Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Vendors in India Not Ready for Offshore Infrastructure Management

Studies show that various global organizations are planning to offshore new and complex service lines like IT Infrastructure management and critical business processes. But vendors in India aren’t necessarily ready for these assets. According to the market research firm Forrester Research, firms in India may be proficient in the art of applications outsourcing, but they are not prepared to ride on the new wave of offshore infrastructure management opportunity. The report suggests that infrastructure and consulting deals require “feet on the street,” something Indian vendors are not ready to offer.

Infrastructure Management (IM) applications play a critical role in monitoring and measuring the performance of the network, across local and wide area links Organizations invest vast sums of money to build IT infrastructure that support their business goals and objectives, but many fail to deploy even the most basic tools to effectively manage their IT resources.

According to Nasscom, the IT infrastructure management services market is between $86 billion and $150 billion.The management involves painstaking activities including managing everything from data centers, networks and servers to storage and desktops.

Sunil Mehta, vice president of Nasscom, explained that since up to 60 percent of the overall work can be delivered through the global delivery model, the market potential for remote infrastructure management is around $55 billion.He feels that although companies in India aren’t yet ready for integrated outsourcing deals, which involve transfer of software and hardware, as well as people prepared for discreet outsourcing.

Infrastructure management outsourcing is divided into two types - total outsourcing and out-tasking. Total outsourcing includes asset takeover while out-tasking involves outsourcing of certain services. In India, total outsourcing has been initiated by Wipro, who took up this task for HDFC Bank and Yes Bank. According to Prasanna GK, senior vice-president of technology infrastructure services for Wipro Technologies, companies require new financial models for total asset management, as this kind of outsourcing also has affects on the balance sheet. He feels his company also need alliances and tie-ups to manage such large deals.

Experts feel that all IT service providers need not go for total outsourcing to reach the Nasscom projection. They can continue to focus on out-tasking. They also agree that Indian vendors are better prepared for out-tasking than asset takeovers. Most of them don't yet have the ability to jump in the total asset takeover field but they are on the right track, moving up steadily, winning deals against global competition.

Offshore Services: The Next Wave

Learn about the next wave, Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO), and how to catch it

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

The type of work being moved offshore continues to move "up the value chain" -- evolving from its roots of well-defined and often back-office or labor intensive tasks, to a newly-established and growing category called Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO). Unlike traditional business process outsourcing initiatives, KPO involves knowledge-intensive business processes that require significant domain expertise, analytic skills and judgment and decision making capabilities. The goal of KPO is to deliver value by providing superior enterprise decision-making as opposed to cost saving alone. Therefore, companies can improve top line results and better their bottom line.

The rise of a new class of KPO providers creates strategic growth opportunities for global companies looking for new ways to maximize the productivity and innovation of existing resources, without having to commit resources and divert focus by running their own captive center. Reflecting on significant growth in business process outsourcing (BPO) over the past three years, some believe the KPO segment is following a similar growth trajectory. According to a Deloitte Consulting study, the KPO industry is projected to grow to approximately $17-18 billion by 2010, with India expected to account for approximately $12-14 billion. Click here to find out more!

Though similar to the BPO industry in the areas of basic infrastructure and HR processes requirements (including significant data and security investments; competitive recruiting, training and retention programs) there is a much higher bar for KPO service providers. Beyond running secure global operations with a flow of top talent, service providers must have specific vertical and domain expertise, analytics process excellence, and an innovative and proactive culture. These are not back office processes; they are analytics-based knowledge processes that require independent judgment and action within a structured framework.

Over the past couple years, data analytics has exploded in the enterprise, and companies are refocusing and directing more effort on getting increased business value from their data. Many are investing in complex analytic solutions but are having trouble accessing top analytic talent to make it all work. It's no surprise that data analytics is the biggest chunk of the KPO market, at least from an employment perspective.

India is emerging as a key player in the KPO space due to its large base of highly qualified professionals, according to Pricewaterhouse Coopers (PwC). India has advantages over other locations as an offshore destination for KPO. The depth of knowledge, judgment and expertise that India's abundance of educated professionals can offer drives KPO. From doctors and lawyers to chemical engineers and PhD's, India is the world's third largest brain bank with approximately 2.5 million technical professionals. In India, six times more people go to universities than in China. And, it is no surprise that India is developing into the second largest English speaking resource in the world. Ernst & Young says India has already become the most preferred destination for over 100 Fortune 500 companies in the KPO space.

Expected Benefits of KPO

Data analysis and business intelligence are important competitive factors in almost every industry, whether it is healthcare, insurance, telecom, manufacturing, logistics or the financial sector. By leveraging resources that are more readily available and cost-effective in other locations around the world to execute KPO initiatives, companies can re-focus their existing resources to address other business-critical issues, while improving the analytics that power customer acquisition and retention strategies.

Historically, economic factors related to cost-cutting drove many companies to pursue outsourcing strategies. Today however, leading companies view outsourcing strategically. With access to a maturing, low cost talent pool, companies can do more with the same resources, while driving higher revenues and margins. In the field of analytics, that means accessing special skills to be able to move beyond reporting and simple analytics at an aggregated level. Companies can dig deeper into existing data to identify trends that can move the needle for the business, resulting in improved top-line results, greater market share and higher market capitalization. Examples include:

*More granular market and customer segmentation (e.g., the ability to do make retention or acquisition campaigns work at a micro-market level)
*More predictive response modeling and propensity/cross-sell/up sell modeling
*Precision marketing, churn prediction and management, customized products and services in finance, insurance, telecom services
*For retailers, store and shelf space management at neighborhood market level and store level
*Promotional efficiency tracking at micro-market level
*Category/brand performance measurement, tracking and control at micro-market level
*Market mix modeling at lower granularity levels of product, geography and time dimensions
*Precision and dynamic pricing, promotion and product portfolio design and optimization
*Primary, secondary and web-based market research
*Monetization, predictive analysis and portfolio management of intellectual property and patents
*Analytics and optimization algorithm R&D for ISVs in enterprise application areas such as, SCM, SRM, ERP, CRM, MR, BI, BPM

The Challenge of Measuring Quality and Productivity

KPO creates the need for a new business and engagement models, where measurement of quality and productivity vary from those associated with other types of outsourcing. Value-based measurements around service provider specialization, competency, scope of innovation, and impact on client business objectives replace the pure cost-based measurements associated with traditional outsourcing. Successful KPO engagements require more partnering and sharing of responsibilities and knowledge in order to improve performance versus rote compliance-to-process standards and automation structures alone.

KPO holds great promise for global organizations seeking to leverage the productivity and economies of scale that a strategic outsourcing relationship can provide. The service provider's best positioned to deliver the value that KPO promises have deep analytics skill, BI process excellence, vertical market expertise, high intellectual property assets and solid global infrastructure allowing for ongoing computing and storage of high volumes of data.

Distinctive Practices for Successful KPO

Unlike BPO, which has become a commodity operation, KPO service providers need to have distinguished practices and demonstrate deep vertical market domain expertise. Domain-specific knowledge is the key to understanding the business context and delivering timely, revenue-impacting insight -- that's what differentiates KPO from BPO. Providers who can demonstrate that domain knowledge will operate at the high-end of the value chain and provide their clients with significant value.

Rajaram Kudli is the Program Director for Symphony Services.

Sutherland plans to locate BPO campus in Kochi


Wednesday February 1 2006 00:00 IST
KOCHI: The New York-based Sutherland Global Services is making its foray into Kerala with a BPO campus in Kochi at an investment of Rs 120 crore.

It plans to set up a service delivery centre and training infrastructure on 25 acre at Kalamassery in Kochi, which will absorb 3000 professionals over the next three years.

The BPO facility is expected to go on stream in the third quarter of 2006. �We will start operations with 500 employees. In the next 36 months, the employment will be ramped up to 3000. In the long term, the company is looking at an employment of 7500,'' Dilip Vellodi, chairman and CEO of Sutherland Global Services, said.

