Capita Group

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Capita Group Plc
Type Public (LSE: CPI)
Founded 1984
Headquarters London, England, UK
Key people Eric Walters (Chairman)
Paul Pindar (Chief Executive)
Simon Pilling (Executive Director)
Industry Business Process Outsourcing
Products BPO & service transformation
Back office administration
Customer service
Finance & treasury
Claims & policy administration
HR, staff support & training
ICT & software
Corporate services
Advisory services
Property & infrastructure
Offshore/near shore solutions
Revenue £1,738.5 million GBP(2006)
Operating income £225.1 million GBP (2006)
Net income £139.7 million GBP (2006)
Employees 25,000 (2005)
Website www.capita.co.uk

Capita (LSECPI) is a British company with its headquarters in London which specialises in business process outsourcing, having clients in central and local government, and in the private sector. In 2006 the company posted a profit before tax of £193.2m on a turnover of £1,738.5m. It has had a full listing on the London Stock Exchange since 1991 and has been a member of the FTSE 100 since 2004 when it replaced GKN[1].

Capita works across eight markets, being local government, central government, education, transport, health, life and pensions, insurance, and other private sector organisations (including financial services). Examples include television licence fee a contract won from the Post Office for the BBC; management of call centres for many government initiatives such as the London congestion charge; and provision of IT services, including web hosting and helpdesk support, to many county and city councils, many LEAs, the Driving Standards Agency and the National Rail (NCAA). Capita are also the developers of the SIMS schools information management software that is used in many primary and secondary schools across the country. With the impending change in the law that will allow commercial companies to offer legal services, Capita are now looking to get into this market with its formation of Optima Legal Services.

Despite continual claims of failures, Capita's share price has seen the biggest rise of any UK company in the last 17 years[citation needed].

Contents

Capita was formed in 1984 as a division of CIPFA (Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy), became an independent company with 33 staff as a result of a management buy-out three years later, and proceeded to return record results for 15 consecutive years. Having gained full listing on the London Stock Exchange in 1991, Capita is now a FTSE 100 company.

Year Sites People Turnover (£ million) Pre-tax profit (£ million)
1984 1 2    
1987 1 33    
1991 11 320 25  
1992 15 687 33  
1996 60 3,500 112 12.3
1998 80 5,000 238 27.1
1999 100 7,000 327 36.3
2000 120 8,500 453 51.2
2001 140 13,000 691 72.1
2002 200 17,000 898 98.2
2003 210 19,000 1,081 121.2
2004 230 23,000 1,282 148.6
2005 250 24,000 1,436 177.2
2006 250 27,000 1,738 193.2

  • One of the government facilities run by Capita is the Criminal Records Bureau; in 2002, when mandatory CRB-vetting of all workers with children was brought in, a large number of teachers were temporarily unable to work after Capita's systems had difficulty with the workload and were subsequently overwhelmed, meaning that the start of the academic year was delayed in places. Poor systems specifications and last-minute changes in government policy by the then Secretary of State for Education, Estelle Morris are believed to be major causes for these delays[2].
  • Capita also ran the, now defunct, Independent Learning Accounts (ILAs) which were supposed to give financial support to adult learners. The ILA scheme was scrapped after it went £60 million over budget. (Schools Scandal Hits Capita, BBCOnline, 05/09/02, [3]
  • The call centre based in Coventry which deals with the London congestion charge was featured in a series on investigative reporting by the BBC[citation needed].
  • Capita provide outsourced HR and Recruitment services for the BBC, though heavily criticised for transferring 260 jobs from London to Belfast[4]. The contract came into effect on 1 April 2006.
  • On March 23, 2006, Executive Chairman Rod Aldridge OBE resigned in the aftermath of claims that contracts awarded to the Group were influenced by his loan of £1 million to the Labour Party. Aldridge resigned saying that he denied the claims, but to avoid any lingering doubts about it, he was leaving the company. Aldridge is a life-long Labour supporter, and had overseen the company's growth from a £100 million company in 1997 (when Labour came to power) to a £4 billion FTSE-100 member in 2006 [5]. Several MPs and journalists questioned Capita's relationship with the Labour party, alleging a special relationship that their performance did not justify.
  • And a subsidiary, Capita Financial Administrators (CFA), was recently fined £300,000 for having poor anti-fraud controls by the Financial Services Authority. ('Capita Financial fined for fraud', BBCOnline, 17/03/06, [6]
  • Capita is a frequent target of the satirical magazine Private Eye due to its alleged record of incompetence and impropriety. It is often referred to as "Crapita" and "the world's worst outsourcing firm". Former chairman Rod Aldridge has specifically come under scrutiny owing to the loan made to the Labour Party which ultimately led to his resignation.

  1. ^ Capita set for return to FTSE 100. BBC News website. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
  2. ^ History of checks U-turns. BBC News website. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
  3. ^ Schools scandal hits Capita accessed 26/05/06
  4. ^ Unions threaten strikes over BBC's HR outsourcing deal. Personnel Today website. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
  5. ^ Capita boss quits over Blair loan. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
  6. ^ Capita Financial fined for Fraud accessed 26/05/06)
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