Offshore Outsourcing: India Optimistic Despite Global Financial Crisis

With America’s economy in crisis, it would seem that India has a lot to worry about. The country’s annual revenues from outsourcing exceed $40 billion, and a downturn in the U.S. economy could damage India’s outsourcing industry.

But at the India Economic Summit in New Delhi this week, Indian officials and corporate executives remained optimistic about the future of outsourcing.

Montek Ahluwalia, Deputy Chairman of India’s Planning Commission, predicted that India’s economic growth for 2008-2009 will be between seven and nine percent. That’s good for the country, Ahluwalia said in a press release.

“Even if you take growth at 7 percent, it is 2 percent less than what we have had but still higher than what we had four years ago,” he said in the statement. “This is not an Indian crisis. We are being impacted by a global crisis.”

Indian media has also written a great deal about President-elect Obama’s stance on outsourcing. One quote in particular has been repeatedly cited by Indian newspapers as an anti-outsourcing sentiment. During a debate with Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) during the primaries, Obama said, “We have to stop providing tax breaks for companies that are shipping jobs overseas and give those tax breaks to companies that are investing here in the United States of America.”

However, Indian officials remain optimistic—at least in public—about the country’s outsourcing future.

“Barack Obama’s plans to cut down on outsourcing does not pose a threat to the Indian IT-BPO [business process outsourcing] industry,” said Ganesh Natarajan, chairman of the National Association of Software and Service Companies, in an article in the International Business Times. “Our expertise in several areas of outsourcing will always attract new projects from the US.”

Infosys, one of India’s outsourcing titans, is predicting a 13-15 percent growth next year, according to the Financial Times. The company has no plans to scale back, and is committed to keeping the 25,000 new hires it made this year, adding to its workforce of 100,000, said S. Gopalakrishnan, the chief executive officer of Infosys in the Financial Times report.

Still, he admitted that times were tough. This downturn is far worse than the 2001 dot-com bubble burst, he told the Times.

“It is different, it is probably worse. It is not restricted to one segment or one sector or one region,” he said in the article. “It impacts all sectors and the uncertainty is prolonged.”

By Sindya Bhanoo
Source From: cio.com

How Far Can Outsourcing Go?

I notice I mentioned Cognizant in my last blog. Without meaning to start mentioning them every day, I just want to recount a few comments made when I had a chat to Martin Kochman today. Martin is the head of Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) operations for Cognizant in Europe and we had a chat on the phone earlier about some of the changes in the BPO sector.

What was particularly interesting were some of his views on the hard times faced by many companies as we head into recession. Martin remains very positive about the business outlook for the BPO sector as a whole. He said: “I still think that the total size of the market is growing, but we may see a slowing in the rate at which earlier growth targets are met. The fundamentals are still in place for this to be a significant market.”

He added: “Cost reduction will always drive some activity, but the boundaries between what organisations have considered ‘outsourcable’ will continue to be pushed and more is going to come into the realms of outsourced contracts.”

Martin clearly believes that the retained organisation is going to shrink. This implies that as times get harder, companies may even be exploring the outsourcing option even more than usual. In summary, Martin thinks it’s going to be a busy time for companies in IT and BPO services: “The market will grow. On the demand side there is more global recognition of the skills and standards required and so things like Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO) are becoming easier to package up and deliver remotely.”

Source from: Markkobayashihillary.computing.co.uk/2008/11/how-far-can-out.html

IT Outsourcing Giant to Set Up New Center

US software outsourcing company CSC, one of the world’s largest IT outsourcing firms, said yesterday it will launch a new delivery center in China as the global financial crisis may force more Western companies to outsource their business to the country.

Michael Laphen, chairman and chief executive officer of CSC, said the financial turbulence would force more companies to outsource their business in pursuit of lower operating costs, thus creating more opportunities for outsourcing companies.

“Outsourcing will increase in difficult times as the financial crisis pushes companies to become more cost effective,” said Laphen. “We expect further robust growth from China.”

CSC’s new delivery center, located in Tianjin, will open next spring.