He said the company decided to open its third office in India at Kochi after considering the key elements of infrastructure, human resource and local support. �We were satisfied on all these fronts,'' he said.

According to Vellodi there was good support from the government. The huge talent pool and robust infrastructure in Kerala will provide advantages of cost, scalability and value across the spectrum of services.

In Kochi, Sutherland will be focusing on financial verticals particularly in the mortgaging of property. Besides, it will provide technology support to its clients. Software development and training will be other important areas. Of its client base, 70 percent is listed among Fortune 500.

Sutherland Global Services, which has offices at Chennai and Mumbai, is starting its first campus in the country at Kochi. The company is expecting a turnover of Rs 1400 crore in 2006 calendar year. This represents over 40 percent growth over the previous year, Vellodi said. Sutherland has 8000 employees in India.

Worldwide, the 20-year-old company has 12,000 employees across 14 delivery locations in USA, Canada, India and Philippines.

The global BPO business is estimated at $500 billion and it is growing at 11 percent. India is expected to grab a significant share of this business, Vellodi said.

He was accompanied by Kerala industry minister Ebrahim Kunju, IT secretary P H Kurien and other senior officials of the company.

Monday, January 30, 2006

‘Software exports can double in the next three years’

INTERVIEW OF THE WEEK: PHANEESH MURTHY

iGATE Global Solutions is basically a turnaround software company. The company has a new strategy and game plan to acquire new business. Pravin Palande of The Financial Express spoke to Phaneesh Murthy, CEO, iGATE Global Solutions about the software industry in general and the company's growth path in particular. Excerpts:

iGATE is basically a turnaround company. What were the factors that put the company on the growth path?


There are a number of factors that help turnaround a company. First among them is having a new strategy and game plan, and acquiring new customers based on the strategy. Second, is in creating very strong operations focus and discipline. Our iTOPS (Integrated Technology and Operations) strategy has helped us bring together our people to work for a common vision and purpose. Our operations team did an outstanding job of ensuring best in class on-site offshore ratios thereby bringing some of our financial metrics closer to our goals. We were able to acquire some key customers who have scaled well with us. That has been a great boon.

What is the reason for the growth in offshore volumes?

There have been two main reasons for the dramatic growth in offshore volumes. One, on an effort basis, we had a 70% onsite and 30% offshore ratio about three years ago. We have changed that mix to 30% onsite and 70% offshore. This automatically means more work coming offshore. Second, the addition of new customers on the offshore model helped as some of these customers have scaled well with us.

Can you tell us about integrated technology and solutions (iTOPS) from the revenue perspective for the company?

iTOPS is a fascinating concept. It puts us in a partnership position with our customers rather than adversarial position. Among others, it allows us the flexibility to automate, and re-engineer processes. A large chunk of our business today is coming because of the iTOPS story. So, to us, this has become a mission critical part of our business, giving us greater revenues, enhancing differentiation and brand value. Today, its value is significantly greater than the revenue share. We believe that this will make us one of the best firms in many areas.

Your offshore resource utilisation has moved up from 60% to 72% for Q3FY06. Can you elaborate on this?

As our business is growing, we are deploying more people offshore. Also, our transformation engine from entry level to billable people has started working well now - so we can start scaling a little more.

Is this an industry trend to go for fixed price contract than to T&M basis? How does it help the company?

Fixed price projects give clients the satisfaction that we will work productively and protect their interests. Consequently, many clients prefer this arrangement. From a vendor perspective, the fixed price model helps, if the vendor has better processes, estimation models, and gets greater freedom and leverage to innovate and make more money. I think it helps a vendor company to become more sharper and more of a "thinking" company.

On a higher base, how do you see the Indian software industry grow from here? And why?

I continue to see significant runway ahead of the Indian IT industry. In my estimate, only about 7-8% of CIO budgets are spent offshore and that number will go up as Indian companies add more services to their portfolios, such as the infrastructure management, testing and ERP support. I anticipate this percentage, over the next three years, to move to 15-20%. This will mean that in the next three years, the Indian software export industry can comfortably grow to at least double its current size of $20 billion. On a higher level, the addressable market for the Indian industry (including ITES) has gone up from about $300 billion to about $2 trillion a year. This clearly indicates that there is significant headroom for the entire Indian software and services industry and specific companies within the sector, to grow.

Do you have any concentration on SOX or anti money laundering areas?

As a part of the portfolio of services that we offer, risk management is one that has met with a good degree of success. In this service offering, we cover SOX, AML, PPP and Basel II kind of consulting services followed by product selection and implementation.

Which are the areas that you feel will drive growth for the industry in India?

Newer areas in IT that will fuel growth include infrastructure management, testing, and remote ERP support. This of course, is in addition to just volume increase on traditional offerings like application maintenance, development, and re-engineering. On the non IT side, the back office processes and the knowledge processes will add significant top and bottom lines to the Indian industry.

In an age where programmers are becoming obsolete and solutions being delivered in the form of products, how will it affect the Indian software industry?

I have heard of programmers becoming obsolete since the 1980's when Case tools came into existence. As we get into more complex situations and more complex systems we will need very good integration capabilities and this will essentially become the software engineer's job. I think we are a long way from the day of the obsolete programmer - if ever it happens.

What is the product to services ratio for iGATE?

We are a pure services company and we use products or IP to generate more services revenue. We use our in-house developed products like ePartner or third party products to generate our services revenues.


Monday, January 23, 2006

India catches on to ‘temp’ concept

India catches on to ‘temp’ concept The Asian Age India | Shaukat H. Mohammed

Hyderabad: Till recently, temporary staffing, or temping, was treated with scepticism by the labour market in India. People entering the labour market looked for "permanent" jobs, preferably in the government. But with the substantial growth in some sectors of the economy, like banking financial services and insurance, or BFSI, telecommunications, and the ITeS and BPO, temping as a concept appears to be finding traction.

Says Soumen Basu, executive chairman of the New Delhi-based Manpower Services India, a recruitment firm, "The temping labour market is getting organised. It is estimated that currently there are over one lakh people employed as temps in various industries in India. The trend is that this number will increase to between 250,000-300,000 in the next three years."

According to Ashok Reddy, managing director of the Bangalore-based Teamlease Staffing Solutions, India's largest temping company with over 35,000 people on its rolls, "Temping is slowly getting accepted in the labour market because people, especially in the financial services, telecommunications, and retail are willing to take up temporary assignments."

In its Employment Outlook Survey for the first quarter of 2006, Manpower Services India, a subsidiary of the NYSE-listed Manpower Inc., said that the hiring intentions by employers in India "will be very strong, with an overall Net Employment Outlook of 27". "Temping does not mean that the employee will not get any benefits. In fact, while he or she is on our rolls, but is working with our client, the employee gets all the benefits and training accruing to a permanent employee," says Mr Reddy. "We are reaching a point where the temp staff are getting paid on par, if not more, than a company's permanent employees," says Mr Basu.

Friday, January 20, 2006

Major Players in Outsourcing


JANUARY 30, 2006
SPECIAL REPORT -- OUTSOURCING/Online Extra

Major Players in Outsourcing
An expanded look at Gartner Inc.'s analysis of the who, what, where, and how much of offshore outsourcers

More and more multinational companies are turning to offshore outsourcing to help them cut costs and free talent to come up with new products and services. In recent years, Procter & Gamble, DuPont, Cisco, Unilever, ABN Amro, and Marriott have all signed megadeals with global outsourcing companies to overhaul internal operations such as accounting or human resources or to upgrade their technology.

