Outsourcing: Bye bye Chennai, hello Brisbane

By Nick Heath, Special to ZDNet Asia
Monday, February 23, 2009 06:30 AM

Forget Chennai and Mumbai--the outsourcing hubs of tomorrow will be in Belfast and Brisbane.

An eclectic mix of 31 cities, in countries ranging from Australia and Ireland to areas in South America and Africa, will challenge today's best-known outsourcing centers in India and China, according to advisers at KPMG.

Faced with overburdened telecoms infrastructures and overstretched labor markets in traditional offshore locations, cities including Brisbane and Belfast are among the alternatives that should be considered by companies, the KPMG report says.

Belfast makes the grade for its strong schools and universities, its young population, high number of IT graduates and cheap operating costs, while Brisbane has a large talent pool, a multilingual workforce and employee costs that are 10 to 15 percent cheaper than other Australian cities.

According to Shamus Rae, advisory partner at KPMG in the United Kingdom, the credit crunch will drive more companies to outsource IT and business processes, which will in turn hasten the search for new cities to host these services.

The report found that the new cities in Asia-Pacific offer lower costs, younger populations and government incentives such as easy work permits, while those in Europe, Middle East and Africa promise robust telecoms and power infrastructure and niche specialisms in fields such as data management.

Meanwhile cities in the Americas can draw on large labor pools, a more mature service offering, proximity to a major client base and multiple language skills.

Size is not a deciding factor among these emerging cities, with the tiny Port Louis in Mauritius with a population of just 130,000 making the KPMG list alongside the metropolis of Buenos Aires, home to almost 13 million people.

A more important factor is the proportion of computer graduates, the number of research and development institutions, the rate of migration to the cities and common languages with their target markets.

Nick Heath of Silicon.com reported from London.


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