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Monday, April 23, 2007

Offshoring hits home

MUNCIE -- On the eve of the closing of City Machine Tool & Die -- the manufacturing firm their family ran for decades -- John and Jim Wagner, the majority shareholders in the company, talked about China.
Although thousands of miles separate Muncie and China, the Asian country's burgeoning manufacturing industry weighed heavily on the minds of the hometown businessmen.
The two traveled to Japan, Colombia, Brazil and elsewhere to build their business -- "Places I never thought I would see," Jim Wagner said -- but China remained fixed in their thoughts.
The two had gone to China in the early 1990s to set up fixtures for a manufacturing plant.
"We went to the house of a middle manager at the plant," John Wagner remembered. "It was small, with a closet that held his bike."
The Wagners -- whose company made died and work-holding machines over the decades -- learned that because of government subsidies, the Chinese company could afford to pay even its managers a pittance.
"His income was $370 a year," John Wagner said.
The low wages and low costs enjoyed by manufacturers in many parts of the globe have an impact on companies right here in Muncie, the Wagners noted.
"We've lost business to China," Jim Wagner said. "We lost a John Deere contract."
Although many factors led to City Machine's closing after 70 years of operations, the loss of that farm equipment contract to a Chinese manufacturer still weighs heavily on the Wagners.
Some businesses from this area have found a way to prosper in the increasingly global marketplace, where jobs can be lost -- or relocated -- to China or Mexico.

Monday, November 27, 2006

'US companies handled outsourcing issue wrongly'

Panaji, Nov 28. (PTI): Outsourcing into India is inevitable, but if corporates handled loss of jobs in the US in a better way, Americans would not be so opposed to the phenomenon, according to director John Jeffcoat.
Jeffcoat, whose film 'Outsourced' on the BPO industry is being screened at the ongoing International Film Festival of India (IFFI) here, said outsourcing into India was inevitable, but it was the way that the corporates handled the issue with their employees back in the US that was wrong.

Friday, October 28, 2005

India's Talent Shortage

Sectors like IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) are simply outpacing the availability of talent in India
There could be as many as 50,000 foreigners working in India, as part of that country's IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) industry, according to Australia's The Age newspaper. The article went on to cite research according to which India will need 160,000 workers with European language expertise by 2010, by which year only 40,000 Indians will have the requisite levels of expertise.

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

`Legal work outsourcing potential waiting to be tapped'

RIGHT from filing patents to drafting transnational contracts to creating necessary information back-up for global corporations in litigations and providing support in contract management - - ,one can outsource a wide range of legal work, bringing in similar scale of economies that business process outsourcing brings to companies.

Friday, July 22, 2005

How the Democrats can regain power by stopping outsourcing .

One key for the Democrats' to regain power is to stop the outsourcing of American jobs . Millions upon millions of American jobs have already been lost and may never return . While outsourcing of American jobs may mean increased profits for companies that do so , it means only heartache and despair to those hardworking Americans who have lost their jobs . Those people who lost their jobs have not only lost a paycheck . They have also lost a piece of their lives and their dignity .

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Japanese cos may knock on Indian doors for outsourcing

With an ageing population and a falling birthrate, Japan is expected to face a workforce shortage of 30 lakh people by ’07. It will need to either outsource work or allow in foreign workers.

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Gates warns against reliance on outsourcing

Companies should not outsource their core business functions and staff, Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates told a group of Japan's top businessmen in a speech in Tokyo.
"If you rely too much on people in other companies and countries ... you are outsourcing your brains where you are making all the innovation," Gates said.

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

Innovation to drive outsourcing

Innovation not cost reduction will be the main reason successful firms outsource IT jobs over the next decade, according to analyst firm Forrester.

Thursday, May 26, 2005

Insource, Offshore, Outsource -- Help!

Insourcing, offshoring, outsourcing, near-shoring: The confusing terms crop up frequently but aren't always well-defined. What do they mean in practical terms? Should small-business owners sign on to these oft-promoted business models? Do they really deliver on promised cost-savings?

