picture of mail sorting drum
Automatic mail sorting systems are set to go live in September

Royal Mail delivers changes

“Transform to survive” - ­ CIO addresses firm’s IT services challenges

Written by Angelica Mari

Royal Mail has reskilled half its IT department and retooled its 10-year outsourcing deal with supplier CSC to get a stronger focus on software development.

Central to the postal service’s £1.2bn change agenda is the rollout of a Siemens-supplied automatic mail sorting system scheduled to go live at its mail centres and delivery offices in September.

The platform is the backbone of Royal Mail’s service overhaul, which will be followed by a number of customer-focused initiatives such as minute-by-minute parcel and letter-tracking, and projects aimed at internal optimisation, such as telemetry and scheduling of staff, trucks and aircraft.

To support the demand prompted by the service overhaul and the legacy systems yet to be replaced, chief information officer Robin Dargue launched a business capability review which shed almost half the 300-strong permanent IT workforce but created about 100 new core IT roles.

“The goal is transform to survive ­ - it is that stark,” he said. “After establishing what we needed to do with technology, I asked myself whether we had the right mix of skills and capability to undertake this transformation.

“During the review, it emerged we needed roles we did not have ­ because we had never done anything this large ­ such as software architects, programme managers, security experts and business analysts.

“We identified some people to retrain and they are moving forward. Others perhaps were not up for it, so their career choices had to lie elsewhere. But if the core material is there, I will invest in the right talent.”

Royal Mail is five years into its 10-year outsourcing contract with CSC, which was reviewed late last year in relation to “monies Royal Mail wanted to pay for extra services and some services that were no longer required”.

Earlier this year, Computing revealed Royal Mail was tendering for up to £40m-worth of consultancy contracts to support its outsourcing deal with CSC. The move was triggered by “simpler consultancy framework agreements”, expected to reduce project timelines.

“We will see more activity around application development and CSC knows that,” said Dargue. “I like to have competition to ensure we have a range of great capability and partners. It is just sensible, and there is a lot to be done.”

reader comments

related articles

picture of robin dargue

Big opportunity comes knocking for Royal Mail's CIO

Robin Dargue plans to use his years of experience to implement Royal Mail’s ambitious initiatives 24 Apr 2008

 

Self-service system to streamline staff management processes

HR technology to manage 180,000 staff to be introduced over the next three years 24 Apr 2008

Unrest grows over treatment of Royal Mail IT workers

An IT department shake-up that has caused workers to suffer months of job insecurity is souring relations between managers and staff, and threatening to undermine the group’s modernisation plans 21 May 2009

Royal Mail goes hands-on

30,000 handheld devices will help van drivers capture delivery data 10 Jul 2008

Review 2008: Top 10 retail IT stories

We look back at Computing’s highlights in the retail industry in 2008 31 Dec 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

Habitat gets a web site makeover

The furniture retailer is revamping its online presence to provide a fully transactional web site. CIO Jacques Dekock explains why 02 Jul 2009

Government aims to bolster UK's cyber defences

Is the UK’s first national cyber security strategy up to the task of co-ordinating the country’s response to digital threats? Computing investigates 02 Jul 2009

Focus resources on what really matters

IT has become too caught up in the drive for efficiency, at the expense of business success 02 Jul 2009

From tracks man to tax man

Phil Pavitt, outgoing chief information officer for Transport for London, talks to Rosalie Marshall about the lessons he will take to his new role at HMRC 02 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

More available - click 'submit' to view

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you use social networking sites to look for a job?

Would you use social networking sites to look for a job?

Tell us what you think about job hunting through LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter etc

View poll results

Latest audio and video articles

network cablesVideo

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

green footprintsVideo

How to manage enterprise energy use - and the role IT can play

A panel of experts explore how firms can get to grips with their carbon footprint and make smarter use of energy 01 Jul 2009

Latest in-depth articles

Phil PavittAnalysis

From tracks man to tax man

Phil Pavitt, outgoing chief information officer for Transport for London, talks to Rosalie Marshall about the lessons he will take to his new role at HMRC 02 Jul 2009

UPS worker making a deliveryAnalysis

Global standardisation delivers benefits at UPS

Delivery giant sees benefits of central IT solution 02 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Primary Navigation