Posts Tagged ‘Growth’

Business services may drive economic growth

December 20th, 2011

RAPID growth in the business services sector offers hope for the UK’s economic recovery, the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) argued yesterday – but the think-tank also warned a Eurozone recession could cost the UK 70,000 jobs in the industry.

Business outsourcing is forecast to help IT services to grow by 13.6 per cent by 2016, the Cebr said. Management consultancy may grow by 19.1 per cent, and legal and accounting services could see turnover rise by 10.6 per cent.

However , a Eurozone meltdown could stop this recovery in its tracks, cutting spending by 1.6 per cent and destroying 70,000 jobs, the think-tank claimed.

“Demand for business services is expected to grow healthily as UK retailers and manufacturers in particular, look to streamline their business models in today’s tough climate,” said Cebr economist Rob Harbron. “However, a recession in the Eurozone is not good for UK exporters nor the business service firms which rely on their success.”

Source:http://www.cityam.com/news-and-analysis/business-services-may-drive-economic-growth

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Bpo Revenues Seen Reaching $25B In 2016 As Growth Accelerates

October 12th, 2011

The business process outsourcing sector expects to hit its accelerated growth target of 25 percent or $25 billion export revenues by 2016 instead of a best case scenario of 15 percent growth or $20 billion five years from now.

Alfredo Ayala, chairman of the BPAP (BPO Association of the Philippines), said in a speech at the International Outsourcing Summit that if government and the private sector jointly implement enhancement measures the accelerated case scenario is likely to be achieved.

“The real key is our partnership between government and private sector. If we can pull that off then we can hit the accelerated case,” Ayala said.

The BPAP 2016 masterplan has set two growth scenarios: The best case and accelerated case.

The best case calls for a 15 percent growth rate or $20 billion export revenues by 2016 from the projected $11 billion in 2011, direct employment of 900,000 from the current 600,000 and combined direct and indirect employment of 3 million.

Under the accelerated case, the target is 25 percent growth for $25 billion export revenues by 2016. Direct jobs would be 1.2 million and indirect and direct jobs of 4.5 million.

Ayala, however, said that the main challenge now is the supply of talent. He said the industry had accomplished the goals in the 2011 BPAP masterplan of generating demand for the Philippine BPO industry.

“Demand generation has become less of an issue now because the world has come to us so our focus now is on the supply side of talent,” Ayala said.

“The challenge is how can we make use of this strong demand,” said Ayala.

Trade and Industry Secretary Gregory L. Domingo said the talent supply has been an issue since 2003 when the industry was only 25,000 people.

“But we are able to cope until now when the scale of the industry has gone up to 600,000. So the problem has become acute because we only have 400,000 graduates a year,” he said.

He said that industry is targeting to employ between 80,000 to 100,000 new hires this year but said that even the 80,000 is already a stretch given the acute supply situation.

He, however, said that the government and the academe is addressing this head-on including the Department of Education, Commission on Higher Education, the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority and the private sector.

Domingo even said that the Department of Science and Technology is going to make available free software, a training module for would be BPO applicants.

“The classroom solution is no longer sufficient so we are offering online training with free software and the DoST is working on it,” he said.

Congress has also enacted milestone legislation Republic Act 10151 on the employment in the BPO sector including the employment of night workers, especially women. Congress also passed the Data Protection and Privacy Law.

Other government intervention is the continued provision of incentives to those expanding BPO operations.

Source:http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/337442/bpo-revenues-seen-reaching-25b-in-2016-as-growth-accelerates

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Growth in Usage of Data Center Service Providers

October 11th, 2011

It doesn’t seem that long ago there was a sort of phobia behind outsourcing your data center to service provider. Many IT users believed you needed to be close to your servers. That perception has changed, even more rapidly than predicted by research firms that follow the data center market.

