WHAT IS ITES ?
Outsourcing of processes that can be enabled with information
technology Delivered from/to remote areas through the telecom and
Internet medium Transfer of ownership and management of the process
from the customer to the service provider Eg., functions like finance,
HR (human resource), administration, healthcare, telecommunication,
engineering etc.,
HOW ITES HAS EVOLVED
?
Phase I (1996-2000) started with GE in 1997
Pioneers - focus on building scale. Absence of vendors
with exhibited capabilities. Preference of captive model
Phase II (2000-2003)
Early adopters - sharpen outsourcing strategy. Rise of
3PSP (Third Party Service Providers)
Phase III (2003-2008E)
Cautious followers - embracing outsourcing unconditionally.
Higher degree of consolidation and shakeout
Indian ITES industry is moving up the value chain –
Finance and Accounts, Customer Interaction,HR Admin (89% of revenue
in 2004-05) to BFSI, Pharma and Life Sciences, Legal Services and
Business Process management
Factors impacting competitiveness
of ITES industry
Infrastructure
Elements
|
Qualitative Factors
|
| Manpower
Telecom Infrastructure
Regulatory Environment
Information Security Policy
Investment incentives
Costs |
‘Trainability’ of manpower
Service Delivery Quality
Information Security Practices
Marketing ability
Entrepreneur pool
Language skills
|
A new breed of high-end knowledge based BPO called Knowledge
Process Outsourcing is emerging. This comprises of vendors providing
higher-end research and analytic based services - in traditional
service lines as well as new business areas.
Areas with significant latent potential for KPO include
healthcare -pharmaceuticals and biotechnology, legal support - intellectual
property research, design and development for automotive and aerospace
industries, and animation and graphics in the entertainment sector.
F&A (Finance and Accounting) outsourcing is emerging
as one of the fastest growing BPO segments. While earlier, the majority
of F&A outsourcing deals were focused on transaction processing,
now customers want BPO solutions providers to manage almost the
entire business process.
IT & ITES FACTS AT A
GLANCE
The Indian IT & ITES sector revenues are slated to
reach $48 billion in FY07. Below are some highlights -Key
Highlights of the IT-ITES sector performance
IT Industry-Sector-wise break-up
USD billion
|
FY 2004
|
FY 2005
|
FY 2006
|
FY 2007E |
IT Services |
10.4
|
13.5
|
17.8
|
23.7 |
Exports |
7.3
|
10.0
|
13.3
|
18.1
|
Domestic |
3.1
|
3.5
|
4.5
|
5.6
|
ITES-BPO |
3.4
|
5.2
|
7.2
|
9.5
|
Exports |
3.1
|
4.6
|
6.3
|
8.3
|
Domestic |
0.3
|
0.6
|
0.9
|
1.2
|
Engineering Services and R&D,
Software Products |
2.9
|
3.9
|
5.3
|
6.5
|
Exports |
2.5
|
3.1
|
4.0
|
4.9
|
Domestic |
0.4
|
0.8
|
1.3
|
1.6
|
Total Software and Services Revenues
|
16.7
|
22.6
|
30.3
|
39.7
|
Of which, exports are |
12.9
|
17.7
|
23.6
|
31.3
|
Hardware |
5.0
|
5.9
|
7.0
|
8.2
|
Total IT Industry (including Hardware) |
21.6
|
28.4
|
37.4
|
47.8
|
Employment figures-Software and Services
sector
Sector |
FY 2004
|
FY 2005
|
FY 2006
|
FY 2007E
|
IT Services
|
215000
|
297000
|
398000
|
562000 |
ITES-BPO
|
216000
|
316000
|
415000
|
545000 |
Engineering Services and R&D and Software Products
|
81000
|
93000
|
115000
|
144000 |
Domestic Market (including user organizations)
|
318000
|
352000
|
365000
|
378000 |
TOTAL*
|
830000
|
1058000 |
1293000 |
1630000 |
*Figures do not include employees in the hardware sector
SOME FACTS
The contribution to the Indian GDP in FY07 from this sector
will increase to 5.4% from this year’s 4.8%
Announced investments in this sector will touch US$ 10 billion over
the next few years.
About 70% of the 6,500 companies registered with about 47 STPs located
across the country are small and medium enterprises (turnover under
Rs 10 crore).
