Posts Tagged ‘Genpact’

Genpact drives a Nissan into HRO

September 12th, 2011

A lot has changed over the last five years in the outsourcing business. Has it really? I hear you cry. OK – you may have a point, but one thing is evolving – the emergence of some of the major Indian service providers as credible HR delivery firms.

When Indian service providers were originally mentioned as budding HRO providers, many HR executives would respond “we couldn’t possibly entrust such sensitive HR processes with offshore firms”. Since then, many Indian service providers – and other global organizations with large Indian captive organizations, have become exemplars of how to develop, manage and motivate talent.

One US C-suite executive even recently broached the topic of bringing Indian service provider leadership over to the US to help educate US firms on how to develop a competitive talent development culture.

Genpact has been working with Nissan for more than six years, providing finance and accounting, procurement, customer service, supply chain and analytics services. So adding HR services seems a natural extension of these services – even though Genpact has limited client experience of multi-process HRO. Moreover, this is also the reemergence of what we started to see in the pre-Recession days – increased bundling of business processes with a single provider which has developed knowledge of a clients’ institutional processes. Once they have lived their client’s quirks, challenges, ideals and best-practices, surely the opportunity to broaden into new process areas is a natural extension of the relationship? So let’s hand over to our own HRO provocateur, Keith Strodtman to elaborate further…

Why Genpact has some serious chops to do well at HR Outsourcing

Genpact may not be a well-recognized name in HR circles but in the business process outsourcing (BPO) world they are a premier BPO provider, especially in finance and accounting (F&A), procurement, IT, and other process areas. That said; the company’s recent acquisition of the HR services subsidiary of Nissan Motors in Japan is a significant statement about its ambition in the HR BPO market. According to Anju Talwar, Head of HR services at Genpact, we should expect to see Genpact sign several more strategic HRO customers in the next couple of years. Talwar says Genpact plans utilize the capability gained in the Nissan deal to offer HR services to other customers in Japan and other Asian countries.

Nissan, who had a previous F&A and procurement BPO relationship with Genpact, has expanded the relationship to include HR services to 54,000 employees in more than 20 offices in Japan and other parts of Asia. In all there are about 200 Genpact staff supporting the HR processes. Many of the staff are located in Japan but some work is also processed from a Genpact center in Dalian, China. Genpact has more than 3,000 employees in China. The scope fo the Nissan deal includes: payroll, benefits administration, career development, portions of recruiting, an employee call center, and other HR processes.

Genpact got its start in the 1997 as the internal shared services arm of GE Capital. Know then as GECIS, the Indian captive shared service center served as the back office for many divisions of GE. In 2004, GE sold a share of GECIS to two private equity firms and it became independent in January 2005. This enabled the company to diversify its customer base beyond GE. It changed its name to Genpact and the company went public in 2007. Many of it early non-GE customers hired Genpact to manage finance and accounting transactions like accounts payable, account reconciliations, and payroll. The company now has more than 51,000 employees, $1.26 billion in revenue, and offers a broad range of BPO services.

Payroll was the process the got me talking to Genpact when I was leading the HR outsourcing business at Ceridian. I was looking to increase the efficiency of our managed payroll business and sought a partner to support several payroll processes from an off-shore location. This occurred in 2006 and even then it was clear to me that Genpact wanted to expand into other HR BPO services. In fact, had it not been for the “great recession” we might have seen several more HR BPO contracts signed by Genpact in the last few years.

Payroll is not the only credential that Genpact has built upon to develop its HR BPO business. Its GE heritage has left a deep and innovative HR culture at the company. Talwar points out that many of their HR service engagements begin with a conversation with customers who are interested in emulating some of Genpact’s internal HR programs. This comes as no surprise to me. When I was traveling around India in 2006 talking to several Indian BPO providers, I recall being very impressed with the Genpact’s talent management practices.