This table represents research and consulting company Gartner Inc.'s analysis of the hot players in the global outsourcing business. Gartner's 10,000 global clients most frequently inquire about these companies as potential offshore partners. Gartner's hot list includes companies that offer software development, computer network support, R&D and engineering services, call centers, and business services from accounting to procurement. They have offshore staff stretching from Argentina to India to Tunisia. The companies represented here include boutique outfits that do under $100 million in offshore business a year and giants that take in billions through global outsourcing. The ranking is based on the frequency of queries from Gartner's 10,000 clients.

Major Players in Outsourcing
Company and Headquarters Specialty Low-Cost Locations Offshore Revenue Range
Accenture (US) Software Development, Network Support, Finance & Accounting (F&A) Human Resources (HR) Procurement, Insurance Operations, General Banking India, Philippines, Spain, China, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Brazil, Australia Over $5 billion
ACS (US) F&A, HR, Payroll, Procurement. Telecom, Transportation, Healthcare Operations; General Banking, Mortgage Processing India, China, Dominican Republic, Ghana, Guatemala, Jamaica, Malaysia, Mexico, Spain $1 billion-$5 billion
Capgemini (France) Software Development Canada, Mexico, Spain, Poland, India, Australia $1 billion-$5 billion
ClientLogic (US) Call Centers India, Philippines, Poland $100 million-$500 million
Cognizant Technology Solutions (US) Software Development, Network Support India, China, and Canada $500 million-$999 million
Convergys (US) Call Centers "India, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Australia, Canada Over $1 billion
CSC (US) Software Development, Insurance Operations, Demand Management Canada, Bulgaria, Ireland, India, Mexico, Malaysia, South Africa, Spain Over $5 billion
EDS (US) Software Development, Network Support; F&A, HR, Payroll, Demand Management, Procurement, Insurance, General Banking, Telecom, Transportation, Health Care Operations Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, India, Australia, South Africa, Spain, Hungary Over $5 billion
eTelecare International, Inc. (US) Customer Service Philippines Below $100 million
ExlService Holdings, Inc. (India) Insurance, Transportation Operations India Below $100 million
HCL Technologies (India) Software Development, Network Support, R&D/Engineering, Financial Services India $500 million-$999 million
Hewitt Associates (US) HR, Payroll, Procurement India, China, Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia, Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Chile Over $5 billion
Hewlett-Packard (US) F&A, Payroll, Procurement India Over $5 billion
IBM (US) Software Development, Network Support, F&A, HR, Payroll, Procurement, Insurance Operations India, Brazil, China, Mexico, Belarus, Philippines, South Africa, Romania, and Argentina Over $5 billion
ICICI OneSource (India) Call centers India Below $100 million
ICT Group (US) Call centers Philippines $100 million-$500 million
Infosys Technologies (India) Software Development, Network Support, Banking, Mortgage Processing India, Czech Republic, China, Australia $1 billion-$5 billion
Mphasis Corp. (India) Financial Services India, China, Australia Under $100 million
OfficeTiger (US) F&A, Financial Services, Transaction Processing India, Sri Lanka Under $100 million
Patni Computer Systems (India) Software Development,Network Support, R&D/Engineering India $500 million-$999 million
Sapient (US) Software Development India $100 million-$500 million
Satyam (India) Software Development, Network Support, R&D/Engineering India, China, Hungary, Brazil, Australia $500 million-$999 million
SITEL (US) Call Centers India, Phillipines, Brazil, Spain, Mexico, Panama $500 million-$999 million
Softtek (Mexico) Software Development Mexico, Spain, and Brazil. $100 million-$500 million
SR.Teleperformance (France) Call Centers Philippines, Indonesia, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Spain Over $1 billion
Stream (US) Call Centers India, Tunisia, Dominican Republic, Poland $100 million-$500 million
Sykes Enterprises (US) Call Centers India, Philippines, China $100 million-$500 million
Syntel (US) Software Development India $100 million-$500 million
Tata Consultancy Services (India) Software Development, R&D/Engineering, F&A, Telecom, Transportation, Hospitality Operations India, Hungary, Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, China $1 billion-$5 billion
TeleTech (US) Call Centers India, Philippines, Malaysia, China, Northern Ireland; Spain, Mexico, Argentina, Brazil Over $1 billion
vCustomer Corp. (US) Call Centers India Below $100 million
West Corp. (US) Call Centers India, Philippines, Mexico, Canada, Jamaica $500 million-$999 million
Wipro (India) Software Development, R&D/Engineering, Demand Management, Mortgage Processing, Transportation Operations, Healthcare Operations, Banking, Mortgage Processing India, Canada $1 billion-$5 billion
WNS Global Services (India) Transportation Operations, Healthcare Operations, Banking, Mortgage Processing India, Sri Lanka Below $100 million
24/7 Customer (India) Customer Service India, Philippines Below $100 million


Data: Gartner, Company Reports, BusinessWeek

Thursday, January 19, 2006

India: 'Chilling out' for a pittance

By Siddharth Srivastava

NEW DELHI - They have been labeled "adventure workers'': Americans and Europeans joining the Indian workforce. For some time, India's outsourcing and information-technology (IT) firms have been hiring foreigners at higher and middle levels for their expertise. However, workers from abroad are also seeking lower-end jobs, such as answering phones at call centers, for a pittance compared with what they could earn in their home countries.

Most of these workers have said that the idea behind taking up such jobs is to "chill out" or "take a break" - ie, travel in the subcontinent while earning at the same time. But there are also more serious dynamics at play, wherein a shortfall of language-proficient manpower is being plugged by personnel who might find themselves out of jobs in more advanced nations because of cheaper options elsewhere. These foreign workers address a common complaint by customers abroad: that the English (or French, German, Spanish or Dutch) spoken by Indians has a very different flavor/accent that makes it difficult to understand. In addition, for certain queries, there is a requirement for cultural and geographical knowledge.

Although there are no exact estimates of the number of foreigners answering phone calls in India, the National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM), the industry trade association, has estimated that there are more than 30,000 expatriates working in Indian IT and offshoring companies, three times the number only two years ago. The total number of foreign nationals working in India is estimated to be more than 50,000, with more than 12,000 registered at the IT hub Bangalore.

Evalueserve, a Delhi-based company that provides consulting and research services to corporate clients worldwide, has estimated that offshoring firms in India will need more than 160,000 workers with refined foreign-language skills by 2010. However, the Indian education system will only throw up 40,000 or so graduates with the required proficiency. Evalueserve predicts that foreigners will make up the difference.

Among the firms that have hired foreigners for language proficiency are Evalueserve (40 foreigners among a total workforce of 900, with plans to add another 150 foreigners this year), Technovate (40 out of 70 workers in a travel-related process are Europeans, with plans to add another dozen), and Pune-based GTL Ltd, which has hired a London-based employment agency to facilitate its elaborate hiring plans.

These foreign workers are being seen as emblems of a reverse movement of human resources, rather than the more usual Indian brain drain to foreign shores. Typically, the salaries of foreign executives in India are much lower than their earnings abroad and at par with Indian employees', but most firms ensure that their stay here is comfortable by providing health insurance, free lodging, and a special leave structure that allows travel back home as well as providing an environment that is professional.

"It's a win-win situation,'' said Sreeram Iyer, chief executive of Scope International, a Chennai-based human-resources and software-development outsourcing operation of Standard Chartered Bank. "The workers don't only come for adventure. Many have trouble getting jobs back home,'' he said in an interview with Economic Times.

In a recent report, BusinessWeek talked about the emergence of service providers that assist India's outsourcers to hire from overseas. These included Tim Bond, a 32-year-old consultant, who last October set up Launch Offshore, a London recruitment firm that caters to Indian call centers. Bond has found jobs for 100 workers, and expects to place 200 more this year. Headhunters India, a leading tech-employment company, has been quoted as saying it gets about 300 unsolicited foreign resumes every month, and has found jobs for about 100 expats in the past two years. At Team Lease Ltd, India's largest temp agency, resumes pour in from Africa, Japan, Poland and Latin America.