Every Rupee spent by the Indian IT/ITeS sector translates into a
total output of about Rs 2
IT-ITES employs over 1.6 million people directly and provides indirect
employment to another 6 million
Domestic market growing at over 21%
TYPES OF PLAYERS
Category
No. of players
Share of India's total IT/BPO export revenues
Performance
IT Services
Tier I Players
3-4
45% of IT Services
4-5% of BPO
Revenues greater than USD 1 billion
Tier II IT Players
7-10
25% of IT Services
4-5% of BPO
Revenues USD 100 million-USD 1 billion
Offshore operations of Global IT majors
20-30
10-15% of IT Services
10-15% of BPO
Revenues USD 10 million-USD 500 million
Pure play BPO providers
40-50
20% of BPO
Revenues USD 10 million-USD 200 million (Excluding top provider
with USD 500 million)
Captive BPO units
150
50% of BPO
Revenues USD 25 million-USD 150 million (top 10 units)
Emerging players
>3000
10-15% of IT Services
5% of BPO
Revenues less than USD 100 million (IT) Revenues less than USD 10
million (BPO)
TOP 15 BPO PLAYERS 2006
1. Genpact
2. WNS
3. Wipo BPO
4. HCL BPO Services
5. ICICI OneSource
6. IBM Daksh
7. Progeon
8. Aegis BPO Services
9. EXL Service Holdings
10. 24/7 Customer
11. MphasiS BPO
12. Intelenet Global Services
13. GTL
14. TCS BPO
15. Transworks
TOP 20 IT SOFTWARE &
SERVICE EXPORTERSE FORM INDA (2005-06) (excludes ITES-BPO)
1. Tata Consultancy Services Ltd.
2. Infosys Technologies Ltd.
3. Wipro Technologies Ltd.
4. Satyam Computer Services Ltd.
5. HCL Technologies Ltd.
6. Patni Computer Systems Ltd.
7. I-flex Solutions Ltd.
8. Tech Mahindra Ltd. (formely Mahindra-British Telecom Ltd.)
9. Perot Systems TSI (I) LTD.
10. L&T Infotech Ltd.
11. Polaris Software Lab Ltd.
12. Hexaware Technologies Ltd.
13. Mastek Ltd.
14. Mphasis BFL Ltd.
15. Siemens Information Systems Ltd.
16. Genpact
17. I-Gate Global Solutions Ltd.
18. Flextronics Software Systems Ltd. (Standalone for FSS)
19. NIIT Technologies Ltd.
20. Covansys India Ltd.
Had they been ranked based on their India revenues, companies
such as Cognizant, Accenture, IBM and HP would have been placed
amongst the Top 10 of this list and companies such as Kanbay, Syntel
and Intelligroup would have been amongst the Top 20.
TALENT SOURCE ISSUES
The industry presently employees 1.6 million people and
is constantly expanding. Though India has a large labor pool, company
heads say the education system isn’t giving people the skills
they need. And there’s a lack of finishing schools to train
graduates—a big concern for tech firms since they hire a majority
of their employees straight out of college..
2006 Estimates - 3 million graduates & post-graduates.
10% of these are post graduates in Arts, Science and Commerce. Engineering
Graduates and Diplomates are another 7% each. 17% are Science graduates,
19% are Commerce Graduates and 40% are Arts graduates.
NASSCOM has proposed the setting up of a chain of finishing
schools for IT professionals to make them more employable with a
simple 3-4 months of honing of technical skills and imparting soft
skill training, helping bridge the manpower supply-demand gap by
at least 30-40%. It has been proposed that finishing schools be
set up by the IITs and National Institutes of Technology
The NAC (NASSCOM Assessment of Competence nationally rolled
out in November 2006, after a successful pilot, is being taken to
a number of states in 2007.A comprehensive skill assessment and
certification program for entry-level talent and executives (low-middle
level management) is underway to detect talent fitment. Opportunity
for us to position Managerial assessment tools.
National Skills Registry (NSR): A centralized database
of all employees of the IT services and BPO companies in India.
This database contains third party verified personal, qualification
and career information of IT professionals. May be we can get skill
qualification criteria developed with the.
NASSCOM has been working with the academia across the country
under its IT Workforce development initiative to encourage and facilitate
greater industry interaction; it has signed MoUs with UGC and AICTE
to take forward these initiatives. Here lies a specific Dale Carnegie
opportunity for building strategic alliance.
NASSCOM has suggested the concept of experimenting with
adapting the Special Economic Zone concept (deregulation and removal
of restrictions) for education, and create Special Education Zones.
The long term steps that are needed include much higher government
investment in education, major education reform and better compensation
and research grants for teachers/researchers. Opportunity for DCT
at university level to train teachers.
TALENT TRANSORMATION ISSUES
In a recent news report it was stated that the training
tab for the IT industry could run to $1.5-2 billion in FY07. Of
this Infosys alone plans on spending $140 million, while Wipro and
Satyam will spend $100 million and $70 million respectively.
College/university education does not ensure that graduates
are immediately employable. It is felt that every engineering graduate
requires about 14-16 weeks of training at a cost of approx US$5000
per person.
