Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Deccan Herald » DH Avenues » Detailed Story
Indian outsourcing industry punctured
By Jermy Kahn New York Times
Bangalore, India after years of being blamed for job losses in America
and elsewhere, Indias high-tech companies and outsourcing firms are
going through a downturn of their own. The global slowdown is forcing
them to reduce hiring, freeze salaries, postpone new investments and
lay off thousands of software programmers and call center operators.

While some industry insiders insist the global crisis will actually
benefit companies here, as western businesses seek to cut costs by
moving jobs overseas, right now the sector is gripped by an unfamiliar
sense of uncertainty.
"It's certainly not irrational exuberance," said Nandan Nilekani,
co-chairman of Infosys, one of India's best-known technology
outsourcing firms. "There is a lot of introspection about what does
this mean and when does it end."
The downturn is exposing a deeper concern: India has become the
world's front office, handling customer service calls, and its back
office, helping to process payments and run accounting and other
computer systems. But it has not yet become the head office -- making
major new products, pioneering marketing techniques or helping to
shape corporate strategy.

Rather than drowning the American technology firms or work forces with
a vast supply of cheap engineering talent, as some had feared, India –
and Bangalore, its Silicon Valley – have continued to largely serve as
the information economy's version of manual labor.

"Historically, when it comes to innovation, Indian companies are
relatively weak compared to the IBMs and Accentures of the world,"
said Partha Iyengar, the head of research in India for the Gartner
Group, which analyses trends in the technology sector. "It has been
their chronic Achilles' heel."

The recent coordinated terrorist attacks brought Mumbai, India's
commercial capital, to a virtual halt. But long before that brutal
shock, the country had been suffering the effects of the global slump,
losing capital as Western investors fled to the security of American
Treasuries, undermining Indian banks and company balance sheets.
Infosys recently scaled back its earnings projections for the year,
telling investors that it now expects revenue to expand 13 to 15 per
cent, instead of the 19 to 21 percent it had forecast and far below
the 30 per cent annual expansion the company had been used to.

Like many of India's outsourcing companies, Infosys is heavily
dependent on the financial sector, deriving a third of its revenue
from banks like Citigroup and Bank of America and other financial
clients. Its fate is also closely tied to the American economy:
Two-thirds of its business comes from the US. Neither factor bodes
well for the company's prospects.

Technology Partners International, a consulting firm that publishes a
widely watched index of global outsourcing deals, says its index is at
a 10-year low. "People think that outsourcing is a recession-proof
industry. It is not," said Siddharth Pai, a partner at the firm.

That realisation has changed the atmosphere of this city. Young
workers still flock to a rooftop terrace on Residency Road every
Wednesday night to grind to house and hip-hop music. But lately, the
crowds at NYKS, an upscale nightclub, are a little thinner. They drink
a little bit less. They talk a little less loudly. "Now they are
thinking twice before spending money," said Supreeth Chandrasekhar, a
25-year-old disc jockey at NYKS.
Mr Chandrasekhar also said that he used to perform at numerous
corporate events but that this business had largely disappeared.

In a country where most marriages are arranged by parents, the
downturn has even taken a toll on the matrimonial prospects of those
in technology outsourcing. "Because there is no job guarantees for IT
people, for the last six months brides' families have not been
accepting grooms from this background," said Jagadeesh Angadi, a
matchmaker in Bangalore.

The Indian National Association of Software and Service Companies
estimates that the country's technology sector will have created
50,000 fewer jobs in 2008 than last year, although it predicts the
sector will still have added 200,000 workers by year's end. India's
technology outsourcing companies have laid off about 10,000 employees
since September, according to the Union for Information Technology
Enabled Services, a labor group that represents technology workers.
Among the major players that have announced significant cutbacks in
hiring is Satyam Computer Services, which slashed its recruitment
plans to fewer than 10,000 from 15,000. Infosys, by contrast, has
almost $2 billion in cash on its balance sheet, a significant amount
that can help it weather the downturn. It said it intended to follow
through on plans to hire 25,000 workers this year.
"We made offers to people, and we need to stand by them," Mr Nilekani said.

But some companies that have hired recruits are postponing their start
dates. The deferrals allow companies, which once hired in anticipation
of future business, to better manage overhead by adding staff only
when they have confirmed projects.