It will serve both CSC’s domestic and multinational clients in China and will have 500 employees within the next three years.

But Laphen declined to say how big its investment is in the new China facility.

Although the financial crisis has had a major impact on most of the world’s economy, CSC remains optimistic about economic prospects in China.

It said the country’s manufacturing and financial companies, which are two major customers for CSC in China, will continue to grow at a rapid speed.

During the past decades, multinational have been transferring non-core business to countries like India and China to reduce costs.

But as labor costs continue to rise in China, outsourcing companies in the country have been striving to go up the supply chain and earn money with more value-added services.

Lin Zheying, deputy director of foreign investment administration department under the Ministry of Commerce, said at an industry forum on Monday that the economic turmoil provided a good opportunity for China to develop outsourcing in service sectors, as many US financial institutions may have to outsource their business.

According to the ministry, the value of foreign contracts of Chinese outsourcing companies reached $1.9 billion in the first eight months, up 17 percent from the same period last year.

CSC entered the Chinese market in 1991 and now has around 300 employees in the country.

It has offices in Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai and Guangzhou.

Globally, CSC has approximately 90,000 employees and reported revenue of $17.1 billion for the 12 months ended July 4, 2008.

Source from: http://english.people.com.cn/90001/6523270.html

Why We Picked China For IT Outsourcing

The decision to outsource product development to China pays off for NeatReceipts.

After several years of strong sales, a growing worldwide customer base, and increasing competition, NeatReceipts reached a crossroads in 2007: Should we continue product development efforts in-house in the United States, or outsource some of these efforts?

Several factors spurred us to consider outsourcing. For one, we’d been trying to fill a number of open positions without much success. We manufacture products based on cutting-edge optical character recognition technology, and the engineering is complex and demanding. Product development cycles are short. However, because we’re based in Philadelphia–not a technology capital–we don’t have access to a broad pool of engineering talent. Outsourcing product development could potentially lower our development costs and get products to customers faster.

The decision to outsource some of our development was by no means an easy one. We wanted to keep strategic development onshore, close to our stakeholders, and use an offshore team to add skills that we have a difficult time hiring in the United States. However, we were wary of outsourcing because we had to safeguard our intellectual property, as well as customer and employee data, and weren’t sure outsourcing partners could deliver high-quality work against an aggressive product development cycle. We also needed to ensure that we could effectively integrate an outsourcing partner into an already high-performing team.

After detailed discussions with our IT and business decision makers, we decided the benefits of outsourcing product development did indeed outweigh the risks. Of course, cost can’t be overlooked when determining whether outsourcing product development is the right decision. An analysis of the numbers validated our decision to move ahead with outsourcing.

Outsourcing development would be significantly less expensive than recruiting, managing, and retaining a team of U.S.-based engineers, but India is becoming increasingly expensive–with engineering talent on average costing about 75% to 80% of what we would pay onshore.

China is decidedly more affordable, with engineering talent costing about half of what we would have to pay onshore.

NeatReceipts competes globally with larger rivals, so the cost advantages of outsourcing our product development to China were compelling. We also thought that since we have manufacturing operations in China, it made sense to build a software development presence there.

In October 2007, we decided to outsource our product development operations to China.

THREE CHALLENGES
China is a fascinating place in which to do business and is becoming a top location for outsourcing because it has a large supply of engineers capable of doing highly sophisticated product development work. Also, the rapidly expanding Chinese economy presents a major business opportunity. NeatReceipts saw establishing a product development team in China as an important step in expanding our business operations there.

There also were three distinct challenges to outsourcing our product development to China. First is the language barrier. Few engineers in China speak English, which is a challenge for any U.S.-based engineering team that must interact daily with Chinese colleagues.

The second obstacle is the general lack of project management expertise. China’s universities produce software engineers who are just as skilled as their Indian and U.S. counterparts, but this is the first generation of engineers, and the workforce lacks people with project management experience. This can pose a significant management challenge, given the need for the Chinese team to work autonomously to deliver results.

Developing a strategy to manage the 12-hour time difference between Beijing and our Philadelphia headquarters was the final issue. And anyone accustomed to coordinating teams across time zones knows that this can be daunting.

