{"id":1245,"date":"2013-06-23T10:47:00","date_gmt":"2013-06-23T10:47:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/exl-in-2013_062213\/"},"modified":"2024-09-11T11:37:14","modified_gmt":"2024-09-11T11:37:14","slug":"exl-in-2013_062213","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/exl-in-2013_062213\/","title":{"rendered":"It needn’t be marketing hell, with EXL"},"content":{"rendered":"
The whole discussion surrounding Visa Reform, and how it could damage the outsourcing business, raised much bigger questions in my mind than clients simply having a few extra dollars-per-hour slapped onto an invoice. \u00a0It has highlighted the failure of outsourcing to become truly global and deliver more for clients than offshore body-shopping services.<\/em><\/p>\n <\/em> It’s the over-reliance on the offshore that is holding back the whole industry from moving beyond the back office and into the front office, where providers can truly help clients with solving business problems and driving new growth, as opposed to merely making processes more cost-efficient and cheaper to run. \u00a0The more a provider can present itself as a local partner, a business companion, an extension<\/em> of its clients’ enterprises, the more its clients will think about their provider as a business partner, as opposed to an “outsourced” service. \u00a0Hence, if Visa Reform can be a catalyst for driving more local investment from Indian-centric providers, then it will eventually prove to be a blessing in disguise for an industry still struggling with its identity.<\/p>\n I am already seeing positive steps with most of the Indian-centric services firms developing onshore workforces, but we need to see it happen more publicly and more aggressively. \u00a0I would advocate more acquisitions of onshore services firms from the Indian leaders to speed up the rate of progress… there are plenty of candidates out there. \u00a0There also needs to be greater focus on developing management and marketing leadership outside of India. You just can’t keep putting the same lipstick on the same pig!<\/p>\n One example of an Indian-centric provider which is setting the standard for many others to follow is up-and-coming BPO provider EXL, which has not only invested heavily in local delivery resources, but has also put significant resources into developing its corporate, sales and marketing leadership in the United States. \u00a0 With revenues at the $500m level, EXL has greater capable US marketing presence than most Indian-centric services firms several times its size. \u00a0It is also becoming much more effective – just check out its\u00a0new website<\/a>.<\/p>\n