Outsourcing: A Growth Driver for the Economy

July 18, 2009

THE world economy has become a smaller global community influencing different markets in different parts of the world. One country’s economic downturn has a speedy impact on another—some to a big extent, others in a smaller way, but nevertheless in one way or another is being affected by the whole global economy.

In the Philippines, the service sector, particularly the outsourcing industry, is considered as one of the main drivers toward economic growth. According to Wikipedia, the Philippines is the second-largest call-center market next to India, based on a June 2008 study released by Oracle Corp.

The majority of the top 10 business process outsourcing (BPO) firms of the United States have set up operations in the country. The jobs provided by the outsourcing industry grew to 100,000 with total revenues placed at $960 million for 2005. Metro Manila and Cebu City are the locations of these BPO companies, although other cities are now fast becoming ideal destinations for offshore operations such as Baguio City, Bacolod City, Cagayan de Oro, Tacloban City, Clark (Angeles City), Dagupan City, Davao City, Dumaguete City, Lipa City, Iloilo City and Legazpi City.

With this influx of the top outsourcing firms in the United States setting up offices in the Philippines, the local service providers should learn to ride on the popularity gained by the country as a favorite destination of multinational companies.

For one, most of our local providers should find ways to effectively compete with the big potential market out there worldwide looking for experienced, cost-efficient, excellent customer service and technologically capable providers.

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Indian IT Services market to grow

June 27, 2009

Indias top three outsourcing majors, Tata Consultancy Services TCS, Infosys and Wipro, will gain enough muscle to take on todays IT giants like IBM, Accenture and EDS by 2011, IT research company Gartner said. These vendors are increasingly being considered for strategic service deals, and will augment or, in some cases, replace todays acknowledged mega vendors by revenue IBM Global Services, Accenture and EDS in this space by 2011, predicts Gartner. The IT research firm has based its projection on a comparison of growth rates of Indian firms and MNCs.

While the Indian companies have been registering growth of over 3040 percent in the last few years, their foreign rivals are growing at a much lower rate of around 5 to 10 percent. Even the market capitalisations of Indian tech majors were catching up their overseas competitors.

The emerging mega vendors TCS, Infosys and Wipro have made dramatic progress in the past few years and have more than doubled their revenue in a fouryear period, with the 2007 revenue being 2.6 times the 2004 revenue, said Partha Iyengar, vice president, analyst and regional research director, Gartner.

He said, This level of growth differential has continued even as these vendors have become multibillion dollar enterprises. To put this in context, there are just 100 service enterprises globally with more than  USD1 billion in revenue.

However, Iyenger said that Indian software exporters would have to overcome a few challenges before they become serious threats for the MNCs.

Looking at the revenue per employee data, it is clear that there is a divide between todays megavendors and the aspiring Indian megavendors, said the Gartner statement.

The research firm said the Indian service providers would be able to address the issue by moving away from resourceintensive revenue growth to a model that provides higher leverage and increases revenue without a linear relationship to head count.

They will have to achieve similar to the current megavendors levels of revenue per employee benchmarks to truly achieve megavendor status, said Gartner.

In 2007, revenue per employee of IBM, Accenture and EDS was  USD146,910,  USD130,200 and  USD154,340 respectively. That was much higher than the revenue per employee of TCS at  USD51,320, Infosys  USD45,800 and Wipros,  USD41,310 in the same year.

James Abraham director, The Boston Consulting Group, said, to him revenue per employee was not of much concern.

What the Indian IT players really need to work on is building more global delivery centres across the globe, and these centres should have as much scale as their MNC rivals, said Abraham.

Source : http://www.offshoringtimes.com/ 

 

Infosys Expects Outsourcing Services to Recover in 2010

February 28, 2009

BANGALORE — Infosys Technologies Ltd. expects the outsourcing of information technology services to recover "sometime" in 2010, the Indian software exporter’s chief executive said Friday.

"Clients are saying that IT budgets would be down this year, in some cases significantly," S. Gopalakrishnan told reporters on the sidelines of an industry event.

"Even where IT budgets are finalized, there is going to be a delay in spending as clients wait and watch the evolving [global economic] situation," he added.

Indian software companies earn most of their revenue from exports and their revenue growth has been hurt due to lower technology spending by global clients.

Nasdaq-listed Infosys earns about 60% of its revenue from the U.S. and about 90% from exports.

Earlier this month, software industry body NASSCOM had cut its outlook on the sector for the current fiscal year.

It now expects the sector to grow at 16%-17% in the year ending March 31, compared with its previous estimate for a 20% expansion.

Infosys has earlier said it expects the next fiscal year beginning April 1 to be tougher, given the adverse economic environment in which its clients operate.

In a bid to control costs, Infosys is likely to give "minimum" wage hikes due in April, Mr. Gopalakrishnan said. "We are taking a look at lowering discretionary costs; travel costs are one of them."

Chief Operating Officer S. D. Shibulal, earlier in the month, had said that increase in wages for offshore staff are likely to be in single digits compared to 14%-15% in the current fiscal year ending March 31.

Offshore employees work for clients from the company’s facilities in India.

Mr. Gopalakrishnan added that company continues to recruit, but "selectively."

"We will honor all our [campus offer] commitments [for the next year through March]," he said.

The company has made 18,000 campus offers for the next year through March.

Source : http://online.wsj.com/  

Outsourcing industry ponders Satyam impact

February 21, 2009

As the details of the Satyam Computer Services Ltd. fraud scandal – with $1 billion of falsified cash and assets reported – rocked India and the global IT and outsourcing world last month, U.S. outsourcing executives and analysts weighed the impact on their business.

