Posts Tagged ‘Bangalore’

CIBER India starts new SEZ in Bangalore

October 14th, 2011

As part of the expansion plans, information technology (IT) consulting, services and outsourcing firm CIBER Inc announced the opening of its new Special Economic Zone (SEZ) global delivery centre in Bangalore with a seating capacity of 750.

CIBER India head Vir Bhanu said that the expansion was intended to significantly grow the company both in terms of global delivery support and providing IT services to businesses in India.

The company’s India operations are a direct extension of CIBER’s US and European delivery centres. “Initially, the centre in India was established with a vision to augment CIBER’s IT and IT outsourcing services,” said Vir Bhanu, head of CIBER India.

Starting with a modest 100 employees six years ago, CIBER India has increased its headcount to 1,300 in the country.

Headquartered in Colorado (USA), in India CIBER already operates from two such centres in Bangalore and Chennai.

Speaking about the expansion, Dave Peterschmidt, chief executive officer, CIBER, said, “We are strategically expanding our facility in India, particularly Bangalore, as the talent pool is very large here. We will also continue to ramp up operations at the Chennai centre.”

Source:http://www.dnaindia.com/bangalore/report_ciber-india-starts-new-sez-in-bangalore_1598772

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Divorced from its city, global Bangalore struggles on

September 7th, 2011

As Karnataka’s latest political scandal unfolded—the discovery of a 30kg stash of gold and Rs. 1.5 crore in cash at the home of arrested mining baron and former minister G. Janardhan Reddy—a senior executive of Infosys Ltd explained the municipal skills of India’s fourth largest information technology (IT) company.

Infosys’ annual report details that the water tanks at its campuses overall, for instance, can store 33 million litres of water, enough for Shimla’s needs. The company’s diesel gensets can produce 134 megawatts of electricity, nearly as much as Mysore’s daily requirement. None of this makes economic sense.

“Captive power is an expensive option,” explains the senior executive. “Up to Rs. 12 per unit, against Rs. 5.50 per unit of grid power.”

Only a third of the garbage is collected, half the middle-class population faces bribe demands, according to a World Bank report, and infrastructure is now so decrepit that many of Bangalore’s 1,600 technology companies run their own transport services, generate their own electricity, manage their own sewage systems, run industrial estates and often manage their own water supplies.

Global Bangalore, it appears, is divorcing itself from local Bangalore with increasing speed.

Many CEOs, reluctant to speak on record, said brand Bangalore is now so tarnished that the city is quietly losing jobs and revenue to better-equipped, better-governed competitors worldwide.

“Over the last seven years, there has been an increasing divergence between corporate needs and what the government does,” said Mohandas Pai, chairman of Manipal Education and, until recently, Infosys board member. The city could have added 300,000 technology jobs in addition to the current 500,000, if Bangalore had realized its potential, said Pai. Using the metric that every technology job generates four jobs in related services—from construction to taxi services to hospitality—this means the city of eight million people (three million in 1990) has lost about a million jobs. “For any government, jobs should be the biggest priority,” said Pai. “Here, the political leadership just does not get it…today, Bangalore is stagnating and the brand is getting hurt.”

Bangalore’s decline transcends political affiliations. The Congress, the Janata Dal and the Bharatiya Janata Party have been equally complicit over two decades. “I have served all three (governments), and I can confidently say they regard Bangalore as a golden goose, no more,” said a senior bureaucrat, speaking on condition of anonymity. “We do help, but companies must survive on their own.”

Today, if Bangalore contributes about 34% to India’s total outsourcing revenue of nearly $70 billion (Rs. 3.22 trillion), the government can claim no significant credit.

“Bangalore offers the most congenial risk profile among other Indian metros with minimal threat of terrorism, regionalism and political disturbances,” said a 2010 report by Tholons, a global investments advisory service. “However, the city is prone to a high level of bureaucracy and corruption.” As with many Indian cities, the problem grows because Bangalore supplies no more than 24 of 224 seats in the legislative assembly. It does not matter that the city supplies 60% of the state’s revenue.

The political decline is particularly acute in light of other progressive measures led by the IT-enabled administration. About 20 million land records are online.