Among the names that have been profiled by the media are Even Eng, a Norwegian; Myriam Vock (call center Technovate), a Swiss national; Miki Chiba, a Japanese; Joshua Bornstein (Infosys), an American; Magdalena Gazewska (Siri Technologies), a Pole; Paul King and David Eddison (ITC Infotech), British citizens; Patrick Schapper (travel consultant), another Swiss; and Kenny Rooney (GTL, Pune), a Scotsman. Rooney has been quoted as saying: "India provided me a growth opportunity that wasn't there back home.''

Surveys by NASSCOM and Evalueserve in the past have also indicated that the passage of jobs between India and the United States and the United Kingdom is not a "one-way street". Recently, an industry report by consultancy McKinsey and NASSCOM forecast that India's business services and IT exports are expected to surge more than 25% a year, to US$60 billion by 2010. But there are going to be severe hurdles in the form of manpower shortages, rising salaries and infrastructure needs that may make Indian firms look at international locations to conduct operations as well as hire foreigners.

Indian IT companies have set up offices in the US and China, but they have been largely restricted to marketing, generating new clients and establishing a countrywide network, which have created very few jobs, and those mostly for Indians. In the past couple of years, however, there have been steps by several IT firms such as Infosys, Wipro and Satyam to hire Western employees to deal with local populations abroad and the need to penetrate markets further.

Last month, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), one of India's biggest IT firms, detailed plans to more than double its US staff next year in an expansion that looks to cut into a key market for US giants International Business Machines Corp (IBM) and Accenture Ltd. TCS is boosting its US payroll to 1,500 employees from 600 as it focuses on providing more advanced IT consulting services in the United States. According to a company statement, there are plans to hire 13,500 professionals this fiscal year of which 5,000 will be hired abroad. In 2004, Infosys Technologies invested $20 million to create nearly 500 consulting jobs in the United States.

Observers say overseas professionals feel comfortable working in Indian tech firms, as over the years they have imbibed global practices that are inherent in their operations now. As Indian companies continue to expand operations worldwide, they have adapted their management practices and strategies to compete in the global marketplace. Until recently, most Indian software companies employed Indians in key positions in global positions around the world. An onsite posting or assignment was a plum perk that companies offered budding MBAs (masters of business administration) and other consultants wishing to move towards marketing or sales.

But Indian companies have now begun to realize the significance of having "local hands in local markets'', and have started recruiting sales and marketing people in local markets to represent them. This has not only created a familiarity among foreign workers about Indians and India, but also acted as a push to look for placements when the going is tough abroad.

How to win in a global economy


IT and communications are opening up the world to businesses of all sizes. How can your IT strategy maintain competitiveness?

Clint Witchalls, Computing Business 19 Jan 2006

Being a global company used to mean being a big company, but today even the smallest ecommerce firm is a global player by default.

IT has played a significant role in opening up the world’s borders. The internet, email, videoconferencing and agreement on global standards for communication, such as XML and TCP/IP, have all helped to facilitate business in a global economy.

For human resources, globalisation means we can seek skills wherever they are found in greatest supply. One of the manifestations of this has been the phenomenal rise in outsourcing – once the preserve of big firms, now everyone is doing it.

‘You don’t have to be big to be global,’ says Phillip Everson, a consulting partner at Deloitte. ‘I know of some very small companies – founded within the last 18 months – that have part of their IT run in the US, part of their development done in India, and they’re based in the UK. This is very likely to become more common.’

Dealing with an outsourced IT department on the other side of the world calls for a new set of skills – the so-called ‘soft skills’ that always seem to be in short supply among IT people.

‘When you move to an outsourcing relationship, you need new capabilities at home as well,’ says Wendy Currie, professor of information systems at Warwick Business School. ‘Managers at home need to learn about negotiation and contracts management. And often these are the skills that chief information officers (CIOs) don’t have.’

Although offshore outsourcing is an increasingly popular choice, Currie warns it is not always the cheapest option. ‘People look at the cheap labour costs and think they’re getting a bargain,’ she says. ‘But they don’t factor in international flights and the cost of sorting out problems abroad.’

It makes financial sense for a lot of firms to outsource systems development work, but this can cause headaches. One of the problems is – despite what the outsourcing firms say – their business is not your business. If a supplier meets its service levels, many offshore firms feel they have fulfilled their contractual obligations and do not need to offer any more. You cannot expect anything extra, as you might from an in-house IT department. You have to ask yourself, ‘Is the supplier really interested in my business?’ If you are truthful with yourself, you will find the answer is sometimes ‘no.’

To successfully outsource systems development work you need to be very good at writing water-tight specifications.

‘In reality, there are very few organisations that write and keep to water-tight specs,’ says Everson.

‘The advent of methodologies like rapid application development (RAD) requires a really close working relationship between the developers and the business. But it is hard to do this when you are 5,000 miles and seven time zones apart,’ he says.

In spite of the disillusionment with IT outsourcing, and that many firms have brought their operations back in-house, the sector continues to grow. According to the International Chamber of Commerce, IT services outsourcing is expected to be worth $24bn (£14bn) by 2007, up from $1.3bn (£736,000) in 2002. But Everson says managers will become a lot more selective about what they outsource.

‘People will outsource a subset of their operations rather than the totality of them,’ he says. ‘In doing that, it forces the retained IT department to develop a much different skill set based on commercial management of vendors and service rather than the management of resource.’

Fast networks and global standards have also spurred another revolution: software services over the web.

‘We’re seeing a move towards application services provisioning (ASP) and web services,’ says Currie. ‘Much more data is being routed over the internet and that makes firms much more agile and robust.

‘A lot of people talked about ASP five years ago, but the problem then was that the software hadn’t caught up with the aspiration. A lot of the ASPs did not understand what the customer wanted and found it very difficult to provide a tailored offering. Customers always want some sort of customisation. But people don’t call themselves ASPs anymore, they call themselves software-as-a-service providers. ASP became a little bit tarnished with failure.’

The development of platforms for web services by suppliers such as Microsoft, IBM and Sun Microsystems has enabled more seamless transfer of data across the internet.

For those systems that are kept in-house, global firms need to decide whether to keep central control of IT or whether to allow some local flexibility. With centralised control and a fixed set of standards, it is easier to implement standard business processes across the globe; it is easier to transfer IT staff from one location to another as they all share the same skills; it is also easier to squeeze a bigger discount out of suppliers; and it is easier to grow the company organically. But these gains are sometimes offset by a loss of flexibility. Too much standardisation can be also be a straightjacket.

‘The level of competitiveness in the global economy is more significant, and competitive advantage is not very lasting in this environment,’ says Ebrahim Mohamed, director of the executive MBA programme at Tanaka Business School, Imperial College London.

‘Just note the fast rise of the iPod and the demise of the Walkman, or the emergence of the Chinese economy and the challenges it poses to the industrialised nations. The time frames for change are much shorter in the globalised economy.’

To survive in this environment, you need to be able to respond quickly. Standardised IT systems do not always lend themselves to this level of responsiveness, which is why some organisations go for the federated approach to IT. A federated approach involves an IT infrastructure that is globally governed, but which retains a certain amount of flexibility allowed at a local level. Or as Mohamed says: ‘Central coherence is necessary even if the solutions are localised.’

So, when CIOs have reached the correct balance between centralised and de-centralised, standard and proprietary, outsourced and in-house, what will be the next big issue to resolve? Everson believes it will be the ‘industrialisation’ of IT.

‘IT is characterised by many exceptions, failures and variability. It’s the sort of behaviour in IT that you would not find acceptable in a warehouse or in a supply chain,’ he says.

‘I think that people talk about running IT as a business. It’s about making IT do what it says on the tin, rather than have to employ extensive reactive managers who can mop up all the time.’

‘Has this started happening yet? ‘The rise of IT standards such as the Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) and BS15000 are the earliest stages of this, but we have a long way to go,’ says Everson.

