Showing posts with label BPO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BPO. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
Virus upends outsourcing as firms 'reshore' and embrace AI
MUMBAI/MANILA - Coronavirus is permanently shaking up the global outsourcing industry as lockdowns from Bangalore to Manila prompt firms to "reshore" jobs and, with AI, to move further away from needing humans at all.
Restrictions on normal activity in these countries and others have created a logistical nightmare for the managers of call centers and other back-office operations for foreign corporations.
Having their staff work from home is difficult because of rules governing the handling of sensitive material such as financial transactions for bank customers from Scotland to San Francisco.
Also, many workers in places like India and the Philippines live in crowded housing with poor-quality broadband, while some firms do not have enough equipment like laptops to provide to employees.
"The outsourcing industry doesn't lend itself to working from home," consultant Vivek Sood, author of "Outsourcing 3.0", told AFP.
"We are talking about companies which used to ask employees to leave even their pens and pencils outside the office because of security concerns."
TEMPORARY STAY ARRANGEMENTS
Desperate to stay operational, some firms have resorted to having staff live at their place of work.
Vodafone India, for example, says it has "organized temporary stay arrangements at our data center locations, (and) made food and groceries available at critical locations".
Similar practices by others have sparked the ire of trade unions.
Mylene Cabalona, president of the Business Process Outsourcing Industry Employees' Network (BIEN), told AFP the union had received reports of some workers "effectively quarantined and locked down in their offices".
The Financial Times in early April published photos that it said appeared to show workers sleeping on the floor of a call center in the Philippines, living in what they described as "subhuman" conditions.
DON'T CALL
Anthony Esguerra, who works at a Manila firm handling data for a Chinese online gaming company, admitted that 80 percent of its operations were disrupted.
"The workflow of processing players' requests really slowed down, since our internet access was limited compared to when we were working at the office," he told AFP.
Companies like telecom firm Spark New Zealand and Taiwanese computer maker Acer, which uses a Philippine facility to serve Australian and Kiwi customers, have simply told people not to call.
Australia's Telstra and Optus and Britain's Virgin Media -- all of which have offshore units in India and the Philippines -- have announced plans to recruit hundreds of staff back home.
Telstra, which heavily relies on its Philippine facility for customer service, initially said it would hire 1,000 temporary workers, but later raised that figure to 3,500.
Optus sought to fill 500 vacancies, saying that while the company had previously believed "its diversity of locations would make us resilient to any disruptions", this was no longer the case.
OK COMPUTER
But the bigger lasting change from the pandemic will likely involve the wider use of artificial intelligence to handle tasks currently performed by human beings, experts said.
"AI doesn't go on strike, it can work 24/7 and throws up fewer complications," said Michael Czinkota, who teaches international business at Washington's Georgetown University.
Telstra, for instance, which was already planning to slash customer service calls by two-thirds by 2022, now intends to accelerate its use of AI.
"(We) will be using this as an opportunity to further digitize and automate our business," CEO Andy Penn told The Sydney Morning Herald this month.
TRAILBLAZER
"COVID-19 (has) achieved in six to eight weeks what the evangelists of automation have not managed... for more than five years," Ilan Oshri from the University of Auckland's Graduate School of Management told AFP.
But the "onshoring" of jobs and the increased use of AI will have a big impact on countries that for years have benefitted from taking on the back-office operations of multinationals.
India, in particular, was a trailblazer. As of 2017, the industry employed nearly four million Indians and raked in revenues of more than $150 billion, according to trade body NASSCOM.
In the Philippines, the industry started from scratch in the early 1990s but by 2019 its revenues were equal to 7.3 percent of the country's gross domestic product, employing 1.3 million people.
"We will have to rethink the whole outsourcing model," said consultant Sood.
"The assumption that you can offshore everything to Bangalore and Manila and relax has gone out of the window."
Agence France-Presse
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Work from home offers fallback for AI-threatened jobs
MANILA -- Work from home schemes can be a fallback for call center agents who risk losing their jobs as their industry automates certain tasks, a jobs recruitment platform said Tuesday.
Up to 10,000 jobs daily are offered on Freelancer.com where 92,920 employers are looking for project-based workers for data entry, programming, graphic design, Excel and Photoshop, according to its vice president for sales, Sebastian Siseles
Finding a project-based job is easier since employers look for a skill instead of a college degree, Siseles told ABS-CBN News.
