ict in the uk public sector defence market march 2007
TRANSCRIPT
ICT in the UK public sector defence market
March 2007
ICT within the UK Defence market
1. International View
UK public sector defence market
1. Structure
2. Key drivers
3. Key initiatives
4. Procurement
5. ICT market forecast
6. ICT outsourcing
International view
European Defence market - total size For 2007 the following European members of Nato are forecast to spend
€224bn on defence.
• Facing challenges of coalition warfare;• Implementing Allied Ground Surveillance Project to provide
interoperable network centric system.
• Trying to establish role, but conflicts with Nato, who will win?• The European Capability Action Plan is responsible for developing
Istar capabilities
European Defence Agency
• Seeking mutual benefit from an enlarged and common procurement market;
• Non binding approach makes this hard to enforce.
European Defence market – main drivers
European Procurement Policy
Nato
• Looking to exploit markets outside of their domestic territory;• Weakness in mid tier market due to strength of Primes;
Suppliers
UK public sector defence market structure
UK Ministry of Defence objectives The objectives of the Ministry of Defence (MoD) are to bring together maritime,
ground and air components into coherent joint forces under a unified command fully capable of achieving the government’s strategic objectives.
It must deliver appropriately motivated, manned, trained and equipped force packages, at the required level of readiness, and with the necessary support, sustainability and deployability, to achieve the full range of agreed military tasks.
The military has a history of organising its armed services according to air, sea and land operations, but the current ethos is to work as an integrated unit.
This has obvious implications for organisation structure, and for the technologies used to communicate and share information.
Functions, such as equipment acquisition, policy definition, and planning and resource allocation are provided by the support functions across the three services
UK Ministry of Defence hierarchy Ministers are supported by the top management of the MoD, headed
jointly by the Chief of Defence Staff and the Permanent Secretary
The Defence Management Board acts as the executive board of the MoD, providing senior level leadership and strategic management of Defence. It is responsible for:
the role of Defence - providing strategic direction, vision and values; objectives and targets - establishing the key priorities and defence
capabilities necessary to deliver the MoD's Departmental objectives; resource allocation and strategic balance of investment to match
defence priorities and objectives; and performance management - managing and driving corporate
performance
UK Ministry of Defence top level budget holders structure
Commander in Chief Strike
Chief of Joint Operations
Commander in
Chief LandFleet
(Includes Chief of Naval Personnel)
Personnel & Training Command
Central
Adjutant General
Defence Equipment & Services*
Defence Estates Science, Innovation & Technology
GOC NI
Operations and Front Line
Personnel
Acquisition
And Support
Most defence activity is managed through Top Level Budget (TLB) holders
The Permanent Secretary delegates power over financial, personnel and property resources to each TLB.
UK public sector defence key drivers
UK Ministry of Defence key drivers ICT investment drivers and inhibitors
Network Enabled Capability
Force modernisations / capability change
Ongoing operational commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan
Technology developments
Continuing integration of back office systems
Shared services programme
The Comprehensive Spending Review 2007
Strength of supplier base
Internal focus on change
Increase in the number of overseas operations
Poor procurement across large programmes
Ongoing recruitment shortage
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UK public sector defence initiatives
UK Ministry of Defence - transformation There are three main themes to the
transformation program;
1. improving military effectiveness – the effect that armed forces and military systems can deliver;
2. efficiency improvements – spending money wisely, making savings and focusing funds on “front line” capabilities, and;
3. exploiting technology – to improve everything from communication to strike capability
Implications of the transformation program include;
new force structures and enhanced networking;
delivering efficiency savings; delivering new capabilities to time and to
cost; planning effectively for the introduction of
new capabilities; Identifying changing needs for future skills
and capacities; improving the professionalism with which
all aspects of activity are conducted, and; research and development in new
technologies that might be needed to meet future needs
UK Ministry of Defence - efficiency programme Split between -
Corporate services – covering
military Human Resources; civilian Human Resources; finance; estates; information infrastructure, and; Defence Logistic Organisation
enabling infrastructure.
