Real estate developer Megaworld Corporation is riding mightily on the fast-growing business process outsourcing (BPO) sector and is investing P1.5 billion ($31.2 million) in a new office building exclusively aimed at BPO operators.
Megaworld expects to finish the construction of the 27-storey Global One Center, which will house BPO players, by early 2009. The new building, which will offer 42,000 square meters of office space, follows in the heels of other Megaworld properties catering mostly to IT and BPO companies.
The country's BPO sector - which includes call centers, outsourced accounting, and transcription firms, among others - is expected to grow 20 to 30 pecent annually, putting pressure on property developers, like Megaworld, to keep up.
Jericho Go, Megaworld's first vice president for business development and leasing, said they are set to build at least 500,000 square meters of office space aimed at the IT and BPO markets in the next five years, when demand is expected to peak.
Megaworld owns the Eastwood City Cyberpark, the country's first information and communications technology (ICT) park accredited by the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA), where IBM Philippines is the developer's biggest tenant. The Cyberpark is currently home to about 60 firms, half of which belong to the IT and BPO sectors.
Thursday, April 12, 2007
When BPO Demands, The Ecosystem Responds
Office workers working in the expanding BPO industry need offices to work, right? The beneficiaries of the BPO boom include property developers busy adding supply to meet demand. Manila's skyline is changing, as surely as Bangalore's. Maybe the pace is not as fast as Shanghai's, but the change is illustrative of how one industry can be the economic engine for the rest of the country.
Labels:
BPO,
call center,
change,
economy,
forecasts,
government,
management,
outlook,
property,
software,
stock market
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment