Five hot outsourcing trends to watch

By Natasha Lomas, Special to ZDNet Asia
Monday, July 09, 2007 01:02 PM

What's looming on the horizon for the offshore outsourcing market in the next five years? ZDNet Asia's sister site Silicon.com profiles five areas of interest:

Consolidation
Competition for outsourcing contracts is more cut-throat than ever with a huge expansion in the number of suppliers--so some significant consolidation is on the horizon.

Recent rumors of a merger between sector heavyweights Infosys and Capgemini suggest the stars are aligning for some significant marriages. Duncan Aitchison, managing director of business advisory company TPI, told silicon.com even if the rumoured Infosys-Capgemini tie-up never materialises it reflects current "market sentiment", while other industry experts are predicting more mergers-and-acquisition activity in this sector over the next year or two.

Globalization
There has long been talk of India losing its edge in the offshore outsourcing market - including warnings of a looming skills crisis--but a bigger threat to India's dominance could lie closer to home. According to a study by analyst IDC Chinese cities will overtake their Indian counterparts as top destinations for offshore global delivery by 2011.

While the scenario of China outstripping India remains unlikely, the trend is for increasing globalization of the market as more regions seek to cash in on the offshoring boom. Beyond the Bric bloc of countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China - or 'Bricm' including Mexico), small-time, near-shore developing nations, such as Egypt and Poland, are rising up the agenda.

The trend is not only for a "greater pattern of diversity" in the offshore outsourcing sector, said TPI's Aitchison, but also for greater specialization as smaller players seek to distinguish themselves in an increasingly crowded marketplace.

Person-to-person offshoring
Offshoring is more commonly associated with the idea of large-scale business redeployments--the relocation of a back-office function, say, or a whole department. But research suggests there's growing momentum on a much smaller scale. According to a report by research company Evaluserve, offshoring has reached small businesses and even homes--a trend it dubs 'person-to-person', or P2P, offshoring.

Examples of services offshored in this way include online tutoring, web and software development, and writing and translation services. Customers for this type of offshoring can be small businesses or even individual consumers. Evaluserve says revenue for this sector stood at more than US$250 million between April 2006 and March 2007, and it predicts the value of the P2P offshoring market will rise to more than US$2 billion by 2015.

Green sourcing
Rising energy prices have put the eco issue firmly on the CIO's radar but could pressure to demonstrate green credentials influence businesses' outsourcing decisions as well?

silicon.com's CIO Jury of UK heads of IT recently revealed environmental factors play a key role in the selection of technology suppliers and partners.

Virtual worlds
The rise of virtual worlds such as Second Life is making it easier for companies to hire workers from anywhere in the world whether to build their virtual offices or to work as 'meeters and greeters' in them.

It's still early days for virtual world-based outsourcing but businesses are taking an increasing interest in the likes of Second Life so momentum is likely to build. Last month news emerged of a hook-up between a Chinese online entertainment company and the Entropia Universe virtual world, to create a virtual economy that could provide as many as 10,000 jobs. Over the longer term, customer-contact jobs such as helpdesk or call center roles could migrate into virtual worlds, where customers can be both informed and entertained.

Natasha Lomas of Silicon.com reported from London.


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