automation Archive
How Automation Will Change the Services Industry
On March 4, 2015 In Thought Leadership
As we at Everest Group look at the service delivery automation landscape and think forward to where we believe it’s heading, there is truly a lot of disruption in the picture. From working with and talking to service providers and enterprises implementing automation, we recognize that it’s more than just a labor-to-technology substitution. It
KABOOM! Is an Implosion of the Services Market Coming?
On February 26, 2015 In Thought Leadership
There is rising concern among the Indian service providers that their arbitrage model is about to go through a significant and abrupt change – and not to their benefit. As I look at the various factors driving their concern, I see a set of challenges that will fundamentally reshape the industry and create new
The Downside for Enterprises in Automating
On February 6, 2015 In Thought Leadership
Service delivery automation is obviously powerful. But there’s a downside and potential risk for enterprises in the shift to automation. Benefits include reducing the number of FTEs in a process and therefore reducing the cost. And automation can be applied without changing the system of records. Plus the implementation cost is significantly less than
The Vexing Aspect of Service Delivery Automation
On January 20, 2015 In Thought Leadership
The advantages of service delivery automation add up to significant value realization. Unfortunately, it’s not a one-time step change. Automating is a continuous shift, and it’s never over. You first assess where it should happen. Then you get comfortable with the tools, get data on the process, get comfortable with the organizational implications of
Global Services Trends and Tipping Points for 2015
On January 12, 2015 In Thought Leadership
It’s the season when analyst/advisory firms flood the media their predictions and top-10 lists. One problem with those lists is the services world rarely has 10 things that are different from the year before. Another problem is we tend to hype new technologies and business models and make predictions about their impact in the
The Cloud Experiment is Over, but are Buyers Waiting for Godot?
On January 8, 2015 In Thought Leadership
The cloud experiment is over and the debate in enterprises about its benefits and risks is settled. We know it works, it’s more flexible and cheaper, and it makes it easier for IT to align with business needs. So should buyers put their applications into a cloud environment? My advice: Don’t rearchitect your legacy
Years of Plenty Followed by Years of Starvation for RIM Service Providers
On November 17, 2014 In Thought Leadership
Right now Remote Infrastructure Management (RIM) service providers are enjoying explosive growth as they take share from asset-heavy players. The labor arbitrage market is disintermediating or successfully attacking the traditional asset-heavy infrastructure space. But in every boom are the seeds of undoing. It reminds me of the story of Joseph in the Biblical book
The 40-40 Rule of Disruption in Global Services
On October 27, 2014 In Thought Leadership
Everest Group research has analyzed the impact that automation will have on the services industry. Our opinion, which we refer to as the 40-40 Rule, is that 40 percent of all outsourcing contracts are ready to be impacted by automation and the average impact in the amount of labor to do the work will
IBM Positioning for Dominance in Future of Infrastructure Services
On August 12, 2014 In Thought Leadership
I recently had the privilege to sit through a two-day session with IBM’s senior executive team in services. I’m someone who tries not to drink the Kool-Aid. Even so, I came away truly impressed by the work that IBM has done to position itself to be relevant and a major player in the future
The Coming Disruption in BPO
On June 6, 2014 In Thought Leadership
We at Everest Group have been exploring robotics and understanding its potential. What we’re seeing is that it’s relatively easy and cheap to implement. Where it has been implemented to date, it results in somewhere from a 15-20 percent reduction in critical shared services or BPO functions, depending on the transactional nature of the