Business Strategies of Virtusa

clock February 25, 2008 00:23 by author anjel

“The issue of immigration is receiving much attention among the candidates, but the sub-issues of offshore outsourcing and the use of visas for highly-skilled workers have received very little attention,” he observes, during the course of a recent interaction with eWorld.

“While an economic downturn could change the climate for offshoring, so far the issue has been less controversial than in the past presidential election cycle,” adds Marc, stirring up a south Indian coffee that caps an uncomplicated vegetarian meal we have together.

Hebert, an expert on offshore outsourcing who has authored many publications and given dozens of invited presentations on the subject to a variety of audiences, holds a Bachelor of Science degree in experimental psychology from Harvard University, and an MBA from Stanford University. He is responsible for corporate strategy, positioning, branding, public relations, analyst relations and lead generation programmes. He also drives alliance relationships for the company and heads its West Coast operations.

Our lunch had started off with a question on a personal note, asking Hebert if his grounding in experimental psychology came handy in the marketing role he now donned. “When I entered my business career, I made a fortunate discovery,” he began.

“The principles of organisational behaviour that global businesses employ in managing their employees are founded on behavioural psychology, the branch of psychology popularised by B.F. Skinner, who headed the Experimental Psychology department for many years at Harvard,” he elaborated.

“It turns out that my psychology grounding prepared me well for a career in business management, and I have had the chance to participate in building several management development programmes in my career, including at Oracle, using my behavioural psychology background.”

Hebert is happy that he has carried these concepts and experience with him into his marketing roles. “It helps me every day in how I build the culture in my team and how I manage my people in the global model across cultures. It also helps me understand how our clients think and why they buy from us.”

Perhaps Hebert also understands how journalists think and work. Which explains why, on his way to Sri Lanka that evening, he catches up with a blog post to give his comments on the latest numbers about US GDP growth, the recession fears and so on. We follow up our conversation over e-mail.

Excerpts from the interview.

What is your offshore-onsite mix? Also, what is the geographical split of your clientele?

We manage our service delivery mix with 20 per cent or less of our work performed on-site at our client locations and 80 per cent or more of our work done in offshore centres.

Our 20/80 on-site/offshore service delivery model is a direct result of our collaborative processes and our ability to apply high performance global teams across all services we provide.

We have operated with a 20/80 or better on-site/offshore ratio for the past five years, and believe that this service delivery mix provides our clients with a cost and time advantage relative to our peers.

Europe represented 31 per cent of revenue for the second quarter of fiscal 2008, with North America accounting for the remaining 69 per cent.

How do you differentiate yourself from other tier-two IT (information technology) companies?

We differentiate ourselves in several key ways, including our consultative platforming approach, our industry expertise in financial services, communications and technology, and media and information, and our enhanced global delivery model.

Through our approach, we help our clients identify and implement efficiencies, whether they be through our technology consulting, systems implementation, or application outsourcing services.

While this approach applies across all services we provide, let me give you an example using application outsourcing. With such clients, we look for commonalities across existing applications with an eye towards consolidating common technology and common business strategies into reusable, plan-specific software frameworks and platforms.

This results in significant business benefit for our clients, including reducing their total cost of ownership, accelerating the launch of new products and services to market, and improving their end customer experience. We apply these same principles across consulting and systems implementation. This approach helps us differentiate and establish thought leadership, continually provide more value than the inherent cost arbitrage benefits of global delivery and gives us the opportunity to build long-term, strategic relationships with our clients.

We believe the combination of our consultative platforming approach, enhanced global delivery model, and industry expertise provides significant incremental value. Our largest client, and a strong example of this value creation at work, is British Telecom. We started working with British Telecom over three years ago and our relationship has steadily grown. This past spring, BT signed a five-year, $200 million strategic IT services agreement with Virtusa.

When will there be clarity in the IT budgets of US companies, especially among the BFSI (banking, financial services and insurance) clients? Your outlook for 2008.

We have seen strong growth in our financial services practice, where we saw double-digit growth both in our first and second fiscal quarters. (We do not publicly discuss our own business outlook except during our earnings announcements.)

With respect to IT budgets, we continue to see strong demand for offshore services, especially for engagements relating to improving productivity and cutting costs. And, we have a track record of service excellence in all of our clients that has led to and continues to lead to expansion of our existing account base.

The research analysts that we follow who issue IT spending forecasts are indicating cautious growth in IT budgets for 2008. They generally project growth in the same range as 2007, but with downside risk in case the US economy enters a recession. That is, IT budgets will continue to grow modestly for now, with reductions possible if the economy slows more.

 

If the sub-prime crisis turns out to be worse than imagined, will it not be indicative of a slowdown in the US? In this light, is there a possibility of clients across verticals cutting their IT spend?

The research analysts that we follow indicate that the US economy is likely to show slower growth in the calendar fourth quarter just ended than the healthy growth of Q3, and projections for 2008 suggest further slowing is possible in the next few quarters, with some chance of a US recession.

Some of this is attributed to the impact of the sub-prime crisis and housing slowdown. The analysts also suggest that we have not yet hit bottom in the housing sector, which will continue to drag down economic growth in 2008.