Data Center Knowledge readers report strong usage of data center service providers among enterprise class companies. It seems only a few years ago enterprise IT wanted to own their facilities and servers. However, now 62% are reporting they are, or plan to outsourcing elements of their data center processing. Thirty two percent of the respondents report using data center service providers in a broad fashion, and 17% are more selective with their IT outsourcing. 12% are in testing or planning, which creates solid market growth for data center service providers for the next several years.

These findings are part of the Data Center Knowledge 2012 Data Center Market Insights Report. For more from this survey read the other market insights articles. If you prefer you can download the complete report coutesy of Vantage Data Centers.

Source:http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2011/10/10/growth-in-usage-of-data-center-services-providers/

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HCL Tech CEO expects strong growth in orders

September 30th, 2011

India’s HCL Technologies Ltd. (532281.BY) expects strong growth in orders in the October-to-December quarter as it taps new markets in Japan and Europe and seeks to benefit from contract renewals due in the U.S., Chief Executive Vineet Nayar said.

The recent market turmoil is unlikely to hurt orders because many contracts that were initially signed for a five-year period in 2005-06 are due for renewal and companies are likely to switch outsourcing firms as they look for cheaper rates, benefiting companies such as HCL.

“You have to have a business model that will grow in a flat market. There has been no increase in IT spending since 2008. And if we found a way of growing at that time, we can find a way of growing at this particular time,” Nayar told Dow Jones Newswires in an interview in Singapore on late Wednesday.

Typically, only 5% of the contracts that come up for renewal change service providers but now the number has gone up to 30%, Nayar said, attributing the higher churn to the unwillingness of outsourcing firms to accept lower payments from customers to help them tide over the 2008 global economic crisis.

Orders for the industry are expected to grow 28% in the second-half of this year from the first, Nayar said, citing estimates by industry information service provider TPI. HCL is well positioned to take away clients from bigger global IT firms, he said.

“The only trick for growth is eating someone else’s lunch, and we are focused on doing it,” Nayar said.

HCL Technologies also expects Japanese firms to step up outsourcing to tap into India’s software engineering skills, he said, adding that European customers are now outsourcing more.

Nayar declined to put any numbers on the size of orders HCL Technologies was aiming for, citing restrictions ahead of reporting quarterly earnings. In July, the company reported a 52% rise from a year earlier in its fourth quarter net profit at INR5.11 billion, beating analyst estimates. Sales rose 28%.

HCL Technologies recorded a INR83 million foreign exchange gain in the quarter that ended June 30, compared with a loss of INR1.35 billion a year earlier when hedging bets misfired.

“We’ve learnt our lesson well. We’ve stopped taking calls on where the dollar will be. We do what we call systematic hedging. We hedge every month and we build the book every month of up to 40% of our revenues. We get an average rate,” Nayar said, adding that he has “stopped talking to banks and analysts” as they have been unsuccessful in predicting currency moves.

Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/hcl-tech-ceo-expects-strong-growth-in-orders-2011-09-29

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Growth rates of 2003-07 are a thing of the past

September 26th, 2011

The ever-changing landscape for Indian software services players means that interesting trends emerge from an IT outsourcing perspective.

Mr Sid Pai, Partner & Managing Director, TPI, throws light on these and the way forward for Indian software service providers during the course of a conversation with Business Line.

Excerpts from the interview:

Will it be a repeat of 2008 for the Indian IT industry? What is the outlook for outsourcing?

In 2008, there was a general ‘shutdown’ as it were. Along with the financial crisis, we had events such as the near collapse of GM and so on. So the financial contagion spread to other sectors as well. This is not happening now.

The downgrade of US sovereign debt rating is just a commentary on the state finances and nothing else. From an outsourcing perspective, we have not seen any reduction in the pipeline. We feel there will be no early closure of projects for the next six-nine months.

But we are beginning to see some weakness in the second calendar quarter of this year. But much of this has to do with seasonality. It is also due to the fact that some of the contracts that have come for re-negotiation or were going to be renewed had slowed down, which we knew was coming.

