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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 9 page paper discusses Affiliated Computer Services, EDS and IBM, and the types of services they provide to companies who are outsourcing some of their operations. Bibliography lists 11 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVUseACS.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
discusses Affiliated Computer Services, EDS and IBM, and the types of services they provide to companies who are outsourcing some of their operations. Executive Summary This report begins
with an introductory section that explains its purpose, which is to decide on which of three firms to use for outsourcing needs. It describes the industry and why companies
outsource their services, and then moves into a discussion of each of the three companies (ACS, EDS and IBM). It compares their services and suggests that ACS is the
best candidate for outsourcing; IBM is too large and EDS appears to be less efficiently run than ACS, judging by its financial reports. ACS is recommended as the company
to handle the outsourced claims. Introduction This report has been prepared in order to study the performance of Affiliated Computer Services (ACS), a company that handles outsourcing needs
of other corporations, particularly in billing. The report describes the industry and discusses the reasons for outsourcing; discusses ACS with regard to its financial condition, products, officers and its
overall health; briefly discusses ACSs two competitors, IBM and ECS; and summarizes the research and findings of the paper. Almost all the sources come from the Internet but several
are from magazines and journals. The Internet, used properly, is a sound and reliable resource, as long as researchers remember to use web sites that are reputable (almost all
print media have electronic versions, and many libraries make their collections available via electronic databases); and to identify the sites bias. (Any site that aggressively markets Christian books and
music is likely to be more conservative than one called "Atheists Party Hearty" (not a real site)). The point is, most sites have a bias and a researcher can,
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