With our decision to outsource to China made, we evaluated several outsourced product development firms on the quality of engineering talent available in the regions in which they’d established development centers and on their expertise and history of working with independent software vendors. We needed a partner who understood that our revenue is tied directly to the success of our technology.

We decided to work with Symphony Services because the company had product engineering expertise and strong test-automation and quality-assurance capabilities, which helped us improve the productivity of our development process and speed the time to market for our products. Symphony’s newly opened China development center provided access to the growing base of engineering talent in Beijing.

We started building out the China development team in 2007; it’s now 10 members strong and growing. The language barrier proved to be the least daunting of the challenges we faced. Working closely with Symphony to identify the right candidates to meet our needs, we were able to secure a team leader with strong English skills. This greatly facilitated communication between the Chinese and U.S. teams and ensured that issues could be resolved before they threw the product development cycle off-track.

We also made the appropriate investment to ensure that the Chinese team felt comfortable working within our agile product development framework. The reward systems inherent in this system were especially appealing to the team.

MANAGEMENT ACROSS TIME

Weigh Your China Options
PROS CONS
Less-Expensive Labor Cultural/language barriers
Faster project devlopment 12 hour time difference, or more
Establishing presence in potentially huge market Potential for theft or loss of intellectual property or customer data

Few issues are more likely to knock a project off-track than delays caused by time-zone differences. The time difference between Beijing and Philadelphia is a massive 12 hours, and it grows to 13 hours when daylight saving time kicks in.

We address this by keeping product development plans extremely organized. Managers in the United States are in daily contact with their Chinese counterparts (at times when both teams are working) and the entire team meets twice each week via videoconference to determine where the team stands with regard to product development objectives. We also use TargetProcess software for project management, and instant messaging and e-mail for ad hoc communication.

It hasn’t always been easy, but our outsourcing initiative has translated into results: Since December, the Beijing team has helped deliver two new products–a NeatReceipts upgrade and NeatDesk desktop scanner–and has played a central role in developing a robust automated software testing framework. These results, coupled with huge cost savings, have confirmed for us the business case for outsourcing in China.

By Jeff Burk
Source from: InformationWeek

Engg Srvcs Exports (Excluding IT/Telecom) Cross Rs 10000cr

A study by CyberMedia group’s flagship IT magazine, Dataquest says that driven by the offset requirements of India’s defense purchase and the country’s enhanced profile as an engineering base after the launch of Nano, engineering services outsourcing to India will accelerate.

The engineering services exports (excluding software product engineering, semiconductor design, and other high tech/telecom engineering) from India grew 25.6% in 2007-08 to reach Rs. 10,110 crore, according to a study published by Dataquest, the flagship IT publication of CyberMedia group. The Indian third party service providers accounted for 56% of that revenue, while the captives had a share of 41%. The non-Indian third party service providers accounted for the rest.

Aerospace and automotive industries led the engineering design and services outsourcing to India. A few recent developments in these industries have significantly impacted the engineering services outsourcing, says the Dataquest study. Some of these include: high oil prices leading to design of newer fuel-efficient cars, India’s plans to buy 100 plus fighter aircrafts with significant offset requirements (which stipulates that 50% of the total contract value to any supplier will have to be spent locally), and the launch of Tata Motor’s Nano, which has raised the profile of India as an automotive engineering base.

“All these developments have significantly enhanced the action in the engineering services outsourcing area. They have paved the way for the revenues to start flowing in beginning this year when we can expect the growth to accelerate sharply,” said Shyamanuja Das, Editor, Dataquest, who led the research.

The study also outlines that India’s own market as a major automotive market has drawn many of the automotive manufacturers and their tier one OEM suppliers to India. Most of them have also used the opportunity to tap India’s engineering talent. Car manufacturers such as Ford, GM, Chrysler Honda, and Volkswagen and their suppliers such as Delphi, Eaton, and Visteon have all set up engineering design centers in India.