In so far as there is reduction in the cost for an existing platform, clients will continue to consider outsourcing. There is a second wave of outsourcing, with some Fortune 500 and global 2000 companies considering outsourcing for the first time.

But, overall, we will not get to see the growth rates in IT outsourcing we saw in 2003-07. It is a thing of the past. It is a maturing market.

We have seen mega deals dry out over the past couple of years. Has there been a paradigm shift in clients’ strategy of structuring large contracts?

Large deals have died out. This happened even prior to 2008. To illustrate from a TPI standpoint, seven-eight years ago, we were advising on contracts worth $25-30 billion annually in TCV (total contract value). That was done over roughly 30 transactions. So, on an average, it translated to a billion dollars a deal.

Now, we still advice on $25-30 billion annually. However, the number of transactions is 120-140. At a micro-level, we see that the $200-300 million deals are still a preserve of the global MNC players such as IBM.

In such large deals, even when they come up for renewal or re-negotiation, 89 per cent of the time, the incumbents get the contract. So even though Indian majors compete, such deals tend to go to global players.

Then, there is an entire $50 million-minus deal, which is a space that is almost completely owned by the Indian service providers. By a ‘penetrate and radiate’ strategy, they gradually build good relationships with these clients. Now, the true battleground is in the $50-150 million deal space, which is what the average deal size is today.

How has vendor rationalisation affected the top-tier IT players?

Vendor rationalisation is actually not what most people think it is. To give you an example, one of our clients recently found that it was working with over 400 vendors! Apart from the usual suspects — IBM, Accenture, TCS, Infosys and others — there were also several ‘mom and pop’ players with two, three or 10 people, and so on. It is this segment that is being taken out.

Rather than dissipating their buying power over so many vendors, clients are looking to concentrate it to about six players. It is the long tail that is being rationalised, not the cream.

Why are higher end services in larger deals awarded to MNCs? Is this likely to change?

The heritage and delivery model has a lot to do with the nature of deals won. Our Indian service providers are mostly focussed on low-cost destinations. They have built capabilities mainly in low-cost offshore destinations. For example, TCS has large capabilities in Brazil. But have they hired 5000 delivery people each in the US or the UK? No.

Forget consulting, even some simple technical work can at times be done only with local presence. Obviously, that would mean lower profitability, which is why Indian service providers are not doing it. Cognizant, Infosys, Wipro or TCS all have bulk of their workforce in India.

Higher-end services such as consulting, advisory etc will require significant local presence. So, Indian service providers cut themselves out of such deals.

Margins of 28-29 per cent are unthinkable in the global context! At some stage, the penny has to drop and they have to globalise their workforce, if they are to climb the value chain.

Will BFSI still be driving growth going forward? Telecom still seems in trouble and will the manufacturing segment continue to grow further?

BFSI will always be the biggest spender and consumer of IT services. Based on interest rate cycles, they step up and step down. So it tends to be lumpy at times. But the cycles are also shorter.

So the same bank that has fired 30,000 people will do a large outsourcing contract or hire 50,000 people within 24 months!

The investment cycles of telecoms are typically longer. It is around seven years, based on technology changes. Right now, we are seeing a down cycle, but we see it coming back in two-three years time.

It will be driven by computing on a mobile platform, devices such as tablets, and so on. Investment will happen from both equipment manufacturers as well as carriers. Semiconductor manufacturers would see a slower revival — they have a 7-10 year investment cycle.

Source:http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/features/investment-world/article2482310.ece?ref=wl_opinion

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BPO industry sees growth despite macro challenges

August 26th, 2011

The business process outsourcing (BPO) industry in India, which is as export-oriented as the information technology services industry, is unperturbed despite the macroeconomic challenges and problems that are haunting the US, its biggest market.

The overall mood at the Nasscom annual BPO strategy meet in Gurgaon was reflecting this. Industry chieftains, strategists and analysts were unanimous that a slowdown, if at all happens again, won’t affect the prospects of the $17-billion industry. This is given the fact that global clients have already undergone significant restructuring with no headroom for further cost reduction.

