Showing posts with label software. Show all posts
Showing posts with label software. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Buy Now

Short items from Indian press reports that Infosys will buy the BPO operations of Philips Electronics NV. When it closes, it will be another item in the on-going rejigging of the BPO industry. Captive operations become part of independents. And operations that managers once thought vital or contained too many secrets to let outsiders peek at them now become outsource-able. What was it I heard at a cocktail party recently? In rapidly-changing businesses, there are no secrets. Just speed of execution.
India's second-biggest software-maker will be taking over all the costs of this acquisition, similar to the manner in which rival Tata Consultancy Services bought the operations of UK's Pearl Group insurers, the website reported. The acquisition will add to Infosys current BPO unit, which has close to 11,000 employees, providing the company with round-the-clock processing, the report
added.

Here's Times of India's take:
Infosys Technologies is said to be close to acquiring the finance and accounting BPO arm of Philips Global. The Philips arm has an employee strength of 1,500 globally, including a 500 strong force in Chennai. The other facilities are in Warsaw and Bangkok. The BPO arm is said to have assured revenues of $200 million spread over five years.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Bagging The Citi

Would you buy a business from a bank? Would you buy a business that is solely dependent on that bank? Citibank is close to a sale of its captive BPO, according to Indian press reports. The information asymmetry seems to favor Citibank, since who better knows the bank's prospects -- and the outsourcing potential going forward -- than itself.


If you're a buyer, it makes sense to pay the reported $1.2 billion price if you're confident you can cut costs in the unit faster or deeper than Citi thinks, and if you can use the Citibank BPO as a platform to acquire other bank customers. What better calling card than to say to future customers, "The largest bank in the world outsources to me."

Citigroup's BPO arm, Citigroup Global Services, is likely to find a new owner in a week. Surprisingly, big names like IBM, Infosys, TCS and Blackstone, which were in the race for the BPO firm, have fallen by the wayside, citing expensive valuations. The fight is now between half a dozen suitors comprising Genpact, First Source, WNS, 3i and a couple of private equity investors. Citigroup's BPO arm was recently put on the block and is likely to be valued around $1.2 billion. "The multiples are going to be pretty high here.

That means the buyers require to cough up anything up to $1.2 billion. Third party BPO firms in India are yet to have such deep pockets. Again, sinking large chunks of money upfront on a non-core cause may not be the right option for domestic IT services providers. That clearly leaves the game with big boys like IBM and monied PE guys who are willing to wait for ROI and capable of taking risk,'' says Pari Natarajan, CEO, Zinnov, a Silicon Valley-based offshore research and consulting firm.
For Genpact, the former captive unit of GE, this acquisition would reaffirm its leadership position in the country, while for WNS, acquiring Citigroup Global would give it a presence in the financial services sector. WNS, a legal service and financial services company, has made a few unsuccessful attempts to add financial services to its portfolio and is looking to make a splash by bagging this deal.First Source, on the other hand, is already a specialised player in the banking and insurance sector and the addition of the Citigroup's captive unit will bring them practices that banks usually don't outsource to third party players.

Friday, June 29, 2007

Blackstone Flag to Fly in Philippines

A Reuters news story in the NYTimes website says Blackstone Group has bought Intelenet Global Services of India, teaming up with its management in an 80-20 venture. The buyout price was in the region of $200 million.

This marks the first foray in the industry for Blackstone. And such big boys with deep pockets don't usually stop at one deal. Rollup strategy, anyone?
The British bank Barclays and an Indian mortgage firm, the Housing Development Finance Corporation, said separately that they each were selling their holdings in Intelenet, without disclosing the price.

Intelenet plans to expand its operations in Britain and begin services out of the Philippines and Mauritius, said its chief executive, Susir Kumar.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

If Citi Can Do It, So Can HSBC

HSBC , according to this press report, will add a few thousand more jobs in the Philippines to serve its US and UK customers. As more and more financial bigwigs such as AIG and Citibank cluster their in-house operations in the Philippines, you can say the Philippines is becoming the center of backroom operations -- the contradictory terms intended.
...the visiting bank official said HSBC is committed to the country in terms of expanding its banking services and its support group by increasing its Business
Processing Outsourcing (BPO) operations.
A third BPO is scheduled to open this coming year, which will increase the total employees of the bank on a consolidated basis to roughly 11,000, disclosed HSBC Philippines Chief Executive Officer Mark Watkinson. Specifically, its banking operations employs a total of 2,500 and 5,500 for BPOs.
At present, the bank has a couple of BPOs, one in Ayala-Alabang and another in PBCom Tower at the heart of the Central Makati Business District. These two service HSBC’s clients in the United States and United Kingdom.
It was explained the Philippines has an edge to service the bank’s US and UK customer base because of the natural talent of locals to speak English as a second language.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

