Advertisement
Promo

Outsourcing Toolkit

Swansea ditches outsourcing plans

Andy McCue silicon.com

Published: 15 Jan 2007 10:11 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Swansea City Council has scrapped plans for the second phase of its outsourcing contract with Capgemini because of cost.

Swansea finally inked the £83m 10-year contract for phase one of the service@swansea project last year after a bitter 18-month battle with IT staff and trade union Unison over whether workers would be permanently transferred or seconded to Capgemini. The £83m figure includes an extra £40m investment by the council on top of its existing IT budget over the 10 years.

The original projected savings for both phases of the outsourcing deal were £72m, of which £26m was for the first phase covering IT support and the replacement of 30 outdated IT systems for its finance, procurement, personnel and payroll functions. Currently Swansea has identified and signed off £7.4m of the £26m cash savings targeted in phase one.

But the council's cabinet agreed with a recommendation this week not to proceed with phase two of the contract because of the cost — although Capgemini claimed this was actually lower than the original quotation. The second phase was to improve customer access to services through a new call centre and website to provide a single point of contact for council services.

The council said it will seek an alternative, incremental approach to improving access to services instead and Chris Holley, council leader, called it a "sensible and prudent" decision.

He said in a statement: "Continuing reviews of our option to sign up to a Capgemini-managed phase two have shown that there is not a solution that is acceptable to the council. There are significant budget pressures this year and we must cut our cloth according to what we can afford."

Capgemini said it remains "firmly committed" to the council and to Swansea.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Did you find this article useful?
5 out of 9 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:




Video icon

Video

Discussions

hkommedal hkommedal

About collecting data etc.

Thursday 9 July 2009, 10:18 PM

9 comments

Featured Talkback

Software development for instance can be off shored with a perceived reduction in development costs but the resulting code is rarely of good quality and there is much greater expense in reworking and support over the life of software developed in this way. As a consultant who has to deal with off shoring on daily basis I very often see no savings at all over the lifetime of a software product, and in some cases actually see projects costing a fortune to rework.

By: pround

Read full story:
Offshoring behind UK tech-labour divide


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters