Managed services fails to deliver: IDC study
- 04 October, 2012 15:44
- Comments
Some managed service providers are not fully meeting the total cost of ownership (TCO) and return on investment (ROI) expectations of their customers, according to an IDC study.
The study, Managed Services and Why Choose a Telco: A Snapshot of Australian Business, found that 23 per cent of 100 Australian IT managers and decision makers surveyed have incurred an increase in costs under a managed services provider.
“That’s one of the highest figures in the entire region of Asia-Pacific — it’s higher than New Zealand, and the only place higher is Malaysia. Everywhere else, like Singapore for example, it's at 5 per cent,” said IDC Australia associate research director Dustin Kehoe.
“Some C-level [executives] want [ROI/TCO] within three months, six months, and most want it definitely within nine months… 44 per cent are saying costs have increased or costs have stayed the same. That means only 56 per cent have achieved cost savings.”
Kehoe said a “misalignment” and not being “realistic” in expectations are the main reasons for why cost reduction goals are not being fully met. He said it could be the doing of both the service provider and the customer.
“There’s some kind of misalignment between what [the vendor] is selling as a service provider and what the customer’s expectation is,” he said.
“It’s very difficult to deliver, even if you put it all in the cloud, any project that has, for example, a TCO metric of less than six months return. The way that most providers are able to map around this is to [decide on] a realistic time frame of a few years and within specific metrics."
However, this misalignment could be the customer's fault, according to Kehoe. He said that if price is the only criterion or one of two criteria an organisation uses to select a managed services provider, then this could potentially be a flawed model.
"In the short term it’ll give you the best price, but there are so many hidden costs behind that," he said. "If it's all about the transaction and price and squeezing your suppliers, then you will pay because the moment something breaks, the moment that you need to move, add, change delete… that’s when you are locked into a contract and the supplier plays the game of taking the money back.”
Despite the fact that nearly half of respondents had not achieved cost savings with their managed services provider, the survey showed that 75 per cent of respondents will increase their spending on managed services or spend the same amount in the next 12 months.
Kehoe said that investment in managed services is going to continue because IT departments recognise that they need to start freeing up their time to focus on innovation rather than ‘keeping the lights on’.
“IT is getting more and more complex and the more you hand off to a trusted provider the more things you can do strategically to focus on other areas,” he said.
Follow Rebecca Merrett on Twitter: @Rebecca_Merrett
Download the CIO Australia iPad app CIO Australia for iPad
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- The 7 Key Factors in Choosing a Mobile Device Management Solution
- 2013 State of the Mobility Enterprise Study
- Choosing the Right ERP Solutions to Support a Global Business
- Webroot slashes Royal Flying Doctor Service anti-virus scan time from 2 hours to 2 minutes
- Buy Vs. Build - Embedding Business Analytics Into SaaS or Cloud Applications
-
CIOs struggle to deliver timely mobile business apps: survey
-
Spiceworks' free management software gets integrated MDM
-
Opinion: Why national e-health is not for everyone
-
Opinion: Why national e-health is not for everyone
-
Opinion: Why national e-health is not for everyone
-
Detecting APT Activity with Network Traffic Analysis
Today’s successful targeted attacks use a combination of social engineering, malware, and backdoor activities. This research paper will discuss how advanced detection techniques can be used to identify malware command-and control (C&C) communications related to these attacks, illustrating how even the most high-profile and successful attacks of the past few years could have been discovered. -
Endpoint Security and Virtualisation
Besides form factor, virtual systems are not really that different than physical systems. They both use the same operating systems and applications. They both present users with computing resources such as RAM and hard drives. Consequently, the ability to exploit vulnerabilities in a physical environment will present a significant threat to virtualised environments as well. This paper examines the different endpoint security methods for virtualised environments and presents how Endpoint Protection security provides optimal performance, protection and manageability. -
NetApp FAS6240 Clustered SAN Champion of Champions
Storage systems today must match agility with diversified I/O performance to satisfy an enterprise’s changing needs. In their review, Silverton Consulting ranks the NetApp FAS6240 Clustered SAN, as an Enterprise OLTP “Champion of Champions.” Read the results of their benchmark testing and the features that impressed them the most.















