Showing posts with label custom software development russia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label custom software development russia. Show all posts

Friday, January 29, 2010

Outsourcing Potential 2010 – How Does It Look Like? (Part 2)

Another pronounced trend of the coming year shows up in the shifting global markets. The survey by the global consultancy PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and Duke University's Offshoring Research Network stated that the outsourcing industry is transforming due to the emergence of new providers around the world and efforts of existing outsourcers to expand into new markets. "Outsourcing companies in North America and India, which have long dominated the industry, are being challenged by competition from Latin America, Eastern Europe and Asia in service areas such as contact centers, business process outsourcing, and information technology outsourcing," the survey revealed.

Near-shoring has gained momentum among companies considering outsourcing services. Growing competition has transformed outsourcing industry into a global race for market share where emerging economies are rapidly seeking to expand in the sector. In particular, Central and Eastern Europe has revealed its potential as a strong rival grabbing its market share on the global scale. In our previous post we’ve drawn your attention to the latest Everest research featuring EPAM Systems as a leading vendor from the CEE region challenging some established global leaders in the software outsourcing industry. This year’s NOA predictions also touch upon this trend noting “Russia will increase in prominence on the world stage”.

Apart from that, NOA's annual predictions scrutinize over such issues as public sector deals growth, growth of green technologies and 'green sourcing' arrangements, innovation in services and products, and a declining trend in signing big contracts.

Douglas Hayward, analyst at IDC, draws our attention to the shift in the outsourcing models and states that in the new decade outsourcing suppliers will increasingly be paid depending on the volume of services used. "2010 will see a strong increase in the use of outcome-based payment models, as enterprises extract better value from service providers. Outcome-based models allow enterprises more easily to scale service consumption up or down, making costs more variable. […] They will cease to be seen as experimental, and will become accepted as a normal part of the contract toolkit," he says.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Agile Outsourcing: Taking the Lead!

Agile methodologies such as agile software development and continuous process improvement are considered more suitable for software development outsourcing than traditional ones. Now they are seen as critical factors for software projects success and customer satisfaction. Why is it so? Let’s see.

Methodology Fit. For any outsourcing or offshoring company, agile methodologies are more suitable than traditional ones. Agile software development and continuous process improvement offer the chance to make fine adjustments continuously on both sides to accommodate for these differences. Traditional methodologies in software development will almost always lead to fixed price contracts since the buyers of those services will insist upon it.

Bridging Communication Gaps. Even apart from the differences in language between the United States and India or the United States and the Philippines, imagine the differences in time zones, culture and work habits. Agile software development ensures that frequent releases bridge these communication gaps quickly.

Perfection Is an Iterative Process. When two disparate organizations work together, success can be achieved only iteratively with as many feedback loops as you can design into the effort as possible. Agile software development and continuous process improvement offer both buyers and sellers of outsourcing services the opportunity to achieve perfection iteratively.

Building Expertise. Service providers can move to using agile software development methodologies or billing customers on a transaction basis only if the sellers of these services aren't just executing a project or process but building expertise in that area.

Responsiveness to Change. Software requirements change over time. Business processes are evolving everyday due to competitive pressures as well as changes in the law. Agile methodologies are needed in outsourced software development to keep the development effort synchronized with changes in requirements.

Building Longer Term Partnerships. Building a partnership with your software development service provider makes it easier and better the next time you have another major software development effort come up.

Building Quality. Agile methodologies achieve something that is counterintuitive at first glance. You build things faster, but by doing so, you ensure better quality. Agile methodologies address serious problems in ways humans communicate. They do this by allowing faster and quicker feedback cycles so that course corrections are made as soon as possible.


Source: Global Services

Saturday, June 28, 2008

SOA: Promising and Long Lasting Trend?

As Gartner notes, approximately half of all 2007 major projects in the world were made on SOA. According to analysts, 60% of organizations will adopt the approach, and by 2010 it will be used in 80% of new systems. IDC forecasts that corresponding software expenses will constitute 11 billion dollars.

Whereas 2007 was the year of pilot projects giving an opportunity to customers to test SOA efficiency when developing and using business applications, the year of 2008 will witness double increase in SOA-related expenditures and further development of the most successful projects as customers are willing to implement the technology into business processes.

Experts at SAP believe that SOA is a perfect option for companies that previously had to choose between standard ERP solutions and pricey custom ones. Still with all its advantages (flexibility in changing business processes, service security and reliability, cuts in operational IT costs) SOA is not a panacea for all technology integration problems a company may face.

Expert forecasts concerning SOA advancement in Russia are pretty optimistic. Up to 70% of projects will use SOA in 2008 and at least one of the reasons for this is that all the current middleware platforms some way or another already use SOA at present. Various verticals demand SOA implementation however only a few, Finance and Telecom, have mature enough IT processes and sufficient budgets to start off with SOA.

Forrester analysts expect leading software providers will spend the next couple of years on developing more dynamic applications with better support of cross-functional business processes. Although the demand for SOA is growing, they will have to find new ways to promote their business applications. Hopefully SOA will be a more promising and long lasting trend than all the previous technological tendencies as the focal point of SOA is business but not technologies.

Source: Cnews (in Russian)

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Gartner Predicts Steady Growth for IT Outsourcing Market in 2008

The spending on third-party providers will increase by eight per cent this year both in the United States and in Europe, according to research by analyst Gartner.

The value of publicly-disclosed business process and IT outsourcing contracts dropped by 50 per cent during 2007, says the study. But as the market matures and becomes more commonplace, fewer deals may be reaching the world's press, suggested the analyst. Companies are outsourcing more, but electing to use a multi-provider strategy and so deals are smaller in size and less reported.

Gartner has identified 35 countries where IT directors could consider establishing their own software development and shared services operation, or where local service providers are beginning to sell services beyond their domestic market.

Gartner says Russian locations are providing “credible alternatives”. Others topping the list include Ukraine reconfirming its maturing market positions.

According to Ian Marriott, a research vice-president at Gartner and an expert in IT outsourcing, Belarus has begun carving a niche in application development services.

He also noted end-user businesses were increasingly factoring in proximity of time zones and ease of travel into their outsource requirements.

Sources: Computing ; ComputerWeekly ; Networkworld