A few so-called captive outsourcing operations – those that serve only
their parent company in Europe or the US – have also cut back.
American Express laid off some 200 of its 6,000 workers in India, and
Goldman Sachs announced last month that it would dismiss a similar
number, or about 10 per cent of its Indian work force.
For the moment, the industry has escaped large-scale job losses.
Indian labor laws make it difficult for companies to drop workers, and
mass firings can draw a political outcry. Yet outsourcing companies
have begun pruning workers, citing poor job performance, a way to
quietly reduce labor costs without attracting much public scrutiny.
The large outsourcing company Wipro dismissed 2.5 per cent of its work
force in the second quarter. Outsourcing companies are also shelving
expansion plans. Wipro, for instance, announced it was postponing the
opening of a major new software development center in Atlanta.

But India's business leaders see opportunity in the downturn. "Once
things settle down, people will start looking at their business
operations and how to make them more efficient, and that is where we
play," Mr Nilekani said.
Even consolidation on Wall Street, which may eliminate some Indian
companies' clients, could help Indian workers, outsourcing executives
say. Mergers require technical skills to integrate disparate systems,
and there is a potential for profitable outsourcing work in areas like
regulatory compliance. Banks are likely to be under stricter
government scrutiny given the sense that lax oversight contributed to
the financial crisis.
Quatrro BPO Solutions Chairman Raman Roy, says he has 300 employees
reviewing legal documents as part of bank mergers.

Copal Partners, a company that uses employees in India to help
investment banks do the sort of deal-based research normally performed
by the bank's junior analysts, has continued to expand even during the
downturn.
Critics say that will not change the local industry's basic
competitive disadvantage: a creativity gap with western competitors.

Indian technology companies are too focused on increasing the
efficiency of their internal systems, not improving their clients' own
industry-specific processes, according to Navi Radjou, an analyst with
Forrester Research. "They are having trouble tailoring a technical
application to a particular business need," he said.
But India's biggest tech outsourcing companies want to do as much as
their European and American rivals, including expanding in Europe and
the US. And the downturn may allow them to acquire talent – and even
whole businesses – on the cheap.

In August, for example, Infosys acquired the British consulting firm
Axon for $753 million. Wipro is said to be shopping for a similar
acquisition.

The changes may come too late for workers like Vikram Hathwar.
In July, Hathwar, a 22-year-old engineer, graduated from a technical
college with a job offer from a software developer.

But instead of starting his job -- paying nearly $6,000 a year, a good
starting salary in this country -- he has been waiting in vain for a
letter from the company telling him when to report for work.

"I called them and they said they would be calling two or three months
later, but still they have not informed me anything about when I
should start," Mr Hathwar said.

In the meantime, he has begun looking for a temporary job. But he said
most tech businesses were no longer hiring recent graduates. The few
that are have begun asking applicants to intern for several months
without pay and with no guarantee of a permanent position. "The
recession has made for all these pressures on us," Mr Hathwar said.
"It is very confusing to know what to do."
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Monday, December 29, 2008

Legal outsourcing set to boom
OUTLOOK 2009
Priyanka Joshi / Mumbai December 28, 2008, 0:19 IST

An Indian legal professional who takes home Rs 25,000 a month earns a
tiny fraction of the Rs 10,000 an hour that his counterpart in the US
earns.


But with Indian legal process outsourcing (LPO) industry poised to
increase it's hiring, amidst a whirlpool of cost cutting measures
being embraced aggressively by the US and the European firms, things
could change. Mathematically, this translates into 20 per cent rise in
salary packages of LPO employees and bonuses of up to 25 per cent to
experienced lawyers employed by various outsourcing outfits.

Bhaskar Bagchi, country head, CPA, leading provider of outsourced
legal support services and intellectual property management
specialist, claims that CPA would double its headcount from the
existing 500 employees, in the next 6 months. "We are targeting a
headcount of 2,000 employees by 2010," he said. Industry sources
assert that the average salary benchmark would follow the increase in
outsourced legal project revenues, which is rising at an average 30-45
per cent.

Numerous foreclosure-related assignments from US banks and law firms
have been keeping Indian LPOs occupied, besides the usual assignments
like indexing and coding to database maintenance, patent support,
contract review and management, litigation support and legal
compliance.