"We are looking for 1,000 different skills and abilities and you just need to know 1 thing, 1 skill for you to land a job," he said.
Freelancers are paid $196 or P10,000 per project on the average, "a lot bigger" compared to office work, he said.
The proposed Telecommuting Act, which seeks to provide equal pay and benefits for home-based workers compared to their office-based counterparts was passed by the Senate and the House in a bicameral conference last October.
Some 43,000 low-skilled workers could lose their jobs in the next 4 years when companies turn to artificial intelligence, instead of humans, to accomplish "repetitive" tasks, the IT and Business Process Outsourcing Association of the Philippines earlier said.
The freelancing industry can accommodate these workers as the network is "still growing," Siseles said.
The Philippines, with 1 million freelancers, leads Southeast Asia and is fourth in the world in terms of project-based work, he said.
India, United States and Pakistan are ahead of the Philippines only because of bigger populations and faster internet connections, he said.
English fluency is a "huge advantage" for Filipinos seeking freelance work, like in BPOs, he said.
Freelancing thrives because it removes "unnecessary intermediaries" that drive up costs, he said.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Thursday, September 13, 2018
BPOs need to keep English language edge: Teleperformance
MANILA -- The Philippines should maintain the English proficiency of its workforce to take advantage of growing demand for the skill among business process outsourcing companies, the head of Teleperformance said Thursday.
Teleperformance will hire 4,000 to 5,000 more people until the end of the year to cater to its retail and healthcare clients in the US, according to its managing director for the Philippines, Travis Coates.
Coates said Teleperformance clients prefer "near native" proficiency when it comes to English. The Philippines is competing with BPOs in India and Latin America, he said.
"It’s not the only place in the world to do English so it’s another reason why the country needs to continue to be competitive," Coates told reporters on the sidelines of the opening of Teleperformance's newest location in Quezon City, it's nineteenth nationwide.
"The requirement for English language skill set continues to increase so the abilities and capabilities continues to increase and I wouldn’t say necessarily that we’re seeing as much supply around that specific skillset as perhaps we have in the past," he added.
At Teleperformance, a "quality team" is also tasked to monitor workers' English proficiency and retrain them if necessary, he said.
Graduates of the expanded basic education system or K-12 helped sharpen students' English language skills, he said.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, May 8, 2018
Amazon.com opens first customer service office in Philippines
MANILA - Amazon.com said Tuesday it launched its first customer service office in the Philippines, creating 300 new jobs and up to 1,000 more by year-end at its base in Cebu City.
The world's largest online retailer is betting on customer service in the Philippines as government and industry officials prepared to shift over 1 million BPO workers to higher skilled roles that will not be replaced by artificial intelligence.
The site will provide support for Amazon customers in North America and the United Kingdom. It employs customer service associates, team managers and group managers, the internet giant said in a statement.
"We are excited to be investing in Cebu and working with such talented people, especially since Filipinos are known to bring high levels of experience and passion to their work,” said Amazon vice president for Worldwide Customer Service Tom Weiland.
The Philippines has hosted Amazon Web Services since 2016 and the country is "integral" to the growth of the cloud platform in Southeast Asia, the company said.
The company said job opportunities for its customer service operations in Cebu are posted on its website.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Saturday, October 7, 2017
BPO workers bet on 'human touch' to ride automation wave
MANILA - Business process outsourcing workers said they were betting on the "human touch" to keep their jobs, as the industry looks towards artificial intelligence.
The industry that employs roughly 1.15 million people expects that the shift to AI for mechanical tasks had the potential to displace 40,000 low-skilled workers while creating opportunities for nearly 700,000 with higher skills.
Potential job losses are a "myth" as companies that outsource operations develop "hybrid digital and live interaction agents," said SITEL chief operating officer Craig Reines.
Michael Noche, a 32-year-old training manager with Ibex Global, said he was "not threatened at all" by the looming automation wave.
"AI might have its own advantages but still we will not be able to deny the fact that human talent is something a lot more deeper and is indispensable," Noche told ABS-CBN News.
Call center supervisor Keith Rosales is similarly optimistic.
"Having AI do all these in the future is not possible. Human touch would always be needed when it comes to customer service," Rosales told ABS-CBN News.
"Customers still like to speak to a live agent instead of having to deal with a computer or robot. My company is trying to introduce self-service channels but so far, customers still rather call the hotline with live agents because it is more personalized," he said.