Top Players

The top 15 firms account for 93% of the total engineering services exported by the India-based engineering services firms. India’s top IT services firm, TCS, leads the list, followed by HCL and Satyam. The list itself is a mix of three types of players — the broad-based IT services firms such as TCS, HCL, Satyam, Infosys, and Wipro; the specialized players such as Infotech Enterprise, Quest, Geometric and Neilsoft; and the design arms of Indian engineering companies such as Tata Technologies, Mahindra Engineering Services and L&T Infotech.

Source from: news.moneycontrol.com/india/news/pressnews/
engg-srvcs-exports-(excluding-ittelecom)-cross-rs-10000cr/18/48/353052

Patni Launches Green IT- BPO Knowledge Centre

The environment-friendly facility complements the organisation’s green initiatives around efficient utilisation and conservation of energy, water and natural resources.

Patni Computer Systems has launched its first Green IT-BPO knowledge centre in Noida with an investment of Rs 175 crores ($40 million). Developed on Green Architecture, the eco-friendly facility is spread over 5 acres and has a seating capacity of over 3,500. Christened Patni Knowledge Centre, this facility is designed and constructed as per the guidelines of LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) India Green Building Rating System for New Construction. The centre is currently under certification process and is jointly audited by the Indian Green Building Council (IGBC) and US Green Building Council (USGBC).

“We are delighted that a leading IT and BPO organisation like Patni is one of the front runners in the green architecture brigade. The concept of Green Buildings is still at a nascent stage in India; with only 26 certified green buildings and very few Platinum certified green buildings,” said Dr P. C. Jain, chairman, IGBC.

Inaugurating the ‘green’ Knowledge centre, Narendra K. Patni, chairman and CEO, Patni, said, “We recognise our responsibility to protect the environment. The launch of our first Green centre is a significant step in demonstrating the company’s commitment to environment conservation.”

According to Sanjiv Kapur, senior vice president and head, Patni BPO, “Over the last four years, Patni’s northern India operations have grown exponentially. Leveraging an integrated IT-BPO model, we are providing variety of advanced outsourcing services including benefits administration, actuarial valuations, health insurance, F&A, securities and capital markets, services desk, product engineering services and life sciences. We see tremendous potential in these segments and as we expand and diversify, the new centre will support our aggressive growth. Above all, the new Knowledge centre will give our employees a healthier and environment friendly workplace, especially as BPO and KPO operations run on a 24×7 basis.”

Source from Efytimes.com

India’s Jobs, Wages Grow Due to Foreign Outsourcing

Industry grows 30% to employ more than 1.2 million people

Vish Ramamurti is home again. Sixteen years after leaving India to pursue a better life in the United States, the 37-year-old electrical engineer has returned to Bangalore. There were many reasons for his reverse migration: aging parents, homesickness and a desire to teach his children his native language. But the real driver was job opportunity.

Last July, Ramamurti joined Wipro Ltd. in Bangalore as a general manager while his wife accepted a transfer with her semiconductor firm. Their combined pay is close to the salaries they made in Austin, Texas.

“I’m not going to say we are completely comfortable with this place,” said Ramamurti, who is still adjusting to the long hours and his new Indian colleagues, “who talk about very personal things at work.”

Still, Bangalore has its advantages. Ramamurti dodges cows and crater-like potholes to reach the office, but his home is a luxurious 2,500-square-foot condo staffed by a full-time cook, driver, nanny and two maids.

India’s IT software and services engineers are climbing their way up the economic food chain. Between 2007 and 2008, the outsourcing industry grew 30 per cent, reaching $39.5 billion in export revenues and employing more than 1.2 million people.

No longer a ghetto of low-level software jobs and call centres, Indian corporate behemoths such as Wipro, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and Infosys Technologies Ltd. have transformed outsourcing to include such critical services as market research and analytics, copy editing, patent generation, the drafting of legal documents and engineering plans.

While software programming and call centres still flourish here, Indian companies are running entire IT departments, designing Ericsson and Nokia phones and monitoring water and wastewater facilities such as Thames Water Utilities Ltd. Even new government services are being offered.