Its recruiting, performance management, and training processes rivaled the best I had seen anywhere in the world. The GE heritage also embedded a vast Six Sigma competency that is not only used to increase operating efficiency in the outsourcing centers, but is also used extensively in client process improvement engagements.

The outcome of this deal could have a significant impact how much progress Indian outsourcers make in the HR BPO space. In addition to Genpact, Infosys, Wipro, Caliber Point, TCS, and some smaller Indian providers have active HR BPO practices. Each has customers in the North American market but none have experienced rapid growth here. If Genpact has success with the country/ regional model that it has with Nissan, we may see others follow with similar approaches.

Genpact certainly has a lot of skills to employ in the HR BPO market. The Nissan engagement could very well be a significant proof-point that will help propel the company to higher prominence in the HR services marketplace. We should see in the next couple of years if Genpact does indeed continue to “drive” its HRO business to significant growth.

Source:http://www.horsesforsources.com/genpact-nissan-hro_091111

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Genpact plans analytics hub in China, looks to tap talent pool

August 8th, 2011

Genpact Ltd, a $1.4 billion (Rs.6,272 crore) business process outsourcing and information technology (IT) services company, will set up an analytics hub in China before the year ends, drawing on its large practice in the segment driven out of its Bangalore centre and spread across New Delhi and Kolkata.

“We are looking at China for three reasons,” Genpact’s new president and chief executive officer N.V. Tyagarajan said in an interview on Friday. “There is talent there, though not as evolved as in Bangalore. Second, the local market for analytics is big there. And third, analytics is one of the areas where language proficiency is needed only up to a point.”

He did not give an estimate of the size of the analytics market in China, the fastest growing major economy.

Genpact, which in April added an IT services business, will start the China centre from scratch, though it already has some 4,000 employees in the neighbouring country.

Teams from Bangalore will train the staff in China. “We are good at teaching people on a global level, starting small and migrating them to higher skill levels. That is what we do,” said Tyagarajan, who took over in June after former CEO Pramod Bhasin resigned. He was previously chief operating officer.

Analytics is increasingly becoming important for business process outsourcing providers as it is a natural extension of their offerings, where they can add value and charge a premium, said Amneet Singh, vice-president, global sourcing, at consulting firm Everest Group.

“For Genpact, it is an important component of their strategy,” he said.

As for its entry into China, Singh said, after India, China was the place to consider for analytics because of the talent pool there—proficient in mathematics and statistics.

Analytics make up more than 20% of Genpact’s revenue, almost all of it under its outsourcing services, and is its fastest-growing practice, Tyagarajan said.

Business analytics deals with the analysis of large volumes of data to glean insights that can improve a company’s decision making and processes. Market size estimates vary, but IBM Market Insights puts the business analytics and optimization opportunity at $150 billion or higher, including software and services.

In the first half of this year, analytics for Genpact grew at 45%, or at two to three times that of its other offerings, Tyagarajan said.

Genpact clubs business analytics, process re-engineering and risk management into what it calls smart decision services (SDS).

The Bangalore centre—its biggest for analytics with about 3,500 people—almost exclusively focuses on analytics. The importance of this centre is gaining for Genpact because of the increasing importance of the analytics space, Tyagarajan added. “Analytics is a big piece of our business, an important aspect of who we are and how we add value to our clients.”

Analytics is gaining in importance for Indian as well as foreign technology and consulting companies such as International Business Machines Corp. and Accenture Plc.

Given Genpact’s genesis as a unit of General Electric Co., the company has been working on advanced analytics that are normally not outsourced, including running credit card businesses and managing supply chains and inventories for high-end equipment such as aircraft engines.

“While everybody is talking analytics today we have been at it since 1998,” said Tyagarajan. “… It is the kind of work that companies want to do themselves. What we did for GE continues and we are building on that. From a global delivery perspective, we are clearly among the largest in the world.”

Genpact’s analytics offerings today are also focused on external processes, he added. Clients include consumer product companies and pharmaceuticals.

