Tag Archive for 'BPO'

“The Best Years of Outsourcing Are Ahead of Us”

Despite the current challenges, the best years of outsourcing are ahead of us, according to speakers at “IT Services & BPO Connect ‘08”, a conference focused on the road ahead and investment opportunities in these sectors. The event was organized by my firm Venture Intelligence last month at Mumba. Here are a couple of extracts from the post event newsletter:

Srinath Batni, Executive Board Member at Infosys Technologies, was categorical in stating that the outsourcing industry had “a long way to go and there is still a lot of juice to be extracted”. The current challenges are not so much on the demand side, but on the supply side. “The fundamental drivers of outsourcing are not going to change overnight,” he averred. On the cost escalation front, Batni pointed how salary increases as a percentage of revenues for Indian companies have risen less than 5% over the last 10 years. Plus, wage costs in the client markets are also increasing and the number of students going in for technical education in those countries is decreasing. The differential is still attractive enough to drive outsourcing to destinations like India. On other parameters like quality and scalability too, the Indian outsourcing industry has built a strong foundation for itself. “Also, the requirement for customers to keep pace with technology – which is becoming more and more heterogeneous - for competitive advantage will continue. Customers will need technology-related support regardless of state of the economy.”

…Abhay Havaldar, Managing Director of Private Equity firm General Atlantic, emphasized the need for striking the right balance between scale and innovation. His firm was more interested in investing into companies that attacked the operating expenses of businesses rather than the SG&A budgets. The challenge for such vendors is that it requires customers to re-engineer their processes – kind of like changing the wheels while you are still moving.

Other speakers at the conference included Aparup Sengupta, CEO, Aegis BPO; Nitin Shah, CMD, Allied Digital; Subbu Subramaniam, Partner, Baring Private Equity; Partha De Sarkar, CEO, HTMT Global; Shailesh Shah, Chief Strategy Officer, Satyam; Ranjan Bandyopadhayay, Global Head of HR & Strategic Initiatives, TCS; Dev Raman, Principal, Tricolor India; Sunil Kolangara, Director-Private Equity, UTI Ventures and Ashutosh Vaidya, CEO, Wipro BPO.

Any VW members who would like a copy of the full post event newsletter, can email info@ventureintelligence.in.

The Death of Indian Outsourcing

“Are you kidding? No way!”

In 2008, the IT and IT enabled services (ITES / BPO) industries are supposed to be the major drivers of India’s economic growth. According to Nasscom, the two industries combined will employ 4 Million people, account for 7% of GDP, and 33% of foreign exchange inflow.

Death of this industry is far from anyone’s mind.

Let me tell you a story. <!–more–>

There is a tiny company in Silicon Valley called InsideView. It helps customers in sales lead generation, qualification and opportunity identification research using technology and a software-as-a-service (SaaS) business model.

In November 2007, InsideView acquired a company called TrueAdvantage which did the exact same thing manually, with a team of 150 people in India. TrueAdvantage had 2500 customers, all of which are being transitioned over to InsideView’s software-driven solution. All 150 people at TrueAdvantage have been laid off for no fault of their own.

The human tragedy may sound familiar to the Michigan auto-workers who have been losing their jobs to China, or the IT/Call-center workers in the US whose jobs have been off-shored to India. They have all been laid off for no fault of their own.

The reality is that wages are rising in India. The cost advantage for off-shoring to Indian used to be at least 1:6. Today, it is at best 1:3. Attrition is scary.

Jobs that are low-value-add and easily automatable should and will disappear over the next decade. People talk a lot about India moving up the value chain. Yes, some of that has indeed happened. An industry that started gaining momentum with the Y2K porting projects has blossomed beautifully into one that offers a much more comprehensive spectrum of services.

Yet, India, for all its glory, is still the world’s back-office. The IT / ITES industry is a “services” industry. In simple terms, the Indians don’t do the thinking. The customers do. India executes.

As a result, India has not learn’t to come up with technology products of its own. Barring a few exceptions, the huge amount of venture capital chasing India finds it difficult to be deployed. There is way too much money, way too few deals. Instead, tech-sector VCs are now diverting capital to retail, real estate, hotels, etc.

The $30 Billion IT / ITES services industry, meanwhile, is slowly and surely, losing its competitive advantage.

You see, most of the 4 Million people that the industry employs have already “arrived”. They have breezed through the milestones that their fathers had to toil all their lives to reach. A phone. A watch. A TV. A car. A house.

They are complacent. They will not take risks. They have “outsourced” thinking to their customers.

As the 1:3 cost structure becomes 1:1.5, it will soon become inefficient to use Indian labor. Why not Oklahoma or British Columbia? For many Europeans, Eastern Europe has already become more compelling than India. The pure labor arbitrage equation will no longer balance.

In a decade, what would happen to the newly minted affluent class created by the Indian IT boom?

Companies like Infosys and Wipro, assuming that they want to preserve their business momentum, will need to diversify their portfolios away from pure body-shopping and process competencies to technology driven advantages. The obvious place for them to go is Software-As-A-Service (SaaS). Their current market caps and cash reserves are high, so an easy way for this transition would be via acquisitions. Wherever SaaS and manual BPO services overlap, they should cut the manual and replace with SaaS to the extent possible.

To give you an accurate picture, none of this is happening quite yet. In fact, Infosys is hiring tens of thousands of new employees in India still. The mood is upbeat. The golden goose is still laying large, warm eggs, enough to feed the 4 Million and their families.

Meanwhile, the workforce is getting comfortable in their cubicle chairs, just as the turkey gets comfortable before Thanksgiving.

Domestic BPO market - next big opportunity?

Avendus has a report out on the domestic BPO sector. With the decline of the dollar and the expansion of the India domestic market in all spheres, could this be the next big opportunity?

Historically, the outsourcing market in India has been export focused and most participants have been focusing their energies in building businesses catering to US and European clients. However, with the emergence of India as one of the largest economies in the world, the Indian domestic outsourcing market is also emerging as an attractive target market.

To enable various participants of the outsourcing market to understand the Indian domestic BPO market better, we are publishing a report titled “Indian Domestic BPO Market - An Emerging Opportunity”.

While it is a US$1.8Bn market and expected to reach US$6Bn by FY2012 (CAGR of 35%+), we expect the third party segment of this market to grow much faster at 53%, taking the third party share from 18% in FY2008 to 30% in FY2012. Dominated today by call center activities from Banking, Telecom and Insurance, we expect this business to also show growing demand in the back office processing activities as the market and vendor sophistication grows.

Contrary to popular belief, the Indian domestic BPO business, despite its relatively lower pricing levels, has better (or at least equal) profitability margins as compared to the companies catering to global customers.

We believe the Indian domestic BPO market is a strong potential opportunity for both financial and strategic investors looking at making attractive investments in this space.

Last, but not the least, we also believe that the existing players in the Indian domestic BPO market will stand to gain from the years of credibility and referencibility they have built in this space, with the infusion of structured capital into this market.