Archive for the ‘Romania’ Category

CEE Outsourcing Industry Shows Growth in 2008 but will decline in 2009

September 21, 2009

According to the data provided in CEE IT Outsourcing Industry Review 2008 and 2007 issued by the Ukrainian High Tech Initiative, the outsourcing industry market value has increased by 2% from $2999 million in 2007 to $3056 million in 2008.

CEE outsourcing Review Figures Comparison

 

 Growth Dynamics

On the country level, the growth was not consistent. Ukraine, Romania and Hungary showed slight decline, whilst Poland, Belarus, Serbia and a number of other countries showed a considerable increase in market value of the outsourcing industry. Whilst overall in the region the IT outsourcing industry continued to grow in 2008, the reduction in rates and volumes was expected in 2009.  Already in the second half of 2008 there was a slight reduction of business activity by two to three percentage points, a significant reduction of 15-20% was seen at the beginning of 2009.

The cooling down of the industry growth is from our prospective a positive development, which offsets the accelerated price increases over the period of 2006-2007 fuelled not only by demand but also by cost of living, often reflecting the real estate boom in the region.

Prices
Revenue per professional 2008 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The report provides a consistently optimistic assessment of all of the Eastern European countries as cost effective outsourcing destinations. For example, the revenue per employee calculated on the basis of the figures provided by the report, shows very attractive equivalent hourly rates from $11 for Moldova to $23 for Hungary. This may reflect the lower prices on the existing contracts than the ones offered to the new clients. In our experience the price of outsourcing services are more attractive in the locations such as Ukraine and Belarus, than in Bulgaria or Romania, where the hourly rate have increased beyond the $30 per hour.

The report shows the maximum and minimum price per person per year for each country. For example in Hungary the cost of one man-year may ranges from $33’500 to $66’500 and in Albania it fluctuates from $25’000 to $48’000.

Summary

With the worldwide economic downturn outsourcing services are typically experience growth, offering much needed cost efficiency. At the same time the Eastern European outsourcing providers, especially small and medium size companies experienced revenue decline in the second half of 2008 and in 2009. Although the outsourcing market grew slightly in 2008 it has already shown decline of 15-20% in the first half of 2009 and will undergo a further decline by the 2009.

Outsourcing providers companies will have to implement drastic cost-cutting measures to remain profitable in the foreseeable future. Despite current difficulties, leaner organisation and more competitive pricing will position Eastern European region once more as an attractive outsourcing destination.

Further study needed

The report does not explain sudden growth or contraction on individual country markets, such as 25% reduction in market size in Estonia or 56% market growth in Croatia. We believe that an individual country study would be useful to explain such fluctuations to better understand the individual country dynamics. Source: CEE Outsourcing Industry Review 2007, 2008 Analysis: by goaleurope.com

The reports can be found at http://goaleurope.com/main?cat=6

Consolidation in Eastern Europe: Who is Still in the Outsourcing Game?

February 6, 2008

Here is my article which came out in February issue of the Outsourcing Journal.

For a long time the management of EPAM Systems, Eastern Europe’s largest software development company, was looking to enter the Russian outsourcing market. At the same time the labor market in Belarus, with a population of nearly 10 million and EPAM’s first offshore location, began heating up. So the need for new resources became more urgent.

EPAM management selected Vested Development (VDI), a Russian software development company headquartered in Burlington, Massachusetts. “We looked at a number of companies, but with VDI we knew each other for many years and there was a strong level of comfort,” says Arkady Dobkin, CEO of EPAM. VDI, founded in 1993, began life as an offshore software development company. However, since the beginning of 2000, the company has placed a strong focus on the Russian market.

Such is the picture across Russia: many software development companies have seen more success on the local IT market than abroad. The Russian economy, rich in natural resources, finally showed a need for the talented engineers back home. Besides, unlike publicly-listed Western companies looking to squeeze every cent of efficiency out of their outsourcing business case, privately-owned Russian businesses pay well to keep the best suppliers delivering the best results.

The growth of the IT industry in Russia has been remarkable. According to the estimates of Russian information agency RosBalt, in 2007 the IT market in Russia grew by 25 percent compared to the previous year; the market has maintained that growth rate for a number of years in the past. The increasing local market need for IT professionals, exceeding existing supply, resulted in the first signs of the industry consolidation.

Thus in 2007 one of the largest Russian system integrators, IBS Group, completed an acquisition of Borlas, a consultancy and IT services company. At the end of the year the company employed 6,000 people. Also, last year Systematica acquired systems integrator TopS BI. In the meantime Verysell, which employed 750 employees in 2007 and was valued at $300 million by Troika Dialog, raised $50 million to acquire an IT services company in preparation for an IPO.

Across other eastern European countries the fight for IT resources gets tougher. In Poland, the third largest country in the region after Russia and Ukraine, there are only a few large specialized offshore outsourcing service providers. In 2007, the total IT outsourcing market volume was 750 mln PLN (3.5 PLN = 1 Euro). Most of the key players, though, offer software development services to their international customers, accounting for approximately 45 percent of their revenue, although there is no firm statistical data, according to Andrzej Horodeñski, the spokesman of the Polish Chamber of Information Technology and Telecommunications.

“The Polish IT labor pool is close to being exhausted,” he says. “The basic reason for that is not labor migration, but mainly the internal IT industry growth.” Here IT companies merge to survive fierce competitions from the international giants such as IBM and HP. In 2007 Computerland merged with Emax to form 3000-people-strong Sygnity Group, and at the end of the year Asseco merged with Prokom, creating Poland’s largest IT company.