Multinationals like Cisco work with the government on taking medicine to remote areas. The state’s Yeshasvini health insurance project, conceptualized by cardiac surgeon Devi Shetty, is touted as the world’s cheapest at Rs. 5 (11 cents) a month, covering 2.5 million poor people.

The government continually builds new flyovers, underpasses and a new Metro is under construction, but none of it is adequate or adequately planned. The Metro construction is chaotic, slow and the first stretch (or reach 1) of the first phase, expected to open this month, runs for no more than 6km of a total 18 for phase I.

For quite some time now, Infosys has been struggling to get its new 300-acre Sarjapur campus going, but approvals are still pending. “There is a huge lag in the project because of governmental delays,” said the senior Infosys executive on condition of anonymity. “This is unfortunate. We are talking about 40,000 jobs here. Which company is waiting to create 40,000 jobs today?”

Other companies have plans too. Wipro Ltd is planning to invest Rs. 1,000 crore in centres in Sarjapur Road and in Devanahalli, while Tata Elxsi Ltd is considering a Rs. 486 crore investment for a hardware design and development centre at Devanahalli, on 20 acres.

Many companies have plans and if and when they will come to fruition, and in what form, is an open question. But the interest indicates the still unrealized power of brand Bangalore.

Source:http://www.livemint.com/2011/09/06003409/Divorced-from-its-city-global.html?h=B

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Bangalore, Home of the Next Angry Birds

September 2nd, 2011

The entrance to MoFirst Solutions is not far from the trash piles and stray dogs of one of Mumbai’s many slums. Inside, it looks like the offices of any of India’s other programmer-for-hire companies, part of the country’s $88.1 billion a year information technology services and outsourcing industry. Two dozen workers sit shoulder to shoulder, with no air conditioning, coding on laptops. The main difference? They’re building iPhone apps.

While IT services still dominate the nation’s technology industry, companies such as MoFirst are tapping India’s next wave in outsourcing, with thousands of programmers hired in recent years to capitalize on the demand for building programs for Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone and iPad and devices running Google’s (GOOG) Android software. Mobile-app outsourcing may be a $5.6 billion annual business by 2015, according to estimates from Forrester Research (FORR), and if history is any indicator, much of that will head to the subcontinent. “India is a logical place to do it for the same reason the software and services model has worked here: lower cost,” says Anshul Gupta, an analyst at research firm Gartner (IT) in Mumbai.

Requests for programmers who write code for Apple’s iOS platform rose 20 percent between the first and second quarters of this year, according to Elance, a Mountain View (Calif.) broker that matches outsourcers such as MoFirst with those who want to create apps. Demand for programmers with Android skills rose by 15 percent, while developer requests for Research in Motion’s (RIMM) BlackBerry devices increased by 3 percent, according to Elance.

“The iPhone stuff is very, very hot,” says Ajai Shankar, who spent 12 years in the U.S. as a software programmer for companies including Wal-Mart Stores (WMT). He moved back to India this year to set up his own mobile-app development shop. “The struggle people have nowadays is that once you’ve developed an application for iPhone, the next thing you know is you have to do the same for Android.”

MoFirst bills its clients, who are primarily in the U.S., the U.K., and the Middle East, $15 to $20 an hour, says Akash Dongre, the company’s chief operating officer. That compares with $50 to $100 per hour charged by developers in the U.S. One of MoFirst’s recent creations, released early this year, is Friends Aloud, an app that speaks status updates from Facebook. MoFirst charged a Texas-based entrepreneur about $8,000 to develop the app, less than half what it would have cost in the U.S., and completed it in about three months, says Dongre.

MoFirst’s competition includes QBurst Technologies, which started in 2004 as a Web developer in the southern Indian town of Trivandrum and in 2008 turned to building apps. Qburst has helped develop 150 mobile apps for customers in the U.K. and U.S. That includes an iPhone app for St. Albans (U.K.)-based PrivateFly, which allows users to search for and book private jets; an e-commerce iPad application for Simba Toys; and an iPhone shopping search application for thefind.com. The company, which employs 400 people, has seen overall revenue, which includes website and iPhone app development, jump 76 percent, to $3.18 million last year, says Manjith Kamalasanan, a business development manager at Qburst.