“Overall, under SDS, growth-focused analytics is about 50%, 25% is back-end cost, efficiency and effectiveness, and 25% is risk management.

Source:http://www.livemint.com/2011/08/07183534/Genpact-plans-analytics-hub-in.html?atype=tp

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Genpact’s Q2 net surges 40% to $39 million

August 4th, 2011

Increased revenues from its global clients made India’s largest business process outsourcing (BPO) company Genpact post a 40% jump in its net profit for the second quarter ended June 30, 2011. Despite the ongoing economic pressures, the BPO posted net profit of $39 million compared with $27.8 million in the second quarter of 2010. Revenues in the quarter stood at $397.6 million, up 29.3% from $307.6 million posted in the corresponding quarter a year ago.

Revenues from clients other than GE, which Genpact refers to as global client revenues, grew 44.1%. Business process management revenues from global clients grew 23.7% over the second quarter of 2010, led by 54.0% growth in re-engineering, analytics, business consulting and enterprise risk consulting businesses. Revenues from global clients now represent approximately 69.2% of Genpact’s total revenues, with the remaining 30.8% coming from GE. Revenues from IT services were approximately 21.9% of total revenues for the second quarter of 2011, up from 14.1% for the second quarter of 2010, including IT services revenues attributable to Headstrong. Genpact had acquired US-based consulting and information technology services company Headstrong for $550 million (R2,500 crore) in April this year. Currently, the BPO has $336.4 million in cash and cash equivalents. Going ahead, Genpact is positive on its full year guidance and expects full year revenue growth of 23-25%. “We continue to expect full year revenue growth of 23-25%. Given our strong performance during the first half of the year and the diversity of our business, despite ongoing concerns in the global economy, we now expect to be at the higher end of both ranges,” said NV Tyagarajan, Genpact’s CEO and president.Firstsource net slides 63% to R10.64 crore Business process outsourcing (BPO) firm Firstsource Solutions on Wednesday reported a 63% decline in its consolidated net profit at R10.64 crore for the quarter ended June 30, 2011. The company had registered a net profit of R32.07 crore in the same quarter of the previous fiscal, Firstsource Solutions said in a filing to the Bombay Stock Exchange.

Triveni Turbine posts R21.3 crore net profit

Triveni Turbine, which has been demerged from Triveni Engineering and Industries into a separate company, on Wednesday reported a net profit of R21.3 crore and net sales of R161 crore for the quarter ended June. Comparable figures for the year-ago period were not available as Triveni Engineering and Industries, which is engaged mainly in sugar manufacturing, demerged its steam turbine business into Triveni Turbine in October, 2010.

Ceat first quarter net loss at R41.90 cr

Ceat on Wednesday posted a net loss of R41.90 crore for the first quarter ended June 30, 2011. The company had reported a net profit of R13.87 crore in the same period last financial year, Ceat said in a filing to the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE). Net sales of the company rose to R1,072.59 crore for the first quarter ended June 30, 2011, compared to R772.22 crore in the same period previous fiscal.

Sree Sakthi registers 13% top line growth Kerala-based Sree Sakthi Paper Mills registered a 13% jump in revenues during the first quarter of the 2011-12 financial year, resulting in a 16.5% rise in profits despite a sharp rise in raw material prices.

Source:http://www.financialexpress.com/news/genpacts-q2-net-surges-40-to-39-million/826741/0

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Headstrong about making it big

April 14th, 2011

Genpact’s Rs 2,475-crore acquisition is set to take it beyond pure-play business process outsourcing.
Genpact, India’s largest pure-play business process outsourcing (BPO) company, has set the ball rolling for IT-enabled BPO play with its acquisition of Headstrong Corp for $550 million (around Rs 2,475 crore).

The deal, the largest for Genpact, was the third-largest in the IT space after Wipro’s acquistion of Infocrossing for $600 million in 2007 and HCL Technologies’ £441-million acquisition of Axon in 2008.

