Pact's
end is among several pointing to new era in outsourcing
11:18 PM CDT on Monday, September 20, 2004
By CRAYTON HARRISON / The Dallas Morning News
Perot Systems Corp. divulged details Monday
of the final phase of its landmark outsourcing deal with
UBS AG, the latest major company to reconsider its technology
needs.
Plano-based Perot Systems disclosed in August that it expected
to lose the majority of revenue and profit from its UBS
contract when it expires at the beginning of 2007. The company
said Monday that it would work with UBS to phase itself
out but would still provide some technology work for the
financial giant after the original contract ends. Companies
have become savvier about outsourcing, choosing in some
cases to directly manage their technology rather than completely
hand big decisions over to a contractor, experts said. Perot
Systems shares fell 39 cents Monday to $13.86.
UBS' new technology strategy is similar to one J.P. Morgan
Chase & Co. decided to employ this year in dropping
its large outsourcing contract with International Business
Machines Corp. And General Motors Corp. has signaled that
it will spread its technology work among several contractors
when its deal with Plano-based Electronic Data Systems Corp.
expires in 2006.
Those decisions aren't cause for immediate alarm in the
outsourcing industry, since plenty of companies still choose
to work with technology services contractors, experts said.
But they do reflect the way companies are learning to more
closely control their technology operations, even when they
hire outsourcing firms.
"We may be reaching an inflection point in that there's
probably going to be a host of smaller deals and less of
the megadeals," said Ben Trowbridge, chief executive
of the Trowbridge Group, an industry consulting firm. The
technology services industry is still growing, but contractors
such as Perot Systems, EDS and IBM will increasingly be
handling smaller, more specific tasks, he said. The multibillion-dollar
deals that once ruled the industry will still exist, but
they could become rare and won't cede as much control to
the contractor, he said.
The UBS contract generated $242 million in sales for Perot
Systems in 2003, accounting for nearly 17 percent of its
revenue. The negotiations to end the deal won't significantly
alter Perot Systems' expected sales or profit from the deal,
which earned $44 million to $50 million each year for the
last three years.
The J.P. Morgan, GM and UBS contracts have turned heads
in the outsourcing industry because they were so big, forcing
contractors to discuss the renegotiations with their investors,
said John Funk, a Dallas attorney with Jones Day who works
with outsourcing clients.
Behind the scenes, outsourcing companies constantly have
to renegotiate their contracts with clients, sometimes expanding
their services and sometimes reducing them, said Mr. Funk,
who declined to comment specifically on the Perot Systems
deal because he has worked with the company. "These
relationships really do change over time," he said.
"Fully half the projects I have at any given time are
renegotiations."
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