Practical outsourcing advice and case studies for IT and business process outsourcing.
  Home > Research & Statistics  > Trends Search:
 
 for    
 Highlights: Buy Books|Outsourcing Blog | Quality Events and Training Calendar | Quality Dictionary | Outsourcing Discussion Forum | Outsourcing Jobs | Outsourcing News and Press Releases | Free Outsourcing Newsletter
 Free Newsletter!  
Improve your
Outsourcing skills and knowledge


Sign up today!
  Manage Subscriptions
  What is Outsourcing?
  What is Offshoring?
  What is BPO?
  Offshoring to India
  Offshoring to China
  Glossary of Terms
 Sourcing Directory 
  Outsource by Function
  Outsource by Region
  Outsource by Industry
  Outsourcing Strategy
  Outsourcing Tactics
  Legal
  Research & Statistics
  Tools & Templates
  Vendors & Consultants
 Channels 
  Business Process Mgt
  Innovation
  Six Sigma
 Quick Access 
  Help
  Search
  Advertise Here
  Article Archives
  Newsletter Archives
  RSS/XML Feeds
 User Feedback 
  Please suggest site
  improvements.
 
  [ larger form ]

Outsourcing and Offshoring Predictions for 2007

Bookmark This Page Bookmark This Page
Email This Page Email This Page
Format for Printing Format for Printing
Submit an Article Submit an Article
Outsourcing Article Archive Read More Articles
Related Tools & Articles
  • Discussion Forum
    "Do you have any suggestions for what kinds of evidence to ask for from our supplier? I would like to see us experiment with different forms of compensation but I am having trouble finding examples to share with others in the company"

    Contribute to this Discussion

    Alsbridge CEO and collaborative outsourcing pioneer Ben Trowbridge says as the outsourcing industry moves into 2007, higher priority must be placed on staying cost competitive and staying ahead of global trends in the sourcing market.

    "Companies want to see the results of their sourcing projects turn out successfully," observed Trowbridge. "In this regard, we believe our predictions of the market will prove beneficial to industry leaders and buyers in all stages of the sourcing lifecycle."

    Alsbridge proprietary data, public information and current industry trends have led Trowbridge to offer his outsourcing and offshoring predictions for 2007:

    1. Because of a tightening US labor supply in technology, accounting and other processes, US-based companies will accelerate their outsourcing strategies to stay competitive.
    2. Contrary to prevailing opinion, the cost of labor in India will remain neutral when compared with wage inflation in US. The offshore trend won't subside.
    3. Contrary to prevailing opinion, China will still lag other markets, mainly India, as a destination for English language-driven business process outsourcing (BPO) or shared service centers due to language, low national birthrate, intellectual property and other legal issues. The exception will be those companies that have a market strategy to sell into the China market, which will override the former characteristics.
    4. New areas of Eastern Europe will open up and should be evaluated as local authorities jump on the outsourcing, shared services and offshore boom.
    5. The "location" decision will become more challenging due to shifting political and threat profiles.
    6. The major private equity firms will again review acquisition and rationalization of the large outsourced provider market. The fact that no deals were done in 2006 doesn't mean they have lost interest.
    7. Outsourcing of procurement will gain momentum in 2007 as certain providers begin to achieve true scale and market share as others continue to challenge them. The business case will become the "velocity" case.
    8. Indian service providers will continue to grow their global presence and win even more complex deals. The challenge will be to move from their high margin person-time "voice" pricing to other forms of outsourcing price structures.
    9. Throughout next year, the thriving US providers will begin to fall into one of two groups:
      "The Transformers." Those that offer transformational outsourcing as a result of taking on multiple process silos thereby gaining enough mass to affect change.
      "OAP providers." Those who focus on single functional areas, often within a single vertical market, and offer outsourcing as a product (OAP).
    10. Shared service centers where clients choose to outsource to a center owned by the company will continue to represent as much as half of the offshoring activities. Indian providers will participate more and more, creating hybrid solutions eventually poised for outsourcing. US-based outsourcers will lag in adopting this solution area.
    11. Knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) will grow significantly over the next three years and generally go to captive centers or be outsourced as a part of hybrid transactions. Research and engineering will grow significantly as an offshored service.

    "Future trends are easy to identify if you know what indicators really make a difference," says Trowbridge. "You have to know how to read between the lines when it comes to revenue numbers released by outsourcing service providers. Forecasts must be evaluated based on labor statistics, birth rates, economic indicators and hard-to-find, internal corporate activities not released to the general public."

    Trowbridge says his company gathers data from a variety of sources, including customers, providers, government agencies, research firms, trade and business media from around the world.

    Useful Links

    Alsbridge
    http://www.alsbridge.com

     
    Rate This Article:  Current Rating: 4.67
      Poor    Excellent     
              1    2    3     4    5
    Copyright © 2003-2008 – Sourcingmag.com, CTQ Media LLC. All Rights Reserved
    Reproduction Without Permission Is Strictly Prohibited – Request Permission


    Publish an Article: Do you have a sourcing tip, learning or case study?
    Share it with the largest community of Outsourcing professionals, and be recognized by your peers.
    It's a great way to promote your expertise and/or build your resume. Read more about submitting an article.

    Outsourcing AdLinks
    AdLinks Information
     
    Home | Discussion Forum | Event Calendar | Job Shop
    Link To Sourcingmag.com | Report A Problem | Submit Article For Publishing
     Terms of Service. ©2003-2008 Sourcingmag.com, CTQ Media LLC. All rights reserved. v1.0, 0.1
    About Sourcingmag.com · Contact Us · Privacy Policy · Site Map