Showing posts with label Global BPO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Global BPO. Show all posts

BPO staff may soon work from home too

Wednesday, September 30, 2009
A year after the department of telecommunications conditionally relaxed rules on IT-BPO employees working from home, Raman Roy, chairman & managing director of Quatrro BPO Solutions, has started pilot projects in Mumbai and Delhi to explore the possibility of scaling up the model.
Quattro is the first BPO to have secured permission for this model from DoT. "This is a provisional permission. Once the company is able to meet all our security concerns, we will grant them a license," confirmed a senior DoT official on condition of anonymity.
The license is a prerequisite for service providers to provide infrastructure and last-mile connectivity.
The $11-billion BPO sector employs over 750,000 people, and 'working from home' could add significantly to the employment numbers, said Roy. He added that he has been 'toying with the idea for nearly two years before I got help from software body Nasscom and the required permission from the DoT.'
Roy plans to launch another pilot in Chennai soon. He has also appointed a dedicated team of six senior employees -- including a lawyer and a technician -- to make these pilots successful.
"We feel this is the next-generation step for the industry. It will create jobs for people who are educated but don't have the flexibility to go to offices. Besides opening a career option for them, it will create a flexible workforce. So, housewives and others can work from home, will have flexible work timings and also earn money," said Roy.
Currently, the 30-odd employees who work from home have a computer that is connected to the company's server (using virtual private network or VPN technology). Whenever an employee logs on to the computer, the data on the screen is monitored by a supervisor sitting at the Quatrro headquarters in Gurgaon.
The supervisor sits in front of four large Plasma screens and can see each of the employees' monitors. If he wants to speak to anyone of them, or clarify any of their doubts, he accesses the webcam.
Currently, these employees are involved only in non-voice work which comprises both low-end data entry work and in some cases high-end data analytics, Roy said.
The main hurdle in this case is ensuring that a client's data is secure. "The test is all about security. So, the solution is that when the employee logs onto our server, the supervisor will be able to see him and his activities. The plasma screens ensure constant monitoring and guidance. The VPN pipe takes care of security," Roy said.
Usually there are 8 to 15 supervisors in one shift but for this virtual model one supervisor will be able to supervise 16 or 32 sessions at one go.
If the pilots are successful, Quatrro plans to expand this concept and train people by sending supervisors to tier-II and III cities and towns where it will set up training centres.
Roy said he has already spoken to some schools and received a favourable response from the principals. Quatrro will set up a computer lab with around 10 computers in schools that will be used by the schools in the morning and for training BPO 'work- from-home' aspirants in the evenings.
Going forward, employees who are selected for the work-from-home programme will be provided with computers in their homes for which Quatrro will stand guarantee with banks.
The company will deduct the monthly installment from the employee's salary.The salary structure for such employees, said Roy, will mainly be variable as the fixed salary structure will not work here. "We plan to make the pay structure transaction-based.
The higher the number of transactions, more the pay," he explained.
Another company that is experimenting with this concept is Aspect Software. "The home agent is the new wave of offshoring and is not intra-continent but intra-country. The processes demands what percentage of people can be home-based," explains Rajeev Soni, Managing Director, Aspect Software.
The company has experimented with this concept with Sparsh BPO and its own BPO for both voice- and non-voice work. However, it is yet to get a licence from the DoT to roll out the services on a commercial scale.
Soni explained that by using Microsoft's Unified Communications in the work-from-home concept, the follow-up calls went down from 18 to 20 per cent to 8 to 9 per cent, thereby reducing costs.
Analysts, however, remain sceptical about arrangements related to working from home on the ground of- data security, infrastructure, data processes, employee motivation and monitoring problems and lack of a controlled environment.
"Independent work can be done in a work-from-home arrangement but group work requires a controlled environment. Models like these work only when data masking is possible," says Sabyasachi Satpathy, partner at advisory firm Tholons.
Moreover, processing needs to be scrutinised and a faster turnaround can't take place in such models, said analysts. Few companies are interested in the work-from-home policy as infrastructure is another problem and the work will have to be verified.
"We understand and appreciate these concerns," countered Roy, adding: "After all, I have been there and seen this industry grow to its present size. But I believe that we will make this concept work."

Best BPO Companies in India

Friday, September 25, 2009

BPO or Business Process Outsourcing is one of the sunshine sectors in India. According to statistics by World Bank and Goldman Sachs, an investment banking firm India will attract about 80% of the world's BPO industry by 2020. BPO is one of the most outperforming sectors in the Indian economy. Services, which account for almost 35% in India's productivity has BPO at the heart of the growth.India is blessed with 50% population below 35. India is fortunate to be blessed with a young English speaking population. The British left their main legacy behind, when they granted independence to India; English. India, according to statistics is the second largest English speaking in the world just below the United States. Moreover, Indians are known to be processing one of the most neutral accents in the world. The citizens of India, especially the BPO workers have the potential to speak various accents in the world including American, British, Canadian and Australian to name a few.Recently, many BPO companies from East Asia and continental Europe have set up BPO offices and call centers spanning all of India. Indians, especially BPO workers are trying their best to learn new languages apart from English. There is a rapid rise in the use of foreign languages of Korean, Japanese, French, German and Spanish. Young Indians are constantly getting acquainted with these languages to serve their clients and customers based in these countries.The most important reason why companies outsource to India, besides being the country of young English speaking people, is the cost advantage. The Indian currency, Rupee, is pegged at Rs. 50=$1. Indians, due to the far lower cost of living are happy to work at only 25% of an average westerner. They are not only more efficient and work for a mere amount compared to a westerner. It is beneficial to outsource, and India is the best destination for all your outsourcing needs.

