Archive for August, 2011

New Jobs at San Antonio Brooks City Base Customer Support Center

August 30th, 2011

SAN ANTONIO, Aug 29, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) — VMC, a technology consulting and outsourcing company, is actively looking to fill 40 new jobs this week, before the start of the Labor Day weekend, on the south side of San Antonio at their Customer Care and Technical Support Center at Brooks City-Base. The hiring activity is part of an additional 120 jobs to be filled by the end of September in San Antonio.

The Support Center, located at 3300 Sidney Brooks Rd. Bldg. 532 in San Antonio, provides call center customer support services to consumers. VMC, headquartered in Redmond, WA, opened the Brooks City-Base location last December, and started full-time call center operations in January.

“We continue to grow our operations to support our customers, and are happy to bring more new jobs to the San Antonio area. We have had great cooperation and support from the community, and continue to invest in our operations here,” said Kristin Carrico, Chief Operating Officer at VMC.

VMC officials said the company is immediately hiring Tier I support agents and quality assurance agents to begin working in a call center environment. People interested in finding out more about immediate job opportunities can contact 210-340-8800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 210-340-8800 end_of_the_skype_highlighting and asked to speak with a VMC recruiter, or submit a resume via email at sanantonio@volt.com.

The 35,000 square foot facility is a newly furnished, state of the art, 600-seat call center with expanded cafeteria on the Brooks City-Base campus.

About VMC

VMC is a technology consulting and outsourcing company, providing flexible and scalable build, run and support solutions for business. With development, integration and quality assurance as “build” services, IT outsourcing and HelpDesk as “run” services, and customer care solutions including end-user and technical support, sales and retention support as “support” services. VMC partners with businesses for competitive advantages through the effective application of people, process and technology. Using proven methodologies and world-class talent and resources, VMC delivers targeted solutions for the unique business needs of our customers.

Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/new-jobs-at-san-antonio-brooks-city-base-customer-support-center-2011-08-29

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Saltflow Plans Exit from Outsourcing Business by Mid-2012

August 29th, 2011

Saltflow, Inc., a Dubai, United Arab Emirates-based group, announced today that the company has definitive plans to exit the Information Technology (IT) outsourcing business by mid-2012. The company has strong technology operations globally which are now controlled by a Moscow subsidiary, but those are exclusively focused on highly-scalable consumer finance, mobile and data solutions on the Internet. With slower growth forecasts on the IT outsourcing front, the company is looking to split and sell off its Washington, D.C. services operations.

“Our Washington, D.C.-based outsourcing arm has been performing slower than we expected. I attribute that more to the lack of management interest than anything inherently wrong with the business itself. We may come back with an acquisitions-driven strategy in perhaps 2-3 years,” said Zubair Nazir, Vice President of Technology at Saltflow. “We will definitely not be selling the core international entities and infrastructure that are controlled by the Washington, D.C. company. Infrastructure retention is critical to successfully running some of our Internet-driven models in many of the countries in which the company operates. It will likely be the service-focused units only, but exactly what we are selling is yet to be determined,” Nazir added.

Executive Chairman Arif Ayub outlined a clear strategy for how the proposed unit sell-offs of the subsidiary will proceed. “We must get the right bid for the exit. If we have to delay the sale a few months in order to obtain capital injections from us internally and from some private equity firms in Asia, we will take that path in order to sell at about $100-200 million rather than accept the $10-12 million we will get for the company’s outsourcing units in their current form. There is no point in keeping full ownership of the units when we are selling it in any case,” Ayub said. “We will utilize the proceeds to further strengthen our Moscow-based operations, as well as keep significant funds within the Washington, D.C. arm to continue to expand the infrastructure that we utilize to deliver our Internet products in additional countries,” Ayub added.

Source:http://www.pr.com/press-release/349385

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Wipro: No change to this fiscal-year hiring plans

August 29th, 2011

Wipro Technologies, the outsourcing services unit of India’s Wipro Ltd. (507685.BY), said there is no impact to its hiring plans for this fiscal year due to global uncertainties and that it plans to hire 25%-30% more entry-level staff next year on expectations that demand for software services will rise.

“We have not seen any impact, from this business environment change, on hiring,” Priti Rajora, global head of talent acquisition, told Dow Jones Newswires recently.

Rajora declined to comment on the number of entry-level employees it plans to hire in the current fiscal year through March and next year.

