Monday, October 12, 2009

IT firms bet on risk-reward partnership

Mumbai: The recent global slowdown and client pressure to share risk have led a significant increase in the number of deals based on risk-reward partnership. "In the past few quarters, many contracts were renegotiated. The new models are based on a risk-reward partnership, and pricing based on defined outcomes," said Karthik Ananth, Engagement Manager, Zinnov Management Consulting.

According to analysts, deals based on sharing risks are becoming a lot more frequent these days. "About a quarter of all deals with an annual run rate of $30 million or more are now being negotiated on newer pricing models," said a senior executive with one of the country's top-10 IT exporters, requesting anonymity.

Patni Computer Services' $40-million deal with the U.S. based Weyerhaeuser is said to be based on one such new model. HCL Technologies, which bagged a $350-million contract from Reader's Digest, made an upfront payment to it, as part of the promised savings. Pricing is set on a set of results or on the number of transactions, rather than on the number of man hours spent on a project.

"There are also pure risk-reward models for product engineering projects, where the vendor is paid based on how successful the product is in the market. A similar model has now emerged for large IT service projects, where the client initially covers only the costs incurred for the project. The rest of the payment to the vendor is a percentage of the profits," said Ananth.

Previous Post's: HP launches software to increase wireless revenue

LEGAL DECLAIMER

The content available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License and Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 India License. We're not responsible for any type of damages occured, while using of iEncyclopedia's content. For commercial content licensing, do follow the instructions in the Content Licensing Section to gain the commercial content license.

* * All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

© iEncyclopedia Society, 2013.