Eight of top-10 companies lose over Rs 21K crore in m-cap
There is definitely an
impact of the
global economic scenario on Indian IT and outsourcing firms, however,
most of them have long-term contracts with their clients which were signed at extremely competitive rates,
experts said.According to HR consultancy Hay Group's Managing Consultant (Mumbai Operations and Rewards Practice Leader) Sridhar Ganesan, "post 2008,
business planning with high
focus on risks and mitigation has been critical for Indian IT firms. The precedence of
2008 in terms of outlook and forecasts is therefore much
more realistic".Echoing sentiment,
executive search
firm GlobalHunt Director Sunil Goel said: "The IT and outsourcing
companies have realigned their businesses, and have a very
balanced approach. Though there would be a slowdown, there may not be a complete downfall or a
shut down in
hiring activity".Prateek Srivastava, Manager (IT Practice), Elixir Consulting, a
recruitment process outsourcing
firm said: "Impact of a
global slowdown would be marginally low than the last time. Early reports already indicate Indian IT
firms are picking
up more talent than last
year from top B-Schools".Besides, Indian BPO
companies in their evolution of
business from basic
services to
more complex
services have also realised that clients are looking at portfolio of
operations for giving business."It is not just pure offshoring anymore. The model has to be a mix of on-shore, near shore and offshore," Hay Group's Ganesan said, adding that Indian outsourcing
firms like Aegis and Wipro
among others are not looking at only India but a portfolio of locations that will help them win client
business based on this model.Central European countries are getting a lot of the knowledge process outsourcing (KPO)
business as the cost is competitive, it is near the main
company head quarter and also technical institutions there are providing very
good talent."There has been an accelerated number of
companies that have decided to
move to places like Philippines, Latin America and Australia, primarily because of cheapest wages coupled with high literacy rates. Countries like Philippines, a former US colony that retains many American cultural values ensure better cost arbitrage," Srivastava said.India, which was earlier preferred for its low cost advantage has lost that tag, as in the last decade salaries have gone up,
infrastructure cost has increased and support system cost has also jumped.Companies are now looking for newer avenues where they can align their
costs are hence preferring countries like the Phillipines, China and Africa, GlobalHunt's Goel said.
[More]