Most LPOs employ an eclectic mix of lawyers, paralegal professionals
and engineers for various outsourced functions.

Soumitro Chatterjee, CEO of Legal Circle, a recent startup and
subsidiary of the leading law firm Fox Mandal Little feels that salary
packages of experienced lawyers would get better by up to 30 per cent
in 2009. According to him, "As complexity and volumes of outsourced
legal work increases, lawyers from LPO firms would be the most prized
professionals leading to a compensation scramble among the growing
Indian LPOs."

Legal Circle is looking to hire 15 lawyers in legal and compliance
verticals, and expects the headcount to cross 100-mark by 2009 end.

Attrition rates are on an upward curve for Indian LPOs and most
players agree that employee benefits like bonuses and increments would
be the key retention tools in 2009. Average attrition rates in the
industry vary between 25-35 per cent. Bagchi says, "At CPA, we handed
out bonuses and increments, starting at 15 per cent and upwards. For
2009, we have a healthy orderbook and the benefits will only get
better for employees."

Printed from

Global meltdown catches IT firms off-guard
28 Dec 2008, 1226 hrs IST, IANS

BANGALORE: After nearly a decade of uninterrupted boom, the Indian information technology industry finds the road ahead bumpy as 2008 draws to a
close, with the global meltdown and financial turmoil in the US and other rich countries catching the otherwise resilient sector off-guard.


With no signs of early revival, even the top firms - TCS, Infosys and Wipro - are bracing for hard times in the year ahead.

A reality check of the industry by leading IT industry-specific publication Dataquest of Cyber Media shows that the Indian software services sector is set for a lower growth this fiscal due to declining IT spends by enterprises worldwide and a volatile currency market.

"The global economic slowdown is impacting the Indian software services sector as never before. With the US, Europe and Japan slipping into recession, demand for outsourcing and offshoring IT services will slacken over the next three-four quarters," Dataquest warned.

Though the software industry body Nasscom projected 21-24 percent revenue growth rate for this fiscal as against 28 percent in 2007-08, analysts fear the annual growth could decline to 15 percent by the end of the fiscal - the lowest in a decade.

Nasscom president Som Mittal said the growth rate target would now be reviewed in January, as the member-companies were in the process of furnishing fresh data to the representative body.

"We wanted to review the forecast in mid-December but could not do so as export and domestic firms are still assessing the situation. We will re-visit the numbers and give a revised forecast next month," Mittal told IANS.

A performance review of the top 20 Indian IT firms shows the projected growth rate of 28 percent may not be met.

"The slowdown is likely to last 12-15 months. New application development is expected to be affected the most. Smaller companies looking for funding are equally affected by the tight credit market, while the large outsourcing firms/IT bellwethers are sitting pretty on cash on their balance sheets," Dataquest said.

According to global technology and market research firm Forrester, slowdown in the technology sector will continue till the third quarter of 2009, while outsourcing growth will remain moderate till 2010.

"Slowdown will force companies to turn to vendors to help cut costs. Growth in IT outsourcing revenues will remain moderate due to the use of lower-cost offshore resources and smaller-scale outsourcing deals," Forrester said in its report "Outlook for the global IT industry".

"Unlike in the first two quarters (April-September), clients have put discretionary projects on hold in the third quarter. Decisions on new projects have been postponed to next year, as clients are busy grappling with the ongoing crisis," the report said.

Bearish sentiment in the US and British markets, which account for about 80 percent of the Indian IT export revenues, are compelling vendors to tap emerging markets.

According to Dataquest, the meltdown also impacted projects in the banking, financial services and insurance sectors, which contribute about 40 percent of software sector revenues.


"Coupled with recession, the prevailing negative sentiment is also affecting new projects in manufacturing and retail verticals, which account for 15 percent and eight percent of the total revenues," it added.

To sustain the growth momentum, albeit more slowly, Indian IT vendors are shifting to fixed price model from time-and-material billing model. Infosys, Wipro and HCL are moving away from billing customers by the hour to entire projects or in parts to maintain their profitability, as fixed price contracts give flexibility to drive productivity and protect margins.

In the second quarter (July-September), fixed price contracts accounted for 34 percent of the combined business of Infosys, Wipro and HCL, as against 29 percent in the same quarter the previous fiscal. TCS has been sustaining on fixed price contracts, which accounted for 44 percent in the last quarter.

