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MTS Allstream sells IT consulting wing to PwC Canada

MTS Allstream sells IT consulting wing to PwC Canada

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 12 Jan 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The deal will send a couple hundred employees, a handful of client contracts, and a non-telecom IT consulting business to PwC Canada, while MTS Allstream hopes to benefit with a stronger working alliance and the ability to put more focus and dollars into its core telecom services

PricewaterhouseCoopers Canada has purchased MTS Allstream Inc.’s non-telecom IT consulting business in a move aimed at rebuilding its IT consulting business.

 

In addition to a slew of client contracts, the acquisition will bring PwC Canada 180 new employees from MTS Allstream’s professional services consulting group, including those specializing in enterprise apps, IT management, systems integration, and project management.

 

The history behind the acquisition might actually date back to 2002 and a deal which saw IBM Corp. pay US$3.5 billion to buy up PwC Consulting and its 30,000 consulting professionals. The massive acquisition also came with a five-year non-compete clause, which ended in 2007.

 

Nigel Wallis, a research director for IDC Canada Ltd., said that with the non-compete agreements now expired, PwC’s global subsidiaries are working to slowly rebuild its consulting business through acquisitions.

 

“This isn’t the first time PwC at a worldwide level has done a deal like this,” he said, referring to PwC’s U.S. firm and its purchase of some of BearingPoint Inc. in 2009.

 

This time around, Wallis added, PwC is focusing on consulting services that complement its auditing, analytics and risk management work. “They’re looking to grab tech advisory people with skill sets in Oracle and project management,” he said.

 

As for whether PwC Canada can parlay the purchase into strengthening its client base, Wallis warned that many of the incoming contracts will be systems integration deals, which typically have a lifespan of six months to two years.

 

“That’s going to be their window to try and pitch them,” he said.

 

For MTS Allstream, the transaction is expected to bring the company back to basics, with a renewed focus on its core business offerings in unified communications and converged IP services.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.
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