WaMu Chooses Cebu

Washington Mutual (stock symbol: WM) is putting in a captive operation in Cebu, the Philippines' second-largest metropolitan area.
Joel Mari Yu, Cebu Investment Promotions Center managing director, announced the entry of Washington Mutual Inc., one of US’ leading retailers of financial services catering to consumers and small business banks. He said WaMu will be among the locators of a 12-story building that will be constructed in the Asiatown IT Park (AITP).
While WaMu's entry into the Philippines will mean an addition of 1,500 jobs to the country's burgeoning BPO industry, what happens to PeopleSupport?

Thursday, May 3, 2007

Texas at Clark: Philippines Lands a Biggie

Texas Instruments chose the Philippines over China for a new 800,000 square foot (74,000 square meter) plant. The world's largest maker of chips for mobile phones will spend US$1 billion over 10 years to build out the factory. The plant will be located at Clark, a former U.S. airbase about an hour's drive north of the Philippine capital, and will employ 3,000 people by end of 2008.

"We have broken the myth of China here," said Ernie Santiago, executive director of the Semiconductor and Electronics Industry in the Philippines, Inc. (SEIPI). "It seemed before all roads are going to China, but we have made a point here that the Philippines is also a smart choice for investment. It will be a magnet, we expect other companies would follow," he said.
The Philippines supplies about 10 percent of the world's semiconductor manufacturing services, including mobile phone chips and microprocessors. Texas Instruments and Intel Corp are two of the biggest companies with manufacturing plants in the country.
Once the new TI plant comes onstream at the end of next year, Philippine electronics exports could jump by $3-4 billion per year, Santiago said.
The Bloomberg take was that human capital, and not cheap costs, was the deciding factor for TI choosing the Philippines over the perennial favorite China:

Texas Instruments in recent years has implemented a strategy of making about 80 percent of its chips and outsourcing the rest to reduce production quickly when demand weakens. The company's current management in the Philippines, where it has had a factory since 1979, gave that country the deciding edge over undisclosed locations in China, (TI's) Silcott said.
``We got a really experienced team, and we wanted to quickly bring up the factory,'' he said.

The Wall Street Journal had a similar take, arguing that the overall cost of doing business in China, especially taking into account rapid increases in wages for skilled labor, are no longer as cheap as they used to be:
Texas Instruments' executives visiting Manila Thursday said the highly skilled workers at its existing chip plant in the Philippines persuaded the company to open a second plant there, despite intense competition to attract Texas Instruments' investment from other Asian nations.

While China continues to be a major draw for technology companies -- Intel Corp. in March said it was planning a $2.5 billion chip-wafer manufacturing facility there -- Texas Instruments' decision to build another semiconductor testing and assembly plant in the Philippines may also reflect how rising costs in China are encouraging investors to consider other locations.

On Thursday, Kevin Ritchie, Texas Instruments' senior vice president of technology, said the Philippines' pool of educated, English-speaking workers tipped the company's decision. The new plant is expected to provide jobs for around 3,000 people.



Tuesday, April 24, 2007

The First Gram is Always Free

There's a study out by Compact Management Consulting on how IT and BPO outsourcers deliver cost savings in the first year, and then ratchet up their prices in successive years, making them the costlier option for a company than if it kept the service in-house.

The research, based on an analysis of 240 deals worth more than £20m, found that outsourcing providers were pricing contracts to produce savings of up 18% compared with in-house costs in the first year. But costs then began to escalate, reaching 36% above comparable top quartile internal operations by year three. . . .

Simon Scarrott, head of business development and marketing at Compass, said: “With those figures, it is easy to see why the claim that all outsourcing will save money is a myth. There can be sound strategic reasons for outsourcing but saving money over the long term is not one of them.”

He added: “Outsourcing providers are not that different from an in-house operation. Indeed, they often use the same people as the in-house operation after the deal is signed and outsourcers cannot perform alchemy on a business process and turn an operation into gold.”