Wipro is India’s third-largest software exporter by sales after Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. and Infosys Ltd. Its upbeat hiring outlook comes amid concerns that economic uncertainties in the U.S. and Europe–the main markets for outsourcing services–may affect the growth of India’s technology companies.

Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/wipro-no-change-to-this-fiscal-year-hiring-plans-2011-08-29

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IT services: IDC crowns IBM

August 29th, 2011

After Gartner ( Back on ’smile’ in the IT services industry. And the 2010 ranking rewards even IBM ), IDC has also crowned IBM at the forefront of the worldwide market for IT services .

The report Worldwide Services 2010 Vendor Analysis: Revenue Performance of the Top 10, in fact, IDC has ranked IBM Global Technology Services, first in terms of market share, measured by turnover.

Although this is a confirmation, IDC shows that in 2010, considering the worldwide turnover in the services derived from IBM, of Armonk giant has passed by almost 60% turnover of its nearest competitor, or HP .

According to research firm, IBM Global Technology Services has ranked first in all three categories of services ( project-oriented , outsourcing , support / training ), generating the most revenues in project-oriented services and over 35 % of turnover compared to more outsourcing provider in second place.

In the Top 10 with IDC, as well as IBM and HP, also include Fujitsu, Accenture, CSC, Deloitte, Lockheed Martin, Capgemini, NEC, NTT Data, and finally, the latter to the fore in our country to have recently acquired the Milan Value Team .

As mentioned, the first IBM’s position in the global IT services is a confirmation. According to the rest Gard Little, research director of IDC’s Worldwide Services, from 2009 to 2010 the top five positions are not changed, while there has been a shift in the second half of the ranking in the Top 10 by entering a new player: Deloitte . “Deloitte came in sixth place, by shifting Lockheed Martin in the seventh, eighth and Capgemini NEC and NTT Data in the ninth and tenth place respectively.”

Out of the IDC Top 10 2010 Hitachi, who was tenth in 2009.

Source:http://www.cwi.it/2011/08/29/servizi-it-idc-incorona-ibm/

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IT shares reboot after Bernanke’s comments on US economy

August 29th, 2011

TCS (up 3.32%), Mahindra Satyam (up 3.08%), Infosys (up 3.04%), Wipro (up 2.30%), HCL Technologies (up 2.13%), Tech Mahindra (up 2.04%), Rolta India (up 1.47%), Oracle Financial Services Software (up 1.19%), MphasiS (up 0.63%) and iGate Patni (up 0.58%), edged higher.

The BSE IT index was up 2.93% at 4,858.16. It outperformed the Sensex, which was up 1.60% at 16,102.90.

IT shares have tumbled this month on concerns that a likely economic slowdown in the US and Europe will hit technology spending by overseas clients. The BSE IT index had lost 3.59% in the preceding three sessions to settle at 4,719.97 on Friday, 26 August 2011, from a recent high of 4,895.56 on 23 August 2011. The BSE IT index had underperformed the market over the past one month until 26 August 2011, sliding 20.39% compared with the Sensex’s 14.41% fall. The index had also underperformed the market in past one quarter, falling 20.09% as against 12.17% decline in the Sensex.

Bernanke said he optimistic about the long-term prospects of the US economy even amid challenges from the slumping housing market and financial-market volatility. The US is the biggest market for the Indian IT firms. In a speech on Friday, 26 August 2011, Bernanke refrained from stating that the Federal Reserve would immediately introduce new measures to support the US economy, saying instead that options would be discussed at the Fed’s next meeting in September 2011. The Fed holds a two-day meeting on 20 and 21 September 2011.

Standard & Poor’s downgraded US sovereign debt rating to AA+ from AAA with negative outlook on 5 August 2011. HCL Technologies had said early this month that the historic downgrade of US debt may lead to a slowdown in decision-making on technology spending by clients in the world’s largest outsourcing market.

However, the National Association of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom), the main software trade body on 23 August 2011, had reiterated its estimate of the Indian IT industry recording 16%-18% growth in export revenue this fiscal year. Nasscom had in February 2011 forecast the industry’s export revenue at $68 billion-$70 billion for the fiscal year that started on 1 April 2011.

Source:http://www.indiainfoline.com/Markets/News/IT-shares-reboot-after-Bernankes-comments-on-US-economy/3913557494

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SA in top three emerging outsourcing destinations

August 29th, 2011

A new survey claims SA is among the top three emerging destinations for business process outsourcing.

