Business Process
Outsourcing (BPO) is a term that describes the process of delegating
non-core functions to third parties in order to cut down on costs.
Most
organisations are familiar with the idea of outsourcing cleaning and
security services to third parties in order to reduce the Human
Resources administrative overheads of managing this cadre of employees.
Perhaps
you are a bank, a hospital or a supermarket and since your core
business is not offering cleaning or security services, you are better
off if you offloaded these services to third parties who are more
focused and competent in these areas.
It
is a win-win situation as managers are spared the administrative
overheads of thinking and managing non-core functions while having more
quality time to focus on what banks, hospitals or supermarkets are
mandated to do.
With the Internet as
the medium, this concept radically extends the nature and the geographic
reach of what can be outsourced, when it can be outsourced and to whom.
A
classic example is a US-Bank, based in New York with local Americans as
the majority customers. The bank realises that it is having a large
work-force of clerical staff whose main role is to receive and service
calls from customers who have issues with their bank statements.
INTERNET TECHNOLOGY
Through
Internet technology, these calls can be re-routed to Bangalore, India
where a large work-force of Indian clerical staff receive the calls,
access the American banking system and through the internet and
effectively answer the queries raised by the American customer.
The
American Bank is happy because, it is 50 per cent cheaper to maintain
an Indian clerk in Bangalore than it is to maintain an American clerk in
New York. The Indian clerk is happy because his income in dollars is
several times bigger than his peers in Bangalore. The American customer
is happy since he gets his queries answered any time he calls – day or
night – by happy clerical staff.
This
is a basic Call-centre BPO Operation - but it serves to show why and
how India is making billions of dollars every year as European and
American Corporates move their non-core business functions off-shore.
In
2005, Kenya began its journey to eat into this global BPO market that
is dominated by the Indians. The argument then was that Kenyans with
their “neutral” English accents would do better than their Indian
counterparts in this market. But eight years down the road, there seems
to be little evidence that the millions of jobs envisioned have
materialised.
Various reasons have
been advanced but the main one must include the lack of legislation that
would provide assurance to foreign companies that their data will be
protected and not abused when processed through Kenyan BPO companies.
The
second reason is that our BPO industry has not been reasonably tried
and tested – particularly when it comes to big contracts that would
require thousands of agents to execute. Government must therefore offer
some of its non-core functions to BPO operators to use as stepping
stones to the International BPO markets.
The
final reason could be that we are trying to play catch-up with India –
which has been in this business for over 20 years. Perhaps we should
change tact and simply create our own BPO niche that is unique to our
competencies. Let us think about spinning new BPO opportunities around
the tourism, agriculture or education sectors.
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