The currency volatility has also compounded the woes of the Indian IT sector.

If a rising rupee in the last fiscal had dented export earnings, the steady rise of the US dollar against the rupee, British pound and Euro during the second quarter (July-September), impacted revenue realisation in dollar terms since 30 percent of the billing is done in these currencies.

"The sharp and sudden appreciation of the US dollar against the rupee by 5.5 percent, euro (13 percent) and pound (13.8 percent) in the second quarter had adversely impacted the revenue of Indian IT firms in dollar terms," Dataquest noted.

As a result of over-hedging in forward contracts, benefits of a weak rupee were limited. For instance, Infosys posted a market-to-market loss of $28 million (Rs.1.35 billion) on hedging $932 million for the entire fiscal.

Similarly, Wipro suffered a forex loss of Rs.280 mn in the second quarter on hedging $2.1 billion, while HCL took a hit of Rs.970 mn. On the other hand, multinational companies proved to be resilient.

"Having consolidated their presence in the hardware segment, thanks to a liberalised import regime and lowered tariffs, global brands such as Dell and Lenovo have outperformed their Indian counterparts even in these times of slowdown," the Dataquest report said.

Similarly, in the software segment, global majors like Microsoft and SAP registered revenue growth of 29 percent and 104 percent respectively last fiscal, and continue to grow despite the slowdown.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Where do I sign up for my H-1B visa?


Outsourcing firms warn of H-1B visa cutbacks

SEC filings show H-1B needs could be hurt by uncertain political climate
Patrick Thibodeau
 
December 17, 2008 (Computerworld) In filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, companies that use H-1B and L-1 visas are alerting investors that it may become more difficult to obtain them in the future. Some firms are also noting that they don't know whether President-elect Barack Obama and the new Congress will help them get adequate numbers of visas.

Bangalore, India-based Wipro Ltd., one of the largest users of H-1B visas, warned in an SEC filing shortly after the November presidential election that the "increasing political and media attention" directed at outsourcing may lead to legislation that restricts visa use or "imposes disincentives" to expanding offshore programs.

During the presidential campaign, Obama repeatedly promised to "stop giving tax breaks to companies that ship jobs overseas" and to provide incentives that help companies keep jobs in the U.S. Since his election, Obama has not unveiled a detailed plan for H-1B visas.

But Obama has nominated supporters of increasing H-1B visa caps, such as Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano, to cabinet posts. In addition, members of his transition team, such as Google Inc. CEO Eric Schmidt, have long been vocal about the need to boost H-1B limits. In fact, India's major high-tech trade group, the National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM), issued a statement the day after the election noting its support for many of Obama's policies, including expanding the H-1B program.

For some companies, visa numbers are substantial. For example, in its SEC filing, Infosys Technologies Ltd., also based in Bangalore, said that almost 7,000 of its employees held H-1B visas at the end of September. In addition, Infosys said that 1,500 of its workers held L-1 visas, which are used by multinational firms to transfer employees. A year earlier, 7,700 Infosys workers had either an L-1 or H-1B visa, the company said. Infosys also repeated warnings made in earlier filings that its "reliance on work visas for a significant number of technology professionals makes us particularly vulnerable" to changes in visa laws. Infosys is one of very few outsourcing companies that included specific H-1B numbers in SEC documents.

Smaller firms also said that legislation aimed at changing visa laws could hurt them. Pittsburgh-based IT services provider Mastech Holdings Inc., which has operations in India, said in in an October SEC filing that unless Congress "substantially increases the annual H-1B quota," its pool of workers could be reduced. About 40% of its U.S. workforce have H-1B visas, Mastech said, adding that it employed 619 consultants at the end of June.

Robert Meltzer, the CEO of VisaNow.com Inc., an immigration services provider in Chicago, said that many of the companies may be most concerned with potential legislation aimed at the L-1 visa, which has no cap. The H-1B cap is currently set at at 85,000, including 20,000 set aside for advance degree holders.

The L-1 visa gives companies a lot more flexibility than H-1B visas, Meltzer said. The companies may be concerned about potential rules aimed at limiting use of the L-1 visa, and imposing H-1B-like prevailing-wage requirements. "That could have a big impact on their business," he added.