The survey, by Everest Consulting, excludes established outsourcing destinations India and the Philippines and focuses on emerging destinations such as SA, China, Brazil, Poland, Egypt, Ireland, Morocco, Costa Rica, Mexico and Singapore. It highlights destinations that are most likely to benefit from offshoring in 2011 and beyond.

According to business process outsourcing analyst John Willmott of Nelson Hall, SA will experience substantial growth in the next few years, with continued outsourcing investment from the UK and increased interest from Australia and potentially the US.

“On the back of information from recent offshoring reports, analyst events and investor visits, SA is definitely heading in the right direction and I am confident that we will see substantial offshoring investment in the next few years,” says Gareth Pritchard, CEO of BPeSA Western Cape, and industry body that represents the outsourcing industry.

The Everest survey polled companies’ perceptions and plans in terms of choosing global service locations and is made up of 340 respondents across multiple sectors.

Source:http://www.techcentral.co.za/sa-in-top-three-emerging-outsourcing-destinations/25553/

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The outsourcing bogeyman

August 29th, 2011

Outsourcing of services has been a persistent cause of panic and protectionism in recent years, especially in the United States since the 2004 presidential election. Back then, the Democratic candidate, Senator John Kerry, upon hearing that digital X-rays had been outsourced from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston for examination by radiologists in India, denounced firms that outsourced as Benedict Arnolds, the most infamous traitor in US history.
Kerry’s misstep was followed by alarm over outsourcing across the West. If free trade is to regain the support of statesmen who now hesitate over liberalising trade with developing countries, the myths that turn outsourcing into an epithet must be countered.
Myth 1: Outsourcing will be like a tsunami. While even a shrewd economist like the former US Federal Reserve Board member Alan Blinder thought this, it is not likely for several reasons, both “natural” and manmade. Consider just two.
First, it is simply not possible to outsource everything. For example, the fact that I can call someone in Bangalore to tell me how to fix a computer problem presupposes that I can understand her instructions. I tried this with a Dell computer and gave up after repeated attempts. I was so desperate that I asked Michael Dell, whom I met at the World Economic Forum in Davos, for a replacement.
That is a remedy unavailable to others, of course. So Dell has now given up relying on call centres. Besides, many “electronic plumbers” have emerged who will come to your computer and fix the problem while you while away the hours working where your competence lies.
Second, there are manmade restrictions to outsourcing particular types of expertise: professional organisations often intervene to kill outsourcing simply by requiring credentials that only they can provide. Thus, foreign radiologists need US certification before they are allowed to read the X-rays sent from the US. Until recently, only two foreign firms qualified.
Myth 2: Outsourcing will be only from rich to poor. There is a lot of two-way trade in manufactures, even within a single industry. Economists call it “intra-industry” trade. But when it comes to services, the popular fear is that outsourcing will go in only one direction. This fear is baseless.
Indeed, there has been substantial growth in “reverse outsourcing,” i.e., “insourcing.” Indian firms like Infosys and Wipro, giants in the information-technology sector, are now looking for cutting-edge services and high-grade talent as they compete for local markets such as the US. At IQor, the hugely successful outsourcing entrepreneur Vikas Kapoor now has 12 US locations, which account for half of its 11,000 employees.
Myth 3: Outsourcing costs jobs. A standard argument used by US Democrats against Republican business CEOs who were running for Congress last year was that they had exported US jobs. Senator Barbara Boxer railed continually against Carly Fiorina, a former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, that she had exported 35,000 jobs. The obvious reply should have been: “Yes, I outsourced 30,000 jobs. But, if I had not, HP would have become uncompetitive in fiercely competitive markets, and I would have lost 100,000 jobs.”
Another “jobs fallacy” is that when a job disappears in a Western country and turns up in India, it must have been “exported” by nefarious businessmen. But, in many cases, the job has simply become uneconomic to maintain in the West, regardless of whether or not India exists.
If it costs a US nursing home $2 per call to get someone to remind a patient to take her medicine, the job of providing such reminders will disappear. But if Indians can make the call for $0.25, the nursing home might well sign on. This would make its patients healthier, drug makers more profitable, and India better off, because employment increases.
In short, everyone wins from outsourcing of services. Alas, few understand this. — Project Syndicate

**Jagdish Bhagwati, professor of economics and law at Columbia University and senior fellow in international rconomics at the Council on Foreign Relations, was co-chair of the High-Level Trade Experts Group appointed by the British, German, Indonesian, and Turkish governments.

Source:http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=455421&version=1&template_id=46&parent_id=26

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