In Romania, where the country entered the EU on the first of January 2007, its outsourcing industry was simply sold out. U.S.-based Techteam acquired Akela, one of the oldest Romanian outsourcing companies; UK-based Endava acquired AGS; and Adecco bought IP Devel to expand its embedded development team. U.S.-based Computer Generated Solutions bought EasyCall, the largest Romanian call center operator, with 600 employees and Euro 1.8M revenue.

Also, in 2006 Adobe bought the Dreamweaver development experts InterAKT. Now, according to Vasile Baltac, the president of ATIC – Romanian IT association, there are few small outsourcing companies with Romanian capital left. Branches of ICT multinationals or joint ventures where the main shareholder is a foreign company produce 80 to 90 percent of the industry turnover,” he says. “All the big names are present in Romania now: Oracle, HP, IBM, Alcatel, and Siemens. Large multinationals number about 3,000 people, and they are very aggressive on the local IT market too.”

In Bulgaria the demand for software developers exceeds supply, and the local providers are fighting with Coca Cola, HP, SAP, and Siemens for the talent. VMware solved the problem with resources fairly easily. In 2007 it simply acquired its outsourcing supplier Sciant, a Bulgarian software development company with a lower-cost subsidiary in Vietnam; so Sciant clients had to look elsewhere to set up their operations from scratch.

Acquisitions of outsourcing companies have been happening across Eastern Europe. Exigen, the U.S. outsourcer, has been buying companies in Eastern Europe for a while. In its portfolio, for example, is Dati Gruppa, a Latvian IT company, and Starsoft, a Ukrainian company.

In Ukraine, acquisitions also started to take place although the country has still over a hundred small and medium-size players, with only a handful of them employing over 200 people. For example, Global Logic whose resources are based in India and the U.S., merged with Bonus Technologies, whilst Kharkiv-based Telesens was sold for $2.7 million to NASDAQ-listed TTI Telecom in December 2007. The purpose of the latter deal was to open up markets for both companies, rather than simply secure a resource base.

Tom Scharning, the Vice President of Business Development at EDB, a Scandinavian IT company, has conducted extensive research looking for infrastructure outsourcing capabilities in Eastern Europe. “We looked at both outsourcing and acquisition options. However, we didn’t find sufficient level of expertise in infrastructure management, only some rudimentary skills,” he says. So the company decided to acquire a company in the region and train specialists in house.

“We looked at many Eastern European countries such as Russia, Bulgaria, Poland, Belarus, Ukraine, Romania, and Baltic States. We found that only Russia and Ukraine fit the bill. We feared that Belarus, Bulgaria, and Romania will follow the steps of the Baltic countries where the resources became drained quickly and the prices reached those of Finland.” Eventually, EDB bought a majority stake in two companies in Ukraine.

“We had a long list of about 40 Ukrainian companies, some of which had high expectations of their valuation,” says Sharning. “So finally we made a deal with Infopulse and Miratech, which are now part of the EDB global operation.”

In defining its Eastern European strategy, EDB looked not only just at low-cost resources, but it has also followed the steps of its clients. “Scandinavian banks are the key EDB customers. They are moving eastwards towards Russia and Ukraine,” adds Scharning, so the company looked for the resource base nearby to continue supporting its clients worldwide.

The consolidation of the offshore outsourcing industry in Eastern Europe has become a reality, which demonstrates both the high demand for the local professionals, located close to the Western European markets, and the bottleneck of the labor supply. As for EPAM Systems, the acquisition was a success; it completed the post-merger integration in 2007. “As a result of the merger we’ve got interesting CIS clients, and now 50 percent of our resources are in Russia and Ukraine,” concludes Arkadiy Dobkin.

Lessons from the Outsourcing Journal:

  • As the consolidation of IT industry in Eastern Europe has started, the companies looking to secure IT resources in Eastern Europe need to look for the locations carefully, avoiding overheated labor markets.
  • Companies looking to buy an outsourcing supplier in Eastern Europe should look at additional benefits of an acquisition such as access to the new markets.

Germans in Romania and at Systems 2007

November 2, 2007

Last week I attended Systems 2007, one of the major IT exhibitions in Germany located at the massive Munich Messe. The two observations surprised me: a staggering number of ERP implementation companies in Germany and a stunning fluency of Romanian companies in speaking German. But forget about ERP.

Apparently, there are as many as 45 000 German speakers in Romania. According to Wiki, there are many different groups of Germans, the largest of whom have historically been known as the Transylvania Saxons. Germans once constituted a much larger portion of the Romanian population than they do today, though they are still the fourth largest ethno-linguistic group. In 1938 there were 700,000, and in 1992 there were 111,301 but the numbers are steadily on decline. Since 1989 Germans in Romania were represented by the Democratic Forum of Germans which functions in the German language.

On a separate subject. Whilst at the exhibition, I have conducted a short market study. Having spoken to over 20 representatives of German IT Mittelstand (many of them Geschäftsführers – Managing Directors) I learned that many are concerned about the quality of the code developed by an outsourcing provider, and prefer to keep the development in house. They believe that they retain a unique competitive advantage by doing so, as no one can do it better, or they rely on too specific a skill set to outsource.

Having lived in Germany now for over a year, I can see how much value Germans put on quality. It is almost impossible to convince a diligent German who takes pride in his or her work, that someone else can do the work just as good. A leading drills and saws manufacturer allegedly refused to outsource altogether for the same reason: “If we have managed to remain a leader in this field for so long, we must be doing something right”.

German market certainly represents an opportunity for the outsourcing companies. However it is a significant challenge for those suppliers that will have to break the wall of scepticism in what outsiders can achieve, fuelled by some negative experiences. But let’s start by speaking decent German first, shall we? Needless to say that we are now discussing collaboration with a number of Romanian companies who are already good at it.