English proficiency and a service-oriented culture give Filipino BPO workers an edge over other outsourcing hubs said SITEL's Reines.
"There's no such thing as singularity replacement of human capability but it's rather how do we manage it," said Gilbert Camasura, president of recruitment firm Asia Select.
With the advent of automation, team supervisor Kevin Paolo dela Cruz looks forward to more years in BPO.
"I feel excited about it, I am working for a company with a goal of being innovative, to put the business to the next level, and it will help a lot of people who's looking for a decent, well compensated job," he said.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
BPOs feared to take hit if tax breaks removed
MANILA – Removing tax incentives for foreign companies seeking to outsource operations in the Philippines can discourage investments, an industry official said.
The business process outsourcing industry employs roughly 1 million Filipinos and is a key source of dollars that help stabilize the local currency.
“China is offering a lot of the incentives, here we are trying to take some things out. It’s like are we pushing the investors out,” said Contact Center Association of the Philippines president Jojo Uligan.
“Mahihirapan tayo (We’ll have a hard time). We can no longer compete,” he said.
The tax regime, however, is not the only consideration of investors, said finance undersecretary Antonette Tiokno. – from a report by Jekki Pascual ABS-CBN News.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
BPO automation may displace 40,000, add 700,000 jobs
MANILA - The shift to automation can displace 40,000 low-skilled workers in the business process outsourcing industry, but will open up job opportunities for nearly 700,000 higher-skilled counterparts, an industry official said Tuesday.
Low-skilled workers include receptionists and clerks. Job demand will shift to medium and high-skilled jobs that offer higher compensation, said Alex Tined, program director of the IT and Business Process Association of the Philippines.
"We need to teach them the new jobs. The challenge now is to make sure that we have people to do the mid and high skill jobs," Tined said.
Tined said some 388,000 jobs would be added to the middle level and another 309,000 to the high skill level, bringing the industry workforce to 1.8 million by 2022 from the current 1.14 million.
The BPO industry is a key job generator and source of dollar earnings that help strengthen the peso.
Tined said the Philippines had fallen to third place among the world's top BPO destinations, as India and China lure companies with more advanced technologies.
China is a relative newcomer to the race, previously dominated by India and the Philippines.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Friday, June 30, 2017
Lawmakers urged to retain fiscal incentives for BPOs
A month before the Senate deliberates on government's proposed tax reform program, industry players want lawmakers to keep the fiscal incentives enjoyed by business process outsourcing firms. - Business Nightly, ANC, June 29, 2017
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Wednesday, June 28, 2017
PH BPO industry taking steps to comply with data-privacy rules
The business process outsourcing industry has been one of the country's major economic drivers. Now, the fast-growing sector is urged to implement stricter data-privacy measures amid the prevalence of cybersecurity threats. - Business Nightly, ANC, June 27, 2017
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Monday, May 22, 2017
Switzerland's Partners Group to acquire SPi Global
MANILA – Partners Group, a global investment management firm, will acquire SPi Global in a transaction that values the Philippines-based outsourcing company at $330 million, PLDT Inc. said Monday.
PLDT Inc has an 18.32-percent economic interest in SPi Global through its indirect subsidiary, PLDT Global Investments Corp.
Aside from PLDT Global Investments Corp, SPi Global is also controlled by CVC Capital Partners Asia III.
SPi Global provides outsourced services to education, science, technical and medical research publishers.
“As the publishing world transforms and expands at a rapid pace, SPi has a very exciting opportunity to support its customers,” said Cyrus Driver, managing director of Partners Group, which has headquarters in Switzerland.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Friday, March 24, 2017
Accenture's net revenue rises 4.7 percent
BENGALURU - Consulting and outsourcing services provider Accenture Plc reported a 4.7 percent increase in quarterly net revenue, helped by strong demand for its digital and cloud services.
Net income attributable to Accenture fell to $838.8 million or $1.33 per share in the second quarter ended Feb. 28, from $1.33 billion or $2.08 per share, a year earlier.
Net revenue rose to $8.32 billion from $7.95 billion.
Accenture's digital, cloud and security-related services make up more than 40 percent of total revenue.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
BPOs cautious on expansion due to Trump
MANILA - Some American companies have delayed expansion plans in the Philippines due to caution over the economic policies of US President Donald Trump, the head of a recruitment website said Wednesday.
