Dev BPO Facebook

Indian 24 x 7 Service Call Centers To Gain Big From U.S. Banks' Outsourcing

Indian 24 x 7 Service Call Centers companies are to add more ‘moola’ to their revenue from their largest market, U.S., as the country’s regional banks are looking forward to outsource technology related work more than ever before, reports Economic Times.


India’s biggest Inbound and Outbound Call Center companies like TCS, Infosys, Wipro, HCL, as well as midsized companies like MindTree, Polaris, and Hexaware, are likely to get benefits from banks which are looking for cost effective banking technology.



The top 20 regional banks of the U.S. which includes SunTrust Bank, PNC and Key Bank, currently outsource 20 to 25 percent of $1 to $1.5 billion spent on information technology every year. And reportedly these banks are to up their call center services to 75 percent over the next few quarters as they adopt newer technologies to cut costs, integrate banking systems and catch-up with their larger rivals, according to Deutsche Equities, India.

Indian 24x7 BPOs' Seek big opportunity from U.S.A.

As US President Barack Obama's new health insurance plan takes effect this month, Indian Inbound Call Centers handling customer care for insurers there are expecting a big boost in business.

These 24 x 7 Call Center are betting on confused customers jamming phone lines and cluttering inboxes seeking clarity on what kind of health coverage they are eligible for, what they need to do to sign up and how much it will cost them.

The landmark overhaul nicknamed Obamacare, which brings an additional 30 million Americans into the health insurance net, is already being targeted by Indian IT services companies, such as Cognizant, Infosys, HCL Technologies and Wipro, who are vying to build parts of the technology backbone of online health exchanges that link customers to insurance plans and so on.



The US Department of Health and Human Services estimates that the call centres will receive 42 million calls about the federal marketplaces this year—a daily average of up to 200,000—plus answer 2,400 letters and 740 e-mails, and host 500 web chats daily.

The US government has already awarded a $28-million, one-year contract to Vangent, a unit of General Dynamics, to handle consumer questions. The call centers in India scent an additional business opportunity as well.

"US healthcare reform will mean incremental business because consumers will want to know how they are affected. It is still early though; the industry is waiting and watching," said Sandeep Aggarwal, chief marketing officer at Serco Global Services. The Indian BPO industry had revenues of $18 billion (Rs 1.1 lakh crore) in the last fiscal year, with US clients contributing more than half of the business.

"The federal government stimulus lead by President Obama's Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) is driving major growth in the market," Jennifer Mazzucca, senior research analyst at Gartner said in an email. "We expect major growth in business to consumer services offering opportunities for ICT (information and communication technology) firms as payer organisations are working to keep up with the technology demands driven from healthcare reform."

Mazzucca added the US healthcare payer market is expected to grow by 6.05% to reach $ 17.9 billion in 2013. Business process outsourcing with a growth rate of 9.8% and expected market size of $ 1.66 billion will show the strongest growth in 2013. There is a precedent to a new law boosting business for BPOs.


24 x 7 Call Centers in India Continue to Excel !!



Chinese software outsourcing firms are unlikely to catch up with Indian 24 7 call centers and other global software services firms anytime in the near future, despite a major policy push towards outsourcing from China’s central government in recent years, according to a new study by a top US-based business school. Indian service call centers have created a niche for themselves in the Outsourcing arena. 
In a study, titled Providers in China and USA: Preliminary Comparison, Arie Y. Lewin, a professor at the Fuqua School of Business, Duke University, says Chinese firms are struggling to make an impact in the global IT services market at a time when the industry is fast reaching saturation point amid severe competition among global and Indian Inbound Outbound Call Center.
“It’s been very hard for Chinese outsourcing firms to break into the top; it’s partly not their fault because the timing was wrong,” Lewin said in a telephone interview. “They’re not trying to take the share away from a growing market; they’re trying to take away share from existing players, which is much more difficult.”
Global IT spending is expected to touch $3.7 trillion in 2013, according to technology researcher Gartner Inc.
Lewin also pointed out that the language barrier has also played a huge role in China’s inability to attract large outsourcing contracts at a time of increasing commoditization of IT services. “They are not realizing that English competency is a big problem,” Lewin said.
According to the survey, 79% of IT services firms in China have been in business for less than 10 years. On the other hand, top US and Indian IT firms have been around for the better part of the last three decades, in some cases, even longer.
Lewin’s study, which surveyed more than 250 Chinese firms, was jointly conducted with Shanghai Jiao Tong University professor Liu Yi.
Lewin said China has also faced the problem of attracting the best talent, with the country’s engineering graduates not looking at IT services as a primary option for employment, instead focusing more on manufacturing firms. China currently trains 1.1 million engineers annually, according to a recent report by Kotak Institutional Equities. Since 2006, the Chinese government has tried to build expertise in software outsourcing. It identified 20 cities where such firms could be developed.
In 2009, it also put in place a national initiative to encourage the country’s outsourcing industry, with an estimated size of $50 billion, according to Lewin. India’s is bigger at $108 billion, according to industry lobby Nasscom.
“Despite ambitious global growth plans, Chinese ITS (information technology services) providers have largely failed to articulate a compelling value proposition to US and European clients,” said Frederic Giron, principal analyst at Forrester Research Inc., in an email response. “By focusing mainly on low-end application development services, they have instead primarily competed with much bigger and much more experienced Indian providers—but without the ability to offer lower costs.”
The average profitability of Chinese IT services firms went down from 10-15% to less than 5% over the past two years, while that at most large Indian firms was in the 15-25% range, Giron at Forrester said.
This has led to top Chinese IT services firms going private, most notably Yucheng Technology, AsiaInfo-Linkage, Camelot and Pactera—all of which went private within the last one year.
Experts say China’s focus on the domestic market and Japan may have hindered its ability to gain market share in other growing economies.
“Also, unless you have a global delivery capability, you will not succeed, and China lacks that,” said Sid Pai, partner and president, Asia-Pacific region, at Information Services Group, an outsourcing advisory firm.
“In northern China, you had a very thriving (outsourcing industry), but they were serving Japanese or Korean companies—that was a model that could not expand to compete with Western competitors,” Lewin said.