In the SME IT sector there is almost zero investment in
training leading to attrition. Overall there is a crucial need for
business specific training for middle management and executive coaching
for senior management.
TALENT MANAGEMENT ISSUES
A. IT SERVICES COMPANIES – Most IT services companies
have organisations structured around some key functions (Not organisational
hierarchy). At the Customer interface level , is the Business Development
group usually stationed overseas. For product companies, a customer
service group backed up by technical support team interfaces with
customers for online problem resolution and maintenance support.
For product development companies project teams are consituted based
on a particular domain. Such teams engage and dis-engage after completion
of projects. Most technical professionals prefer roles that add
to their expansion in domain knowledge and expertise in a given
area. The product development groups usually have people with domain
expertise (with little or minimal IT knowledge) intergrated to a
software team with minimal industry knowledge.
The top management have a challenge to step up innovation
and create a knowledge environment so that business opportunities
can be captured . Besides buildng upon domain knowledge these companies
depend a lot on IT infrastructure and Facilities management including
transportation.
The people management challenges are :-
Ø Communication skills of the front levels technical
groups
Ø Presentation skills and selling skills for BD
groups and project team leaders
Ø Project management skills – People side
of project management skills
Ø Cross culture business skills
Ø Managing change – for companies growing
by organic growth
Ø Management skills – Performance Management,
people management
Ø Leadership skills – Innovation and people
engagement
B. ITES COMPANIES - Most ITES companies commenced operations
as Captive operations. From the second phase many companies went
ahead as third part service providers. The typical organisation
providing BPO service has a hierarchial structure. At the front
end of delivery are the Customer Service Associates. They are supported
by team leaders , who report into managers. These managers report
to senior managers, who report into a Dy GM/GM responsible for a
Process. Likewise, the operations can have more than one process
and business with more than one company. Therefore information flows
are restricted , and geographical barriers created with utmost care.
Like IT Service companies, creating a knowledgeable and competent
workforce is key to success. This sector is characteristic of a
young workforce and a high percentage of working women. Consequently,
the management levels are also very young. Most supervisors and
managers are less than 25 years old
The people management challenges are :-
Ø Communication skills – usually taken care
of by voice and accent training
Ø Internal personal skills
Ø Supervisory skills of the team leads
Ø Performance Management and people development
skills
Ø Coaching and training skills om the floor
Ø Problem solving and cricis management skills
Ø At senior and Top management the need for managerial
talent development is a key
challenge.
The common issues involve training and development to build
domain knowledge and managerial talent. Challenge of high attrition
rates and cost of training and retraining are other significant
problems.
WHERE LIES OUR OPPORTUNITY
?
The SME sector contributes to nearly 60% of revenues. They
do not have centers of learning excellence as the tier 1 companies
have such as TCS, INFOSYS, WIPRO , IBM, ACCENURE have. This sector
can be tapped by partnering with STPI’s for open programs.The
SME companies not only pay 20% more salaries to their employees
but also become source of ready talent to the tier 1.
PROVIDING a first level supervisory management program
for the BPO segment on a time spaced basis especially for the domestic
and third party service providers can yield significant business
. Here again , integration with our Assessment tool will offer a
complete solution.
IMPORTANT CONTACT
INFORMATION
Bangalore NASSCOM
607,5th Floor, Oxford Towers,
Airport Road, Kodihalli,
Bangalore
Phone: 91-80-41151705-706
Fax: 91-80-41151707
Email: bangalore@nasscom.in |
Head Office New Delhi
National Association of Software and Service Companies
International Youth Centre
Teen Murti Marg
Chanakyapuri
New Delhi - 110021
Phone: 91-11-23010199
Fax: 91-11-23015452
Email : info@nasscom.in
|
| Chennai
Scope International Pvt Ltd.
Europe Ground Floor 1
Haddows Road
Chennai 600 006
Phone: 91-44-4232 7171/7272
Email: chennai@nasscom.in
|
Hyderabad
ITC Kakatiya Sheraton & Towers
Begumpet
Hyderabad - 500 016
Phone: 91-40-66366111/222
Fax: 91-40-66366333
Email: hyderabad@nasscom.in
|
| Mumbai: Map & Directions
NASSCOM
Samruddhi Venture Park
Ground Floor, Office # 14-15
Central MIDC Road
Andheri East
Mumbai 400093
Phone : 91-22-2823 48 44/51
Fax : 91-22-28361576
Email: mumbai@nasscom.in
|
Pune
Koregaon Park
404-405, Metro House,
4th Floor,
Opp. Tata Management Training Centre,
Mangaldas Road,
Pune – 411 001
Tel: 20- 26111277,
Email : pune@nasscom.in
|
KEY CONTACTS AT NASSCOM
|