The states of New Mexico, Nebraska and Mississippi are outsourcing their unemployment and taxation payment processes, Mexico has off-loaded its social-security services, and Bahrain has launched e-visas to a new division of TCS.

India became the darling of IT outsourcing because it offered cheap services. But the next generation of outsourcing no longer relies entirely on wages as salaries continue to climb.

“Five years ago, outsourcing was a dirty word,” says Debashis Ghosh, vice-president and general manager for Global Delivery TCS India North.

Although TCS has worked with a handful of multinationals since the 1970s, including General Electric Co., most Fortune 500 companies have kept mum about their outsourcing deals.

“But the word is getting out,” he says.

“Companies are more open because outsourcing is widely deployed and because they are facing the challenge of finding the right set of people to sustain growth,” says S. (Kris) Gopalakrishnan, chairman of Infosys.

More mid-sized and small firms are jumping on board, and revenues are more diversified with a greater amount of work coming from Europe and Asia than the U.S.

As a result, a second tier of Indian outsourcing firms has emerged, including Evalueserve, Integreon Managed Solutions Inc. and Mindcrest India Private Ltd. Fuelled by an army of lawyers, architects and business graduates, they focus on what’s known as knowledge processing outsourcing (KPO). The firms call this “climbing the value chain.”

“CEOs are now asking their CIOs why they aren’t looking into (outsourcing),” says Ghosh. “Suddenly, India is a good brand to be associated with. It means you know how to leverage talent and globalize.”

Wipro, which counts Nortel as a long-time client, recently added Delta Airlines, AGL Resources and Credit Suisse.

Wipro chairman Azim Premji says 45 per cent of his company’s revenues are generated from new value-added services. In one example, Wipro helped consolidate the claim processes for a U.S. Midwest insurance company. Before outsourcing to India, the insurance firm had 400 claim officers spread across different branches. Some were underemployed, while others were filing for overtime, says Charan Bhalla, vice-president at Wipro. After Wipro stepped in, the claims were processed 20 per cent faster, and the payouts, which had varied from branch to branch, were standardized.

While Wipro, TCS and Infosys handle only Fortune 500 firms, companies such as Evalueserve are staking out the mid-sized and small companies. At its offices in the New Delhi suburb of Gurgaon, Canadian bankers and dealers are commissioning investor reports and research. Evalueserve has one intellectual-property team that drafts the specifications and compliance for patents for new products and inventions, and a legal team that writes non-disclosure agreements and confidentiality clauses. No niche is too small.

“We are like a small consulting shop without the consultant,” says Sanjoy Choudhury, assistant vice-president.

AC Nielsen recently signed a $1.2-billion US contract with TCS. In addition to running the IT platform and back-end financial and human resources, TCS will handle some of Nielsen’s analytics and data references.

“It’s still early days, and everyone is going one step at a time,” says Ghosh.

Taking on more operations is a great way to extract more revenue from a single client, but it’s also changing the way Indian firms work.

“As we seek new partners to work with us around the world, we started thinking, ‘Why do we need to do everything in India?’ ” says Ghosh. “As we go up the value chain, we are going global.”

Outsourcers are insourcing. TCS has 155 offices outside India. Five years ago, it had 300 non-Indians on the payroll; today they represent 1.1 per cent of the 111,407-strong workforce.

Wipro has 46 offices overseas — including a new one in Toronto — and is scoping for new centres in the United Kingdom, Germany and the United States.

By opening offices in Europe and the United States, the Indian firms have telegraphed a new sensitivity to cries that outsourcing creates job losses. But the strategy is also helping businesses cope with outsourcing: Sales staff have multiple languages. They also help alleviate the fear factor.

“A lot of clients still don’t feel comfortable sending their work to India,” says Ghosh.

New clients want six to 12 months to test outsourcing by going through a local office, he says. India’s western outposts will serve as security blankets for jittery new clients.

Source from The Vancouver Sun 2008

Contract with India: Welcome to a world of outsourcing

BANGALORE — Vish Ramamurti is home again. Sixteen years after leaving India to pursue a better life in the United States, the 37-year-old electrical engineer has returned to Bangalore. There were many reasons for his reverse migration: ageing parents, homesickness and a desire to teach his children his native language. But the real driver was job opportunity.

