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January 23, 2007 | Comments: (0)
Offshore attrition on the rise
Offshoring -- especially for BPO (business process outsourcing) -- is about to hit a wall. After all, despite being a relatively new phenomenon made possible by advances in communications, it remains subject to one timeless principle of economics: supply and demand.
The HR pros call it attrition. On any particular project outsourced to a service provider in India, you can expect at least a 15 percent turnover rate for personnel assigned to the project within a year. For some projects, BPO chief among them, it is not unheard of for a whole staff to turn over by year's end, according to Paul Schmidt, a partner in the global services delivery practice at TPI, one of the larger sourcing advisory organizations.
With technology so closely tied to business strategy, to talk about BPO today is to understand the consequences of not being able to deliver expected services in a timely manner due to high turnover.
Schmidt puts it much better than I can: "There is a tremendous opportunity for value leakage," he tells me. In other words, if you don't pay enough attention up front to the realities of attrition at your service provider, you will end up with higher costs, lower-quality deliverables, or, worse, a project that goes bust.
The high attrition rate, particularly in India, finds its roots in the phenomenal growth of outsourcing and offshoring. A recently completed TPI study, "India: An Attractive BPO Destination Marred by Alarming Attrition," by Dinesh Goel and Prabhash Thakur, pegs the growth of BPO attrition during the past three years at approximately 50 percent per year.
What's fueling this attrition is that, despite all you may have heard about how many computer science majors graduate from Indian universities annually, there is a finite talent pool -- and those graduates know it.
The study reports that "the rate of attrition seems to be increasing," and it questions whether the offshore BPO industry can sustain growth and satisfy clients over the long term given this trend. The study cites inconsistent delivery of service levels, loss of client-specific knowledge, and additional investment in retraining service provider staff as consequences of these high attrition rates.
Obviously, you can't just ignore the problem and assume that it's up to the service providers to fix it. There are steps you should take, as an offshoring client, to help mitigate the fallout of attrition. Schmidt recommends a carrot-and-stick approach.
A company must insist on an SLA that quantifies the level of attrition they are willing to tolerate. There must also be clauses within the SLA stating that when turnover reaches a certain threshold it is the service provider's responsibility to retrain and re-educate workers.
On the carrot side, Schmidt says the client should provide ample training and career movement. It should also consider including engaging and challenging work in the mix. And, allowing individuals to rotate through opportunities to work in the United States is certainly a big motivator for keeping them on a particular project -- not to mention reward and recognition programs with financial incentives.
That said, Schmidt doesn't see service provider fees going up long-term, mainly due to the competitive climate that persists in India.
I disagree with Schmidt. The huge demand and the finite supply will increase the cost of offshoring. Over time, this will level the playing field -- and will motivate companies to reconsider whether they should keep projects in-house or send them overseas.
Posted by Ephraim Schwartz on January 23, 2007 03:00 AM
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I agree with the author. At some point the pain is too much and it is better getting work done in the US. Right now, you pay more in the US but you get more. We've done several software development projects out of India and the attrition really hurts. We invest 6 months in training someone. When they leave, a new person has to come in and fill their shoes immediately. The new guy and everyone involved feels the pressure. It leads to lost time, lost knowledge and inconsistent results. Now imagine if a different team member was to leave every 3 months (that's the reality). And the per hour costs will go up: how much can the offshore provider bear on their own? Just look at elance or oDesk, the providers out of India are actually more expensive than those out of Europe.
Posted by: RNB at January 23, 2007 07:34 AMI would like to know what author means what he says ; Attrition on the rise?
Is the word in question used within context, synonyms of some other words?
In dictionary attrition means: a reduction or decrease in numbers, size, or strength: Our club has had a high rate of attrition because so many members have moved away.
In Thesaurus:
Definition: wearing
Synonyms: abrasion, attenuation, debilitation, depreciation, disintegration, erosion, grinding, rubbing, thinning, weakening, wear
Antonyms: building, buildup, fortification, reinforcement, strengthening
I assuming
Posted by: PC Utilisateur at January 23, 2007 10:03 PMhi there,
Sure, "there is a finite talent pool" of Computer Science/engineers students.
But the BPO industry doesn't quite need only Comp. Science graduates. A 3 month training(in specific domain related skills) to any university student who has had 5 years of training in any degree program in English should be sufficient to get someone contributing.
As long as the performance is properly monitored and the skills improved according to the feedback, then things should be OK.
India produces 2 million graduates who can (speak) English. The question is : 1) How many of them can be employed by these BPOs
2) How many of these can understand and speak English good enough on the phone to be intelligent
3) What does it take to RAPID train an intelligent person who can read/write English and speak English a bit to be useful for a BPO job.
Most of the BPO centers are in TIER 1 cities and Tier 2 cities. There is a huge number of graduates without jobs in the TIER 3 and TIER 4 cities. If the BPO jobs can move there, then the companies can make use of this talent pool. Salaries can also be low as well as less attrition. The only problem is infrastructure(bandwidth, telecom)
P.S : Disclaimer : I'm an indian from Bangalore in the US for more than 6 years.
BR,
~A
Why not use Poland at an outsource center? Many offshore software development failures are due to instability in the workforce in geographies such as India and China. The demand is much greater than the supply, with engineers moving from job to job in time periods measured in months. Competition for engineers and programmers with specialized expertise is fierce, and turnover is high, with some firms in India reporting turnover as high as 40 percent annually. In India they are providing "shadow engineers" --- engineers who are not billable but are tracking a project to replace the next engineer who leaves. In many case the "shadow engineers" are fully 20% of the engineering headcount on a project.
This situation almost guarantees project failure.
By contrast, Polish engineers value job stability and as a result provide a stable work force. For example, one group in Katowice Poland has achieved zero attrition amongst their 58 engineers in three years. This is common in Poland but yet unheard of in other countries.
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