Off-Prem

Channel

One of Blighty's most-loved charities hands £46m to one of Blighty's least-loved outsourcers

I'll take the National Trust and Capita for 100, Alex


The National Trust, one of the UK's largest charities and beloved of many a middle-class day-tripper, has handed a £46m contract to everyone's favourite outsourcer, Capita.

The deal is a five-year extension for customer experience services, which Capita has provided since 2009. That includes handling new membership, renewals and cancellations, as well as supporting the trust's holiday, fundraising, donation and event management teams.

Capita said it will work with the trust "to explore new opportunities to embed digital technology into the trust's customer experience operation" and "improve the service and choices available to members".

The outsourcer answers 800,000 calls, resolves 25,000 webchat queries and handles 220,000 emails for the National Trust each year, as well as delivering a range of back-office functions including letter and membership card printing.

Capita said it has helped the National Trust receive a customer satisfaction rating of 4.5 out of five. (Although perhaps not for those non-members who unexpectedly find themselves paying over £100 for a ticket for four to one of their sites. And that's not including the overpriced scones in the tea room...)

It follows the £32m, seven-year Capita contract renewal by the London Borough of Bexley for its revenues and benefits services.

Both extensions will be good news for the business, which is currently in the second year of a turnaround programme by CEO Jon Lewis, who has blasted his company for being "too complex" and "driven by a short-term focus".

In its half-year results in August, Capita reported a fall in revenue of 6.3 per cent to £1.85bn and a drop in profit before tax of 3.6 per cent to £31.2m.

Lewis said the contract extension will save money for the trust "that can be reinvested in protecting 500 invaluable properties and places across the UK".

The trust is not short of cash, with total income for 2019 reported to be £634m up from £594m the previous year.

In its annual report, the trust noted its investment in IT went down £7.1m over the last year. "Our strategy going forwards will be to invest 'little and often' in our technology to keep it up to date and functioning well, rather than a pattern of large cyclical programmes of investment." ®

Send us news
47 Comments

Cognizant alleges Infosys swiped its trade secrets

Sueball suggests outsourcer went out of bounds by developing competing product

Serco appoints former GDS leader Tom Read to digital leadership role

Read also served at UK's MoJ, where outsourcer paid fine over electronic tagging fiasco

Capgemini wins deal with UK tax collector worth up to £574M

Love affair between HMRC and French outsourcer set to last 25 years

It's make your mind up time as Atos sets deadline to pick rescue package

June 5 the day to opt for Onepoint-led consortium or Daniel Křetínský's EPEI

A million Australian pubgoers wake up to find personal info listed on leak site

Man arrested and blackmail charges expected after allegations of unpaid contractors and iffy infosec

Capita says 2023 cyberattack costs a factor as it reports staggering £100M+ loss

Additional cuts announced, sparking fears of further layoffs

Capita wins uncontested extension to mega millions Northern Ireland Education contract

Latest £33M awarded without competition in 11+ years contract that's now worth well over half a billion

Bank's struggle to replace Atos threw system back to dark ages

Costly project to switch supplier likely to continue into 2025, says watchdog

Capita scores £239M contract to manage mega public sector pension scheme

Cabinet Office clearly over Capita's breach in March that saw pension data exposed to criminals

Activists gatecrash Capita's AGM to protest GPS tracking contract

Outsourcer asked to take 'principled stance'

India's big four services giants soar on demand for AI

Pipelines are full, but hiring has slowed

Capita admits some pension data 'likely' to have been accessed in March breach

Weeks after outsourcer admits 'cyber incident' more warnings issued