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India's call centre growth stalls

Is this the end of Indian economic growth since call centers were key to Indian growth;) It had to happen sooner or later.

P.S: Why someone named "Valerian" has to change his name to Andy?

Well, I have had.. Elvis.....Lucy...and Clint calling.....not very common names as you may guess.
I even fooled around by saying....Elvis has left the building....but the poor chap didn't have a clue.
Anyway, he admitted that if he was to use his real name....the person on the other end will just hang up.
 
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Anyway, he admitted that if he was to use his real name....the person on the other end will just hang up.

And why is that ? Why do we have to change our names? Everyone loves his/her name

Making it easier, shortening it I understand but completely changing it .... no way
 
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And why is that ? Why do we have to change our names? Everyone loves his/her name

Making it easier, shortening it I understand but completely changing it .... no way

They don't change it for good. Just when on the call they put on a more western sounding name. Just like Chinese folks living in the Western countries have an English name and a Chinese name. It makes things easier.
 
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And why is that ? Why do we have to change our names? Everyone loves his/her name

Making it easier, shortening it I understand but completely changing it .... no way

When you tell a Westerner that your name is Ajay and you can supply them with cheaper utilities..... they tend to be not interested.
 
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indian accent is more understandable compare to the Geordie, no matter why lovely Cheryl got sacked from the US XFactor lol. My welsh colleagues sometimes dont understand them either.

Cheryl's accent is understandable but still annoying as ****!
 
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Indian outsourcers seek revenues from 'smart work'

By Penny MacRae (AFP) – Sep 6, 2011

NEW DELHI — For advertising executive Govind Nair, working in India's outsourcing industry for a California telecoms firm means burning the candle at both ends for his customers.

"They try to be considerate. They know there's a 12-and-a-half-hour time difference between India and San Francisco but we still end up getting up early and going to bed late," Nair, 30, says.

Such hours are becoming increasingly routine for many young Indian professionals as they liaise with counterparts in the United States and other Western countries on high-end "smart work" projects.

India, known as the world's largest back office with its cheaper, educated English-speaking workforce, is expanding its "knowledge processing outsourcing", offering market research, statistical analysis, legal, health and a host of other services.

The sector -- familiarly known as KPO -- "is the next wave of global sourcing for India", Som Mittal, head of the National Association of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom) told an industry conference last week.

Performing "value-added tasks" such as writing equity reports and legal work can mean 40 to 50 percent higher billing rates than for lower-value jobs in call centres fielding inquiries about bank accounts, industry officials say.

KPO revenues have been growing at 26 percent annually according to research house Crisil, outpacing the overall expansion of the flagship outsourcing industry that has helped make India an emerging market powerhouse.:yahoo:

The India now has 70 percent, or $2 billion, of the $2.9 billion global KPO industry, :woot: :woot: Crisil says. North America provides 65 percent of the sector's revenues, Britain 20 percent and continental Europe 10 percent.

Nasscom believes the fresh economic troubles in Europe and the United States may accelerate KPO sector growth as Western firms seek to harness the technical and financial expertise of India's supply of university graduates, lawyers, accountants and MBAs.

"India has a tremendous advantage in its technical, analytic and managerial skills," Matthew Vallance, chief executive of one of India's biggest back office companies, Firstsource Solutions, told AFP.

The $2 billion is still a fraction of India's overall outsourcing revenues, expected to total $68 to $70 billion this year. But Crisil forecasts in a new report that revenues from outsourcing knowledge-intensive skills will nearly triple to $5.5 billion by the end of 2015.

"India is moving up the value chain," said Crisil chief executive Roopa Kudva, noting Indian lawyers now research case law and put together arguments to be presented in court in the United States, Britain and elsewhere.

Bankers prepare papers for acquisitions, while nurses monitor the condition of housebound patients in the West.

Doing value-added work has become increasingly important for India as it seeks to preserve its overall global outsourcing dominance, especially after ceding its crown as the world's leading call centre hub to the Philippines.

Last December, the Philippines, which also has a trained, English-speaking workforce with a strong service culture, edged past India to become the largest call centre operator in the world, logging $5.5 billion in annual revenues compared with India's $5.3 billion.

"India is still ahead (in total offshoring), although other offshoring sites like the Philippines and Indonesia are emerging," said Tervinderjit Singh, a research director at global consultancy Gartner.

"But these countries are still not mature enough in high-level professional work which India can provide," he said.

AFP: Indian outsourcers seek revenues from 'smart work'
 
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exactly we already moved two notches up from BPO to KPO !
 
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