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India in 1991, IT sector's boom, PEST analysis, SWOT and more.....
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Impact of IT Outsourcing in India
Prasanna Balaji.V
Hemendra.M.D
Mahathev.V
Gautam Kumar Sahani
Dinesh.R
International Business Environment
Page 2
Synopsis
Outsourcing is subcontracting a process, such as product design or manufacturing, to a third-party company.
The decision to outsource is often made in the interest of lowering firm costs or to make more efficient use of land, labour, capital, (information) technology and resources.
India has enormous opportunities emerging from globalization and consequent lowering of tariff barriers.
Information Technology has given India formidable brand equity in the global markets.
Indian companies have a unique distinction of providing efficient business solutions with cost, quality and skilled manpower base as an advantage by using state of art Technology.
Page 3
Players in IT Industries Large Companies
– E.g.: SWITCH (Sathyam, Wipro, Infosys, Tcs, Cts, HCL)
– High Stability
– Size matters: A 50 member team is insignificant
– Low Transparency
– High employee retention
Small Companies
– Niche companies under 100 people
– Gold level customer service at a very low cost
– High Transparency & flexibility in operation
– Retention and hiring is exceedingly difficult
– Lack of a perspective on large scale projects or process
Page 4
Players in IT Industries
Mid Sized Companies
– Providing best of both worlds
– Very technology-savvy
– Gold level customer service at a reasonable price
– Ability to hire and retain top talent from the best Indian
companies
– Striving hard to establish their brand name
Page 5
SWOT Analysis Strengths
- Highly skilled, English-speaking workforce
- Abundant & Cheaper manpower
- Lower attrition rates than in the West
- Round-the-clock advantage for Western companies due to the
huge time difference
- Lower response time with efficient and effective service
Weaknesses
- Recent months have seen a rise in the level of attrition rates
among outsourcing
- The cost of telecom and network infrastructure is much higher
- Local infrastructure
- Political influence
Page 6
SWOT Analysis
Opportunities
- To work closely with associations like Nasscom to portray India as
the most favoured IT destination in the world
- India can be branded as a quality outsourcing destination
- $69 billion ITES business by 2010
- $97.5 billion IT (consulting, software solutions) market by 2010
Threats
- The anti-outsourcing legislation in the US states
- Workers in British Telecom have protested against outsourcing of
Work to Indian companies
- Other IT destinations such as China, Philippines, Vietnam and
South Africa could have an edge on the cost factor
Page 7
Growth of Information Technology in India
10th Five year plan
Gateway to foreign companies
Foreign Direct Investment
Dramatic Increase in Economy with Technological Improvement and Global Market Recognition
Employment
Page 8
PEST Analysis of India
Political Factors
- Counter-trade Agreement to Benefit Indian Companies like Wipro,
Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Infosys Technologies Ltd etc.
- Increase in Globalization, Liberalization and Privatization
- Liberalizing the rules and trade barriers levied on Foreign Software
Companies
Economical Factors
- The fourth largest economy in the world (measured in terms of
purchasing power parity)
- Has the second largest group of software developers after the U.S.
- Lists 6,600 companies on the Bombay Stock Exchange;
- The IT industry as a whole represents 2.87% of GDP
Page 9
PEST Analysis of India Social Factors
- Comparative advantage of English speaking & technically educated
graduates
- Indian engineers settled abroad are returning back to India to
add to the skill set available in India
- Sends more students to the U.S. colleges than any other country in
the world. In 2007, over 84,000 Indian students enrolled in the U.S.
Technological Factors
- Moving up the Outsourcing Value-chain
- 100 of the Fortune 500 have R & D facilities in India
- One of six countries that launches its own satellites
- One of only three countries that makes its own supercomputers
Page 10
Why India?
India's slowly opening economy coincided with the global boom in the technology sector providing valuable source of cheap, educated labour for the world market.
In 2002, software exports and services made up 2% of India's GDP. Some analysts expected the sector to grow above 7% of GDP by 2008 and make up 30% of India's foreign exchange inflows.
Taking advantage of the technology-savvy, English-speaking workforce, American companies began outsourcing information technology (IT) and back office operations to India.
More than 40% of the world's Fortune 500 companies outsourced a portion of their services operations to India in 2002.
Having the advantage of a nine-hour time difference, Indian operations made 24-hour service possible.
Page 11
When & How?
It all started with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 which affected India badly.
India's account deficit had risen above 3% of its GDP and its reserves had depleted to less than US$1 billion which forced India to seek the help of IMF.
IMF granted the loans but only on the condition that India begins making major economic reforms consistently under "Washington Consensus“ policies.
This gave way for lot of foreign investments, which include lot of IT sectors as well.
Encouraged by the loosening restrictions on the import of technology and the absence of taxes on software exports, Indian entrepreneurs began building their own IT firms, including such notable firms as Wipro, Tata Consultancy Services, and Infosys.
Page 12
Conclusion India provides a range of services, including programming, conversions,
testing, debugging, installing and maintaining while specialists in industrialized countries continue to write core software
This led to concerns that the Indian software industry despite its apparent successes has returned to the production pattern of the 1960s
Foreign tie-ups, foreign brand names and access to the latest imported technology were once again the most important considerations and most so-called Indian computer companies actually just produce software for integration with imported hardware
India is exporting inexpensive lines of code and importing expensive foreign software whilst trapped at the low end of the division of labour
Competitive strength is based on low wages rather than productive dynamism
Page 13
Conclusion
A growing number of MNC’s followed the pioneers in setting up offshore development centres in India in the 1990s
In 1990 onsite sourcing constituted 90% of revenue in the software sector. This figure had fallen to 38.9% in 2002/03
In contrast off shoring increased from 5% in 1990/91 to 57.9% 2002/03
32 Indian firms received the prestigious SEI-CMM certification by the late 1990s
In 2001 about 40% of India’s software exports came from Bangalore.
As the industry has expanded in terms of employment, revenue per employer has been increasing, from $6198.5 in 1993/94 to $15,600 in 1998/99.