Logistics – covering
Defence Logistics Transformation Program, and;
Whole Fleet Management.
Examples of efficiency programs -
Procurement - Procurement Reform, and; Defence e-Commerce Service.
Organisation and relocation - Further reductions in Head office; The relocation of defence activity out of London.
Force structure - A shift in emphasis from heavy to light and
medium weight forces in the Army, and; Reorganisation of Ground Based Air Defence.
Manpower - Comprising reductions in manpower to reflect the
improvement programmes, and; Productivity comprising increases in the
proportion of military personnel fit-for-task.
UK Ministry of Defence - change programme The twelve most important change initiatives are included in the Defence Change
Programme and cover - Defence Logistics Transformation Programme; Defence Information Infrastructure; Estates Modernisation; Defence Training Review Transformation; Joint Personnel Administration; Defence Health Change Programme; Broadening Smart Acquisition; Acquisition for Network Enabled Capability; Whole Fleet Management; Fully Serviced Infrastructure; People Programme, and; UK Military Flying Training System.
The Defence Change Programme is directed by the Change Delivery Group, reporting to the Defence Management Board and Ministers.
UK Ministry of Defence - shared services Leads in the shared services agenda due
to the size and scale of the back office systems and process required to support a staff level of 300,000 across more than 25 countries.
Shared services objectives; focused on the realisation of cost
savings and increasing effectiveness of current resources, and;
planned reductions in headcount of 15,000 staff to release £300m of savings annually
To date; consolidation of transaction and
infrastructure functions into shared services centres;
estate rationalisation; improved strategic oversight, and; improved business process.
Going forward the MoD will focus on –
human resource (Civilian) - a unified People Service Centre;
human resource (Military) – a comprehensive, triService personnel administration system;
finance – the simplification of financial processes along with a greater focus on collecting and analysing the costs that managers actually control and that inform better decision making;
estate – an estate of the right size and quality;
ICT – a secure and coherent Defence Information Infrastructure (DII), and;
commodity procurement – using a single set of procurement processes and a common set of en-enablers
UK public sector defence procurement
UK public sector defence procurement
In 2005/06 the MoD placed nearly 26,000 contracts with a collective value of approximately £18.2bn.
Of this an estimated 97% are for contracts worth less than £100k
The number of contracts placed decreased between 2004/05 and 2005/06, but the value increased by nearly £3.4bn (22.5%) over the same period.
Of the total MoD contracts placed, 60% were priced through an open competition process.
UK public sector defence procurementmodels and approaches The MoD is adopting a more flexible approach to procurement.
Change has centred on creating a procurement system which has a greater focus on support, sustainability and incremental enhancement of existing capabilities.
The policy has opened up the number of procurement models for the MoD, which include;
commercial off-the-shelf offerings, including the competitive purchase of proprietary products; competitive development/production/in-service support; non-competitive procurement (with or without development); collaboration/international collaboration; cooperative development with Industry in a jointly funded programme; incremental acquisition; partnering and alliancing; public/private partnering and private finance initiative; hiring/leasing; enabling arrangements, and; contracting with MoD agencies.
UK public sector defence procurementdefence acquisition change programme The MoD has embarked on a change programme in the way in which it organises its internal
procurement procedure, developed from the Defence Acquisition Change Programme;
Fundamental to this change has been the creation of a unified customer model, and from April 2007, this will be supported by a single procurement and support organisation, the Defence Equipment and Support (DE&S).
The new organisation will structured around three “pillars”, or sections – the capability pillar; the customer-facing pillar, and; the corporate pillar.
All of this is set within a central framework covering policy, financial and planning.
The key participants in the new unified customer model are expected to be; the sponsor, who leads the capability change programme to achieve policy goals within
allocated resources; the DE&S, to deliver equipment and support, and; the end user.