At the same time, Infosy CEO S. Gopalakrishnan earlier this month told reporters in India this month that the company plans to scale back hiring because of the economic turmoil. The firm still expects to hire 25,000 people in the fiscal year ending next March, but it is apparently not setting targets for fiscal 2010. Infosys officials didn't respond to request for comment on these reports or on whether the hiring plan would affect its need for H-1B visas.

What is occurring in the outsourcing market during the downturn is, in some ways, paradoxical. The Indian firms say they see a softening IT services market, but surveys and anecdotal reports are showing that the need to cut costs may be spurring demand for outsourcing.

John Delaney, an attorney and co-chair of the technology transactions group at Morrison & Foerster LLP in New York, said that his firm is seeing increasing demand for outsourcing services even during the economic downturn. He cites an observation by a colleague that the "firm's sourcing group is as busy as our firm's bankruptcy group these days."

Delaney noted that interest in outsourcing is particularly strong in the media and retail industries, which had been slow to look to offshore services providers.

"The focus of today's outsourcing deal is almost entirely on saving money," said Delaney. Clients also wants deals completed quickly and are showing more interest in China, which promises greater cost savings over India, he said. The Indian firms may be feeling a pinched on the H-1B cap because of the trend to put more of their workers in the U.S., in order to strengthen relationships with client and project governance, he said.

Meanwhile, U.S. IT services providers are also shifting work overseas without the reliance on H-1B visas that Indian-based firms have. For instance, Dallas-based Affiliated Computer Services Inc., which only needed three H-1B visas in 2007, announced last month that it plans to move "more complex, higher-paying" jobs to other countries.
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Palestine promoted as outsourcing destination

Offshoring could help to stabilise Middle East region

Rosalie Marshall, vnunet.com 18 Dec 2008

UK trade body Intellect held an event on Tuesday at Yahoo's London offices to discuss how companies can be encouraged to offshore their services to Palestine.

The event took place in the midst of a two-day Palestine Trade and Investment Forum (PDF) intended to promote Palestinian economic development by giving UK companies an overview of investment opportunities in sectors including construction, tourism and ICT.

Speaking at the forum, business secretary Peter Mandelson urged businesses to consider Palestine as a trade and investment partner.

"The UK's commitment to peace in the Middle East must not be weakened by economic difficulties," he said. "Growth of the Palestinian economy is crucial for driving forward change for the better."

Tom Wills-Sanford, Intellect deputy director, echoed the government's remarks to vnunet.com following the Palestinian ICT day which attracted 12 Palestinian business attendees.

"The general objective is to initiate a platform that will create outsourcing opportunities between the UK and Palestine and create a thread of the peace process," he said.

"In Palestine there is a young energetic industry that is able to make a contribution to outsourcing."

Wills-Sanford acknowledged that the lack of "mega outsourcing players" created "certain issues", but stressed that the region had the potential to develop.

He added that the main obstacle to overcome before businesses think seriously about investment in Palestine is the "perception problem".

"We are talking about business in the West Bank not the Gaza Strip," he said.

Wills-Sanford mentioned the names of companies that already provide services from the West Bank city of Ramallah, including BCI, Exalt, ASAL and Hulul.

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From Network World:

This story appeared on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/121808-offshoring--outsourcing-in-2009.html

Offshoring & Outsourcing in 2009: What Does the Future Hold?

By Stephanie Overby , CIO , 12/18/2008
Sponsored by:

All things considered, 2008 was a relatively stable year for the IT services industry. Deals got smaller and shorter, but they grew in number. The second tier providers and Indian vendors did well, along with Accenture and IBM Global Services. The outlier was EDS, where weakness led to its acquisition by Hewlett Packard.

IT outsourcing providers were largely unscathed by the economic downturn throughout much of the year. "It took almost two quarters for the effects of the slowdown to manifest in providers' financial statements," says Eugene Kublanov, CEO of San Ramon, Calif.-based outsourcing advisory NeoIT. By the end of this year, however, CIOs became too distracted by the economic destruction surround them to do any outsourcing deals. "As the markets crumbled and CIOs were confronted with the prospects of their personal employment, naturally, decision-making around strategic cost cutting and efficiency took a back seat," says Kublanov.

That's all poised to change in 2009. The only problem is, that may be bad news for both IT services providers and their IT leader customers.