Hiring has gotten harder. “Competition is increasing a lot,” says MoFirst’s Dongre. At his company, new hires fresh out of college earn a monthly salary of 20,000 rupees ($437), but many receive 40 percent raises within six months of joining because of competition and poaching from other mobile development shops. Kamalasanan says Qburst needs to recruit half a dozen senior developers and a dozen less experienced ones in the next three months.

The rise of mobile-app developers signals Indian technology companies may be evolving away from the old software services model and toward building full products, says Gartner’s Gupta. “It’s not completely the sort of outsourcing, offshoring activity that’s been going on in India for a while,” he says. “It is more about creating an application from scratch; it has more to do with R&D and invention.”

Source:http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/bangalore-home-of-the-next-angry-birds-09012011.html

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Bangalore is no more the favorite for IT

June 7th, 2011

Bangalore used to be the IT hub in India, but according to a survey by Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (Assocham), Gurgaon and Noida are now becoming the preferred location for IT companies.

Many IT companies are more interested on making up their IT offices in Noida and Gurgaon. The offices include IT, IT-enabled services (ITes), business process outsourcing (BPO)and knowledge process outsourcing (KPO).

For the survey, ASSOCHAM interacted with around 800 directors, CEOs, CFOs, Chairmen and MDs of Indian and multinational companies about the choice of five cities to relocate their businesses. 30 percent top-ranked officials of IT companies of Bangalore said they prefer to shift their business to Gurgaon. 25 percent said that they would prefer to shift their businesses to Noida or Greater Noida. About 20 percent said that they would prefer Chandigarh for their business. 15 percent of respondents said they prefer Pune. The remaining 10 percent prefer to relocate their business to Hyderabad.

The survey shows that Bangalore is losing its charm because of various reasons like crumbling infrastructure, compelling many companies to head towards more convenient and industrial-friendly centres. Moreover, there are many other reasons like narrow roads, pollution, and rising costs of goods and services , poor infrastructure and problems of power shortages.

Source:http://www.siliconindia.com/shownews/Bangalore_is_no_more_the_favorite_for_IT-nid-84353.html?utm_source=clicktrack&utm_medium=banner&utm_campaign=mostread

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Bangalore to lose its IT status

May 31st, 2011

According to a survey conducted by Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM), Bangalore might lose its status of being the IT capital of India. The survey states that the status would soon belong to the National Capital Region (NCR) of Noida and Gurgaon.The survey concluded that companies offering IT, IT-enabled services (ITes), business process outsourcing (BPO), and knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) in various domains like banking, financial services, insurance, pharma, auto, FMCG and manufacturing prefer to relocate operations.

The survey also finds out that Bangalore is losing its sheen due to crumbling infrastructure, compelling many companies to head towards more convenient and industrial-friendly centres. Leading IT and ITeS vendors prefer to shift their focus from Bangalore to other satellite cities like Noida and Gurgaon for more revenues.
Officials at ASSOCHAM state that the growth explosion in Bangalore has pushed the city towards serious civic crisis. Civic issues like roads choked with vehicles, frequent power outages, erratic water supply and poor sanitation is making Bangalore lose its luster to Gurgaon and Noida.

ASSOCHAM interacted with 800 directors, CEOs, CFOs, chairmen and managing directors of Indian and multinational companies in various verticals. Five cities were chosen to relocate businesses to garner more revenues. 30 per cent top-ranked officials of IT companies said they preferred Gurgaon, 25 percent wanted to relocate operations to Noida, about 20 per cent preferred Chandigarh, 15 per cent of respondents said that they prefer Pune and 10 percent wanted to relocate their business to Hyderabad.

The cosmopolitan culture, modern infrastructure, availability of skilled workforce, closeness to Delhi along with industry-friendly government policies are the factors which give Gurgaon and Noida an upper hand say officials at ASSOCHAM.

