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Indian IT-BPO Services: Time to Look InwardSudha Nagaraj Bharadwaj, Journalist | 12/25/2012 |
It is high time the Indian software and services industry took a closer look at the domestic outsourcing market.For more than a decade, the focus has been on exports, but the dismal economic conditions in the US and Europe have slowed growth. According to revised estimates from NASSCOM, the sector's export revenue for the 2012-13 fiscal year will increase 11 percent from a year earlier to a range of $75 billion to $77 billion. Earlier projections had called for growth of up to 14 percent. The sector faces several challenges, including low visibility, delayed decisions, different growth rates among various verticals, and lowered revenue growth at the top IT services firms. These factors forced the industry body to conduct a midyear review for the first time. Now is a great time for growth in the domestic IT-BPO market. Though the potential is promising, the industry has failed to make inroads. Indian corporate groups are going global and developing an appetite for state-of-the-art technologies. Government agencies -- both national and state -- need IT processes and systems to accelerate economic growth. But domestic IT-BPO revenue (excluding hardware) stood at a modest $16.6 billion in 2011-12. NASSCOM had projected that it will reach $28 billion in 2012-13, but there is no update as of yet. Why do CIOs hesitate to give the domestic market top priority? For one thing, there is a perception among most Indian companies that outsourcing eventually leads to increased costs. The BFSI segment (which is by far the most adaptive) also prefers to maintain large in-house IT teams. Companies prefer to purchase packaged software and implement IT programs on their own to protect data and retain control. In addition, the IT industry has failed to project the image of a partner. Third-party outsourcing is seen as solutions provided on a piecemeal basis, rather than a business process management initiative. Many shy away from engaging with the government, due to lack of a uniform policy. However, the early adopters -- including the BFSI, telecom, and government segments, where outsourcing is catching on -- are also experimenting with various contract models. They are moving from a purely transactional model to a more trusting managed services model and further on to a collaborative or cooperative one. The industry should recognize that the growth curve is maturing and cash in on the opportunity, since domestic markets are picking up. According to Gartner, the Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan) BPO market will grow from $5.9 billion in 2011 to $6.45 billion in 2012 and $9.5 billion in 2016. Australia is the largest segment of that market, with more than $4.63 billion, versus India's $1.26 billion. China and India will be the fastest-growing markets in coming years, boosted by demand from the banking and financial services, communications, government (both local and federal), technology, retail, and travel and transportation verticals, the research firm said. In contrast to India, 90 percent of China's IT and software production is consumed domestically. NASSCOM's strategic review of India's IT-BPO sector also backs this opportunity and says that, in the 2012-13 fiscal year:
In 2013, we will definitely see the industry coming together to chart out a strategy to target these customers further. Therefore, CIOs will need to realign their focus to cater to India-specific needs. The blogs and comments posted on EnterpriseEfficiency.com do not reflect the views of TechWeb, EnterpriseEfficiency.com, or its sponsors. EnterpriseEfficiency.com, TechWeb, and its sponsors do not assume responsibility for any comments, claims, or opinions made by authors and bloggers. They are no substitute for your own research and should not be relied upon for trading or any other purpose. |
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