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“The transformational value offered by RIM services has made it a preferred"
 

 
Subbalakshmi BM
 
Monday, October 02, 2006

 

Anant Gupta, COO, HCL Comnet, believes that the transformational benefits that enterprises stand to gain from RIM are many and these, coupled with HCL's revolutionary co-sourcing model, allows customers to retain control of their strategic components, while outsourcing day-to-day operations

What have been the key drivers for the growth of the RIM (remote infrastructure management) industry globally and in India?
The key drivers for the growth of RIM services have been technical feasibility, cost-saving and transformational value. With the advent of sophisticated tools and technologies, the 'remote' manageability of the IT Infrastructure was the primary driver of this trend. The 'offshore' angle to RIM offered a significant labor arbitrage and gave almost 10 times cost savings to global clients, which in itself was a significantly compelling cause. However, it's the third driver, which has made RIM a preferred strategy for CIOs' worldwide today.

Anant Gupta
COO, HCL Comnet

The transformational benefits that enterprises stand to gain from RIM include 24X7 expert-skill-on-tap, quality processes like ITIL, proactive problem resolution systems, infrastructure consolidation and optimization benefits. These coupled with our revolutionary co-sourcing model allows customers to retain control of their strategic components such as physical IT assets, technology refresh, policy and architecture while outsourcing day-to-day operations.

What are the current trends as far as prevailing technologies and solutions in the RIM space go?
As far as the solutions are concerned, the new trends are towards areas like regulatory compliance, ITIL process alignment, service automation and business service management (visibility into the direct impact of IT services on business transaction real-time). On the technology side SAP Netweaver, utility computing, server consoli­dation and virtualization are the buzzwords these days.

On a higher and larger level, we can also see interesting trends like sourcing engagements continuing to undergo a paradigm shift from traditional total outsourcing to select or discreet outsourcing in the global market space. More and more companies are shying away from the traditional models of IT infrastructure service delivery and are primarily in search of flexibility, while looking to get strategic control of their IT infrastructure outsourcing engagements.

The 'Total or Full Out­sour­cing Model', proposition entails a third party service provider taking over the entire IT assets of an organization and running it with a combination of on-site and near-shore services. This 'lock-stock-and barrel' approach results in complete loss of control and flexibility on the part of the CIO. In the post 9/11 world of dynamic business cycles, new engagement models like co-sourcing approach are being opted for greater flexibility.

The essence of this model is its collaborative approach to outsourcing by defining it as an partnership activity between the client and the service provider where the client retains the strategic portion of the operations like technology refresh, policy definition and architecture issues and control of strategy enunciation, while the service provider like HCL, takes over the day to day running of operations and other areas as defined by the client.

India being a hub for offshore activities, what kind of opportunities lay in the Indian market for players in the RIM space? How can they make use of the same?
As Indian companies grow in size and make transnational forays, they will need to strengthen and expand their IT Infrastructure to enable and sustain this growth. The same will make them embrace global best practices and services like RIM. There is also the career market for IT professional that RIM offers. One of the important drivers that make RIM an attractive career is the exciting and challenging environment it offers to employees. Of course, the area is technically more challenging than software development or any other IT track, because of the scale and size of the learning environment it offers.

Who are the major players in this space-both globally as well as in India?
Even though most Indian IT application service providers have now started building capabilities in this space, our real competition is with the global giants and it is a competition of models, HCL's co-sourcing offshore RIM model versus their Total IT outsourcing model, and it is this competition, which has resulted in creating a clear differentiator for companies like ours in the market.

What do you think of the future market scenario for RIM. How would you benefit from the same?
The future for RIM is extremely bright as more and more fortune/global 500 companies are showing preference for Indian specialty vendors like HCL for IT infrastructure management. More and more components of the ecosystem will get added in the portfolio in the coming years. This will make RIM a door opener for Indian companies into new accounts besides giving them a tremendous cross-sell potential for mining their existing clients.

Another huge opportunity is $100 billion worth of contracts coming up for renewal in the next two years. According to a research firm TPI, 325 deals are due for renewal during 2006 and 2007, representing over a fifth of active contracts; this opens tremendous prospects for the offshore RIM Industry too and players like us are likely to benefit from this opportunity.

Software developers like HCL Technologies, Infosys, Wipro etc would continue in the domain of creating business. Running and maintaining the IT infrastructure of the business will increasingly become indispensable for large organizations. Network management service providers like HCL Comnet, IBM, EDS, and Wipro would benefit in this space. Global leaders in this space like EDS and IBM would continue to provide total outsourcing contracts, but Indian service providers will differentiate on the basis of providing selective or discreet outsourcing, giving the customer flexibility and freedom from long-term contracts that have a tendency to make the vendors complacent. The real transformation however would occur in terms of the advantage felt in the cost as we move up the value chain in terms of processes and tools.

SUBBALAKSHMI BM

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