Source:http://www.mybangalore.com/article/0511/bangalore-to-lose-its-it-status.html

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Philippines, India hold BPO meet in Bangalore

March 7th, 2011

The Phillippine Trade and Investment Centre, on Friday, organised the first Philippines-India Outsourcing Partnership Summit with CII Karnataka, in a bid to create mutually beneficial opportunities between India and the Philippines in the outsourcing space.

It was pointed out that Philippines has slowly created a space for itself in the off-shoring and outsourcing sector. The country has positioned itself as a strategic partner to India’s immense capabilities in ITeS as more and more Indian companies have made strategic moves to locate part of their global service delivery chains in the Philippines.

The Philippine Department of Trade & Industry Secretary (Cabinet Minister) Gregory L Domingo stated that there has been an explosion of outsourcing demands due to telecom revolution, transportation and free flow of people. BPO is the fastest growing industry in the the Philippines and will grow by 15-20 per cent in next couple of years.

Source:http://www.deccanherald.com/content/143162/philippines-india-hold-bpo-meet.html

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Outsourcing building a new Bangalore

September 11th, 2010

Africa is proving an attractive destination for business process outsourcing but it has a long way to go to provide end-to-end services for cost-conscious multinational corporations.

Visit a doctor in Australia and she could send the notes overnight to be typed in Durban or Johannesburg. Buy a property in Hong Kong or Brussels with law firm Lovells and they will send the paperwork to be drawn up in Cape Town. African countries marketing themselves as outsourcing destinations would salivate at this kind of high-end knowledge-processing opportunity. It marks South Africa’s efforts to climb the business-process outsourcing (BPO) ladder. Market intelligence company IDC estimates that the global BPO market will be worth $168bn by 2012.


Offshoring is a fiercely competitive business and Africa is a pretender to the established reign of countries like India, China and Malaysia. While 
Accra and Nairobi are a long way from becoming the next Bangalore or Manila, Africa is proving an attractive alternative for companies looking to minimise costs by moving back-office operations to low-cost countries. High-speed cables bringing fast broadband combined with good language skills and a focus on outsourcing as a career rather than a stop-gap job are strengthening the BPO sector in Africa.


Egypt, Ghana and Tunisia are climbing up global rankings of the best destination for offshoring services (see table, page 70). In a sector where the bottom line is the priority, lowering costs is a key consideration for companies looking to set up their own 
‘captive’ operations. Employing an operator in Morocco, for example, costs around one-third of the price it would in France. 


Africa’s BPO sector is dominated by the call-centre market. In South Africa, where consultants Frost & Sullivan estimate that the BPO sector is now worth $1.6bn, 67% of the market share comes from contact centres. Now, some large multinationals that are already used to offshoring their French- and Spanish-speaking operations in North Africa (Dell, CapGemini, Atos Origin and Accenture all outsource information technology services to Morocco), are now looking to sub-Saharan 
Africa. Accenture has launched a pilot offshoring project in Kenya, where Virgin Mobile Canada is also outsourcing its database management with MFI Business, and Deloitte is considering setting up a 500-seat accounting and financing centre. 


Still, these high-tier examples are the exception, and there is unease among operators about the way Africa is positioning itself. Sceptics point to the Philippines, which based its BPO offering around call centres but has found it tough to move away from providing low-level ‘tier-3’ services. One Kenyan blogger lamented what he called “brain-process outsourcing” following the government’s announcement of plans to create 20,000 BPO jobs by 2014, arguing that it would turn graduates into answering machines. Paul Kukubo, chief executive of the Kenya ICT Board, which is implementing the vision, told The Africa Report that the country’s offering was more nuanced. “There will be a great level of innovation that is developed around meeting our own needs first, then taking that expertise onto a global scale – which is always a more sustainable way to do things.” 


Although South Africa is marketing 
itself as a ‘tier-2’ country and can already offer advanced financial and accounting capabilities that have been well-groomed by the country’s domestic market, Spiwe Chireka, industry analyst at Frost & Sullivan, argues that South Africa remains focused on call centres: “It will catch up with them because the value from contact centres keeps going down.” South 
Africa is “actually underselling its capabilities in other areas”, says Chireka, mainly because of the push to create quick jobs in contact centres that can absorb the unemployed. 