Last July, Mr. Ramamurti joined Wipro Ltd. in Bangalore as a general manager while his wife accepted a transfer with her semiconductor firm. Their combined pay is close to the salaries they made in Austin, Tex.

“I’m not going to say we are completely comfortable with this place,” said Mr. Ramamurti, who is still adjusting to the long hours and his new Indian colleagues, “who talk about very personal things at work.”

Still, Bangalore has its advantages. Mr. Ramamurti dodges cows and crater -like potholes to reach the office, but his home is a luxurious 2,500-square-foot condo staffed by a full-time cook, driver, nanny and two maids.

India’s IT software and services engineers are climbing their way up the economic food chain. Between 2007 to 2008, the outsourcing industry grew 30%, reaching $39.5-billion in export revenues and employing more than 1.2 million people.

No longer a ghetto of low-level software jobs and call centres, Indian corporate behemoths such as Wipro, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and Infosys Technologies Ltd. have transformed outsourcing to include such critical services as market research and analytics, copy editing, patent generation, the drafting of legal documents and engineering plans.

While software programming and call centres still flourish here, Indian companies are running entire IT departments, designing Erikson and Nokia phones and monitoring water and wastewater facilities such as Thames Water Utilities Ltd. Even new government services are being offered.

The states of New Mexico, Nebraska and Mississippi are outsourcing their unemployment and taxation payment processes, Mexico has off-loaded its social-security services and Bahrain has launched e-visas to a new division of TCS.

India became the darling of IT outsourcing because it offered cheap services. But the next generation of outsourcing no longer relies entirely on wages as salaries continue to climb.

“Five years ago, outsourcing was a dirty word,” says Debashis Ghosh, vice-president and general manager for Global Delivery TCS India North. Although TCS has worked with a handful of multinationals since the 1970s, including General Electric Co., most Fortune 500 companies have kept mum about their outsourcing deals. “But the word is getting out,” he says.

“Companies are more open because outsourcing is widely deployed and because they are facing the challenge of finding the right set of people to sustain growth,” says S. (Kris) Gopalakrishnan, chairman of Infosys. More mid-sized and small firms are jumping on board, and revenues are more diversified with a greater amount of work coming from Europe and Asia than the U.S.

As a result, a second tier of Indian outsourcing firms has emerged, including Evalueserve, Integreon Managed Solutions Inc., and Mindcrest India Private Ltd. Fuelled by an army of lawyers, architects and business graduates, they focus on outsourcing knowledge, what’s known as knowledge processing outsourcing (KPO). The firms call this “climbing the value chain.”

If your company isn’t outsourcing today, it soon will be. “CEOs are now asking their CIOs why they aren’t looking into it,” says Mr. Ghosh. “Suddenly, India is a good brand to be associated with. It means you know how to leverage talent and globalize.”

Wipro, which counts Nortel as a long-time client, recently added Delta Airlines, AGL Resources and Credit Suisse. Azim Premji, the high-profile chairman of Wipro, says 45% of his company’s revenues are generated from new value-added services. In one example, Wipro helped consolidate the claim processes for a Midwest U.S. insurance company. Before outsourcing to India, the insurance firm had 400 claim officers spread across different branches. Some were underemployed, others were filing for overtime, says Charan Bhalla, vice-president at Wipro. After Wipro stepped in, the claims were processed 20% faster, and the payouts, which varied from branch to branch, were standardized.

While Wipro, TCS and Infosys handle only Fortune 500 firms, companies such as Evalueserve are staking out the mid-sized and small companies. At its offices in the New Delhi suburb of Gurgaon, Canadian bankers and dealers are commissioning investor reports and research. Evalueserve has one intellectual-property team that drafts the specifications and compliance for patents for new products and inventions, and a legal team that writes non-disclosure agreements and confidentiality clauses. No niche is too small. “We are like a small consulting shop without the consultant,” says Sanjoy Choudhury, assistant vice-president.