The $1.26-billion Genpact (formerly GE Capital International Services, a captive unit of GE), with its 43,900-strong staff, has come a long way since it was founded by Pramod Bhasin in 1997.

However, even as the acquisition will give Genpact a boost in both IT space and the banking and finance vertical, Bhasin, president and CEO, has categorically said the intention is not to be another IT company.

“Our strategy on the IT front is not to be another giant IT guy. That is not what we want to be. We want to be very focused in a particular niche, with very strong domain expertise and end-to-end capabilities of delivering processes to our customers. This means you have to have technology, you have to have analytics, you have to have process, you have to bring those three together to be able to provide the services these customers want. It is different in other verticals, but that is the way we are playing it,” Bhasin said in an analyst call after the announcement of the acquisition.

The strategy augurs well for Genpact, which will require the niche focus to counter competition from IT services players like IBM, TCS, Infosys and others, who are increasingly eyeing BPO deals too. This also shows that BPO is no longer just about voice calls. The Indian BPO industry, which started with call centres and back-office assignments, has moved over to much more high-end work.

“Many players in the BPO space are looking to increase their presence in the BFS space. A couple of years earlier, IT services had done the same thing by acquiring BPO companies, as they wanted those capabilities. But, more importantly, BPO companies need to get into the full-services play once they reach a certain critical size,” said Siddarth Pai, partner and managing director, TPI India.

Another edge that IT services companies enjoy is in their reach. Mainstream IT service providers are better placed to sell additional services to the same clients, as it is economically viable for them. They have evolved as bigger brands and can win these deals more easily than standalone BPOs. Platform-based BPO verticals also allow them to deliver the next level of saving, technology refresh and better process efficiency, which standalone BPOs cannot offer.

Analysts also point out that clients are no longer interested in the number of people working on their project, or how soon the vendor can ramp-up the process. Their demand has now shifted to outcome-based results. “Add to this that they also want insight. How can a company help them sell a certain product better? Can they help structure a product or offering better, or can they help in analytics,” said a senior executive of a leading IT services and consulting firm.

TCS made one of the biggest acquisitions in the BPO space in 2009 by acquiring Citi Global Services for $505 million. Similarly, Infosys acquired Philips Captive BPO unit, which had an expertise in finance and accounting. And, one of Wipro’s earliest moves was to acquire Spectramind in 2002.

While the focus has been to get into full-services space, many of the acquisitions have also been about niche capabilities. For instance, when TCS acquired Citi Global Services (CGS), a captive unit of Citibank, one of the capabilities that the acquisition gave was understanding the core banking services of a bank. CGS gave TCS the capability to offer core banking as an outsourcing service.

For Genpact, banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) contributed 39 per cent to its revenue as of December 31, 2010. The acquisition of Headstrong will further strengthen its focus in the BFSI vertical, giving it a strong technology backing. And, as Bhasin says, this acquisition will make Genpact one of the leading capital markets players. “We will, in fact, add capabilities to them, capabilities in the analytics space related to capital markets, reengineering related to capital markets, process and domain expertise that we currently have in capital markets… so that we build a complete vertical with end-to-end solutions that we can drive. We really believe that that is the way the world is going, that is the way we have been shaping our own organisation and delivery centers over the past few years. This fits perfectly into that strategy,” said Bhasin.
Sudin Apte, founder and principle analyst, Offshore Insights, also believes that pure-play BPOs will need to look at such a strategic fit. “I think pure-play BPOs have a series of challenges… but not essentially because they lack IT service capability. The problems have more to do with format in which they do business and the type of work they do. Most standalone BPOs were started 5-6 years before IT biggies jumped on the bandwagon. By then, it was clear that pure voice was not a good idea, “lift and shift” or “as is where is” shifting of processes have limited opportunity to showcase value. These boil down to labour arbitrage, etc…, so top companies like TCS and Infosys have selected models different from what companies like Transworks, WNS or yesteryears’ Daksh or Spectramind followed,” said Apte.