At the same time, the US economy continues to show resilience in non-housing sectors, often surprising the analysts, and offsetting the negative impact of the housing sector. As a result, we appear to be in a period of unpredictability in the US economy, which is why analysts are couching their IT spend forecasts as modest growth with downside risk.

You are working on re-branding. Why?

During most of 2007, we were in a quiet period as we prepared for and executed our IPO. As a result, we reduced our press activity in India, and reduced our public visibility. Now that we are re-emerging as a public company, we have the chance to re-establish our image and increase our visibility. We find that this is a good time to fine-tune our messages and brand as part of this evolution.

What, according to you, are the key marketing skills that win in today’s IT world?

IT services marketing has evolved rapidly in recent years. New marketing techniques that we have put in place in the past year are already paying off for us. These include the effective use of our Web site as a lead generation tool through techniques such as search engine optimisation, pay-per-click advertising, and direct e-mail campaigns.

In addition, we are beginning to leverage online content marketing tools, such as white paper syndication and podcasts, for lead generation.

We are finding that these tools offer the ability to target specific market segments with highly-tailored messages to attract new prospects. For example, we are leveraging our premier position as leading IT services providers for key software partners such as Pegasystems and Vignette, and attracting their customers through targeted e-mail and Internet-based messages.

As the Internet continues to evolve rapidly with new tools and models, including social networks, blogging and video sites, successful IT marketing will evolve with the Internet.

In addition, a business such as ours, which targets Global 2000 clients, must successfully employ high-touch marketing techniques that leverage the high-powered personal networks of IT executives and buyers. Accordingly, high-impact marketing programmes that provide interesting content and networking opportunities will continue to be crucial marketing priorities for IT services providers.

Where would you plot the level of current offshore outsourcing from the US, in terms of a potentiality curve?

Research analysts and organisations such as Nasscom (with help from McKinsey) and the Information Technology Association of America, who track the global IT services industry, suggest that the penetration rate of offshore IT services is still low in aggregate, both in the US and in other industrialised countries.

This reflects our own anecdotal experience with clients and prospects in our three key industry groups, who continue to expand the offshore share of their IT budgets, even in clients with mature offshore practices.

We believe that the next major offshoring trend, what we call “next-generation” offshore IT services, has just begun. It is the use of offshoring primarily not for cost savings through labour arbitrage, but rather for the delivery of high-value IT services involving state-of-the-art technology and consulting-led IT services, that benefit clients by giving them speed and productivity advantages to make them more agile, more productive, and more service-oriented.

Are alternatives to India emerging as more attractive cost destinations? On Sri Lanka vis-a-vis India.

On Sri Lanka vs India as offshore destinations – While we don’t discuss cost profiles of our specific operations, I can tell you that both countries offer us cost-efficient and effective ways to serve our clients.

Moreover, salary surveys of popular global offshore destinations continue to show that on average, India’s cost of IT services, while growing, is still ranked among the lowest in the world. In addition, India’s deep experience as a leader in IT offshoring gives it an advantage in productivity levels such that productivity growth largely offsets unit cost increases, keeping India competitive as an offshore destination, particularly for high-value IT services.

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Software as a Service (SaaS)

clock February 21, 2008 21:50 by author anjel
There's been a lot of talk about the Software as a Service (SaaS) model. That debate has helped define what SaaS is now and what it should be in the future. But the chatter also asserts a number of erroneous SaaS definitions out in the IT marketplace.

So let's start by clarifying exactly what SaaS is and then later what it isn't.

  • SaaS is a software delivery model in which the user accesses software over the Internet from anywhere at any time. Users need only a web browser to use the software. Companies don't need to invest in and upgrade servers, operating systems, databases, backup equipment and complex programming environments. The software vendor provides all of that.
  • All customers run off of the same code base. This ensures that the software the customer uses is always up-to-date and saves the vendor from having to support different databases, operating systems and versions of its application. Customers can deploy the application very rapidly, since they don't have the lead time and hassles associated with configuring their local environments.
  • Customers do not have to worry about upgrading their software. For example, no one worries about what 'version' of Google they are running.
  • The software provider is contractually obligated to provide acceptable availability and response time. Again, the customer doesn't have to monitor disk and CPU usage and upgrade hardware.

The most mature instances of SaaS are multi-tenant, vendor-hosted solutions include Salesforce.com, NetSuite and my company, Plexus Systems, Inc. These characteristics offer distinct advantages. For customers, they are the ease with which the software is kept current and the cost savings associated with a shared infrastructure. Some of the cost savings come from using a simple Web browser to perform any transaction in the system -- not just those that have been 'Web-enabled.' For our customers, SaaS is an enabler of nimble, responsive organizations that embrace both innovation and customer value.

Given these advantages over the basic Application Service Providers (ASP) delivery model of 2000, it's not surprising that SaaS has become the "hot" application delivery model. It seems every software vendor claims to have SaaS applications, whether the model meets all the criteria or not.

I have to admit, I take umbrage with the fact that the SaaS moniker has been hijacked by some in the IT industry.

