Examining a "before" and "after" of how
global companies take decisions about the location from where to source IT and
BPO services shows the evolution and maturity of the global sourcing market.
Following three perceptible changes can be noticed. One, during the outsourcing
decision-making process, earlier companies talked in terms of countries
("should we source application-development services from India or
China"), but now they discuss cities ("should we source from Bangalore
or Shanghai").
Two, earlier they discussed generic availability of talent
("how many students does Manila graduate each year"), but now they
analyze skill-sets specific to the function they want to outsource ("how
many US GAAP-trained accountants are there in Manila").
Three, earlier they considered only the large, established
centers for sourcing ("we have a delivery center in Bangalore"), but
now they are actively talking about-and getting work done from-tier-2 cities
("we have delivery centers in Bangalore and Coimbatore").
As cost advantages of outsourcing operational processes become a
given, the challenge in today's services sourcing landscape is to identify
destinations that may be able to provide an equal (if not greater) level of cost
effectiveness and operational efficiency than previous or existing locations. As
such, the focus for many of the larger and best-of-breed providers has been to
scale, expand, and distribute their outsourced processes across multiple cities
within a country. For example, companies need to identify calculated benefits of
expanding to Cebu City in the Philippines, as opposed to simply expanding their
already established operations in Manila NCR.
City, Not Country
This one is a no-brainer. Comparing the availability of skills and the
cost saving to be had in say Mexico versus Brazil remains superficial. In Mexico
alone, costs may vary between Mexico City, Monterrey, and Juarez. And so would
skills-while one city may graduate more engineers, another may have more
accountants.
Clearly, no two cities of a country would be at the same level
of skills maturity or offer the same cost advantage, and deciding whether to
source services from one over the other is just a first necessary step.
Companies need to spend time delving deeper into the attractiveness of cities.
They must consider various elements of cost and not just salaries and the
specific skill-sets that each city has (See box 'Cost Matters').
Discussion on countries is important for macro issues, such as
political risk, exchange-rate fluctuation, and wage inflation, which determine
the sustainability of savings.
| The
challenge in today's services sourcing landscape is to identify
destinations that may be able to provide an equal (if not greater) level
of cost effectiveness and operational efficiency than previous or existing
locations |
Functional Capabilities
Any decision on which city to choose for outsourcing must be specific to the
process that the customer company needs to source services for. Simply
calculating the number of graduates a particular city has will not help a
customer wanting to outsource Finance and Accounting (F&A) processes; the
customer will need to know the number of trained accountants the city has. In
China, for instance, Shanghai may be better suited for F&A Outsourcing (FAO)
than for contact centers.
Moreover, companies will feel confident of outsourcing high-end
work such as engineering services, R&D, or ERP implementations to a larger,
established city, while for work like application development or HR processes,
they may be fine to source from a less experienced city.
Discussions on cities can be further refined by analyzing them
as centers of excellence specific to particular IT and/or BPO processes.
Companies need to graduate to referring to Hyderabad and Chennai as prime
locations for FAO and automotive engineering services respectively, Cebu City as
a strong information systems outsourcing location and Buenos Aires as a viable
Spanish-based contact-center site.
Emergence of Tier-2 Cities
As service providers become increasingly wary of investing in only one city
because of challenges of saturation and scale, finding alternative locations has
become an increasingly important operational consideration. This is so not only
in the context of business preservation, but also with regard to expansion,
scale, and long-term cost management. This makes the identification and accurate
profiling of emerging tier-2 cities increasingly relevant.
|
Cost
Matters
A key reason to outsource is to save costs, and most discussions on cost
revolve around the wages at outsourcing locations. This can be extremely
misleading because it precludes several other operating costs-support
staff salaries, cost impact of attrition, training, management costs, and
corporate overheads, real estate, communications, technology costs, etc.
These costs vary across
cities, and can influence a company's decision to outsource there. For
instance, though salaries in Mumbai or Shanghai are comparable to many
other outsourcing cities, rental costs for office space in these cities
are probably higher than most others. |
Not only will a scientific identification of these alternative
cities pinpoint location options, but they will also enable operators to better
plan for future growth in these areas. In this next wave of outsourcing when IT
and BPO services players will look to better utilize the capacities of emerging
tier-2 cities, an effort will be made to focus on cities located further away
from primary sourcing destinations. These tier-2 cities will be carefully
evaluated, and in many instances will be developed by industry and institutional
players to become provincial (regional) IT and/or BPO labor hubs. In creating
these hubs, the labor resources can be attracted from similar sized or smaller
cities in the vicinity of the region.
Beth Lui, country manager, Philippine, Accenture, rationalized
his company's expansion to Cebu City, a significantly smaller city, yet
equally capable labor force as compared to Manila. "Cebu alone is a small
province. We will have to draw from the neighboring provinces as well. There is
a need to create a hub of talent," says Lui.
Global Services-Tholons research report ranks top 50 and
profiles the top 15 emerging global cities for outsourcing. These are the ones
that may not be top of mind for most companies, but are well suited for specific
IT and BPO functions. As there are some global outsourcing cities that stand as
the clear winners, the study also ranks the top five obvious choices that need
no introduction.
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