Showing posts with label hcl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hcl. Show all posts

Monday, February 15, 2010

Is industry utilizing employees? Or exploiting?

Akanksha Prasad, CIOL

BANGALORE, INDIA: The recent Nasscom and other reports signal that the wave of recession is slowly receding. Companies are reportedly posting positive employeeutilization, but this is done on the cost of the employee. IT companies increased working hours, work pressure putting more stress on the employees, and in return, they were not eligible for over time benefits.

As Business Directory.com defines, employee utilization means "a method that attempts to maximize the efficiency of a company's employees".


Kris Lakshmikanth, founder CEO and chairman of Headhunters India, said that till 2007, the average employee utilization of the IT companies was less than 70 per cent. But 2008 onwards, the utilization went up to 80-82 per cent.

He said, "The factors responsible for this movement is reduction in workforce, utilization of the bench and increase in the work timings."

During the recent quarterly announcement, Wipro reported an increase in the utilization to 73.2 per cent in Q3 FY 09. HCL reported its employee utilization level moving up to 76.4 per cent in Q3 and that of Infosys came around 68.8 per cent in Q3. TCS reported the highest utilization rate of 81.1 per cent (excluding trainees) and 77.2 cent (including trainees).


Speaking to CIOL, requesting anonymity, a Kolkata-based IT professional, working in one of the leading IT companies in India, said, "Starting April 2009, our work timingswere increased by half an hour officially but one hour internally. If we worked for less than nine hours then we were penalized. But when we worked for 12-15 hours, we were not given overtime."

Lakshmikanth elaborated, "As per the reports the companies had increased the working timings by half an hour every day, which would come around an increase of two and a half hours in a week. This increase in the entire workforce can effect the total employee utilization to as much as five per cent."

Some of the IT companies reported to have increased their work timings from fifteen minutes to half an hour are TCS, HCL and Accenture.


When contacted these IT companies refused to respond, while others like Wipro and Infosys refrained from making comments saying that these timings had been around since long time.

According to them, these norms have been around for years, and it was just during the period September to December 2008 that they made compulsory office working of 9 hours 15 minutes and 9 hours 30 minutes respectively. In other words, every employee needs to work for around 8 plus one and half hour and on record, though they end up spending more than that.

Elaborating on the concept of increasing work timings, Praveen Bhadada, engagement manager, Zinnov Management Consulting Pvt. Ltd said, "For IT companies working on time and material basis, working extra hours means more revenues at the fixed salary of the employee, i.e. increased profitability. For fixed bid contracts, the work is executed faster – i.e. higher efficiency. Increased work hours reflect in increased overall productivity.


Another IT professional working in Bangalore reported that in order to show good performance and high efficiency, employees end up working for 12 hours, but still were not eligible to claim for the overtime.

She said, "Our targets were increased by double, in order to meet them under the deadlines, we worked for almost 12-14 hours. We were not only devoid of the overtime claim, but also the performance sheet did not reflect our hard work. This is the high time, when government should make strict labor laws and work timings."

Through an email, the spokesperson from the Union Labor Ministry said IT employees shall have a minimum of 48 working hours in a week but the maximum working hours have not been defined in the law and left to the discretion of the employer company. He said the department is examining the issue of working hours beyond 8 hours a day- without any extra monetary benefits.

Interestingly, none of these companies seem to bring back the gold old working experience of relief and luxury at work. Lakshmikanth opines that companies might continue with these policies for yet another six months, till they comfortably see not only recovery but growth.

Bhadada raised a very valid point that if the employee is stressed it can result in lower productivity and lower utilization as well. And this would soon become a challenge for the companies, perhaps one the reasons behind employee attrition.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Telangana issue forces IT firms to eye neighbours

Political disturbance over the demand for a separate Telangana state is forcing information technology companies to shift. The process to shortlist office space in neighbouring states, like Tamil Nadu, is underway.

"Six companies, including top five in IT and operating in Hyderabad, want to shift before the end of January," Chennai-based Shriram Properties Managing Director M Murali said.

Software exports from Andhra Pradesh are projected to touch Rs 35,000 crore in 2009-10, and IT companies like Tata Consultancy Services , Infosys , Wipro , Tech Mahindra and HCL are present in Hyderabad.

"Besides Chennai, we have received enquires for leased properties in Visakhapatnam. All want office space for at least three-five years," Murali added.

"Two IT majors have approached us for 100 apartments on bulk lease, besides IT premises," said Chitty Babu, chairman of Akshaya Homes, a Chennai-based developer.

The IT department of Tamil Nadu confirmed that Chennai had received enquiries from Hyderabad-based IT companies. The Electronics Corporation of Tamil Nadu (Elcot), the nodal agency for IT in the state, develops special economic zones.

"We have been approached by IT companies, which are currently enquiring about availability of space in the state," an IT department official said. He added that Elcot was planning to organise roadshows -- from Hyderabad to begin with -- to promote IT in Tamil Nadu.

The move is bound to have its impact.

"About 15-20 percent of the 60,000-140,000 professionals employed globally by Tech Mahindra, Patni Computers, Satyam Computer, HCL, Wipro, Infosys and TCS globally are based in Hyderabad," P Phani Sekhar, fund manager (research arm), Angel Broking said.

J A Chowdary, managing director of NVidia Graphics India and president of The Indus Entrepreneurs, Hyderabad chapter, said if the decision on Telangana was prolonged, the IT companies would suffer. "Though we have requested the political parties to ensure law and order, students are going in for violent agitations by not allowing buses to ply and creating problems for people to reach offices."

Monday, December 21, 2009

JP Morgan Asset Management Extends Outsourced Services Contract With HCL

To provide continuity and certainty around life and pensions administration for Save & Prosper
HCL IBS, part of HCL Technologies (HCL), has extended its contract with JP Morgan Asset Management to deliver life and pension administration services for Save & Prosper, the global asset management arm of JP Morgan Chase & Co.
JP Morgan has claimed that the contract extension will reduce cost and deliver service enhancements to improve the policyholder experience. HCL will continue to provide an end-to-end service solution to enhance policy administration, finance, actuarial and call center services. The new contract services 185,000 policies and provides additional costs savings to JP Morgan Asset Management over the contract's lifetime in the order of GBP 8.5mn.
Peter Ball, CEO of Save & Prosper, said: "JP Morgan Asset Management has long enjoyed a strong relationship with HCL and we are happy that our partnership has been extended. I am confident that HCL will continue to provide great service and value to our policyholders."
Stephen White, COO of HCL IBS said: "We are delighted that JP Morgan Asset Management has reconfirmed the value it places in our partnership through this contract extension. We look forward to adding further value through the introduction of wider HCL service capabilities to help the company achieve its business needs. HCL's governance model means that strategic needs are given as much focus as operational delivery. Our platform has the capability to deliver cost certainty and provide those benefits on long term contracts.
"We have developed a growing onshore/offshore business model, which will enable further capability developments and efficiency improvements. We are keen to grow our Life and Pensions business, in both the open and closed book space, and this announcement demonstrates we provide a compelling and competitive proposition in this market."
David Mitchell, SVP of IT research at analyst firm Ovum, said: "Outsourcing of specific business functions or business areas is most effective when the outsourcing provider has domain specific capabilities. The recent life and pensions administration contract with HCL for Save & Prosper with JP Morgan is based on the HCL industry specific expertise in this sector, offering JP Morgan an enhanced service for their customers and staff while still being very cost effective."
HCL Technologies offers integrated portfolio of services including software-led IT solutions, remote infrastructure management, engineering and R&D services and BPO.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

GlaxoSmithKline and HCL in IT outsourcing deal

Healthcare company GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) has signed a five-year outsourcing agreement with HCL Technology division HCL Axon.

Under the agreement, Indian based outsourcer, HCL will provide GSK with systems integration, SAP implementation and IT consulting services for the international company.

The appointment comes a year after Indian-based HCL Technologies’ acquisition of UK based Axon.

“This is an important win for us, it keeps our objective of becoming the largest global SAP-based business transformation provider on track and confirms the rationale behind the merger with HCL technology.” said Mr Steve Cardell, President, HCL Axon

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

HCL Tech bags 5-year order from News Corp's UK arm

Our Bureau

New Delhi, Dec 8

HCL Technologies on Tuesday announced it has bagged a multi-million pound, five-year infrastructure management and transformation order from News International - a U.K. subsidiary of News Corporation.

The company produces some of the U.K.'s most widely read newspapers including The Times, The Sun and The Sunday Times. HCL Technologies will manage News International's data centre and network environment. Initially, it will involve transformation projects such as migrating operating systems to lower-cost industry standard solutions, business continuity improvements and virtualisation, consolidation and standardisation of storage and servers.

The Indian company is already working with other News Corporation companies for their technology infrastructure management requirements, a statement said.