UK public sector defence ICT market forecast
UK public sector defence ICT forecast
Expenditure is expected to level out due to;
completion of some major equipment programmes, but;
delay in taking some equipment programmes to main gate point is a concern;
there are areas of growth associated with software and communications and consolidation of back office systems.
• Total ICT expenditure will slow down from £2.04bn in 2005/06 to £1.98bn in 2009/10.
UK public sector defence product expenditure forecast• Spending likely to be
erratic.
• Highest growth in Communications (5.5%) expenditure reflects major investments in the underlying infrastructure to support NEC.
• Slowdown expected in In-house staff (-3.6%) due to move to more outsourcing
Combined Total (£m) 2005/062006/0
7 2007/082008/0
92009/1
0 CAGR
Hardware 375.2 376.9 353.6 338.9 340.4 -2.4%
Year on year growth 0.5% -6.2% -4.2% 0.4%
Software 294.6 286.0 300.9 315.4 305.4 0.9%
Year on year growth -2.9% 5.2% 4.8% -3.2%
Services 1083.3 997.4 1039.3 1061.6 1017.9 -1.5%
Year on year growth -7.9% 4.2% 2.1% -4.1%
Communications 185.7 186.2 212.1 227.7 230.3 5.5%
Year on year growth 0.3% 13.9% 7.4% 1.1%
In-house staff 101.5 106.6 88.9 68.4 87.8 -3.6%
Year on year growth 5.0% -16.6% -23.1% 28.4%
Total 2,040.2 1,953.0 1,995.0 2,012.1 1,981.8 -0.7%
Year on year growth -4.3% 2.2% 0.9% -1.5%
UK public sector defence top level budget ICT expenditure forecast
Top Level Budget Holder Total Spend 2006/07 (£m)
ICT Spend 2006/07 (£m)
Percentage of Total ICT Expenditure
ICT Spend over Total Expenditure
Strike Command £3,729.7 £26.3 1.34% 0.08%
Land Command £6,290.0 £45.9 2.35% 0.14%
Commander in Chief Fleet £4,193.2 £23.3 1.19% 0.07%
Chief of Joint Operations £518.5 £21.1 1.08% 0.07%
Adjutant General £1,807.1 £50.8 2.60% 0.16%
RAF Personnel & Training Command
£926.5 £9.6 0.49% 0.03%
Defence Logistics Organisation £7,317.0 £456.7 23.38% 1.42%
Defence Procurement Agency £2,460.0 £1,146.2 58.69% 3.55%
Central £3,320.2 £107.7 5.51% 0.33%
Trading Funds £1,436.0 £65.6 3.36% 0.20%
Departmental unallocated provision £263.0 N/A N/A N/A
Total £32,261.2 £1,953.1 100.00% 6.05%
Back Office
Equipment Programmes
Hardware
Desktops
UK public sector defence product opportunities
Software Services Comms
Laptops
Off-the-shelf
Development tools
Database SW
Operating systems
Off-the-shelf
Support & training
Maintenance
BPO / MS
Maintenance
Data services
Mobile
Data services
Mobile data
Desktops
Servers
UK public sector defence ICT outsourcing
UK public sector defence ICT forecast In 2006/07 the annual value of ICT
and Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) spend for defence is £753m, and this is forecast to grow to £785m in 2009/10, a CAGR of 1.3%.
IT represents the largest segment by expenditure within the outsourcing market place, due mainly to one contract, the Defence Information Infrastructure (Future) (DII(F)).
Future growth areas; development of the managed
services segment; growth in the BPO segment; communications, and; estate consolidation and training.
UK public sector defence ICT suppliers Supplier market share;
EDS is the biggest winner from the outsourcing trend, in 2006/07 EDS is estimated to account for 34% of the total ICT related outsourcing business;
the ICT and BPO sector is dominated by small number of contracts, and the MoD prefers to procure ICT and BPO outsourced equipment and services via prime contractors.
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