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Top Reasons for Outsourcing

Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Big boys turn backs on offshoring

Many of the world's largest organisations are turning their backs on outsourcing and one in four are actively bringing services back in-house.
A survey from Deloitte Consulting reveals that 70 per cent of respondents have had significant negative experiences with outsourced projects. Just under half, 44 per cent, did not see outsourcing contracts achieving significant cost savings.
In fact 57 per cent of respondents said they had had to pay for services they believed were included in the cost of the original contract. Almost half of those questioned said hidden costs were the most common problem with outsourced contracts. As a result of these disappointments more than half of those surveyed have moved from long-term contracts (of about ten years) to shorter contracts of less than five years.
Ken Landis, senior strategy prinicipal at Deloitte, said the survey revealed the fundamental difference between outsourcing the making of a product and outsourcing an actual service that has to be delivered every day. Firms found that outsourcing contracts can add complexity and increase the burden and workload for managment.
The survey was carried out using face-to-face interviews with senior executives representing 25 big companies - nearly half are within the Fortune500, a quarter are privately held or public sector bodies. The average participant had annual turnover of $50bn.

Thursday, April 14, 2005

70% of Indian business process outsourcing companies to die within the next few months

70% of Indian business process outsourcing companies to die within the next few months by ZDNet's IT Facts -- 70% of the top 15 Indian business process outsourcing start-ups will cease to exist in the coming months, Gartner said. Offshoring customer service will not be as widespread as expected. In 2005, it is expected to be less than 2% of the total and will grow only to less than 5% in 2007. Through 2007, 80% of organisations that outsource customer service and support contact centres with the primary goal of reducing cost will fail.

Monday, April 04, 2005

Outsourcing, Offshoring, Exporting U.S. Jobs - Who’s Most Likely to Do It? Who’s Most Likely to Succeed or Fail?

Key findings include:
· Large companies use offshore services 2.4 times more often than small companies and are more likely than small companies to use more offshore services in the future.
· Top users of offshore services, by industry:
· Communications (34.5% of these companies say they use offshore
services)
· Information Technology (33.8%)
· Financial Services (25.7%)
· Retail-Wholesale (22.9%)
· "Health and Education" and "Public Administration" report that they're increasingly disinclined to use offshore services. In the case of Public Administration, i.e. Government, the disinclination to go offshore may reflect recent political backlash and significant dissatisfaction reported with past use of offshore services.

“Lou Dobbs, Carly Fiorina, Gregory Mankiw—whomever’s side you’re on, this special report sheds new light on the controversial issue of offshore services,” said Kelly Gay, chairman, president & CEO of KnowledgeStorm. “In the midst of heated debate and rising backlash over this trend, quantitative facts and analysis are hard to come by. ‘Corporate IT Spending and Offshore Services’ reveals the trends, profiles and numbers behind outsourcing that may affect your job, your company and your customers.”

NOTE TO EDITOR: http://KnowledgeStormResearch.com/
The full report on “Corporate IT Spending and Offshore Services” is available complimentary for credentialed members of the media. ($1,500 for non-press). In addition to more detailed data and charts, the full report includes complete segmentation analysis by industry and company size.

More findings from the full report:
· 23.6% of companies surveyed report using offshore services.
· Use of offshore services varies widely by industry, from a low of 9% to a high of
· over 34%.
· The marketplace is polarized -- not all companies are eager to use offshore services:
· 42% of respondents indicate that they're less open to using offshore services in the future.
· 57.8% of users of offshore services are satisfied with them.
· There's a strong positive correlation between satisfaction and increasing likelihood to use offshore services. Therefore, expect use of offshore services to continue to grow because of this base of satisfied and eager customers.