‘If you go into a lot of IT organisations, managers can’t tell you what’s going in that organisation and if they can tell you, they probably can’t tell you why. There is a level of control and visibility and management transparency that would not be tolerated anywhere else in business.’

For Dwight Klappich, an analyst at Gartner, globalisation will mean the re-defining of the role of IT.

‘As businesses have become more information dependent, part of the role of IT is changing to that of information architects and information experts,’ says Klappich.

‘The functional groups tended to be very good at doing their one thing, running a warehouse for example, but when a company wants to re-engineer its approach to the marketplace, IT brings a certain set of skills around defining, modelling and managing business processes.’

And as this begins to happen, IT will take an increasingly strategic role in the global enterprise.

Best Practice:

Formulating a global IT strategy

* The strategy must have clear purpose and use. It must address the questions of the key stakeholders.

* It must align with the rest of the business, and should succinctly address the main needs of the business, its aspirations, and recognise the role and possibilities of IT.

* IT strategy must address the key questions of business strategy, information strategy, how to manage IT and how to maximise return from technology access.

* The plan must be fiscally responsible – there are a lot of IT strategies that are not. It must strike a financial balance between the need to balance IT spend with the business need for growth and productivity improvement.

* The IT strategy can be used to facilitate effective communication as this is where a lot of work carried out globally falls short. If you are working in France, for example, social considerations are in the top-three issues for business executives. And if they are not, employees will put them back there very quickly.

Focus on value

* Address the ‘how-to-do’ things rather than the ‘what’ and the ‘why’. A lot of IT strategies fall into extensive cross-cultural arguments about ‘what’ and ‘why’ and rarely address the ‘how’.

* Measure progress, or the lack of it.

* The strategy must be useable over time rather than being merely useful to inform at a particular point in time.

Outsourcing

* You must develop a relationship with the vendor and it must be an ongoing long-term relationship.

* Understand the culture of the offshore location. Employ people from the country you are doing business with to help you with negotiations.

* Outsource the less business-critical activities before you outsource the critical activities.

* Develop a risk mitigation strategy.

* Choose your outsourcing partner carefully because it can be costly to switch later.

Global data synchronisation

* ‘Before you go too far in implementing global data synchronisation, verify that the quality of data within your organisation is good, clean, consistently interpreted data. Do that inside before you push it outside or you will upset your partners quicker and you will waste money,’ advises James White, an analyst at Gartner.

Case Study: How to develop a winning IT strategy for an organisation competing in the global economy

‘The technology that we sell to our customers is the same technology that we use to run the organisation,’ says Albert Hitchcock, CIO at networking company Nortel.

‘A few years ago, a lot of organisations viewed IT as a necessary evil. We were lumped together with human resources and a number of other support functions as something you just had to do, and do as cheaply as possible. The view nowadays is that IT is much more core to business strategy, and that’s especially true for technology firms such as ourselves.’

From discussions with his peers, Hitchcock found that IT is also becoming core in an increasing number of non-technology firms.

So how does Hitchcock go about developing an IT strategy?

‘We have a well-defined process for developing our strategy,’ he says. ‘The cornerstone of it is an 18- to 24-month strategy that we revisit every 12 months. I have a chief architect – a combination of a strategy person and a technology person – who looks at our 24-month vision both in terms of what’s happening in the business, at a Nortel level and at a market level.

‘What market challenges will we be facing in the next 24 months? He takes a macro-level view of that and a IT view of what’s happening with IT.’

Most people would consider a strategy to be something that looks at longer-term horizons, maybe five years. ‘Some people say that a 24-month strategy is not really a strategy but a set of objectives,’ says Hitchcock.

‘But technology is moving so fast that I don’t think you can reliably predict beyond 18 to 24 months.’

When gathering data for the IT strategy, the process never stops. ‘There isn’t a fixed start and stop timeline,’ says Hitchcock. ‘We start creating the document in September and finish in December. That’s when we set the priorities for the next year.’

Once the chief architect has analysed the environment that Nortel is operating in, the team looks at the company’s own business objectives for the next 12 months.

‘We boil that down to a combination of a vision and something we can make into an operational set of objectives,’ says Hitchcock. ‘We have a set of about 10 priorities that we manage, and we review those every six months. That set of priorities has to link back to the strategy. Every employee in the firm understands his or her priorities for the six-month period. They also understand how their work contributes to delivering the greater vision. The strategy really becomes a living document.’

Case study: The legal challenges of being a global ebusiness

Michael Hancock, a partner at international law firm Salans, is active in ecommerce issues for the International Chamber of Commerce in Paris. He says ebusiness does not involve many new issues for people who have been involved in international business for years.

For as long as there has been trade across borders, the basic questions remain the same: if I pay in advance, how can I be sure to receive delivery? If I manufacture or provide service in advance, how can I be sure to get paid? What can I do if my foreign partner steals my business, concept, products or clients? If everything goes wrong, is there any effective recourse?

So, what is new?

‘First, the players. IT permits very small businesses to become involved internationally at a very low cost,’ says Hancock. ‘All it takes is an email address and some imagination. But these new players are not usually familiar with dealing abroad. Second, the nature of the products and services are frequently IT based, and therefore may be easier for someone to copy and distribute without authorisation.’

For all businesses, intellectual property (IP) is hard enough to protect in their home country, but it becomes next to impossible for small firms, if only due to the cost of engaging foreign lawyers and prosecuting claims abroad. Hancock’s advice is simply, ‘don’t disclose the essentials’, assuming the business permits it.

‘Some products and services are well suited to a start-small-and-grow strategy,’ says Hancock. ‘Here the key is building up a network of trading partners that are worthy of confidence.’

Nonetheless for other businesses there is no substitute to travelling abroad to meet partners and using networks to find someone who can give you a little advice about finding the right partner. Business school alumni associations can be good for this.

When the monetary value of the business permits it, contract obligations can be enforced abroad thanks to an international treaty that foresees the enforcement of arbitration awards abroad – the 1958 New York Convention. A quick internet search will let a small business check the proposed trading partner is in a country that signed it.

‘To keep costs under control, a small business may want to add a contract clause that provides for a single arbitrator and an expedited procedure, perhaps without oral hearings to eliminate travel costs,’ says Hancock.

‘I usually recommend requiring a mediation before arbitration, as mediation so often leads to a settlement at a fraction of the cost of arbitration.’

There are also inherent legal implications of setting up a business with an ecommerce element.

‘If a firm is selling in a foreign country, the seller will probably be subject to the local consumer laws,’ says Hancock. ‘Very small sellers may essentially be “judgment proof” in the sense that the courts of a faraway jurisdiction will not be able to reach them in their home country. But as the business grows, the seller will have more at stake and perhaps even assets in the country. There are, of course, almost as many different situations as there are businesses, and each one must be considered separately.’

Lason to go ahead with biz model; mulls expansion


Our Regional Bureau / Chennai January 19, 2006



Lason India, a 100 per cent subsidiary of US-based Lason Inc, is expected to continue with its present hub-and-spoke business model and has chalked out an expansion programme to hire about 1,600 professionals for full-time employment during the next 8-10 months. The plans would entail an investment of $1.5 million during this year.

Lason, a third party BPO providing data and document management services, has decentralised its business associate model to about 40-plus 'production centres' in Class B towns in Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry.

Its three hubs in Chennai employs about 1600 professionals in outsourcing activities. The rest is distributed across 40-plus centres employing about 5,000 personnel indirectly.

With its plans to add 1,600 professionals, its full-time staff strength would go up to about 3,200 and the total employee strength will go up to 8,000-plus in the next 8-10 months.

Addressing a press conference along with Thomas W Denomme, director Lason India, Ronald D Risher, president and chief executive officer of Lason, US, said that the company would continue with the same business model and was confident of achieving its goals and objectives.

