcing activity in the US since 1994.

Duncan Aitchison, MD at TPI, said in the quarterly update that part of the reason is a rise in the number of organisations doing 'DIY' offshoring.

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He said in the quarterly update: "We believe the slowing of growth in the global outsourcing market is driven by the fact that offshoring to a wholly owned captive operation, or tactical out-tasking of small, discrete processes, is currently considered an alternative to outsourcing by some client organisations looking for short-term cost savings."

Offshore IT outsourcing is also still on the increase and the TPI figures show 59 per cent of deals in the first half of the year had at least partial offshore delivery.

But the overall global market slowdown is not reflected in Europe where the total value of new outsourcing contracts in excess of €40m for the first six months of 2007 is up 78 per cent on the same period last year at €12.3bn.

The increase is on the back of growth in the continental European market in Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Italy, Norway and Switzerland, and Europe now accounts for more than half (54 per cent) of new outsourcing contracts signed globally.

Much of this demand is coming from the banking sector. Globally financial services is still by far the largest private sector market for outsourcing, accounting for more than a third (35 per cent) of total contract value this year.

The increase in Europe has also been driven by five 'mega deals' totalling €5.3bn and four of these deals have been for network, rather than pure IT, outsourcing.

This demand for network outsourcing has pushed some of the telecoms providers such as BT up the overall global outsourcing rankings. The 'big six' outsourcers - Accenture, ACS, CSC, EDS, HP and IBM - accounted for just 10 per cent of the €7.8bn global spend on 'mega deals' in the first half of this year.

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