If you are a customer seeking a SaaS solution that adds value to your operation, make sure you get a true SaaS application; not a pale imitation, which may really be just an old client/server application with a customized front-end and a few new features on a dedicated server in a third party data center.

Pretenders will offer a variation of the following:

  • A third-party hosting company running a separate instance of the solution for each customer -- This doesn't solve any of the delivery problems. It just moves them from the customer to a third party. Each individual customer must still go through the painful upgrade process. With no shared infrastructure, no costs are taken out of the equation. In fact, the costs go up because the third party hosting company also needs to make a profit.
  • A 'new' Web-based user interface with the same old database structure and very old business logic still intact. Some call this "putting lipstick on a pig" or "whipped cream on roadkill." If the underlying business logic is still in RPG, Cobol, or other older languages, the vendor has not kept up-to-date and the software will be expensive and cumbersome to maintain.
  • Not 100% Web Native -- unless the solution transmits just HTML (web native), the software will consume a lot of bandwidth. Get estimates as to bandwidth needs for a proposed application. You should be able to support your entire organization with a fractional T1.

The SaaS model evolved to drive out costs and complexity in the relationship between the software vendor and the customer. It addresses many problems that have arisen over the years.

To get a real SaaS solution that will yield all the benefits versus a hosted legacy application that will just add cost and complexity to the customer-vendor relationship, software buyers should do the following.

  • Be sure to see the actual software, not just Powerpoints.
  • See the software in use at a similar company.
  • Ask the software vendor to demonstrate the entire system from one of your computers without loading any software on it beforehand
  • Ask what the bandwidth requirements are.
  • See where it is hosted.
  • Truly understand how many users will be needed to get the full value from the system. SaaS is a subscription-based service, with fees usually (but not always) based on the number of users at a particular company.

There is no doubt SaaS delivers value to the customer in the form of rapid time-to-market and low maintenance. Customers want new features faster than ever before, and SaaS effectively enables responsiveness.

And if responsiveness doesn't sell you on SaaS, ask any CFO or VP of Finance if they are happy with spending a high portion of their budget keeping outdated software running, or with hiring IT people to babysit servers and applications, and they usually start fuming. They want an IT team that are business process consultants, and who focus on building value with technology, rather than simply babysitting technology. Or ask an IT guy how many of his applications are updated to the current version, and he'll likely laugh at you.

It's my belief that the SaaS model will be the future of most applications, as the advantages are just too great to match.

Mark Symonds is president and CEO of Plexus Systems, Inc. Symonds has his MBA in finance and accounting from Cornell Universityand a bachelor's degree from the University of Rochester. He is a Certified Public Accountant and is also certified in production and inventory management (CPIM) by the American Production and Inventory Control Society. He holds a variety of industry association memberships, including the Precision Metalforming Association (PMA), where he is a member of its national board of directors.

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Software Development Costs

clock February 17, 2008 20:50 by author anjel

Twenty-six per cent of the cost of implementing a new custom software development application is consumed by integration with existing applications, according to a survey of 105 IT executives in Australia commissioned by InterSystems. The figure remained virtually the same as that uncovered by last year's survey.

The InterSystems Australian Integration Survey found that 64 per cent of organisations are hampered by insufficient staff resources in being able to quickly and cost-effectively connect or extend their applications. Lack of available skill sets was reported by 45 per cent of respondents and insufficient budget by 42 per cent.

"No wonder organisations have insufficient staff resources to integrate new applications, when it consumes 26 per cent of the budget", said Denis Tebbutt, managing director of InterSystems in Australia. "That is a substantial overhead in developing new applications and a significant drag on business agility".

Tebbutt said that increasing staff resources was not the answer to the challenges organisations face in integrating applications, pointing to forecasts by IDC that the deficit of skilled high-tech professionals in Australia is expected to increase to 7100 by 2009.

"If organisations expect more staff resources to come to their rescue in the midst of a growing IT skills shortage, many will be disappointed". said Tebbutt. "Realistically, these barriers will only be overcome with new, less labour-intensive and less costly technologies for connecting and extending applications".

The survey found that the most common of these new technologies -- Web services/SOAs, deployed by 52 per cent of organisations surveyed -- has still not replaced traditional, more labour-intensive ways of connecting and extending applications. Some 39 per cent of organisations were customising applications, 36 per cent re-engineering applications and 35 per cent replacing them.

Len Rust is publisher of The Rust Report.

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Yahoo has opened the service of stream video Yahoo Live

clock February 10, 2008 21:22 by author anjel
Company Yahoo has opened the service of stream video - Yahoo Live which users can open own videochannels and build in player Yahoo Live own sites and blogs.

One interesting feature of service is the opportunity of adjustment of viewing of four channels from other users looking the same stream. In this case small windows from video from "neighbours" are displayed under a window with the main videoclip. On the main page of service there are sections with the most popular channels and with translations which were updated more recently. On Yahoo Live the text chat also is stipulated, informs News.com.

Simultaneously with opening service has been published API by means of which interested persons can develop own on-line videoservices.

Apparently, in Yahoo have appeared are not ready to inflow of visitors because now during work with service from time to time there are messages on congestion of a server. Journalists of the western sites state similar complaints.

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