Nordic telecommunications provider TeliaSonera AB has slashed the number of outsourcing partners it works with amid efforts to reduce costs and improve the quality of its IT services for business customers.
The company recently cut the number of partners it will work with in 2006 and 2007 to 14, from about twice that number. In the process it shed big names such as IBM Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. and brought in its first East European partner, Latvian IT services company Dati Exigen.
The strategy is part of a wider effort to reduce IT and other costs, partly in the wake of the merger that formed the company three years ago. While TeliaSonera doesn’t disclose its IT budget, observers estimate it to be about 1.6 billion Swedish Krona (US$203 million) per year.
TeliaSonera also aims to make its IT services to work by "telco standards," meaning they have to be available around the clock and work uninterrupted through equipment and software upgrades, said Ingmar Jonsson, the company's chief information officer.
IDG News Service talked with Jonsson at the company’s headquarters in Stockholm last week. Following is an edited transcript:
IDG: TeliaSonera has reduced the number of partners it uses for various IT services. Why?
Ingmar Jonsson: These were the framework-agreement vendors that we used to do our IT integration projects, but who also maintained our services. We have quite a large IT environment in our wholly-owned companies in Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland and Omnitel in Lithuania. We started with a lot of suppliers when the merger took place. We had a lot of legacy systems and suppliers with knowledge of them.
IDGNS: So you had both Telia and Sonera’s partners?
Jonsson: Yes, and there were our activities in the other fully-owned companies as well. We had a scheme of frame agreements for the last two years. We started with agreements with over 30 vendors, which is what various profit centers said they needed to work with. From the beginning we had a plan to reduce that to fewer, but to still maintain competition (among the partners). There was a plan to reduce those to around half, and we ended up with 14. That’s all we need.
We used strong players with a large local presence and a mix of companies that are based offshore, in India and the Baltic countries. Companies have emerged there (in the Baltics) of a sufficient size to work with us.
IDGNS: A lot of what your IT vendors have installed and are maintaining are classic back-office and administrative solutions -- billing, customer care and the like. But with telcos deploying new services like IPTV and wireless broadband, and applications for business customers, what are the IT challenges you'll face in coming years?
Jonsson: The general requirements are for us to be a service company and to make things simple for our customer, and IT plays a key role. So everything that automates and allows self-service is needed. The customer should be able to activate services anywhere, whether through the reseller or the mobile phone.
The other thing that affects IT heavily is that it has to be real time, it has to be open 24 by 7. If you upgrade a telecom system, you have to do it without any disturbance, and we are now putting exactly the same requirements on the IT system suppliers.
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