The impact, if at all, will be positive since the clients will be forced to outsource more to optimise the costs and the benefits of that will come to the global outsourcing services providers, say industry leaders.

INDUSTRY AT A GLANCE
* India is number one in the global BPO landscape with 37% market share
* Over 500 companies offer services in India
* Over 200 MNCs and captives are doing business out of India
* The Indian BPO sector serves 66 countries in 36 languages
* The sector registered export revenue worth $17 billion with $14.1 billion from exports and $2.8 billion from the domestic markets

“In 2008, when the economic slowdown happened, we and the customers went through a fair amount of adjustment. We effectively moved from one pricing model to the other. The customers gave us far more flexibility than they gave before and that led to a different kind of relationship. Given all these, we think that the business for us will continue to be good,” Nasscom President Som Mittal said on the sidelines of the two-day event that started on Wednesday.

Besides, he said the BPO industry was more insulated as compared to some other industries, as it was not directly linked to the global uncertainties. Seconding his view, Pramod Bhasin, the non-executive vice-chairman of Genpact said the sector would go at a steady pace in the long term.

According to rating agency Crisil, while the IT sector grew by seven per cent during the downturn, the BPO sector expanded by 20 per cent. “Those numbers speak of a very interesting dynamics and what lies ahead for the BPO industry,” said MD and CEO Roopa Kudva. Moreover, in case of IT projects, the companies have to make payments upfront and wait for the benefits to accrue. But a BPO project is productive from day one, according to Manish Choudhury, VP and MD of Pitney Bowes Software India.

The software body said it remains confident about its projection for 16-18 per cent growth of the Indian IT industry in 2011-12 despite economic uncertainty in the US and European markets.

Source:http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/bpo-industry-sees-growth-despite-macro-challenges/446961/

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BPO sector bullish on growth despite challenges

August 25th, 2011

The business process outsourcing industry in India [ Images ], which is as export-oriented as the information technology services industry, is unperturbed despite the macroeconomic challenges and problems that are haunting the US, its biggest market.

The overall mood at the Nasscom annual BPO strategy meet in Gurgaon was reflecting this.

Industry chieftains, strategists and analysts were unanimous that a slowdown, if at all happens again, won’t affect the prospects of the $17-billion industry.

This is given the fact that global clients have already undergone significant restructuring with no headroom for further cost reduction.

The impact, if at all, will be positive since the clients will be forced to outsource more to optimise the costs and the benefits of that will come to the global outsourcing services providers, say industry leaders.

“In 2008, when the economic slowdown happened, we and the customers went through a fair amount of adjustment. We effectively moved from one pricing model to the other.

“The customers gave us far more flexibility than they gave before and that led to a different kind of relationship. Given all these, we think that the business for us will continue to be good,” Nasscom President Som Mittal said on the sidelines of the two-day event that started on Wednesday.

Besides, he said the BPO industry was more insulated as compared to some other industries, as it was not directly linked to the global uncertainties.

Seconding his view, Pramod Bhasin [ Images ], the non-executive vice-chairman of Genpact said the sector would go at a steady pace in the long term.

According to rating agency Crisil, while the IT sector grew by seven per cent during the downturn, the BPO sector expanded by 20 per cent.

“Those numbers speak of a very interesting dynamics and what lies ahead for the BPO industry,” said MD and CEO Roopa Kudva.

Moreover, in case of IT projects, the companies have to make payments upfront and wait for the benefits to accrue.

But a BPO project is productive from day one, according to Manish Choudhury, VP and MD of Pitney Bowes Software India.

The software body said it remains confident about its projection for 16-18 per cent growth of the Indian IT industry in 2011-12 despite economic uncertainty in the US and European markets.

Source:http://www.rediff.com/business/report/bpo-sector-bullish-on-growth-despite-challenges/20110825.htm

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