With a number of orders already in hand, the BPO business of Lason is expected to grow by 25-30 per cent during this year, he added. Its India operations contributed about 20-25 per cent to the total global BPO revenue of over $150 million.

However, he indicated that the 'hub and spoke' model needed tremendous control on processes, quality, technology, and security related issues. He also stressed the need for better managers and better communication bandwidth for this model.

Referring to Lason's rural BPO initiatives, Risher said that company was doing valuation for the rural BPO model. Lason has lined up an investment of $1.5 million to expand its operations in Chennai during this year. A significant amount of the investment would go to training besides spending on infrastructure and equipment, he said.

It also has an additional investment budget, which will go for research and development activities.

The Chennai operations also carry out R & D activities that include developing new technology platforms. It has developed imaging solutions to set standard in document scanning and document indexing and other services.

�R & D is a core part of our operations in India. About 70 people are involved in development activities in Chennai,� he said. We will make Chennai operations a Centre of Excellence for R & D and technology development for all of Lason operations, he added.

In December, top two officials of Lason India -- managing director and CEO, Pradeep Nevatia, and president and chief technology officer Ranjit Pisharoty � resigned from their posts. Their key initiatives included the decentralised business model and taking the BPO work to villages.

Thomas W Denomme, who has been involved in India-related operations over the last two years, will now head the India operations. However, he will be based out of Michigan, US.


Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Outsource More, Spend Less





American workers hate it and campaigning politicians attack the practice. Despite all that, U.S. businesses are outsourcing work at record levels.

The number of outsourcing contracts worth $50 million or more increased 9% in 2005 to 293, according to research by Technology Partners International. It's the largest number of deals that size seen in a single year, the consulting firm said last week. TPI relies on outsourcing announcements and its research of unpublicized deals.

While the number of deals is up, businesses actually are spending less on outsourcing. That's because more of the work is performed in India or other places where labor is cheap. Indian service providers grabbed 6% of all outsourcing contracts worth more than $50 million in 2005, compared with 2% the previous year.

At the same time, big U.S. outsourcers such as IBM and EDS are increasing staff in their own offshore facilities to stay competitive. Also driving down contract values is the tendency to parcel out work in smaller chunks and for a shorter duration. The total value of contracts let in 2005 dropped 5% to $75 billion, TPI says.

Outsourcing is controversial because critics say U.S. workers pay the price for businesses' desire to use low-cost labor.

Not all work that's outsourced goes to foreign shores. The majority is still performed domestically. In fact, outsourcers are beefing up their local workforces. According to the Labor Department, payrolls among IT-services firms grew by nearly 32,000 workers in 2005, a 2.7% gain for the year. But that's small comfort to IT workers whose jobs have gone overseas.

SITEL to ramp up presence in KPO segment


Our Regional Bureau / Hyderabad January 18, 2006



SITEL India, a contact centre service provider, is scouting for locations to expand its operations.
This apart, the business process outsourcing (BPO) player is looking at establishing its presence in the knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) segment this year. The company is also looking at focusing on non-voice based interaction as a growth strategy.
Addressing the media on the occasion of the inauguration of SITEL India�s contact centre in Hyderabad, Safir Adeni, chief executive officer of the company, said, �It is important for us to expand our operations to various locations. We are looking at Chennai, Kolkata, Chandigarh, Kochi and Vizag as potential destinations.� The company currently has its presence in Mumbai and Hyderabad.
�This year�s strategic focus for SITEL India will be the KPO segment. We have dabbled in high-end data analytics work and will now position ourselves seriously in this sector. We would like to have a leading edge in the KPO sector,� Adeni added.
The company will be holding its annual strategic plan meetings next week and will outline its plans in this regard.
SITEL India is a 50:50 joint venture between the billion-dollar SITEL Corporation, a global provider of outsourced customer support services, and the Tata Group. At present, 77 per cent of the company�s business is via voice-based interaction.
�Two years down the line, we would like to balance this and have a 50:50 ratio between the voice-based and non-voice based sectors,� Adeni said.
According to Chris Gates, co-chief operating officer of SITEL Corporation, the company would be doubling in India in the near future. At present, it employs around 2,000 people in India out of the around 36,000 worldwide.
�This is my first visit to Hyderabad and I am amazed at what I see,� he added.
Adeni added that the company is looking at tremendous growth and performance from Hyderabad for their company. The company plans to hire 1,000 people in Hyderabad initially.


`Domestic BPO market to grow 60 pc in 2005-06'

Moumita Bakshi Chatterjee

New Delhi , Jan. 17

MOVE over Sam, it is time for Shyam to ride the next business process outsourcing (BPO) wave. After exports, the domestic BPO market is now set to take off in a big way, and grow at an estimated 60 per cent to touch about Rs 4,200 crore in 2005-06.

"The domestic BPO business is expected to grow at 60 per cent to clock Rs 4,200 crore during 2005-06 compared with Rs 2,640 crore in 2004-05. As much as 60 per cent of this would be call centre work. Other activities include HR and finance and accounting operations," Nasscom's Vice-President, Mr Sunil Mehta, told Business Line here.

The domestic BPO business is expected to employ close to 50,000 people in 2005-06, he said. In terms of revenues, the market had grown 85 per cent in 2004-05, from Rs 1,425 crore in the previous year.

"Enterprises have begun to realise that the call centre work is not their core competence and that it is easier and more efficient to outsource this work. Moreover, the growth of exports have helped BPO and call centre companies attain economies of scale and understand business," Mr Mehta said.

Although the domestic pie is still miniscule compared to massive BPO exports of $7.3 billion (Rs 32,850 crore) estimated for 2005-06, the high rate of growth back home combined with lucrative deals — such as the one announced by Bharti last year — is prompting players to actively look at the domestic opportunities.

Earlier today, Spanco Telesystems announced it has secured a five-year outsourcing contract worth Rs 5 crore for its domestic call centre operations under the brand name `Sparsh' from the Delhi Government. The contract involves setting up a voice and Web-based public grievance management system and providing contact centre services. Sparsh would manage Citizen Relationship & Grievance Management System (CRGMS) in Delhi.

In August last year, telecom major Bharti had announced a Rs 1,000-crore deal with four business process outsourcing companies to outsource its call centre operations for the next 4-5 years. The deal signed with IBM Daksh, MphasiS, TeleTech and Hinduja TMT envisaged setting up contact centres in each of the four zones of the country. The same month, MphasiS BPO, formerly MsourcE, forayed into the domestic business process outsourcing market with a multi-crore, multi-year order from State Bank of India.



Friday, January 13, 2006

After BPO and KPO, it is now time for EPO: EEPC chief

Engineering Export Promotion Council (EEPC) Chairman Rakesh Shah today said it is time for India to focus on engineering process outsourcing (EPO), which holds tremendous potential for the country to be a third major world power.

''After business process outsourcing (BPO) and knowledge process outsourcing (KPO), the time for EPO has now arrived and with proper policies, India can lead the world here as well,'' Mr Shah said.

'India's tremendous intellectual capabilities will make the country a big name in this segment and hence, I urge the Centre to extend all support to industry to develop the country as a premier centre for EPO,'' he said.

Delivering the welcome address on the occasion of EEPC's all-India award presentation function here, Mr Shah given the country's strength in research and development (R&D) and human resources, proper development of the EPO business will have a far-reaching beneficial impact on the development of export of engineering goods.

EPO work involves delivering services related to project management, manufacturing process improvement, process simulation study, product design support, product performance testing through virtual simulation and R&D.

Expressing bullishness on the export prospects of the Indian engineering sector, the EEPC chief said while the export target for FY-06 of US dollar 18.3 billion was likely to be exceeded, ''Our engineering sector continued to be on course for doubling our exports by 2009 and carving out a 1.5 per cent share of total world trade.'' Enumerating a few significant promotional programmes taken up by EEPC, Mr Shah revealed that an India engineering meet was being planned in New Delhi where 200 foreign business delegates would be invited.