Back to the Future: More-Not Better-Outsourcing

"Whenever there's a downturn people outsource more, not less," says Gartner analyst Linda Cohen. "Organizations want to take costs out wherever they can. CFOs are pounding on their CIOs to just outsource it, just offshore it."

"The difficult economic conditions will push companies further than before to consider what stays in house and what gets done by others," agrees NeoIT's Kublanov. "Additionally, demands by the business for further cost reduction will need to be addressed in an environment where many companies have already leveraged labor arbitrage to source the low hanging fruit."

CIOs may sign hasty deals for a short-term returns. In a case of what Cohen calls "convenient amnesia," IT leaders may forget all the lessons they learned rushing into bad outsourcing arrangements and chasing elusive benefits. "Everyone has a gun to their head right now," she says. "But the financial voodoo of outsourcing deals doesn't work. You have to accept the reality that if you hand your mess over to a vendor, you're going to eventually have to pay for that burden they take off your plate. You can pay it now or pay it later, but you're going to have to pay."

Bad deals can lead to degradation in service performance and price increases down the line. Smart buyers will ask for shorter term lengths, but in times of economic pressure rational thinking is hard to come by. "People do bad deals for short-sighted reasons," Cohen says. "We've seen it before and we'll see it again."

For Vendors: Pain at the Margins

Service providers will be only too happy to sign on any new business in 2009. "They're chasing the albatross of quarter-to-quarter earnings," says Cohen. Outsourcers may do anything for revenue, even if it's outside of their sweet spot. It'll be like 2001 all over again. "It looks like good revenue, but in the later years, the provider starts to see profit problems," says Cohen. Then the customer starts getting his "A" team replaced by a "D" team, prices creep up, everything is a change order."

Providers with cash will be king, giving Indian vendors the upper hand. They may try to buy up second-tier companies in the U.S., Europe and Asia, or buy into deals at a discount, just to get a foothold in the U.S. They will even buy up customer assets, something they've been unwilling to do in the past. "They'll do anything for cash," says Cohen. But as with any other contract, "a deal that looks too good to be true will read better than it lives."

But the offshore providers will face the additional pressure on their margins as the dollar continues to depreciate.

Outsourcing Innovation: Transformation? What Transformation?

Remember all that talk about how an IT services provider could be your partner in innovation? Forget about it.

"The focus will shift away from open-ended efforts," says Stan Lepeak, research director of outsourcing consultancy EquaTerra. "Buyers will not have much appetite for transformation in 2009."

"Innovation or big solution implementations will slow down dramatically," agrees Cohen, "unless you prove I'm going to get back in cost improvements a lot more than I put out and it would have to be a pretty rapid ROI for any transformation."

One Bright Spot: The Sustainability of Green

Although outsourced innovation will be set aside in 2009, the greening of IT outsourcing deals will not... if only because sustainability can mean cost savings. "Purely environmental desires will take a back seat to explicit cost savings desires," says Lepeak of EquaTerra. "But green that hits the bottom line will flourish."

The only question is-who will see that benefit on their bottom lines?

"There will be a push by buyers on service providers to lower their cost of operations by employing green techniques and pass that savings on to the buyer," says Cohen. "Service providers are trying to go green for own profitability. Buyers will push for that to become a cost improvement for themselves rather than a profitability and performance for the vendor."

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Harris assists State with outsourcing services

12/18/08 -- 11:52 AM
By David Hubler

Sponsored By

Harris Corp. will provide outsourcing services to the State Department under a three-year task order that has a potential value of $8 million.

The award calls for Harris to provide desktop support, help desk support, knowledge management, training and asset management services for up to 37,000 desktops at 28 offices of State's Bureau of Information Resources Management.

The contractor provides similar IT support services to several State Department bureaus.

Harris is a member of Pragmatics Inc.'s team, which was selected by the department to execute the Vanguard 1.0 program. The program launches the IT consolidation initiative within State's Information Resources Management bureaus, said Wayne Lucernoni, vice president of civil federal operations at Harris IT Services.

Pragmatics, of McLean, Va., awarded the task order to Harris under its $99 million Hybrid IT Services for State contract that was announced in September. It is expected to be the first in a series of IT consolidation initiatives planned at State, Harris officials said.

Harris, of Melbourne, Fla., ranks No. 13 on Washington Technology's 2008 Top 100 list of the largest federal government prime contractors.