APAC contact centers eye UC, hosted services

By Vivian Yeo, ZDNet Asia
Tuesday, May 19, 2009 06:07 PM

Despite the rough economy, the Asia-Pacific contact center market will continue to grow in 2009, according to a new report.

Released Monday, Frost & Sullivan's "Asia-Pacific Enterprises Continue to Spend on Customer Care" report noted the region's spend on contact center applications will grow 8 percent this year.

The forecast for 2009, however, is significantly lower than 2008's year-on-year growth of 14.8 percent which helped the market to reach US$763 million.

The report's authors--research analyst Kiran Kumar and industry manager Shivanu Shukla--said most markets in the region saw good growth in 2008 due to "rising domestic demand for customer care, increasing drive toward self-service, the focus on improving quality of customer experience and sustained growth in the outsourcing business from North America and Europe".

China's contact center applications market, in particular, grew more than 40 percent last year to reach US$108 million in revenues. This was due in part to the hosting of the Olympic Games in Beijing, which saw the Chinese government and enterprises undergo a contact center infrastructure refresh or expansion, noted Frost & Sullivan.

In 2009, Asia-Pacific contact centers are largely expected to continue to offer greater self-service as well as win local and regional outsourcing contracts, said the authors. Enterprises in the region will also continue consolidating their contact center infrastructure and embarking on IP (Internet Protocol) migration.

On top of that, the market analyst firm predicts that contact centers will start to deploy unified communications (UC). However, UC adoption is tipped to go mainstream only in 2010 and beyond.

Hosted contact center offerings will also be on the rise this year, said Frost & Sullivan. Subscription-based models provide small and midsize businesses a more attractive proposition during the current economic climate. At the same time, enterprises with large contact centers will be inclined to explore such options for their expansion needs. By end-2009, there will be close to 75,000 hosted seats in the Asia-Pacific region, the authors estimated.

Over the course of the year, enterprises will be more selective and cautious in spending on technology, said Frost & Sullivan. Contact centers will be forced to revisit their operational strategies to explore how they can cut costs by improving operations--larger facilities, in particular, will be interested in tapping on tools such as performance management and workforce management. Consulting services may also be tapped upon to identify ways to improve process efficiencies in contact centers.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

Save changes to all open Word documents at one time

Microsoft Office Suite

If your Word sessions often wind up with a lot of open documents, this obscure command can streamline the process of closing them and saving your changes.


Read more »



Do we need more delivery centers?

Blog thumbnail

As I wrote a while back in about "racing to subsidies", there certainly is an increased focus by governments to attract delivery centers to their region. To do that, many..... by Michael Rehkopf

Read more »

Tags

  1. acquisition
  2. acquisitions
  3. ceo
  4. china
  5. financial
  6. google inc.
  7. green it
  8. ibm corp.
  9. india
  10. industry
  11. information technology
  12. it outsourcing
  13. job
  14. microsoft corp.
  15. network
  16. outsourcing
  17. revenue
  18. singapore
  19. software
  20. u.s.