Sunday, October 16, 2005

Reader forwarded you this link for your consideration


ronweb@gmail.com, was reading the following story and forwarded you this link:

Link:
http://java.sys-con.com/read/141528.htm

Title:
India's i-Technology Triangle: Will India Fail?

Thanks for your submission. The editorial board of JDJ has been notified, and their decision will be sent you within 2-3 weeks maximum, probably a great deal sooner!

Editorial Department
SYS-CON Media

India rides outsourcing boom to capture legal work from abroad





NEW DELHI, Oct 16 (AFP): India's growing pool of lawyers are being tapped to provide paralegal services for customers from the United States as the next frontier in the country's booming outsourcing sector, executives say.
Companies in India are offering trained lawyers using legal databases such as Westlaw and Lexis/Nexis to provide law firms in the United States with low-cost research, writing and analysis in a move to capture a market worth billions of dollars.
"We did a survey of corporate houses in the US in which 86 per cent identified the high cost of legal services as their number one cost worry," said Sanjay Kamlani, co-founder of the legal outsourcing firm Pangea3 LLC.
"Add to that there are one million lawyers in India and 70,000 graduating from law schools every year. We realised that we had an enormous, enormous business opportunity," he said.
The National Association of Software and Service Companies, an Indian lobby group, said in July that outsourcing firms had barely scratched the potential of the estimated 250 billion dollar legal services market. It estimates Indian firms now get 60 to 80 million dollars worth of outsourced legal business annually.
India earned 6.7 billion dollars in the year ended March 2005 in outsourcing services such as software and call centres in an industry that employs almost 350,000 people as the country taps a large pool of English-speaking professionals.
The work has expanded in the past five years into almost all fields from computer-aided design to medical consulting and fashion to provide jobs for a one-billion plus population, more than half of whom are under 25 years old.
Much of the advantage is based on labor costs, with Indian firms reportedly paying legal researchers about 12,000 dollars a year, or a third of their US counterparts.
The distinction is deemed important as clients may not be happy to know that the firm they retain does not do their work.
Research firm Forrester Inc has estimated that at least 12,000 legal jobs had been outsourced from the United States to offshore locations up to 2004.
The number of outsourced jobs to low-cost countries such as India will grow to 35,000 by 2010 and will reach 79,000 by 2015, Forrester predicted.