Hold on. There are significant savings involved if the business model is to arbitrage the labor costs between an expensive developed country's workers and the cheaper rates available in a developing country. So even if you are still using the same number of IT programmers, clerks, project managers, and customer representatives, there's no doubt the correct outsourcer can do it, cheaper.

Then again, even if you, the chief information officer of a fast-growing company, take the Compass study as gospel truth, you can always choose what Aviva has done -- get an outsourcer to build it for you so you can enjoy the first and second-year savings, and then take over the facility.

The previous month, Aviva transferred 1,600 employees in Bangalore from an outsourcing vendor, 24/7 Customer, to Aviva Global Services. It was the first move of its kind and size in the Indian business processing outsourcing industry, NASSCOM said.

When a vendor creates a call center for a company, runs it for a certain period of time, then hands the operation over to the company, it's called the build-operate-transfer (BOT) model. Typically, a company moving operations to India would build the operation from scratch, or subcontract the operation to an outsourcing vendor, or some combination of the two.

The BOT approach lets a company get going in India faster, Aviva executives said at the ceremony in Mumbai. That helps Aviva, and its Norwich Union insurance subsidiary, adapt to change, [Executive Director Patrick] Snowball said when he accepted the award.

"Our excellent operations in India are critical for us to ensure we maintain a competitive advantage," he said. Aviva has worked with three vendors under the BOT model: EXL, WNS and 24/7 Customer. Over the course of the year, 5,000 employees will be transferred from those vendors to Aviva's own offshore division. The Bangalore facility was just the first to be transferred. Later this year, the company will transfer facilities in Sri Lanka to its control, and in Pune.

73% Attrition

Can any business survive if three-fourths of its workers leave every year?

India's Economic Times has an article saying Wipro's worker attrition rate is 73% per year. Now the way Wipro calculates its "attrition rate" may inflate the headline number; the company includes persons the company had made a job offer but declined to join.

Even if the true figure is 25% a year, i.e. one out of every four jobs has a new face each year, it still speaks to the operational problems facing Wipro, and the rest of India's A-Team BPOs. Anyone care to be the HR director in an Indian BPO?
The business processing unit of IT bellwether Wipro has seen an annualised attrition rate of 73 per cent for 2006-07, a top company executive said today. The attrition rate included those who were given the offer letter for a job but did not join the organisation, Wipro BPO's Chief Executive T K Kurien told reporters after Wipro announced its financial results here. The annualised figures were calculated on the basis of 16.9 per cent in the fourth quarter of the fiscal 2006-07. During the quarter, voluntary attrition rate was 15.7 per cent. "Though the attrition rate has slowed down, a lot is still needs to be done on this aspect," he said. Outlining the reasons for attrition, he said one-third of those who dropped out were because of offers by competitors while another one-third quit to pursue higher studies. "One-third of those who left were those who had quit the industry as a whole. Women form a large part of this segment," Kurien said. The late night shift was a possible reason for women dropping out, he added. He said the company has started several programmes, including one-on-one meetings with employees to reduce the attrition of employees. Commenting on the high figure of 73 per cent as compared to rival figures, Kurien said it was because the measurement of attrition varied from company to company. Wipro BPO considered attrition right after the offer letter was handed over to the individual quitting the job, he said.

Media KPO

Who will be the first in the Philippines to provide outsourcing for America's television industry? According to televisionpoint.com, which tracks the Indian TV industry, Infosys is about to tie up with India's TV18 group to do production work and provide the technology backbone to make it easier to get the digital content we all crave.

The Philippine broadcast industry has the same untapped capabilities -- it's a matter of marrying it with someone who will have enough credibility among TV titans in the U.S. so that those services will be bought.

Sources said the TV18 group was in advanced talks with Infosys BPO and was in the process of finalising the management team that would head this venture. The size of the deal is unavailable, but according to company sources, the deal will involve use of the TV18 brand name and the technology and delivery capabilities of Infosys BPO. This will include rolling out online initiatives and creating technology platforms for high-definition content, digital content and projects that involve editing media-related content.

