What CGI Group gets wrong in Telecommunications
CGI Group's approach to Telecommunications technology follows the same model that has driven their recent performance problems. UK NHS National Programme for IT: CGI (as Logica, then post-acquisition) involved in the £12.7B NHS IT programme that was scrapped in 2011 after a decade of failure — the largest abandoned public IT programme in history
Telecommunications technology operates under specific regulatory and operational constraints that generalist consulting firms consistently underestimate. Telcos targeted by 57% of all DDOS attacks. CGI Group's model does not account for the domain qualification required to navigate this environment.
Compliance in Telecommunications is not a consulting deliverable — it is an architectural constraint. CGI Group treats compliance as a separate workstream that produces documentation. The systems that result require significant remediation before they can survive an audit in a telecommunications environment.
What we deploy instead
Our telecommunications engineering teams are domain-qualified before they are assigned to an engagement. They understand the regulatory framework — GDPR and NIS2 — as an engineering constraint, not a compliance checklist.
Every system we deploy for a telecommunications client is compliant at the infrastructure layer. The architecture enforces the controls. ALICE validates compliance at every commit. The result is a system that passes audits because it was built to, not because documentation was assembled after the fact.
GDPR and NIS2 built into the architecture from day one — enforced automatically by ALICE at every commit.
Fixed-price engagements. Production system in 8-20 weeks. No discovery phase. No change orders.
Domain-qualified engineers with telecommunications experience. The senior engineer who scopes the engagement is the senior engineer who delivers it.
Full source code and documentation transferred at close. No licensing. No managed services dependency.
The compliance difference
GDPR and NIS2 compliance is an architectural constraint in telecommunications. CGI Group treats it as a consulting deliverable. We build it into the infrastructure.
What switching from CGI Group looks like
A typical telecommunications engagement runs 10-20 weeks to a production system. Team: 8-16 engineers, all domain-qualified. Fixed price. Full IP transfer at close.
Architecture review and scope definition. We review existing deliverables and identify gaps.
Scope locked, team assembled, first sprint underway. Working code from week two.
First production milestone — a working integration or system component, not a document.
Full IP transfer. Source code, documentation, operational runbooks. Your team runs the system.
Failed Vendor Recovery Playbook
Step-by-step framework for recovering from a failed CGI Group engagement — from emergency stabilisation through full re-platforming. 4-phase playbook covering stabilise, assess, transition, and normalise.