BPO market share of India-centric vendors to nearly double by 2010

20 Apr 2009

Mumbai: Indian providers of out sourced business process services (BPO) have proved to be stiff competition to western BPO providers, accounting for 5 per cent of market revenue generated among the top 150 providers in 2008, says technology market reseaercher Gartner, Inc.

Gartner analysts expect this increase in revenue to be maintained, with the BPO market share of Indian vendors expected to nearly double by 2010.

In 2002 there were few, if any, India-centric vendors in the top 150 worldwide providers, but by the end of 2008, the top 20 India-centric BPO providers accounted for $4 billion in revenue, representing 5 per cent of the $80-billion revenue of the top 150 BPO vendors. Gartner expects this trend to accelerate because of economic pressures that are leading to demand for low-cost BPO.

''Indian BPO providers are swiftly evolving to balance exposure to vertical industries, currency and legislation issues,'' said Mr. Arup Roy, Senior Research Analyst at Gartner. ''Their strategies include investing in onshore and nearshore delivery, and pioneering new area of analytics services or knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) where Indian BPO players are shining.''

Although there are still no Indian vendors in the top 20 global BPO players, half of the top 20 India-based BPO providers now operate local U.S. and European sales and delivery centers.

Top 5 Indian BPO providers' revenue estimates by geography, 2008 (millions of dollars)

India-Headquartered Providers

2008 Worldwide BPO Revenue Asia/Pacific  Europe  North America

Genpact

833

100

233

500

Aditya Birla Minacs

392

4

27

361

Firstsource

367

38

100

229

WNS

366

2.9

232.4

130.7

TCS

361

4.9

188

168.1

Total for Top 20 Vendors

4,070.60

407.6

1,400.25

2,262.75

Source: Gartner (April 2009)

Indian BPO providers have had the most success servicing English-speaking requirements, from North America and the U.K. North America has been the most successful sales location for Indian BPO providers, where the top-20 India-centric BPO providers generate about $2.2 billion in revenue. Western Europe showed strong growth, mostly in the U.K., and accounted for $1.4 billion in revenue for the top 20 Indian BPO providers in 2008.

From a vertical-market perspective, Indian BPO providers also had more success in telecommunications, manufacturing, insurance and banking than in government and retail, which are not traditionally sectors that have been strong users of offshore outsourcing.

Overall, Indian BPO vendors achieved growth rates between 12 percent and 200 percent (however some of them are starting from fairly small revenue in the first place). Gartner analysts said the BPO market share of Indian vendors will continue to grow based on.

Indian BPO vendors gaining increased acceptance as being able to reliably deliver services in a market.

Indian vendors continuing to make acquisitions of Europe- and North America-based shared-service centers.

Many of these vendors are starting to grow revenue from continental Europe and via partnerships with indigenous BPO providers; this will also help Indian BPO providers understand local business cultures.

''It is highly likely that many new competitors will emerge from India during the next few years," said Cathy Tornbohm, research vice president, at Gartner.

Tornbohm said, "Contact centers and analytics services will likely see the highest growth, having the lowest entry barriers because relatively little technical or specific process expertise is required. These barriers will also be kept relatively low for other types of BPO as prospective with existing Indian player IT relationships will look to Indian BPO players to balance their portfolio of bidders.''