He also highlighted some of the problems confronting the sector, such as the negative impact of the imposition of service tax, fringe benefits tax (FBT) and uncertainty over issues of DEPB and 80 HHC, which he said have held back the sector's rapid progress.

ITeS sector to gain from TPS

Friday, January 13, 2006

HYDERABAD: Even as the industry is grappling to cash in on Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO), a new wave of Transaction Process Services (TPS) is set to hit Information Technology enabled Services (ITeS) sector, Wipro BPO Chief Operating Officer, Devashish Ghosh said.

Indian ITeS companies should prepare themselves to carve out a niche in the emerging Transaction Process Services wave, he said while participating in CII’s conference on Hardware & ITeS as part of GITEX India 2006. Ghosh said ITeS companies would now be asked to provide a combination of services related to process, applications and infrastructures.

In the next five years, a major percentage of companies' revenues would go to employees' salaries and India may lose on its traditional cost advantage, Ghosh added.

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Novo Nordisk outsources clinical trial data management to TCS

Novo Nordisk outsources clinical trial data management to TCS

Kirsty Barnes



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10/01/2006 - Indian IT company Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) has scored a contract from Danish pharma company Novo Nordisk for the data management of its clinical trials run in India.

Novo Nordisk has been actively implementing an outsourcing strategy as a cost-cutting measure and already has number of such agreements in place in India.

Analysts estimate that off-shoring parts of clinical trial management can reap in savings of up to 40 per cent of the current cost of capturing data from clinical trials.

These cost-savings are leading to an influx of big pharma companies seeking to outsource various aspects of clinical trials to cost-effective countries such as Asia and India.

As a result, the potential revenue from outsourcing clinical trial management is expected to be around $1 bn (€0.83 bn) in the next five years, according to available estimates.

TCS recently demonstrated the growth potential in this area, posting total revenues of $2.24 billion in the fiscal year 2004-2005, making it the first Indian IT company to cross the two billion dollar mark. The company expects to double its growth in the next few years.

In the latest deal, TCS will provide a range of data management services that include designing, capturing, and coding of trial data gathered from clinical trials that are run by Novo Nordisk across the globe out of its facility in Mumbai.

"Our deep domain knowledge and data management capabilities ensures that Novo can outsource large groups of trials to a single provider in a low employee cost geographic location to enable greater value creation," said Milind Kamat, head, TCS BPO services.

"Our strategy in TCS is to provide our products, solutions and services across the pharma chain from drug discovery, clinical development, manufacturing, sales and marketing to regulatory services for leading global pharma companies," said J. Rajagopal, executive vice president and head, Global Life Sciences and Healthcare Practice.

Saturday, January 07, 2006

Information Technology & India



Cover Focus Articles
General Information
January 6, 2006 • Vol.28 Issue 1
Page(s) 1 in print issue

A Closer Look At What We Can Learn From This Rapidly Expanding IT Hotspot
Headlines touting India’s burgeoning IT market are almost a daily occurrence in today’s tech media, and for good reason. Outsourcing continues to draw hordes of overseas customers, domestic computing is on the rise, and multinational giants are pouring billions into Indian-based development.

According to Gartner, enterprise IT spending will reach $25 billion in 2006, up from $20.3 billion in 2005, and business spending on computer hardware, software, and communications products will grow at a rate of 20.8% over the next four years. Along with China, India is poised to make a huge impact in the worldwide IT realm in coming years. Gartner reports that “the rapid maturing of information development in China and India will see trade between the two explode and result in firms gaining competencies that can be applied across emerging markets globally.”

That potential isn't being ignored on U.S. soil. India's prospects look so enticing to Microsoft that the company plans to invest $1.7 billion in India over the next four years, with half of the investment being pumped into the expansion of Microsoft’s research and development centers.

“Our business has grown in India as a result of the strong technical and skilled resources available in the state,” said Chairman Bill Gates at a recent Microsoft event in Bangalore, inaugurating the company’s new seven-story India facility. “This new building signals our confidence in the future of this relationship and our intent to provide our employees with the best possible environment and resources. Our partners and we have 4,000 professionals in India today. We will increase it to 7,000 over the next three to four years.”

Also onboard the Indian train is Intel, which unveiled a multiyear plan to invest more than $1 billion in India, including $800 million over the next five years to expand business operations there. The microprocessor behemoth is targeting expansion of its research and development center in Bangalore, as well as marketing, education, and community programs.

Intel chairman Craig Barrett also took the wraps off plans for a $250 million Intel Capital India Technology Fund to help stimulate local technology innovation and growth. A similar-sized investment was announced in October by Cisco President and CEO John Chambers, who says his company will invest $1.1 billion in India over the next three years, including $750 million for the expansion of its R&D operations there.

Methods For Success

This increased focus on India and its massive potential for IT expansion and innovation comes as no surprise to many within the industry, as India has long been an outsourcing hotbed and should continue to be one for years to come. A recent report from Nasscom-McKinsey estimates that the country’s combined BPO and IT outsourcing market will grow at a rate of 25% per year to reach $60 billion by 2010.

“They strive to have a much bigger workforce that has a much higher level of expertise over there than here,” says Sanjeev Aggarwal, senior analyst for Small & Medium Business Strategies at Yankee Group. He says that areas such as network development are particularly rich with talent, resulting in Indian data centers that run smoothly and efficiently.

Indian outsourcing companies are placed in well-built office parks that have all the infrastructure and connectivity required to reach the outside world. “These types of companies are very progressive because they are servicing outside companies,” explains Aggarwal. “They need to have top-notch infrastructure and top-notch IT servers and desktops and storage and connectivity. Those data centers would compare with anything here or may even [rank] one notch above them, in terms of redundancies and [other areas].”

Smaller businesses in India, especially those that service the Indian market, tend to have much older technical infrastructures than companies that make their money outside of India. However, older equipment in India doesn’t tend to affect companies there as much as it does in the United States because Indian personnel are able to stretch the lifetime of their equipment beyond the limits of what we might consider useful.

According to Aggarwal, another difference is that data center employees in India tend to be more adept in varied technologies than employees here. “You’ll see more Linux there because they have people who can toil around with the Linux code and open source and make it work.”

Some might explain this tendency toward broader expertise as a requirement to compete in a country teeming with technical talent. Yet recent research from Duke University reveals inaccuracies in statistics that claim the United States produces 70,000 engineers every year while India produces 350,000 every year. Duke found that the United States is graduating about 222,000 engineers per year, compared to India’s 215,000. And according to a McKinsey partner, only 25% of technical graduates in India are “suitable” for working in the offshore IT industry.

Aggarwal notes that although there is plenty of emphasis placed on certifications for job applicants, experience is similarly valued. However, for smaller companies, balanced applicants are becoming more difficult to snag. “The dilemma that one faces is the people who are more experienced and more certified want to work for the multinational companies and outsourcing companies [instead of] the Indian companies that are servicing Indian clients. They have a harder time getting more talent.”

Ditch The Meetings?

Although India’s data centers increasingly mirror their U.S. counterparts in terms of technology and processes, subtle variations in the way personnel conduct their business can equate to timesaving. Sumit Gupta, who has worked in IT in both the U.S. and Bangalore, says that cultural informalities in India let workers cut to the chase when dealing with particular IT-related issues.

“What could take a meeting of 10 to 12 people here could be done [there] by two or three people just talking in a cubicle,” Gupta says. “Here you call a meeting, you cc: a whole bunch of people who have nothing to do with the topic. People who have little to contribute to the topic end up showing up at the meetings, asking irrelevant questions and taking off on tangents that could have otherwise been avoided.”

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

India's IT economy facing testing time

The Birmingham Post Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge
January 3rd, 2006

India's business services and information technology exports are expected to surge more than 25 per cent a year to $60 billion by 2010, but the industry faces tough hurdles.