One way countries can hope to avoid being pigeonholed is to look closer to home and act as a ‘nearshore’ hub for the African region. The Mozambican IT infrastructure operations of Sasol, the South African chemical company, are managed by Business Connection (BCX), a South African company that delivers regional support for AngloGold Ashanti and BHP Billiton. 


Demand for services like these from African corporates will be limited. However, William Ackerman, head of BCX’s 1,000-strong service-integration division, says that 70% of its revenue comes from providing services to companies expanding in the region: “Our biggest growth lies in delivering services on an outsourcing basis for Africa.” 


African gateways


Ghana, a relatively new BPO destination, plans to add another 5,000 jobs to the existing 3,000-4,000 by 2012. US firm ACS Services enters data for US insurance companies via a shared services centre in Ghana, while local BPO outfit exZeed has a contract with Vodafone. 


Ghana’s short-term strategy is to target West African telecom and banking companies. Pradeep Mukherji, partner at Avasant, a US consultancy hired by the Ghanaian government, hopes that Ghana will “act as the gateway to Western Africa”, with an ability to offer francophone and anglophone services. After 18 months, its strategy will shift to targeting the UK and US, with a long-term plan to move into knowledge-process outsourcing, such as legal and graphic-design services.


Indian offshoring giant Wipro set up a Cairo office in 2007 that now employs 150 people, mainly servicing the software needs of customers from the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Wipro’s Cairo operations should gradually move into support for IT infrastructure, databases and systems. The Egypt centre will also provide a gateway for Wipro’s expansion into Africa. “It is going to be one of the centrepieces of the whole expansion strategy into the region,” says Wipro’s head of marketing, Ramachandra 
Yadavilli. The Egypt office is also hosting a back-office service centre providing software, Java and programming support to Wipro Infotech’s Indian operations.

Business incentives


To attract such business, governments understand that they must provide incentives for investors. They fall into three main categories: tax breaks, infrastructure and training. Morocco provides all three as part of a strategy to attract 100,000 full-time offshoring jobs by 2015 and to triple the sector’s contribution to gross domestic product to 18%. Incentives include a training subsidy of €5,800 per employee, a 20% ceiling on income tax for fully-payrolled employees and five years full exoneration from corporate taxes. 


The South African government offers a capital-expenditure incentive of up to R60,000 ($8,100) for new BPO centres of over 200 seats plus a training grant of up to R12,000 per employee. Bulelwa Koyana, interim chief executive of the Business Process enabling South Africa (BPeSA) industry association, says various incentives are currently under review after calls from international investors for help with operational expenditure. “They are wanting an incentive that will have a direct impact on their profits and losses,” she says, adding that her impression was their competitor countries were offering better carrots. 


Kenya is focusing on infrastructure and special economic zones. Two projects currently awaiting decisions from the Treasury involve the take-over of the privately-owned Sameer Business Park and the construction of a technopolis at Malili, 60km from Nairobi. Another key incentive will be offsetting businesses’ rental costs, says Kenya ICT Board’s Paul Kukobo: “We just want to know which incentive is easiest to actually kick in without too much legal and regulatory manoeuvring. Incentives cost money.” 


It is still early days for the African BPO industry, and there may be dramatic global realignments ahead. 
Futurist Patrick Dixon says that wage inflation in China and India plus an acute shortage of middle-managers are changing the economics of offshoring. 
He notes that companies are already leaving India for Pakistan, Bangladesh and Vietnam. 


Wipro now has 400 people working in Atlanta and another development centre with 500 people in China. “We will have to go where our customers want us to go”, says Yadavilli. But he warns Africa that “the learning curve that we have gone through in India and Asia is something that can’t be reinvented or replicated overnight.” 


Platform-based services, particularly for the anglophone market, where one company manages an entire end-to-end process are still out of reach of most African markets. While it will be a challenge to stand out from other emerging market BPO destinations in Eastern Europe, South-east Asia and South America, Africa is well-placed to compete for business in this shifting global arena.

Source:http://www.theafricareport.com/archives2/business/3295701-outsourcing-building-a-new-bangalore.html

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