Further offshoring for IT inevitable: NIIT

Australian enterprises will increasingly have to engage offshore technology providers to offset declining population growth, according to Arvind Thakur, the CEO of Indian offshoring specialist NIIT Technologies.

"Australia is challenged in terms of its population," Thakur told ZDNet Australia, although he said the country had a good track record for high-level project management and design skills.

However, a shift to more coding and management tasks being sent overseas was inevitable, he suggested. "Work now happens where it is good quality and where it is more cost-effective."

NIIT employs over 4,000 people worldwide, with the vast majority at its headquarters in New Delhi. The Australian operation, headed up by John Price, has around 70 employees.

Price said that the company was keen to encourage local IT service providers to partner with it in delivering large-scale projects, but many remained resistant.

"Not many Australian firms have recognised how they could grow their business through this path," he said.

Those comments follow recent remarks by Satyam's ANZ country manager, Deepak Nangia, that CIOs remain nervous about adopting offshoring, despite perceived benefits.

Thakur said that some market verticals, such as finance, were already comfortable with the notion of planning and measuring outputs based on service targets rather than against specific individuals, but others were still uncomfortable with the notion.

"One of our biggest challenges working with global customers is changing their mindset from individual consumers of skilled people to an output created by people and processes."

Thakur also confirmed that NIIT is working to enhance its own development capabilities in China, although he rejected suggestions that China could ultimately outpace India as a source of offshoring services for first-world countries.

"China is severely handicapped by the fact that it's not in the global marketplace, and there's a significant handicap in terms of language," he said, predicting that its main impact would be in combined hardware and software solutions that could also exploit its well-developed manufacturing base. "China is a source of good talent but they lack the ability to work together as teams."

Advertisement

Talkback 3 comments

    So says Indian outsourcing companies Anonymous -- 30/08/06 (in reply to #120141822)

    Right, so we should believe what an indian outsourcing company says about the future of outsourcing? pft.

    An Indian's Parochial View of China Anonymous -- 31/08/06

    Chinese don't work in teams? How parochial can one get?

    China is not in the global market? Is one blind to the reality that almost anything made today is made in China?

    The Government Don't Get IT John Richardson -- 04/11/06

    Why is the government not trying to do anything to foster the local IT industry when this is the way the world is heading?
    University enrolments in IT are down 40% on just a few years ago. Australia’s trade deficit for IT was $19 billion last year and is climbing at an alarming rate as IT becomes more and more of a part of every day life and business.
    I find it incredible that we are paying $12.99 per kg for bananas to protect the local banana industry; in the meantime the local IT industry is left to struggle. Does the government think that the IT industry is less important than bananas for the future of this country?
    I get the impression that the politicians just don’t understand IT and the way the world is heading. Perhaps it is a generational thing, maybe they should take more of a look at the way in which their children now socialise, find information, spend their money and enjoy their spare time. The information economy is the new economy! Technology is no longer an expense for businesses, it is core business. And we as Australians are falling behind. The next Microsoft or Google is unlikely to come out of Australia when you don’t foster or value IT skills within your own country. These companies are two of the most successful in the world today. Both were founded by computer programmers, the exact highly skilled role we are now off-shoring in mass. How is this a plan for the future?
    Why doesn't the government want Australia to have an IT sector? Do they not want Australia to be an innovative, successful country in the future?

Add your opinion

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Suzanne Tindal Love me, tender
    Considering how expensive and drawn-out tender processes can be to solve problems that might be very immediate, it's little wonder that the Victorian Police IT department tried to work the tender exemptions system.
  • Array 2009 funding drought rolls on
    For Australian start-ups looking for venture capital, 2009 was a very bad year. 2010 may be no better.
  • Array Can not-so-smart meters help the NBN?
    It was interesting to witness Conroy's recent enthusiasm to spruik the NBN's role in supporting the Smart Grid, Smart City initiative. What a pity that Conroy hadn't yet seen the damning report from the Victorian auditor-general about that state's smart-meter roll-out.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured