All things considered, 2008 was a relatively stable year for the IT services industry. Deals got smaller and shorter, but they grew in number. The second tier providers and Indian vendors did well, along with Accenture and IBM Global Services. The outlier was EDS, where weakness led to its acquisition by Hewlett Packard.
IT outsourcing providers were largely unscathed by the economic downturn throughout much of the year. "It took almost two quarters for the effects of the slowdown to manifest in providers' financial statements," says Eugene Kublanov, CEO of San Ramon, Calif.-based outsourcing advisory NeoIT. By the end of this year, however, CIOs became too distracted by the economic destruction surround them to do any outsourcing deals. "As the markets crumbled and CIOs were confronted with the prospects of their personal employment, naturally, decision-making around strategic cost cutting and efficiency took a back seat," says Kublanov.
That's all poised to change in 2009. The only problem is, that may be bad news for both IT services providers and their IT leader customers.
Back to the Future: More-Not Better-Outsourcing
"Whenever there's a downturn people outsource more, not less," says Gartner analyst Linda Cohen. "Organizations want to take costs out wherever they can. CFOs are pounding on their CIOs to just outsource it, just offshore it."
"The difficult economic conditions will push companies further than before to consider what stays in house and what gets done by others," agrees NeoIT's Kublanov. "Additionally, demands by the business for further cost reduction will need to be addressed in an environment where many companies have already leveraged labor arbitrage to source the low hanging fruit."
CIOs may sign hasty deals for a short-term returns. In a case of what Cohen calls "convenient amnesia," IT leaders may forget all the lessons they learned rushing into bad outsourcing arrangements and chasing elusive benefits. "Everyone has a gun to their head right now," she says. "But the financial voodoo of outsourcing deals doesn't work. You have to accept the reality that if you hand your mess over to a vendor, you're going to eventually have to pay for that burden they take off your plate. You can pay it now or pay it later, but you're going to have to pay."
Partner Content
NetScout and analyst Jim Metzler have teamed to deliver a series of IT Briefs on Network and Application Performance Management leveraging research from NetScout's nGenius & Sniffer users.
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Metzler on Service Delivery Management
Delivering IT business value by evolving our thinking from managing application performance to focusing on services.
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2009 Handbook of Application Delivery
Successful IT organizations must know how to make the right application delivery decisions in these tough economic times.
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Metzler on the Modern IP Network
Discusses the growing emphasis on network management and the need to implement a holistic view of the end-to-end experience of the user.
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