I worked with 2 DXC clients this year who had DXC as their IT supplier (although mainly just infrastructure these days). I didn't tell them I used to work for DXC, as I wanted to keep their trust. But I did ask diplomatic questions about the Quality of service they were receiving from DXC. You know, just out of personal curiosity. I would never offer any opinion on suppliers to clients, that would be unprofessional.
TBH, I can't say the clients I met were angry with DXC. No, I think they were more disappointed at DXC's apparent lack of innovation and lack of continuity. As the client told me 'its someone different every time there's a problem and you have to explain your business all over again'. One DXC client felt that DXC did not understand their business. They referenced 'some sales guy came in and within half an hour he was trying to sell us something without a clue about what we do here and what is important to us' That's the kiss of death with a client, when you don't listen and go off on a different tack that seems at odds with the priorities the client has just laid out for you.
Client #1 felt DXC is longer a tech leader. They know DXC is losing staff and feel DXC is there just to keep the wheels turning and the lights on, but they don't feel they DXC can help them with their IT strategic roadmap as they already have a Corp Risk indicating their fear of losing completive advantage in their industry and have seen no signs of innovation from DXC. As the client said to me 'they no longer see us as important'. I am not sure if this means that their contract is too small to keep DXC interested or whether they feel that DXC have enough on their plate with their own problems right now.
Client #2 told me they are likely not to renew their DXC contract, but to open it up to tender - they had a industry referenced tech consultancy in mind to assist with a move of Infrastructure and platforms to the Cloud. Why not DXC? I was told 'They (DXC) were making too many mistakes, some of them were our fault, but you can never get hold of them (DXC) these days and half the time you're talking to the US in the evening and India in the morning about something that I could drive down the road and probably fix myself in half the time'
To be fair, I've also heard similar about the other big ITO's (so DXC is not alone). I've noticed a lot of small tech firms suddenly explode and grow this year capturing the middle ground from the big players with exceptional skilled staff that make the big boys look like amateurs - as their attrition rates of 15-27% suggest they are all going through a rough time, yet the niche, smaller tech companies seem to be doing fine.
I am actually seeing a lot of investment in IT staff budgets again, not in ITO but in clients re-investing back into the IT teams again after Covid. Retail, service, manufacturing all seem to be building up the teams that were once scaled back. Now the focus seems to be all on DevOps, Information Security and Fraud specialists. Fear of ransomware and data breaches seems to have woken up a lot of CEO's who are investing again in cloud and security.
A good time to move.