Garima Vashistha, president, Tholons, agrees: “They could have either acquired a generic IT services company, which would have provided them the technology but lacked focus, or a niche-focus company and gained expertise and capability,” she adds.

This acquisition will also help Genpact arrest the fall in its IT segment. Revenue from IT services accounted for 14 per cent in 2010, down from 19 per cent in 2009. The revenue from the vertical had contributed around 24 per cent in 2007 and has been steadily declining since the global economic slowdown hit the industry.

Moreover, this will also bring down GE’s contribution to the company’s revenues. The company has successfully reduced GE’s contribution to its revenue, but many a time this contribution has hurt Genpact. For instance, after a disappointing second-quarter results in 2009, Genpact almost halved its revenue growth expectation to 6-9 per cent for 2009. Reason: Its largest client, GE, which contributes about 38 per cent to the BPO’s revenue, was under stress.

“The acquisition will reduce GE’s contribution in percentage terms. GE, today, is about 38 per cent of our business. Headstrong brings $217 million, add to that a 20 per cent growth rate. Add that to our current revenues and GE will come out to be 8-9 percentage points lower,” said Bhasin.
Unlike many players who have been focusing on the offshore capability, this acquisition will bolster Genpact’s onsite foot-print along with onsite presence in the US and UK. “Two-third of Headstrong’s capability comes from onsite operations. Besides, it has a significant presence in the US market,” said Bhasin. It has about 3,700 employees in seven countries. Besides the US and UK, it also has presence in Japan and Hong Kong.

“I think Headstrong is an interesting buy. They are a specialist providers focusing on capital markets, have marquee clients in each space they operate (asset management, mortgage, brokerage, etc), have on-shore domain experts, have IP in these spaces and solutions addressing specific client concerns around trading, exchanges, reporting, compliance, etc. It brings many more new accounts to Genpact, brings in IT service capability in ADM space (which is a very small practice at Genpact currently), and the opportunity to up-sell/cross-sell into each other’s accounts.

The acquisition clearly is a thumbs up for the company, but, more importantly, this puts to rest the speculation that Genpact would get acquired.

Source:http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/headstrong-about-making-it-big/432173/

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Genpact net rises 21.4% in Sep quarter

October 29th, 2010

Healthy demand for business process outsourcing (BPO) made Genpact Ltd, India’s largest BPO firm, post a 21.4% rise in net profit at $40.1 million (around Rs.180 crore) for the three months ended 30 September. Revenue rose 13.1% at $321.6 million year-on-year. Net profit was up 44.2% against $27.8 million reported in the June quarter.

The company, which counts the US market and banking and financial services as its biggest sectors, said adjusted income from operations margin declined to 15.4% compared with 18.9% a year ago.

President and chief executive Pramod Bhasin said this was due to unforeseen delays by clients in transitioning signed contracts to full production, its investments in sales staff and in building technologies.

“These client delays have affected margins in the near term; because of the upfront investments, we normally make in transitioning processes from the client to us,” he said. “We have already taken aggressive actions to align our costs with these revised schedules and reset our cost base.”

Genpact has trimmed 2010 revenue growth expectation to 12-13% from the earlier 14-17% due to client delays. “The delays do not amount to any cancellations. Clients are just breaking contracts into smaller pieces due to the uncertainty in the environment,” said chief operating officer N.V. Tyagarajan.

At the end of September, Genpact had around 43,300 employees worldwide. Its employee attrition rate for the nine months to September was 28% against 23% a year ago.

Genpact generated $68 million of cash from operations in the Q3, up from $55.7 million a year ago. It added 20 clients during the quarter.

