The New Normal in IT. Gregory S. Smith
Читать онлайн книгу.the height of the pandemic in 2020 and according to researchers from Source Global Research, the global consulting industry “could lose 30 billion of value in 2020.”62 The research team goes on to suggest that the impact of Covid-19 on the global consulting world could be reduced by 19 percent from $160 billion to $130 billion.63 Revenue reductions by region include the following:
15 percent for North America from $78.7 billion to $66.6 billion
28 percent for Europe from $45 billion to $32.2 billion
12 percent in Asia Pacific from $24.8 billion to $21.9 billion
19 percent in Latin America from $5.1 billion to $4.1 billion
18 percent in the Middle East from $3.6 billion to $3.0 billion
14 percent in Africa from $2.9 billion to $2.5 billion64
Impacts on consulting by industry vary widely with energy, healthcare, manufacturing, public sector, and business services rating as higher risk than other industries that include financial services, pharma, retail, technology, media, and telecommunications65:
–25 percent for energy and resources
–12 percent for financial services
–28 percent for healthcare
–21 percent for manufacturing
–7 percent for pharma
–22 percent for public sector
–10 percent for retail
–29 percent for business services
–17 percent for technology, media, and telecommunications66
According to the latest research, the hardest hit services will be those where in which consultants' time and effort likely involves time at the clients' work place with travel to get there and back.67 On the other hand, work that can be done remotely via online meeting and collaboration tools, which include strategy, will be less affected.68 Also, larger multiyear projects that were initiated pre-Covid-19 will be less impacted as organizations are reluctant to kill large multi-year initiatives that align with either cost savings or revenue increases. Small, medium, and large projects that are not critical to an organization's near future success will be considered for shuttering, even if organizations have to pay a penalty to get out of those consulting agreements.
According to the latest Devex COVID-19 Trends Tracker survey of 560 development professionals from 113 countries, 39 percent of respondents indicated that “they or someone they know” lost their job in the year of 2020.69 Independent consultants seem to be the hardest hit with 43 percent of respondents indicating contracts were canceled or more difficult to land.70 Short-term contracts or consulting agreements that required travel and in-person meetings and workshops were affected worse than longer-term agreements.71 According to the head of a consulting firm that works in the Oceania sector, “three out of four consulting assignments were canceled or permanently suspended” as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic.72
Organizations that source staff and consultants will likely change as a result of the recent pandemic, because many organizations have figured out how to be productive with staff and consultants working predominantly remotely. I asked my CxO panel some questions regarding their sourcing levels, pre-Covid, currently, and post-Covid. I also asked about productivity during the pandemic. Their responses follow:
CxO Survey Question: Did you reduce consultants and staff in 2020?
80 percent responded with no change in consultants and staff employment.
20 percent responded that staff was reduced by 10 percent with overall consultants unknown.
CxO Survey Question: What percentage of hiring (consultants and staff) has returned to pre-Covid-19 levels as of today in first quarter 2021?
20 percent responded that staff and consulting reductions have not returned to pre-Covid-19 levels.
CxO Survey Question: When do you forecast hiring of consultants and staff to return to pre-Covid-19 levels?
20 percent responded that staff and consulting employment should return to pre-Covid-19 levels by fourth quarter 2021.
CxO Survey Question: Has employee productivity been impacted during the pandemic in 2020 and into 2021?
40 percent responded that employee productivity has been impacted by an increase of 11–20 percent.
20 percent responded that employee productivity has been impacted by an increase of 21–30 percent.
40 percent responded no change or no comment due to confidentiality.
CxO Survey Question: Will your staffing and sourcing strategy change as your organization comes out of the pandemic and returns to a more normal operating environment (assume 2022)?
60 percent responded that their sourcing strategy would change (yes).
20 percent responded that their sourcing strategy would not change (no).
20 percent did not respond due to confidentiality reasons.
80 percent responded that more than half of staff would work two to three days per week remotely.
40 percent responded that 75–80 percent of IT staff would work remotely two to three days per week compared to 50 percent for non-IT staff.
20 percent of respondents indicated that staff would work 5–20 percent of the work week in the office with the remaining time spent working remotely.
Yes. We will still look for folks (staff and consultants) in our area, but we are not limited on geography unless necessary for a client. This is a change from pre-Covid-19 in terms of willingness to consider the remote worker earlier in the process and as a viable alternative to being in a physical office.
—SHAUN POULTON, Chief Operating Officer, Edgewater Federal Solutions
Online Meeting and Collaboration Tools in Organizations
During the pandemic, organizations flocked to online meeting tools in larger quantities to accommodate a larger percentage of staff working remotely outside of corporate offices. The prominent online meeting tools include Cisco WebEx, LogMeIn GotoMeeting, Zoom, Google Meet, Microsoft Skype for Business/Teams, and BlueJeans. A recent report from MarketsAndMarkets indicated that the “global video conferencing industry is expected to gain traction” as a result of the Coronavirus pandemic “to connect with remote workers, customers, and employees at the same time.”73 Bans