Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Friday, Mar 28, 2008
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Outsourcing
Info-Tech - Outlook
Renewals under pricing pressure, says Compass

‘Cos demanding rate cuts of 15-23% across-the-board’

Adith Charlie

Mumbai, March 27 Concerned about a looming economic downturn, client organisations are pressing outsourcing firms for price reductions of up to 23 per cent as they negotiate extensions of long-term deals. A reduction of this quantum could result in the failure of many outsourcing contracts, suggests a study by UK-based Compass management consulting.

The research states that pricing pressure is increasingly driving renewal renegotiations. Companies are demanding rate cuts of 15 per cent to 23 per cent across-the-board, without consideration of whether existing services are being delivered at a fair market price, Compass said. These findings are the result of a 12-month analysis of 120 global deals worth over $60 million each by Compass.

Of significance

The findings assume significance as majority Indian IT vendors such as TCS, Infosys, Hexaware and BPO firms such as Firstsource, EXL, HTMT and others have been talking about their ability to increase billing rates in new engagements with clients, enabling them to counter the double whammy of the rupee appreciation and a recession in the US.

For their part, vendors are, in many cases, agreeing to price discounts upfront – in exchange for long-term agreements, according to Compass.

“Clients are plucking aggressive price targets from the air with no due diligence around the competitiveness of existing service and with no regard to what the business needs,” said Ms Geraldine Fox, Director of sourcing services at Compass.

losing proposition

Negotiating for short-term price reductions in exchange for long-term agreements – without a detailed understanding of existing costs, services, and requirements – is a losing proposition. The cuts will eventually become unsustainable, leading to a de-motivated supplier, a poor working relationship, and poor service quality, the study said.

By comparison, between 2005 and 2007, clients were significantly less inclined to focus solely on cost reduction when renegotiating contracts, said Ms Fox. With 8,000 engagements in 32 countries, Compass is a global management-consulting firm specialising in business and IT performance improvement for Fortune 1000 organisations.

More Stories on : Outsourcing | Outlook

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Clasic Hiring

Stories in this Section
Renewals under pricing pressure, says Compass


Telecom operators may lower tariffs
‘Deccan’ soon to go off from the skies
About 532 cos borrow $25 b overseas
ESCAP optimistic on India’s growth prospects
Ranbaxy Laboratories (Rs 435.65): Sell
Day Trading Guide
Much needed funding for subsidiaries
‘Jaguar-Land Rover buy is a long-term strategic decision’
Volvo India to launch six car models
Tatas takeover: Analysts see areas of concern
Tata Motors drives into Thailand with Xenon
Banks asked to assess risks themselves
Prime Securities mark-to-market loss at Rs 23 cr
Yields on short-terms down as liquidity eases
NTPC exempted from equity cap norms for bidding


BusinessLine E-paper


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2008, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line