According to infotech analysts, Infosys BPO is increasingly focusing on getting more knowledge process outsourcing work. According to PricewaterhouseCoopers, the global media-entertainment industry is estimated at $1.3 trillion (India's GDP in the region of $800 billion) is and is expected to grow to $1,7 trillion by the end of 2009. Infosys is India's second largest infotech software services exporter. TV18, with interests in television and Internet business, runs four television channels including news and entertainment and about a dozen Internet portals spanning technology to travel.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Coming Soon: Bosses from Bangalore

When your backyard is crowded, you need to go someplace else. The success of India in making the awkward term BPO an acronym we now all know has led to homegrown problems. While India sorts it out, in the meantime the greener pasture is the Philippines. Competition for Manila's best workers who can speak straight English with an American accent is intensifying, though the labor surplus in the Philippines is still large, so the runaway bidding for qualified workers isn't there -- yet.

Expect a few announcements from major BPO players within the year, according to India's Financial Express.
The wheel has come a full circle for the Indian business process outsourcing (BPO) sector with runaway wage inflation driving the who’s who in the domestic BPO world to look for low cost destinations such as the Philippines to scale up operations.
Leading the pack is the Infosys BPO, which has already set up shop in the Philippines in association with a local partner. The company is said to be planning to ramp up its presence there through an acquisition or floating a new facility. Other BPO players such as HTMT, IBM Daksh and GenPact are also ramping up their Philippines operations, industry watchers say.
“The challenge is real. For a tier-II player who needs to grow to graduate to tier-I, Philippines are an extremely attractive base to expand into. In 2007, we expect four to five deals involving large Indian players who are moving to that country,” he said, adding, “most of the investments there would be towards setting up support operations for primary facilities based in India.” Many BPOs are eyeing tier-II locations outside Manila and Makati in the Philippines to set up disaster recovery centres for Indian facilities, sources said.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Lawson's Hiring

Ramp up. The phrase is insufficient to capture what some hiring managers face when they go from 100 to 900 employees in less than two years. Here's one company that's a microcosm of what's going on in the Philippines:

Lawson Philippine Solutions & Services Center (PSSC) Inc. last year opened its office in Fort Bonifacio Global City with less than a hundred employees. [Lawson Vice President James] Sanderson said they would be spending $5 million in payroll for their targeted 400 employees this year. [Lawson Philippines President John] Mulchrone said they have upped that number to 900 by May next year. Lawson currently employs 350 Filipino software engineers, quality engineers, and business process outsourcing staff for internal support.
In choosing between the Philippines and India, Lawson clearly prefers a nation of 90 million versus a sub-continent of 1 billion:
[Lawson's decision] to transfer operations in the Philippines is based on results of their investigation on the country’s cost advantage. Aside from tax incentives, Lawson said the “an intelligent workforce with high energy and good work ethics” can easily be tapped in the Philippines.

Mulchrone said the firm’s experience in India has much larger costs compared to the Philippines. “So for the past five years, we began transitioning our operations from India to the Philippines,” he said.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Using Your Accent With Accenture

Accenture is opening its seventh office in the Philippines in a massive expansion that will see capacity jump by about 50%, and employment by 36%, according to Philippine press reports. It's all good for those with the proper accents to man the call centers or the skills to do global accounting and programming, not to mention the ability to be productive in a time zone not of your own.

Note to managers: if your lease on office space with excellent telecommunications facilities is expiring soon, make sure you renew and lock in your rates. Landlords are seeing strong demand for prime space.

All Headline News gives us the Accenture capacity figure:
Accenture currently operates seven facilities in the Philippines, with a total of more than 10,000 contact center seats. Its latest and biggest facility is housed at the Robinsons Cybergate Tower II in Mandaluyong City, which has 5,000 contact center seats. Accenture is looking to end its fiscal year with a total of 15,000 seats, including the planned Cebu center, which will initially house 500 seats but will be ramped gradually.
While Inquirer says this about its headcount:
The company expects to have a total of around 15,000 employees in the country by the end of its current fiscal year in August.

Basilio Rueda, senior managing director of Accenture's Global Delivery Network, said that in the Philippines, call center operations exhibit the biggest growth in terms of employee count. In terms of revenue, application development contributes the highest at about 40 percent.
Here's the rub. If you assume a generous yield of one successful hire for every 10 applicants interviewed, that means Accenture has to churn through 40,000 people to get its workforce up from the current 11,000 -- by August.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

More Choices for Punters

Like a supermarket shelf that seems to proliferate with more and more brands to choose from, the financial market will soon offer us a surfeit of BPO companies in which to invest our retirement money.

Sutherland and Genpact, both from India, are among those queuing to sell shares to the public for the first time. They will join the battle for investors' capital, a fight already being fought by publicly traded companies PeopleSupport and eTelecare. As some in the Philippines like to quip, "the more, the many-er."


