Off-Prem

Channel

Massive tech-for-British-schoolkids cash pot up for grabs as UK education buyers prep £140m agreement

It is Thursday and it's framework-tastic


Pheonix Software, Deloitte and Computeam are among the 17 winners sticking their snouts into a £100m pork barrel framework for outsourcing in the UK’s education sector.

The outsourcing deal was organised by the Crescent Purchasing Consortium and other public sector buyers including Education Authority Northern Ireland and North Western Universities Purchasing Consortium.

It is split into two lots, the first of which covers outsourcing of IT services including remote and on-site service provision for proactive and reactive support. This includes monitoring, incident managing, testing, fault fixing, backup and disaster recovery and so on. Also included are asset management and IT procurement, service integration and management, project management and IT strategy.

The second lot involves the provision of consultancy and design services “where a solution is yet to be defined.”

The tender document added: “The purpose of this lot is to attract independent consultants who can utilise expertise from a technical standpoint, offering objective recommendations to support a tendering process for an outsourced ICT service by working in conjunction with an institutions’ procurement staff."

With £100m on the table, it seems the buyers have the attention of the market. See below for a full list of winners.

Outsourcing
Computeam, Stone Technologies, XMA, Computer Systems in Education, CSE, Dataspire Solutions, RM Education, BCN Group, Sweethaven Computers, European Electronique, Adept Technology Group, Deloitte, PTS Consulting, Evr Consulting, New Networks, Phoenix Software and Novatia Services

Alongside the outsourcing arrangement, a group of public sector buyers have separately been awarded a £40m framework contract for networking equipment, storage hardware and cloud-based storage, again set up by the Crescent Purchasing Consortium, owned by buyers in the UK’s further education sector.

This framework will be split into three areas: on-premises, cloud and hybrid cloud, and consultancy services. The framework will also be open education institutions in Northern Ireland and the wider public sector. The on-prem hardware includes everything from switches, structured cabling, network security, network-attached storage devices and storage area network solutions right down to power systems and air conditioning systems, according to the award notice.

See below for the full list of suppliers vying for a slice of £40m.

Storage
Stone Technologies, CCS Media, Virtue Technologie,s Dell Computer Corporation, CDW, European Electronique, CAE Technology Services, ITGL, BCN Group, Phoenix Software, Ergo Computing, Novatech, Insight Direct, DTP Group, 3E Associates, Computeam, Softcat.

®

Send us news
11 Comments

Ransomware attack forces Brit high school to shut doors

Students have work to complete at home in the meantime

Database tables of student, teacher info stolen from PowerSchool in cyberattack

Class act: Cloud biz only serves 60M-plus folks globally, no biggie

No, Broadcom did not just end VMware's flagship VCDX certification program

Sure, it sent an email and FAQ saying it had – but that was a mistake, you see

Academic papers yanked after authors found to have used unlicensed software

Dam, the consequences

Arecibo telescope might have failed because of weak sockets

Electromagnetic radiation contributed to that zincing feeling: analysts

Parents take school to court after student punished for using AI

Claims their child will 'suffer irreparable harm' if the record stays

Brit teachers are getting AI sidekicks to help with marking and lesson plans

Isn't the education system in enough trouble already?

Mind the talent gap: Infosec vacancies abound, but hiring is flat

ISC2 argues security training needs to steer toward what hiring managers want

MDM vendor Mobile Guardian attacked, leading to remote wiping of 13,000 devices

Singapore Ministry of Education orders software removed after string of snafus

This uni thought it would be a good idea to do a phishing test with a fake Ebola scare

Needless to say, it backfired in a big way

Attacker steals personal data of 200K+ people with links to Arizona tech school

Nearly 50 different data points were accessed by cybercrim

Fresh version of Windows user-friendly Zorin OS arrives to tempt the Linux-wary

Adding extra shine to Ubuntu Jammy… with the lightweight edition to follow