Information Age: News, analysis & insight for IT & business leaders

 

Shell to send 30% of IT jobs to Asia

10 February 2006  

Embattled oil giant Royal Dutch/Shell is to cut up to 30% of its 9,300 IT jobs by 2006 and move many tasks offshore.

28 April 2004 Embattled oil giant Royal Dutch/Shell is to cut up to 30% of its 9,300 IT jobs by 2006 and move many tasks offshore to countries such as Malaysia and India.

 
 
 

Shell, whose IT operations are concentrated in the UK, the US and the Netherlands, says the move to send IT jobs 'offshore' forms part of an initiative aimed at raising efficiency and cutting costs.

This wider project includes standardising platforms and consolidating applications.

Shell is under pressure from shareholders to sort out its finances in the wake of its shock announcement in January 2004 that it overestimated the scale of its proved reserves by 20%.

The scandal has already claimed a number of senior executives, and IT staff in the UK are likely to question whether they are its latest victims.

However, the world's third-largest oil company said the IT cutbacks were unrelated to its recent accounting problems.

Indeed, Shell has merely become the latest organisation to send IT functions to lower-cost centres in Asia.

This is provoking anger among IT workers on both sides of the Atlantic. Earlier this week, a group of past and present IBM employees staged a protest outside the IT giant's annual meeting in Rhode Island, calling for the head of CEO Sam Palmisano. Among the slogans they shouted as shareholders arrived for the gathering were "Offshore the CEO!" and "America's future is not offshore!"

IBM has transferred a large number of IT jobs from the US to India, a decision that Palmisano was forced to defend at the meeting.

Palmisano said IBM was a truly global organisation and needed to "look at a global skill pool around the world."

Other proponents of offshore outsourcing say that it creates more IT jobs in the West than it eliminates.

The Information Technology Association of America, which represents more than 300 technology suppliers, estimates that around 104,000 IT jobs in the US were sent offshore in 2003, but 190,000 new jobs were created by "the incremental economic activity that follows offshore IT outsourcing".


Comments 

There are currently no comments on this article

People who read this also read...

IT Service Management

A familiar presence on high streets around UK and Ireland, Vision Express has firmly built the reputation of its optical business around the quality of its customer service. In order to keep to its promises, the retailer has always had to maintain high standards for its internal processes, hence the IT service transformation project which it initiated two years ago.

 
Central to this project was the implementation of service management software Sostenuto across the IT function as well as other areas of the business.

The new world service

Parts of the IT services sector are facing massive upheaval.

 
Advertisement

White Papers

Read article

Developing ios Solutions for Business

Whitepapers

Quickly develop and deploy custom iPad and iPhone solutions. With FileMaker Pro, iPad and iPhone solutions can be prototyped and completed in hours or days versus weeks or months. No iOS application programming or design experience is required.

Read article

IDC Spotlight: Access Control and Certification

Whitepapers

Read this brief for best practices on managing user access compliance.

Read article

GPS World

Whitepapers

Is the PREMIER global media brand serving the exploding world of positioning and navigation for OEM, commercial and consumer applications.

More
div class="banner">