“We see the benefit of working with the same global partners across News Corp,” said Mr Andrew Hickey, CIO of News International and a member of News Corp's CIO Council.

HCL Technologies clientele includes over 40 media and entertainment companies globally.The company had recently announced wins from Reader's Digest Association and Viacom Inc.

Monday, November 30, 2009

IT majors worried about cascading effect of Dubai crisis

MUMBAI/BANGALORE: As Dubai World, the emirate’s investment firm seeks more time to repay almost $60-billion debt, India’s top tech firms fear
that the once lucrative West Asia market for outsourcing can enter a prolonged recession and customers in other top export markets of the US and Europe may exercise more caution while making outsourcing decisions.

Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Infosys Technologies, Wipro, HCL and Patni Computer Systems are among Indian tech firms serving telecom, banking and other customers in the West Asia region. Dubai, the biggest commercial hub in the region saw home prices plunge by nearly half from 2008 levels, reflecting the worst real estate slump during the global recession, according to Deutsche BankAG.

“Global confidence is coming back. We were hoping for more spends. But now the confidence of our customers is shaking. I expect they are going to be a bit more cautious about spends and will not open up so much. Budgets were getting firmed up in December—clients will now relook at the whole thing,” said a senior software executive with one of the firms that was looking at the West Asia and Africa as a growth markets. Publicly, though, few firms are willing to admit to these worries.

While Wipro counts Qatar Petroleum and Road and Transport Authority of Dubai among its top customers, TCS serves Saudi Telecom. Domestic rivals Mahindra Satyam also counts Dubai Municipality and National Bank of Dubai among its key customers in the region.
Wipro’s Anand Sankaran said the crisis was not entirely unanticipated as reports of people in Dubai abandoning their cars in airports because of the economic slowdown have been around for 9-12 months. “To mitigate this risk, we started looking outside Dubai,” he said. Wipro’s IT business in the West Asia is around $80 million and its Dubai business is 15-20% of it.

Apart from exposure to Dubai, the impact on companies could be lower IT spends from West Asia, which was perceived to be a growth market. Tech Mahindra had announced several wins from the West Asia and multinationals like CapGemini had appointed a partner-level executive to open up the market, as opposed to handling it from its UK office earlier.
But possibly more worrying are Dubai’s linkages to the financial world. “Dubai has a lot of financial connections and there could be a
ripple value on the dollar. Any imbalances in the economy could have potential impact on the stability of the dollar and IT spending as well. Further, it is a negative sentiment for the financial sector,” said Ganesh Natarajan, former Nasscom chairman and CEO Zensar Technologies.

“West Asia accounts for mere 1-1.5% of exposure for Indian IT. So the revenue risk is only to that extent. However, the indirect impact could be more severe. Because European and US banks have direct exposure to West Asia, increasing default risk will turn this industry to be conservative in allocating capital and in their spendings, including IT spending,” said Alok Shende, principal analyst, Ascentius Consulting.

“US banks had recently started coming out to of their hibernation, and since US and European banking industry have a significant pie of Indian outsourcing industry, the risk aversion could slowdown the pace of outsourcing,” Mr Shende added. Mastek CMD Sudhakar Ram, however, said the impact was only a second or third order impact, it would not be very major. “As it is, companies were spending only on keeping the lights on. So they cannot cut back on that,” he said. But if indeed customers continue to spend only on keeping the lights on (or in other words, only absolutely necessary spends), then the much-awaited recovery that IT firms were anticipating may be delayed yet some more.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

HCL Tech enters strategic partnership with Savvion

MUMBAI: Global IT services provider, HCL Technologies Limited (HCL), announced a strategic partnership with Savvion to extend its services in the Business Process Management (BPM) space.

With this, both HCL and Savvion would be able to help customers implement and optimise business processes across the organisation, a press release issued here stated.

The BPM solutions enable visibility into extremely critical business processes such as order management, onboarding new clients and releasing and supporting products with an ability to track and measure these processes real-time.

"With this partnership with Savvion, we wish to expand our services across verticals with focus on financial services, media, publishing and entertainment, Government and retail," HCL's Vice-President (Corporate) and Enterprise Application and Transformation Services (Head), Ramakrishna V, said.

Monday, November 23, 2009

HCL Tech says wins $200 mn outsourcing order

NEW DELHI: Software services firm HCL Technologies on Monday said it has won a contract worth $200 million from British insurer Equitable Life
Assurance Society.

The contract begins in March 2011, HCL said in a statement.