Expansion projects in Dumaguete, Cebu and Davao have been pushed back to the middle of the year, from the first quarter, said Philip Gioca, country manager of Jobstreet.com.
"They have a wait and see attitude. They are very cautious and still awaiting directions in the American government," Gioca said.
Trump, who assumed office in January, has signalled a more protectionist US, threatening the outsourcing industry, though his recent moves have largely centered on bringing manufacturing jobs back home.
Despite uncertainty over Trump, Jobstreet.com data showed a 20-percent increase in job demand from the BPO sector.
BPO and small and medium enterprises, both expanding in the provinces, have fueled job demand, data showed.
Nearly half, or 44 percent of postings on Jobstreet.com in 2016 are in the provinces, up 16 percent over two years. These are mostly in Cebu, Davao, Iloilo, Bacolod, Pampanga and Batangas.
The government's infrastructure push is helping transform sleepy towns into investment hubs, Gioca said.
"Employees' preference is also always working within their locale," he said.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, February 7, 2017
BPOs unlikely to leave PH due to Trump: Megaworld
MANILA – US President Donald Trump’s tough rhetoric is unlikely to drive American companies to shut their outsourced operations in the Philippines, a property developer said Tuesday.
Labor costs in the Philippines are equivalent to about a fifth of wages in the US. Filipino call center agents are also more adept at handling irate customers, said Megaworld Corp. senior vice president Kevin Tan.
Trump’s most recent pronouncements were geared towards manufacturing, Tan told ANC.
“On the BPO side, I have to say first and foremost, it is going to be a quite a challenge for them to actually bring it back,” Tan said, referring to jobs outsourced by US firms.
Tan said Trump would risk driving inflation and making American companies less competitive if he insists on bringing jobs back to the US.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Trump warns US firms outsourcing jobs abroad
INDIANAPOLIS - President-elect Donald Trump warned on Thursday that US companies would face "consequences" for outsourcing jobs abroad, as he touted his early success in persuading an air conditioner maker to keep about 1,000 jobs in the United States rather than move them to Mexico.
"Companies are not going to leave the United States anymore without consequences. Not going to happen," the Republican said on a visit to a Carrier Corp. plant in Indianapolis.
Trump, who takes office on Jan. 20, did not say what the consequences would be, but he frequently threatened during the election campaign that his administration would put a 35 percent import tariff on goods made by American manufacturers that moved jobs offshore.
It is unclear what steps would have to be taken by federal authorities before Trump could retaliate against individual companies shifting jobs abroad.
Trump also did not address whether Carrier's parent company, United Technologies, would face any consequences for continuing with plans to move 1,300 other Indiana jobs to Mexico.
Trump made keeping jobs in the United States one of the main issues of his campaign and frequently pilloried Carrier for planning to move production to Mexico as he appealed to blue-collar voters in the Midwest.
Apparently under pressure from Trump, Carrier announced this week it had agreed to keep more than 1,000 jobs at the plant and at its headquarters, while still planning to move more than 1,000 other US jobs to Mexico.
Trump said his negotiations with the maker of air conditioning units were a model for how he would approach other US businesses that are tempted to move jobs overseas to save money.
He pledged to create a healthy environment for business through lower taxes and fewer regulations.
"I just want to let all of the other companies know that we're going to do great things for business. There's no reason for them to leave anymore," Trump said.
If that approach did not work, there would be penalties, Trump warned.
TAX INCENTIVES
The deal marked a quick win for Trump, who has spent most of his time in New York since the Nov. 8 election building his team ahead of January's inauguration, when he will succeed Democratic President Barack Obama.
Media outlets reported on Thursday that retired Marine General James Mattis would be named defense secretary, but a Trump spokesman said no decision had been made.
Trump toured the plant in Indianapolis and shook hands with workers on an assembly line. Some workers yelled: "Thank you Mr. Trump" and "Thanks Donald" as he greeted them.
Carrier confirmed that Indiana agreed to give the company $7 million in tax incentives. A source briefed on the matter said the tax incentives were over 10 years and the company had agreed to invest $16 million in the state, where Trump's vice president-elect, Mike Pence, is governor.
Carrier still plans to move 600 jobs from the plant to Mexico, the Wall Street Journal said. Reuters reported earlier this week that Carrier also still intended to close a factory in Huntington, Indiana, that employs 700 people making controls for heating, cooling and refrigeration and move the jobs to Mexico by 2018.