Source:http://www.livemint.com/2010/10/28220140/Genpact-net-rises-214-in-Sep.html?atype=tp

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NYSE listed Information Technology (IT) giant Cognizant in talks for Genpact takeover

September 21st, 2010

Cognizant is in talks for the acquisition of business process outsourcing firm, Genpact. Cognizant, the information technology giant said it is in advanced discussions with Genpact and will be making an announcement soon regarding its offer for Genpact. Genpact is a major business process outsourcing firm. The two firms, even thought listed in the New York Stock Exchange, have major delivery centers in India.

The Indian delivery centers are at the core of the firms’ Asian operations and to a large extent their global offering. But even so, reports have indicated that it may be long before an announcement is made regarding the success of the talks. According to sources from the investment banking industry, the deal is still in its infancy stages, despite the impressive progress of the talks, and will result in a deal.

Investment banking sources are hopeful the deal will most likely result in the two signing a takeover agreement, as the negotiations enter their advanced stages. But regardless, it is still too early to state if there will be a definite deal, said analysts. Cognizant spokesperson reiterated the firm is currently aiming at increased growth, a core part of its strategy. The firms however denied the conjecture over the planned deal, saying they do not comment on conjecture.

Reports further indicated that private equity firms and GE are also keen on a potential exit from Genpact. Genpact was previously a captive unit of GE, with GE controlling about 9.1 per cent holding in the firm. On the other hand, private equity firms General Atlantic and Oak Hill have a shareholding of 41.7 per cent while Wells Fargo owns about 5.71 per cent.

On the overall, the sum shareholding of these private equity firms adds to about 121.98 million shares and when tabulated at existing closing prices of Genpact on the New York Stock Exchange, values the firm at about $2 billion.

However, analysts have pegged the estimated price for the takeover higher than this valuation. But even so, should the deal go through, Cognizant may as well change the IT rankings in India, as the deal would give it an enlarged offering and portfolio. Cognizant had revenues of $3.27 billion last year and hopes to garner revenues of $4.46 billion this year.

As such, the resultant entity from the merger will be pegged at more than $5.58 billion in value, ranking close to India’s second biggest IT services firm, Infosys.

Source:http://investinindia.com/news/nyse-listed-information-technology-it-giant-cognizant-talks-genpact-takeover-4n69

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Genpact all set to enter West Asia to serve local clients

September 19th, 2010

Genpact, the country’s largest business process outsourcing (BPO) company, is spreading its wings to West Asia. The company is exploring Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon for setting up centres to serve local clients.

“We have customers in financial services in West Asia because of our relationship with GE. Though we are servicing these clients from India as of now, we will need a local Arabic speaking delivery centre there. Egypt is a good option because it has an old and great education system, along with a good English, French and Arabic speaking population. Jordan and Lebanon could be the other places,” said N V Tyagarajan, chief operating officer of Genpact. The company has inked a contract with Sabic, a Saudi Arabian chemicals company, to manage its analytics and supply chain services. It has also signed contracts with two clients in the financial services sector in West Asia.

“We are also looking for a person to lead the company’s West Asia operations and will soon announce that,” he said.
“Egypt is emerging as an offshore destination and is in competition to India. The investment in the centre should be around half a million dollars (Rs 3 crore),” said an analyst.

Besides West Asia, Genpact is looking at Brazil to set up delivery centres in the next one year. “There is a huge market for both global clients and local Chinese and Indian companies in Brazil. As of now, we have a little presence there, in places where the Brazilian languages are not required. We are looking at Sao Paulo and Tier-II cities in Brazil to set up the centre,” Tyagarajan had earlier said.

The investments in these new centres will be part of the company’s plan to spend around five per cent of its revenues on capital expenditure that includes both replacement and new expenditure. The company will start with 50-100 people in these centres and then scale them up. Headcount in these centres will grow like the BPO’s Guatemala centre, which will soon have 1,000 employees, and the Manila centre, where it will have 2,000.

Source:http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/genpact-all-set-to-enter-west-asia-to-serve-local-clients/408493/

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