Thursday, March 24, 2005

India, Philippines to get larger share of outsourcing pie

IANS Mumbai March 16: India and the Philippines are set to corner a larger share of the global offshoring business with 127,000 new call centre jobs likely to be added in the two countries over the next five years, says a study.
Whilst India continues to dominate the global call centre outsourcing landscape, the Philippines threatens to poach some activity as its own market grows in strength, said the survey conducted by London-based research firm Datamonitor.
“Several outsource providers are seeing their order books filling up once again with offshore projects destined for India and the Philippines,” said the report made available to IANS.
According to the report entitled, ‘The future of contact centre outsourcing in India and the Philippines’, the United States continues to represent the vast majority of overseas demand followed by Britain.
“Both India and the Philippines will see substantial growth in call centres now that US presidential elections are out of the way allowing US and Britain businesses to ramp up their offshore operations,” it said.
“Besides the attractions that India and the Philippines offer western firms in terms of low cost access to highly skilled staff, the two markets will also demonstrate substantial growth in their domestic call centre markets.”
By 2009, close to 100,000 agent positions — seats from which call centre agents make and receive telephone calls to internal or external customers — will be serving the Indian domestic market, while the Philippines will have 21,600.
Datamonitor predicts that more firms are set to follow the likes of British Airways, Citibank, General Electric and HSBC, all firms that have spun off a part or all of their captive operations in India.
“Outsource providers are competing to run entire customer processes for their clients, rather than merely the voice-based call centre part,” said Mr Ryan Powell, call centre analyst with Datamonitor and author of the study.
“The fact that they are able to win this kind of work is testament to the efforts that have been placed on assuring quality control and improving call resolution rates in order to improve customer satisfaction.”
According to Datamonitor, outsource providers are looking to increase their operational footprints around the globe while seeking to provide customers with a broader range of end-to-end solutions.
The MphasiS BFL Group, one of India’s leading mid-size IT services firms, said on Monday it had acquired a US-based business process outsourcing company for $ 16.5 million to expand presence overseas.
The study, however, warned that the Philippines might emerge as a competitor to India in the offshoring business with the former unveiling new initiatives to boost its presence in the global market.
India’s educational system and training programmes have helped transform the country into a global outsourcing superpower.
The nearly $ 3 billion business process outsourcing industry in Asia’s fourth largest economy has now become one of the top money-spinning ventures for the country and is set to grow at a dazzling clip in the years ahead.

Thursday, March 10, 2005

Outsourcing IT/ Management Strategies

Business leaders eye external providers to cut costs, but there are ways to take command of the process while helping achieve corporate goals.

By Marc FerrantiNetwork World,

In an ongoing drive to reduce capital expenditures, corporate executives continue to consider outsourcing as a way to pare IT costs and focus on projects that are most directly linked to business goals.
Experienced executives agree that outsourcing almost always sows uncertainty in internal personnel. It can result in layoffs and budget reductions among IT middle managers. The silver lining for IT managers is that there are opportunities for those who are prepared to embrace change and help their companies face the challenges of dealing with outsourcers - whether those external providers are in Bangalore or Boston.
"Take charge of decision making, and take the fear out of the process of using external service providers," says Reynaldo Gil, CEO and founder of Commendo Software in Fremont, Calif.
Capitalize on the fact that outsourcing is notoriously hard to do, Gil says. In a career that includes stints at Bank of America, Charles Schwab and IBM, Gil has pulled the plug on what he calls "nightmare scenarios." He once advised a CEO to walk away from an intellectual property dispute with an external provider, at a loss of close to $1 million dollars.
Other technology and business leaders agree that when it comes to outsourcing, companies need all the talent they can muster to do it right.
"The management of outsourcing partners does create certain positions to ensure that the deliverables expected from your partners are actually done," says Cecilia Claudio, CIO and vice president of engineering for Align Technology, a Santa Clara maker of orthodontic products, and a board member of RampRate, an IT outsourcing advisor in Santa Monica, Calif.
"You need a team to manage the outsourcers, a program management office or an offshore development management center," says Claudio, who has worked at Zurich Financial Services, Farmers Insurance Group and Xerox over her 30-year career. In the 1990s, Claudio helped engineer Xerox's bellwether $3.2 billion outsourcing deal with Electronic Data Systems.
Claudio says outsourcing program management involves a variety of tasks and skills, which include the writing of service-level agreements; analysis of contracts; documentation for how processes should be managed; and creation of liaison roles to ensure effective communication among IT, the business side of the company and outsourcers.

At Align, Claudio started to bring in program managers from offshore providers skilled in these areas. She assigned some of her IT staff to work with the managers on different cross-functional projects."People willing to move out of a fire-fighting role can work at a higher level, on projects that can transform the way a company does business," Claudio says.
Of course, not all IT managers have access to mentoring programs such as Claudio's. However, IT middle managers in any company can develop their project management chops, according to experienced executives.