TCS bags outsourcing contract

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Tata Consultancy Services has been selected as an IT vendor by BP for the oil and gas majors refining, manufacturing and corporate maintenance works. "Our selection as a strategic IT vendor for BP demonstrates our strong domain expertise and highlights the investments we have been making in the technology-led energy sector," TCS Chief Operating Officer and Executive Director N Chandrasekaran said in a release.When contacted a TCS official told PTI that the deal was for five years, but she did not reveal the value of the deal.BP has a rigorous procurement selection process which assessed the capability, oil and gas sector knowledge and cost.BP is one of the world`s largest energy companies, providing its customers with fuel for transportation, energy for heat and light, retail services and petrochemicals products for everyday items.TCS energy vertical serves international and domestic energy companies across the industrys value chain. It also works with oil field services companies on solutions that help increase the production and reliability of upstream operations, the release said."In awarding TCS our refining, manufacturing and corporate maintenance work, we look to benefit from their knowledge of the oil and gas sector," BP Group CIO Dana Deasy was quoted as saying in the release.The contact would help BP to reduce complexity, standardise processes and lower overall cost base, Deasy said.

Global BPO vendors poach staff from local cos

Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Global outsourcing vendors such as Accenture and Capgemini are increasingly poaching employees from Indian rivals as they tap into professionals with expertise in offshoring to compete more effectively against companies like TCS, Wipro and Infosys.
As offshore outsourcing goes mainstream, multinationals are hiring Indians to head their sales teams in key markets in Europe and the US, a shift from the practice of employing locals to win contracts.
“This is happening for several roles spanning from sales, sales support to delivery. There is in a sense, even positive discrimination towards Indians now,” an Indian executive who joined a multinational in Germany recently told ET on condition on anonymity.
Offshore outsourcing, or remote delivery of software application development, maintenance and support from countries like India, helps customers such as GE and Citibank save up to 40% in costs. Indian companies such as TCS, Wipro and Infosys started using offshore outsourcing to their advantage around a decade ago by wooing customers with significant cost-benefits.
In recent months, about a dozen or so top professionals have left an Indian company to join multinational competitors. Padmanabhan Ananthanarayanan, who headed India’s largest software exporter TCS’ sales organisation in Europe until February this year, joined Accenture in March as director of its outsourcing business based in Germany.
Shishir Kumar and Vikas Baranwal quit TCS earlier this year to join Accenture as sales directors, Nimit Chawal and Dev Sharma joined Capgemini to lead the company’s sales team. Mr Sharma headed Wipro’s business development and account management for manufacturing and automotive customers in Germany until December last year, before becoming director, business development for Central Europe at Capgemini.
Sridhar Vedala, managing director of offshoring advisory firm Quantum Step, says global service providers are hiring more Indian professionals to influence the perception of customers who are looking at India and Indian professionals as synonyms for offshore outsourcing.
“Now when offshoring is in demand, obviously customers prefer Indian providers. In order to influence the perception, global providers are hiring Indian managers,” he observed.
Among such customers is the world’s largest chemical company BASF, which is seeking offshore suppliers to support its business IT systems and looking to commence a dialogue with Indian offshore managers. “Initially, global providers did not care about the competition from Indian providers. Probably, they never thought that Indian providers will be able to compete with them for larger deals,” he added.
A top executive at an Indian tech firm says many outsourcing dialogues these days are being spearheaded by Indian offshore delivery managers, unlike in the past, when local experts would help them gain access to a potential customer. “The chief information officers are specifically asking for Indian suppliers.”
The over $40-billion Indian software outsourcing industry derives almost 70-80% of its revenues from offshore outsourcing. While established outsourcing vendors, such as IBM and Accenture, still lead the market because of their early relationships and ‘onshore intimacy’ with large customers, several new outsourcing customers are now looking at pure offshoring, which is helping the Indian vendors.
“For all large application management deals, the question is no more offshore or no offshore, but how much to offshore and in some cases ‘why should anything be onshore anymore’,” said a person involved with decision-making at a large enterprise in Germany.
“This is such a contrast. Until a few months ago, some Indian companies were trying to hire more locals in Germany and France, but now customers are becoming more comfortable with Indian managers,” said a senior Indian professional based in Munich, Germany, who recently quit one of the top ten Indian software exporters to join an MNC rival.
Hema Ravichander, who was the head of human resources at Infosys and is now an independent consultant, says Indian professionals are highly valued because of their early offshoring experience.
“Speed, adaptability, networking, deep understanding of the competitor landscape make them valuable. Also, they have been there, done that; so they enjoy high credibility,” she said.