After the bumper debut by EXLService Holdings and WNS on Nasdaq and NYSE, respectively, Rochester, New York-headquartered third party BPO service provider Sutherland Global Services, is eyeing a US listing to raise close to $250 million. At the same time, it is also learnt that Genpact, one of the country’s largest BPO firms, is mulling a US listing through an IPO to raise over $600 million for the company and its promoters.

The company, previously part of US-based General Electric, is planning to offload about 15% equity through a public float on either Nasdaq or New York Stock Exchange later this year, sources said. The company’s major shareholders — GE and US-based private equity giants Oakhill Capital and General Atlantic — are likely to sell part of their holding through this IPO, which could value the company at around $4 billion.

Genpact has appointed three US-based investment banks — Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan and Citigroup — for the IPO and it may file the regulatory prospectus in the next few weeks, the sources said.

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.
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.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Lowering Costs for eCost

Another welcome mat to unfurl. PFSWeb , which had about 1,200 employees at the end of 2006, mostly in the U.S., opened up a customer contact center at the Tycoon Center Building in the Philippines' Ortigas business district. Capacity is 108 seats, according to TMCnet.

Their press release here:

PFSweb, Inc. (Nasdaq: PFSW) a global provider of integrated business process outsourcing (BPO) and web commerce solutions, today announced it is expanding
its Customer Care Services operations with a new 6,500 square foot customer call
center in the Philippines.
The new facility, located in downtown Manila, will initially house the customer service department for eCOST.com, PFSweb's wholly owned subsidiary. Additionally, certain support functions for eCOST.com, including an expanded web development team, will be relocated to the facility. On a case-by-case basis, PFSweb will evaluate offering this location's services to other PFSweb service fee clients. Cindy Almond, PFSweb's Vice President of Client Services, will be overseeing the Manila operations, and Mary Jennifer Nubla will be the facility's on-site General Manager.
"The Philippines offers exciting new opportunities for us to advance our growth strategy and expand our service capabilities, while maintaining high levels of customer service at a reduced cost," said Ms. Almond. "Many clients view our international presence as a key differentiator, enabling speed to market in expansion strategies. We consider this new facility to be yet another avenue to extend our market reach, reduce cost and deliver the highest level of service to our clients and their customers."

For context, PFSweb has a Canadian facility in Eastern Toronto with 22,000 square feet of space. It also has 480 seats at two facilities in Memphis, Tennessee and Plano, Texas (40,000 square feet) . Guess where most of its capacity (and jobs) will go once the Philippine facility proves itself.

Sunday, April 8, 2007

Welcome Perot

Few businesses in the Philippines can create hundreds of jobs in a single year. But when it's a business serving a global marketplace, it becomes commonplace.

Perot Systems(stock symbol: PER), which had $2.3 billion of revenue in 2006, recently opened shop in the Philippines. The story from Manila Bulletin forecasts their end-2007 headcount at 400.

Perot Systems, a US-based major player in business process outsourcing (BPO) and Information Technology (IT) services has started operations in the Philippines.

The company, which serves half of the global business in healthcare, over 250 hospitals in the US alone, has set up a BPO operation in Makati for the requirements of one client, Tenet Healthcare, the second biggest healthcare firm in America.

Tenet hauls in $ 8.5 billion annual revenues, covers 66 hospitals in California, Texas, Florida and Southeast US, averaging 564,000 hospital surgical patient admissions per year and 4.2 million annual outpatient visitors.

By the end of 2007, we will be employing 400 workers in Manila, 350 of them in business process operations and healthcare functions and 50 in infrastructure solutions," announced Perot Systems Global Director for Corporate Communications Joe McNamara.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Hither They Will Come

PeopleSupport's annual report has this to say as to why its profits rose in 2006:
Excluding the income tax benefits, the increase in net income was primarily attributable to growth in our customer management business, which enabled us to build revenues, and our move to the Philippines, which allowed us to reduce our operating costs, improve our margins and offer cost savings to our clients.

The point isn't that PeopleSupport will continue to be a profitable entity. It's that the relentless pursuit of it by companies in the U.S. makes it impossible for them to ignore the significant savings available, if only they locate in lower-cost countries like the Philippines. The hundreds of thousands of corporations seeking better bottom lines will continue to turn to companies such as PeopleSupport, eTelecare, Convergys, etc.