“In our business we are not seeing any slowdown,” said Kishore Mirchandani, president of Outsourcing Partners International Inc., a New York-based firm that provides financial and accounting outsourcing services. “I think business will be as usual. We don’t anticipate any changes. We will still have growth.”

Outsourcing Partners, which Mirchandani co-founded in 1998, has a handful of locations in India, including centers in Bangalore, Delhi and Kochi. The company has been on Inc. magazine’s annual list of fastest growing private companies for four years with growth of 128 percent over the last three years. It employs 2,400.

Mirchandani admits that, since Satyam focuses on IT, the impact of the fraud scandal might hit closer to home to U.S. IT outsourcers, but overall he does not believe that it will slow business down. “I think it is an isolated situation and it is not reflective of the industry,” he said.

He does believe that it may tighten up the scrutiny and increase the level of governance with clients, but believes that the successful outsourcing firms already have appropriate practices in place and increased scrutiny will only serve to highlight this.

“We have [a high level of governance] with every client of ours. We have total transparency and that is why we are as successful as we are today,” Mirchandani said.

Rajini Poddar, president of Artech Information Systems LLC, a Cedar Knolls, N.J.-based IT-services provider with revenues approaching $200 million, is a bit more concerned about ripples caused by the Satyam scandal.

 

“I think in the short term there will be some impact, because companies that do outsourcing will do more due diligence,” Poddar said. “But I don’t know in the long run if this thing is endemic to India.”

“I think it will kind of blow over at a certain period of time,” she added. “However, if it turns out not to be an isolated incident then there are bigger implications.”

Poddar, whose firm has a center in Noida, India, believes the fact that the Indian government is not taken the matter and has been swift to act will help to quell concerns from outsourcing clients.

Like Mirchandani, Poddar sees only benefits from an increased level of due diligence from clients and increased corporate governance practices.

At the end of the day, she feels the benefits of outsourcing to India will continue to make the practice popular and highly utilized. “[Outsourcing] is part of doing business. It is part of being competitive,” she said.

She also said that it is very telling for the outsourcing industry that, despite the accounting and bookkeeping malfeasance by Satyam, the company suffered no complaints about the service it delivered.

Looking at the Satyam scandal from an analyst perspective, Doug Brown, partner at the Brown-Wilson Group, and co-author of “The Black Book of Outsourcing,” anticipates larger industry response.

He predicts five issues that will shape the industry in 2009 as a result of the Satyam fraud case:

  • Suspicions and scrutiny will rise of all offshore vendors, particularly family-led companies and Indian firms
  • Geopolitical risks and threats force clients to bring offshore work back to United States and the United Kingdom
  • U.S. and U.K. clients establish outsourcing governance officers with offshore contingency planning a top priority
  • President Barack Obama’s administration economic stimulus and infrastructure support plan could benefit U.S. job creation/return in outsourcing sector
  • Transparency in corporate governance, particularly among offshore outsourcers and firms with more than 50 percent of their workforce abroad will become part of customers’ decision making process.

Brown is particularly staunch on an increased emphasis on bringing outsourcing jobs to the United States.

“The timing may be extremely fortuitous for U.S. firms – and offshore companies with U.S. operations – to create American jobs under the Obama Administration’s new stimulus plan,” he said. “Reorganizing service delivery options to the U.S. – for U.S. clients – may be the only way to maintain those customers. Wipro and [Tata Consultancy Services] had recognized that trend and are well positioned to capitalize on the change in service locations. This also means more jobs for Americans.”

The Brown-Wilson Group conducts an annual survey – under The Black Book of Outsourcing name – of over 400,000 outsourcing users globally to evaluate senior leadership of the 5,000 global outsourcing vendors and, according to Brown, even before the Satyam scandal confidence was beginning to lag. “One hundred percent of outsourcing users within the Fortune 1000 participate in the Black Book’s annual customer experience surveys yet only 4.6 percent reported even mild lack of confidence in any of India’s biggest firms in 2008,” he said. “In 2009, preview surveys have indicated over 68.3 percent of offshore outsourcing users report mounting lack of confidence in their suppliers’ governance. Even if Satyam’s problems are Satyam’s only, the rest of the offshore industry is about to experience greatly elevated scrutiny.”

The Black Book of Outsourcing has already altered its 2009 survey to take a closer look at corporate financial governance.

“Black Book’s annual client user survey maintained the same 26 key performance indicators on outsourcing firm’s senior management for six consecutive years in four main categories: C Level Commitment, Human Capital Performance, Corporate Direction, and Leadership Impact. Corporate direction scores, which included Accountability, had decreased from 2006 to 2008 but was comparable to all top Indian outsourcer firms,” Brown said. “In response, we’ve added a new (fifth) section specifically addressing Accountability to include indicators of Trust, Executive Confidence, Financial Stewardship, Avoidance of Illegal Activities, Mitigation of Geopolitical Risks, and Sustainability Leadership among others. We believe these results will greatly change the make-up of 2009’s top 50 best-managed outsourcing vendors as compared to prior years’ rankings.”

Like Mirchandani and Poddar, Brown also believes increased corporate governance will benefit the industry overall. “The big winner will eventually be all offshore outsourcing users because transparency will be necessary to convey trust and tools to better scrutinize vendors will be vital to user decision making,” Brown said.

Source : http://www.indusbusinessjournal.com/