SANDERS CRITICISM
US Senator Bernie Sanders, who lost the Democratic nominating race to Hillary Clinton, said the Carrier deal was incomplete and left the incoming Trump administration open to threats from companies.
"Trump has endangered the jobs of workers who were previously safe in the United States. Why? Because he has signaled to every corporation in America that they can threaten to offshore jobs in exchange for business-friendly tax benefits and incentives," Sanders wrote in a Washington Post opinion piece on Thursday.
He noted that Trump had originally said he would save 2,100 jobs that Carrier planned to move to Mexico.
"Let's be clear: It is not good enough to save some of these jobs," Sanders said.
Despite Trump's deal, employers elsewhere in Indiana are laying off five times that many workers because of foreign competition.
Trump was due to hold a rally in Cincinnati later on Thursday and address supporters who helped him win the swing state of Ohio in his upset victory over Clinton.
The Indiana and Ohio stops are Trump's first public events since he won the presidency.
At the Cincinnati event, Trump and Pence will talk about what is ahead and the "positive change" Trump will bring to the country, spokesman Jason Miller said.
On Wednesday, Trump said he would nominate former Goldman Sachs banker Steven Mnuchin to lead the Treasury Department. Trump named Wilbur Ross, a billionaire known for his investments in distressed industries, as his nominee for commerce secretary.
The Cincinnati rally follows a car and knife attack this week by a Somali immigrant and Muslim student, Abdul Razak Ali Artan, at Ohio State University in Columbus that injured 11 people. The Islamic State militant group claimed responsibility.
In a Twitter message, Trump said: "ISIS is taking credit for the terrible stabbing attack at Ohio State University by a Somali refugee who should not have been in our country."
The Council on American-Islamic Relations accused Trump of seeking to exploit the "tragic situation in Ohio."
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
BPO sector to hire 100,000 workers yearly until 2022
The country's business process outsourcing sector is expected to grow further in the coming years despite political uncertainties here and abroad.
Industry leaders said the country's education system needs to level up to provide Filipinos with the skills needed to get hired. Jekki Pascual reports. -- ANC Market Edge, November 30, 2016
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, November 8, 2016
BPO sector to gain from Clinton victory: analyst
MANILA - Local property companies that lease out to Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) companies could benefit from a victory by Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, an analyst said Tuesday.
April Lee Tan, head of research at COL Financial, said there are a few reasons why investors favor Clinton over Republican Donald Trump.
“I think one of the reasons why people believe that Asia will not benefit from a possible Trump victory is his talk against trade between other countries and the US, like he would impose tariffs,” she told ANC's "Market Edge with Cathy Yang."
"Aside from that, he also has plans to impose tariffs on the BPO sector," she added.
Philippine shares are in the green in step with a big jump in US shares overnight.
The Philippine Stock Exchange is playing catch up to a region-wide rally that started when the Federal Bureau of Investigation decided to end its probe into an email scandal involving Clinton. -- With Warren de Guzman, ABS-CBN News
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Friday, October 14, 2016
BPO industry raises concern over Duterte's statements
The business process outsourcing (BPO) industry is raising concerns about the president's strong statements, saying they're afraid Duterte's tough talk might scare off clients. - The World Tonight, ANC, October 13, 2016
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
Industry group pushes 1M new jobs in IT, BPO
MANILA - The country’s information technology and outsourcing sector is bullish on its target to generate one million jobs until the end of President Rodrigo Duterte’s term in 2022, an industry leader said Wednesday.
The new job openings will likely be in contact centers, software development, health care and analytics, IT and Business Process Association of the Philippines chairman Dan Reyes told ANC’s “Market Edge with Cathy Yang.”
Reyes said improving internet infrastructure in the countryside was important to meeting the job generation goal.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Thursday, November 12, 2015
BPO, OFWs raise demand for real estate
Many residential and commercial projects are being built across the country. Real estate experts say the construction boom is far from over. - The World Tonight, ANC, November 11, 2015
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Monday, October 19, 2015
BPO revenues may surpass OFW remittances
Posibleng mahigitan ng kita sa sektor ng business process outsourcing o BPO ang remittances na ipinapadala ng mga OFW sa mga susunod na taon. Ngayong taon pa lang kasi, bumaba ang remittance ng mga OFW habang tumataas ang kita mula sa BPO. - Bandila, October 19, 2015, Lunes
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
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