The projection, in a study released by consultancy McK-insey and India's IT association, Nasscom, is roughly in line with the 30 per cent annual rise in the past three years and earlier forecasts of $50 billion in exports by end-2008.

At $60 billion, India would have almost half the world's IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) exports by 2010 and could add an extra $15 billion to $20 billion over five to ten years from 2005 through innovation and technological advances, the report said.

While India will remain the biggest pool of low-cost global knowledge workers for the foreseeable future, with more than double the combined total in its nearest rivals, China and Russia, it faces a shortfall of 500,000 people by 2010 unless it steps up training.

"The reality is that this shortfall can be fairly easily met by industry," McKinsey's Noshir Kaka said in New Delhi, citing India's 2.5 million graduates a year.

IT/BPO sector jobs will grow from 700,000 to 2.3 million and indirect employment from 2.5 million to 6.5 million - adding more work than the communist-backed Congress government's four biggest labour creation programmes, the report said.

A bigger hurdle is India's creaking infrastructure, where even leading cities such as Bangalore, Mumbai and New Delhi have massive problems with power, transport and other basic services.

McKinsey's Jayant Sinha said the government and business must go on "a war-footing" to solve the infrastructure crisis, which economists say is also a major brake on broader economic growth.

To get around this, the report urges the creation of ten to 12 new townships or satellite cities across the country, with their own airports, roads, real estate development and other services. It also proposes special education zones and school reforms.

McKinsey and Nasscom estimate barely ten per cent of the potential $300-billion-a-year world market for global offshoring is being tapped, but they expect radical changes.

"We have no doubt that this industry will become the largest export-led industry in the world, rivalling oil from Saudi Arabia or automobiles from Japan," Kaka said.

McKinsey and Nasscom publish their outlook for India's fastest growing industry every three years. This is their third.

They see the sector's export share of gross domestic product - itself growing about eight per cent year - more than doubling from three per cent to seven per cent by 2010.

The report said the face of the IT/BPO sector will change as its traditional engines of growth, such as application and software development and research and development, slow and customers expect more innovation and value-added services.

"Looking forward, the more traditional IT outsourcing lines such as hardware and software maintenance, network administration and help desk services will account for 45 per cent of the total addressable market for off-shoring and are likely to drive the next wave of growth," it said.

This will be focused in areas such as banking, human resources and finance.

Meanwhile, China surpassed the United States as the world's top exporter of laptop computers, mobile phones and other information and communications technology devices in 2004, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said.

China exported $180 billion worth of so-called ICT goods in 2004, compared with US exports of $149 billion, the OECD said.

OECD officials said that China was likely to take top spot in 2005 too, but hard proof would take many months to collect.

The United States was world leader in 2003 with $137 billion worth of exports of ICT goods, followed by China with $123 billion, the OECD said in a statement.

"The data show a shift towards more trade between China and other Asian countries, with a corresponding decline in ICT imports to this region from the European Union and the US," it said.

How to hire a firm for outsourcing

January 03, 2006

The author has been working in the IT industry in various capacities and is currently working for a Houston, Texas-based company.


The biggest challenge for any organisation's management team while deciding on outsourcing -- or offshoring or consulting key functions -- is how to hire a company for the initiative. There are many companies who are certified in SEI/CMM levels. SEI/CMM level is a good metric to judge the value add services offered to its clients by a company.

Many Indian companies are certified in various levels of SEI/CMM; at the same time there are lots of small players in the field too, which are willing to travel that extra mile to deliver more than what customers ask for.

Organisations looking to outsource/offshore key functions as part of their macro-management strategy should also look at small- and medium-sized companies. Of course, one of the key quality differentiators here is that with smaller companies, an SEI/CMM level certification might not be available to select from.

With smaller companies, it is a huge investment, effort and requires experience to build upon over the years to get SEI/CMM certification. The purpose of this article is to provide an insight on thekey parameters to evaluate a S-M sized company and still realise high ROI and optimum benefits. At the end of the day, it is all about 'Level Playing Field.'

Key evaluation parameters

In evaluating small and medium companies offering outsourcing/offshore/consulting capabilities, organisations need to ask a few fundamental questions before hiring. Finding an S-M company is not difficult today. However, finding the right one is often challenging and difficult.

Due to a boom for the IT-enabled service sector and for IT workers alike, there are many S-M companies in the United States and in India offering staffing services. Some companies, as they grow along with the economy, would like to transition to a more stable solution-based model or consulting model from a pure play so-called body shoppers.

Better still they would like to participate in the buzzing activity of outsourcing of IT-enabled services. I would consider them as the S-M companies because they have the experience, zeal, knowledge and the business acumen to deliver more than what customer expects.

It is the inherent capability of these company's staff to consistently deliver the highest value service, and this is what differentiates them from the others in this cutthroat business.

The companies are smaller and hence the company as a whole needs to be evaluated. The areas which need to be evaluated, are listed below:

  • The management's credibility and accomplishments.
  • Collective experience of the employees working for the company.
  • Top 5-10 customers who are served, and feedback from key customers.
  • Supervision process and organisational structure for escalations after awarding the project.
  • Service-level agreement.
  • Costs incurred in evaluation and ongoing fee for the project.
  • Company culture, work ethics, and personality.

Advice to organisations interested in hiring S-M company

Although all the above are important, special emphasis should be made on 'Company culture, work ethics and personality.' No matter how qualified a company is or how glorious the company brochure, the sales presentation, the Web site, etc. appear, if you cannot work closely with them and feel comfortable relying upon their judgment and services, you will not receive the maximum benefits for you're the money you spend.

Key to finding the right firm

The Web site is a good place to start. Often times the Web site's appearance is a direct reflection of the firm's personality, professionalism and approach to a client's needs. If it is easy to use, simple to follow, and 'feels' good, you may want to pursue that company.

If the site seems too flashy or too difficult to follow, then you may want to concentrate on other firms who make you feel more comfortable.

Setting the expectations

Call the company for a sales presentation, brochures and solution offerings: the goal is to get the right message across. Before you decide to hire the company, prepare a list of questions (Request for Proposal or RFP in big organisations). The approach is to ask the company to respond to the preset list of questions, in writing or verbally. This allows you to compare potential firms on a more objective basis. Your list of questions will vary depending upon your needs and your industry.

If questions are framed in the following areas, you can construct an RFP of your own. Your questions should be direct, but not offending. Again, the following are only a guide, but can be used until you have time to frame your own questions.

  • Remember you are the client and the one who needs to feel comfortable.
  • Skim, read and understand the background information and methods of the company.
  • Why should an organisation go with a firm?
  • Key differentiators, process model, project development, management and delivery methodologies and SLAs. Note: S-M companies are not SEI/CMM certified with no project management office, hence no structured process or project management methodologies exist. But with collective experience, do well than most companies. This is my personal opinion, based on experience over the years.
  • How does the approach differ from the competition?
  • Escalation levels, organisational structure, and ownership for key deliverables.
  • Maintaining timelines, cost and budget.
  • Kind of support services and duration of the service provided aftermath and during the execution of the project.
  • Does the company offer a guarantee or warranty of the services?
  • Key resource personnel involved in the project, profiles of key resources, supervisor credentials, background and experience.
  • Evaluate the company's domain and technical expertise in its entirety.
  • In addition, there are questions you should be asking yourself. Does this organisation's value match up those of an S-M company?
  • Do you feel comfortable accepting advice from the company?
  • Is there a collaboration, coordination and communication protocol set up and are you comfortable with that?
  • How will my staff react to the initiative from the management
  • Were the verbal answers�in line with their brochures, sales presentations, Web site, etc.

Conclusion

In essence, to encourage healthy competition and level playing field, organisations can evaluate small and medium companies adopting some of the question areas listed in the article above

It is my personal opinion that the question areas listed above could be adopted to evaluate any company for outsource, offshore/near shore abilities or even to hire individual contractors, consultants or staffing services.