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The BPO industry: Thrive in transition

Originally Published 2.1.2017

Last year I discussed the growth of the business process outsourcing (BPO) industry and the notion of the midnight sun that would never set. That sun is now facing some potential and imminent headwinds in the next nine months, within the next three to five years, and within the next six to 12 years.

The Duterte and Trump effect
Much discussion has been made across both mainstream media and social media about the implications of the Duterte and the Trump administrations in the BPO industry. Since Donald J. Trump started campaigning for the presidency, his key economic themes already revolved around “Making America Great”—some of which can even be associated with autarky or self-reliance. He calls for big tax cuts, steady wages, repeal of Obamacare, and massive tariffs on countries that are seen taking American jobs. Such steps have serious repercussions for “source” countries, such as Mexico, China, India, and the Philippines. Nearly 80 percent of the outsourced work in the Philippines comes from the North American market (77 percent), while the rest comes from European and Asia-Pacific regional markets. However, these expected policies of the Trump administration (from an outsourcing standpoint) may not hold. First, his policies are mainly directed toward the manufacturing industry specific to the businesses in Mexico and China, and not necessarily a crackdown on the BPO industry. Second, even if jobs come back to America, he cannot stop other Western countries from producing overseas.

As a result, not only would the other Western countries become more competitive versus their US counterparts, but these “outsourced” products and services will still get exported to the US. The worst that could happen but is very unlikely is a tariff war between the US and its Western allies. Third, implementing his “bring back jobs to America” can be complicated. Both Dan Reyes (country head of Genpact Philippines and IBPAP chairman of the board of trustees) and Travis Coates (managing director of TelePhilippines) shared the same perspective: it’s not that easy just to migrate jobs back to America. With the robust infrastructure and skillset of running the contact centers in the Philippines, migrating back the jobs to America simply cannot be performed overnight. There will also be issues of being able to distinguish, which are outsourced jobs versus which jobs are the by-products of the overseas growth of the business. With the attractive cost arbitrage of offshore outsourcing, US companies can be lured to look for loopholes and workarounds to outsource amidst the call to “bring back jobs to America”. Last, both Reyes and Coates asserted that we have to wait and see when Trump becomes president.


As for President Duterte, his statements against the West initially sounded worrisome to the BPO industry. As such, key leaders in the industry, like Tonichi Achurra-Parekh (vice president and head of operations - Startek Philippines), had to assure clients (both prospective and incumbent) that the President’s statement may not necessarily lead to a fallout between the country and its partners. Reyes and Coates also observed that there have been no significant policy shifts in international business relationships under the Duterte administration. Furthermore, in the President’s message to the outsourcing industry in November 2016 signified that the government is keen on helping bolster the Philippines’s competitiveness in the BPO industry (10-point agenda). Hence, there is no immediate risk of weakening in the BPO industry.

Facing the next six years
Since the entry of the “BPO start-ups” nearly 20 years ago, the business environment has changed dramatically with the emergence of advances in technology, such as cloud computing, automation, online support, and customer support via social media. In an article published by The Economist online (http://www.economist.com) in February last year, it was mentioned that the contact-center jobs in the Philippines, including India, may be at the “end of the line” due to technological enhancements of an organization’s labor-saving or labor-substituting capital (e.g., interactive voice response). As such, labor market forces will once again demand a new kind of labor that will complement the state-of-the-art capital. Thus, the labor force in the contact center niche of the BPO industry will need to evolve toward producing services that are at the higher end of the “value-added” chain.
The government is aware of this. In Duterte’s message to the IT-BPM last year, he anticipates that within the next six years, nearly three-fourths of the labor force in the industry will be in the knowledge-process outsourcing (KPOs are jobs related to animation and design, R&D, financial market services and legal services). Once more, both India and the Philippines will compete for the “smarter” jobs that will be outsourced. This is because even Western countries lack adequate manpower to handle knowledge-based processes. The question is—are we ready for this transition? Fortunately, the Information Technology and Business Process Association of the Philippines (IBPAP) has developed the Philippine IT-BPM Roadmap 2022. This requires an extensive effort for stronger partnerships between IBPAP and other key stakeholders—from academe to the infrastructure-building sectors—ensuring that the Philippines will remain the outsourcing destination of choice for the next six years.
Original Source: BusinessMirror

Gervy James Biagtan, CSSBB, is currently the Director of Process Improvement at Teleperformance, the global leader in outstanding customer experience, and is one of Six Sigma PH's Black Belt Consultants. 

With 15 years of experience managing and leading quality and process improvement initiatives, Gervy has been one of the top-of-mind Lean Six Sigma Black Belts and Change Agents in the IT-BPO industry.

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