"Be process-oriented, focusing on managing resources," Commendo's Gil says. "Analyze what you do, apply metrics to what you do, break out costs and inventory skills. See how you can do things faster, better."
Process management is regarded as a crucial factor in coordinating work and communications among dispersed offices and personnel. "Errors get compounded and magnified in a distributed environment, which is the world of outsourcing," says Marc Hebert, a vice president at Sierra Atlantic, a provider of ERP implementation services in Fremont.
Process management is essentially a way of breaking down work into tasks that can be benchmarked and replicated. By formalizing and measuring what they do, IT managers can more readily show their business counterparts what they accomplish.
Hebert, Gil, Claudio and others make a key point: Cost-containment is not the only, or even the best, reason to use outside providers. Benchmarking IT processes can help managers lead to where a company can best use outsourcers, and where internal staff should be focused.
"There are many reasons to outsource: to get 24-hour support, to take on specialized skills that you might need for only a short time, to bring in more mature partners," Gil says.
Take initiative by suggesting small pilot projects to be outsourced, starting with lower-level jobs like infrastructure maintenance. Claudio took this approach at Farmers and forged solid working relationships with business leaders throughout the company.
Creating benchmarks for what your staff does and proposing outsourcing pilot programs to accomplish goals more efficiently gives you a shot to expand the total budget you control or your overall responsibility.
Middle managers in IT who learn to measure and communicate what they do to business managers will be seen as a valuable resource, says Tony Greenberg, CEO of RampRate.
IT managers who have strong soft skills are sought after as companies transition using outsourcers, Claudio stresses. "I look for people who are good communicators, good negotiators, people who really know how to get the most out of any particular situation, who can put themselves on the other side and have great empathy for the other side," she says.
"People involved with help desks and network management are in a good position to hone their communications and negotiating skills since they need to contract, for example, for services for bandwidth and deal with a complex network of relationships to have systems installed," Gil says.
Ultimately, outsourcing consultants and top executives advise IT managers to prepare to embrace change, and take the initiative to develop the skills required to deal with outsourcing.
As Gil put it: "You don't want to get run over by the train - you want to learn to drive it."


CHALLENGE
Company executives are looking at outsourcing to reduce IT costs and probably internal staff to focus on core competencies.

RESPONSE
Take the bull by the horns and help drive outsourcing. By being process-oriented, show where internal staff is efficient; suggest pilots to assure outsourcing is done right and in doing so reduce fear among personnel.

Friday, February 11, 2005

Outsourcing Statistics and Facts

Between 1993 and 1996, companies that outsourced achieved a 26.3% growth rate. Companies that did not outsource only grew their revenues at a rate of 20.9%--Coopers & Lybrand
92.2% of companies surveyed report that outsourcing functions formerly performed by in-house departments are effective.--Management Recruiters International

Between 1995 and 2005, outsourcing professional services will expand at a rate of 15%, making it the seventh fastest-growing labor category from 1995 to 2005; this category will grow four-to-five times the overall employment base.--Alex. Brown & Sons

Companies that outsource realize a cost savings of 9%, and increase their overall capacity and measurable quality by 15%.--Outsourcing Institute, 1997 data

Companies are expected to continue outsourcing their sales duties to outside professionals rather than use in-house or direct selling personnel...[outsourced] agents are more likely to have worked in specific sales areas for longer than [in house] representatives...outsourced agents can create a better working relationship and understanding of customers and their businesses' needs.--Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook: Manufacturers' and Wholesale Sales Representatives, April 1996

Many industries are turning to outsourcing; there are 2 specific growth areas; administrative support (+30%) and human resources (+20%). The marketplace for outsourcing is at $400 billion -- The Outsourcing Institute

"It's a headache and payroll outsourcing is affordable, so why not do it?" asks David Schnitt, CEO of Ledgent Inc., a Torrance, Calif.-based company that handles payroll and human resources services for clients. Carlos Rodriguez, president of ADP TotalSource, a Miami outsourcing company for HR services and benefits for small and mid-sized businesses, estimates that between 40 and 50 percent of all small companies hire an outside firm to handle payroll. --Outsource your payroll problems By Jenny C. McCune • Bankrate.com



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