And when BPO companies sell customer-care services to a Fortune 500 company, and achieve 40% gross margins doing it, powerful incentives are created for even more people to enter the business. In that vortex of searching-for-savings will blossom the Philippines' sunrise industry.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Managing Employees

Where would you rather be a manager: in the U.S. or the Philippines? See this tidbit from Investor's Business Daily on the upcoming IPO of eTelecare (ticker symbol: ETEL).

Like other BPOs, eTelecare suffers from a high employee attrition rate. Among workers who completed the training program, 6.7% leave every month in the U.S. branch and 1.7% in the Philippines. The ability to attract and retain qualified people is especially crucial for eTelecare since the quality of service is its main selling point.

The BPO business is highly competitive, and new players continue to spring up. Since cost-cutting is the main reason for their existence, there's always pressure on margins. The competition also extends to the search for workers, who are in a position to demand higher wages as their number of potential employers goes up.

The article suggests ETEL will do well:

Last year two BPOs, WNS Holdings (WNS) and ExlService, (EXLS) pulled off successful initial public offerings. Both of them are Indian. ETelecare will test Wall Street's interest in a slightly different model, based on offering higher-end, more sophisticated telephone services. The firm does this not only through its choice of country, but through its approach to training, managing and quantifying employee performance.
"Although business processing outsourcing is not a new concept, eTelecare Global Solutions . . . has changed the methodology and dynamics of this type of business," wrote Scott Sweet, principal researcher in IPO Boutique, in a report on the company.


Just don't mind the error in the description of Alfredo Ayala, which confuses him with Jaime Zobel de Ayala:


THE MANAGEMENT
Alfredo Ayala, Chairman
He's been chairman since 2000 and was CEO from 2004 to 2006. Currently, he heads Ayala Corp., a holding company with investments in various businesses, and is CEO of Ayala Corp. subsidiary LiveIt Solutions. He holds an MBA from Harvard Business School.

PeopleSupport

Here's what's happening on the microeconomic front. PeopleSupport (Nasdaq symbol: PSPT), one of the BPO stalwarts driving the economic expansion, has 7,500 employees in the Philippines. How fast is its business growing? Check out their 2006 earnings report:

For the full year 2006, PeopleSupport reported record revenues of $110.1 million, an increase of 77% from $62.1 million reported for the full year 2005.

The fourth quarter of 2006 was its best ever:

Revenue in the fourth quarter of 2006 was a record $31.0 million, an increase of 82% from the $17.0 million reported in the fourth quarter of 2005.


Of course, such rapid growth can't be sustained. The company expects its growth rate to moderate to about 27%-31% in 2007 (full-year revenue of $140 million to $144.5 million).

Here's the thing that other industries would kill for. The growth constraint on PeopleSupport, like all the other BPOs in the country, isn't its product line up or the presence of fierce competitors. It's simply not being able to find enough qualified personnel. That's the kind of situation many managers, and business owners, would like: growth held back not by market demand, but by operations.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Text CC Engine

The Asian Development Bank released recently its annual opus on the region's economic outlook. For the Philippines, the ADB expects GDP growth to accelerate to 5.7% in 2008, from a forecast of 5.4% in 2007 and the actual 5.4% achieved in 2006.

One line to note. The ADB says that for 2006:
Transport and communications, finance, and private services, including business process outsourcing and other information technology-enabled services, led the way in the services sector, which grew by 6.3% and accounted for 3 percentage points of total GDP growth.

Let's translate that. What the economists are saying is that the engine of the current economic expansion is "Text-CC" combine: the vibrant domestic telecommunications industry that's made the Philippines the text capital of the world, and those call centers sprouting like mushrooms in every major city.

What's holding back the economy from doing "Eight in o-Eight?"
Inadequate investment is the main factor that has curtailed growth and employment. The medium-term targets, for example, were based on investment picking up at double-digit annual rates in 2006–2010 to reach 28% of GDP by 2010, almost twice the current level.

In agriculture, which accounts for 36% of employment, investment has been weak because of factors that include farmers’ poor access to credit and support services, expensive inputs, high costs of transport, and the incomplete land reform program.

In manufacturing, sampled firms in a 2003 survey of the investment climate cited as the major constraints: macroeconomic instability (at that time) and uncertainty in economic policies; inadequate infrastructure services, especially of power and transport; and corruption and the costs of complying with regulations, especially related to customs, trade, and labor markets.