The mushrooming services are creating a new world order. Rather than charging a fee for a service, outsourcing firms are experimenting with transaction-based pricing models. AC Nielsen recently signed a US$1.2-billion contract with TCS. In addition to running the IT platform and back-end financial and human resources, TCS will handle some of Nielsen’s analytics and data references. “It’s still early days, and everyone is going one step at a time,” says Mr. Ghosh.

Taking on more operations is a great way to extract more revenue from a single client, but it’s also changing the way Indian firms work. “As we seek new partners to work with us around the world, we started thinking, ‘Why do we need to do everything in India?’ ” says Mr. Ghosh. “As we go up the value chain we are going global.”

Outsourcers are insourcing. TCS has 155 offices outside India. Five years ago, it had 300 non-Indians on the payroll; today they represent 1.1% of the 111,407-strong workforce. Wipro has 46 offices overseas — including a new one in Toronto — and is scoping for new centres in the United Kingdom, Germany, and the United States.

By opening offices in Europe and the United States, the Indian firms have telegraphed a new sensitivity to cries that outsourcing creates job losses. But the strategy is also helping businesses cope with outsourcing: Sales staff have multiple languages. They also help alleviate the fear factor. “A lot of clients still don’t feel comfortable sending their work to India,” says Mr. Ghosh. New clients want six to 12 months to test outsourcing by going through a local office, he says. India’s western outposts will serve as security blankets for jittery new clients.

Globalization and outsourcing still have detractors, but the new order has solved one problem: the Indian brain drain. According to a report by Evalueserve, between 1964 and 2001, 35% of the top engineers left India. Today, less than half that — 16% — leave.

Sheetal Ranganathan, 31, who has a master’s in biotechnology and an MBA from Xavier School of Management in India, considered moving to the West until she joined Evalueserve in Delhi. Today, she manages a 60-person team pumping out life-science research reports for the biotech industry and venture-capital firms.

“If I hadn’t gotten something so interesting [that] paid so well, I would have looked for greener pastures abroad,” she says.

Source from financialpost.com

India Leads Asia in IT Outsourcing

India is leading Asia in the IT outsourcing market, according to new research published this week.

Analysts at Springboard Research revealed this week that the Asia-Pacific IT services market is set to grow by a five-year annual rate of 10.5 per cent, to reach $55.9 billion (£28 billion) by 2011.

Excluding Japan, India will lead this market, which is the fastest growing IT services industry in the world, valued at $37.5 billion (£18.75 billion) in 2007.

Phil Hassey, vice-president of services research at Springboard Research, said: “The markets of interest [in the region] are not just the top four – China, India, Australia and Korea – but [also] emerging ones like Indonesia and Vietnam, which will register significant growth going forward.”

According to the report, application hosting – with an annual growth rate of 19.5 per cent between 2007 and 2011 – would register as the fastest growing sector of this market.

Enterprise IT outsourcing, which was the largest IT services market in Asia-Pacific during 2007, is expected to lag behind due to the reluctance of Chinese firms to outsource business.

Outsourcing Wish List

Mumbai, India: At the NASSCOM conference for India’s IT services industry, CIO of Best Buy and CEO if its international operations Robert Willet shared his list of reasons why an organization should outsource and according to him if cost savings are the No.1 reason you feel you should outsource then, you probably should not outsource at all.

His wish list includes –

  1. To harness new and better skills and capabilities
  2. To implement projects, take on additional, more challenging projects and add skills and capabilities to your forte
  3. To reduce risks
  4. To leverage specialized, technical skills that your organization may not be able to afford on a full time staff
  5. To lower cost

Willet also offered other insights into the IT industry. He believes that projects should be customer centric and not product centric. So the IT team must assess each project from the point of view of whether it is customer centric or not. He says that organizations do not necessarily require retail specialists to improve customer management and relationship.

Willet goes on to say that the one skill that IT companies including his Best Buy need to perfect is the skill to pick up and learn from the ideas and experience of peers, competition and the industry in general. These ideas, advice and experience need to be assessed, learned and put to use.
Source from: Informationweek.com

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