Business Analytics Outsourcing to India is Advancing !



Business analytics outsourcing to India is gaining momentum, but the model is substantially different from the traditional IT-BPO outsourcing call center customer service model.
In the last five years, an explosion of data, coupled with a worldwide low-growth phase, has put pressure on companies to optimize their business decisions. Companies such as Lenovo, Pfizer, and Target have built analytics competency centers in India or hired analytics partners to leverage data smartly.
India, as a geography, is an unmatched analytics hub because of its pool of talent in quantitative disciplines like mathematics and economics, says Pankaj Kulshreshtha, a Bangalore-based Senior Vice President of Analytics and Research at the NYSE-listed Genpact. “There is also the adjacency to IT telemarketing services that provides useful context and the technology background,” says Kulshreshtha, who oversees a team of 6,000 employees.
For India, analytics is a major shift away from the process discipline of traditional IT and call center outsourcing, where the competitive advantage is in running large-scale, standardized processes efficiently.
“The difference is that analytics is not a back office operation, but a front-and-centre ingredient of a company’s strategy,” says Vinay Ramesh, Lead of Client Services at Bangalore-based Analytics Quotient. “In some ways, it is every company’s secret sauce.”
With analytics partners, customers are having the classic consulting conversation as they look to tackle problems in areas such as supply chain, sales and marketing optimization, or risk management. In choosing a partner, a high level of analytical and technical competence is essential, as well as the experience of applying those competencies to solve real world issues.
Teams experienced in handling large amounts of data are invaluable, especially those with members having advanced degrees in statistics and economics -- not the standard number crunchers or stats geeks but those who can work to derive insights from the data, says Robert Gannon, VP of Marketing Strategy and Insights at the restaurant chain Ruby Tuesday.

24 Hr Call Center Solutions India is the Answer to Customer Service Support


"More online sales create a need for a broader customer service base," says Lynn Fick, President of XACT Telesolutions. "Everything from effective web chat and email response to call center operations are needed to manage the amount of customer inquiries during the high-spending holiday season." And this is the reason precisely why there is a need for 24 x 7 Service Call Center.

Last year, XACT Telesolutions helped businesses during the 2012 holiday season and the experienced call center service team is ready to do the same in 2013. Even though in-store shopping is expected to drop slightly compared to last year, online shopping is expected to rise 15% in the fourth quarter (the holiday season). According to eMarketer, online shoppers will spend $83.2 billion this time around.

The online shopping forecaster and digital marketing company, eMarketer, also predicts that online sales will jump from $53.7 billion in 2012 to $61.8 billion in 2013 during November and December – the most lucrative months for businesses. During these months, businesses will rely on inbound call center to manage the influx of calls, emails and online help spurred by the growing retail season.
A point Fick thinks is important for businesses to realize is that online shopping creates as much of a need for reliable customer service as in-store shopping, sometimes even more.
"The growth of online sales doesn't mean there's less of a need for customer support. In fact, quite the opposite." says Fick. "Today, people are buying the same things online that can be bought in stores. But because there's no physical representation of the company online, customers often have more questions and concerns."

In order for businesses to keep up with the biggest online retail season yet, they'll need reliable services of call centers in India to keep customers satisfied. Right now, keeping customers satisfied with helpful, friendly customer service is a top priority. After this year, online holiday sales are expected to increase another 15% and continue to do so annually for the foreseeable future.