Sensitivity. Nothing irks me as much as a violation of human rights.

Monday, March 20, 2006

India Rising - Part I

Image sourced from=abcnew.go.com

A few people asked me who is Tom Friedman. I wanted to answer that question and when this link was sent to me as junk forward, I thought I will write what is in my mind.

There seems to be a general gung-ho about India's economic prospects. Post Bangalore, every wannabe-metro is laying ring roads and building IT-corridors. The beaming NASSCOMM cheif announces that the BPO industry will require a million or two more employees in the next two years and how inadequate our colleges are to meet this demand. Magazines sport cover stories on health services becoming the third big thing. The finance minister is in a hurry to push 10% envelope and even Laloo wants to consider buying a laptop because some magazine called him the CEO of Railways.

And Thomas Friedman is the New York Times correspondent and Pulitzer-winning author who has penned a book titled The World is Flat, which to a great extent deals with India's rise to economic power club with specific focus on, what else, IT and BPO.

If some of you really believe that, I'm sorry to spoil your party. To me, India is neither rising nor shining. At least not yet. Our swanky IT corridors and buzzling BPO centers and a few whites choosing India for their slip-disc surgery or Naturopathy don't mean much when you look at the big picture.

The big picture firstly, is the tag called 'outsourcing'. I consider that only as a glorified housemaid's job. You don't want to spend your time or your wife's time on dishwashing, sweeping, swabbing and dusting. You hire a maid whom you can pay pittance and she will do the dirty job so that you can focus on more valuable things. Your maid is quite thankful to you because you are providing bread and butter to her family. But she rarely raises to your level of lifestyle. Or you don't foresee her lifestyle raising to any level in the near future. I often consider our 'outsourcing' industry to the level of a housemaid.

Let me explain. Having been in the so-called software services, ITES or BPO for some years, I know what goes on. We borrow processes, work-flow techniques and best practices from our clients who are mostly from US. We often hear from our clients about the lack of ATD among us. ATD is Attention-to-Details. Some of our clients even monitor the process from onsite and want to know day by day status so that they can foresee any risks and avoid or manage them. Some clients go to the extent of providing us even the file-names of the modules we are supposed to work on.

And we do the dirty work here. Thomas Friedman, in his book explains this clearly. He thought he was addressing the American public's concern about the hoards of jobs going to India and China. He assures them confidently. 'Don't worry folks. The types of jobs going to India are only low-end administrative and software services jobs. This is a good opportunity so that you (the Americans) can focus on more value-added skill sets'.

I fully subscribe to what Friedman says about Americans going up the value ladder. Because what predominantly happens in India is these low-end BPO and software services jobs only. There are, however, instances of research centres being set up where some mission-critical and high-end jobs take place. But they are far and few. There's this article in Outlook on SAP setting up a research centre in Bangalore. Number? 130 employees. I don't know what 'research' happens over there, so I can't comment about it. But what happens in the famed Microsoft development centre? They develop a few DLLs (device drivers) for the forthcoming Windows system and they are jubilent. Probably Microsoft will be able to reap the returns of their investment by selling Windows to a few state governments in India. Get the certification exams developed by Indian vendors and whatever the money you spent is recovered quickly because there are thousands in India seeking these certifications.

We do not develop organisational processes, methodologies, or best practices. India still doesn't have a single world-class software emerging from its shores. The key, to me, does not lie in our fat Forex reserves. It lies in our knowledge repository. We haven't begun building it yet. We don't have knowledge workers. We only boast of skill sets.

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree with nondescriptindian on this. In fct you seem to contradict your own reasoning in your essay. There has been a very tangible and visible change in lifestyle due to the BPO/ITES invasion. When you and I started working we got paid a pittance in the name of a salary. The kids today earn 5-digit incomes from day one, travel the world and in general grow faster than we ever hoped to.

I am quite proud of my generation for what we have acheived. We sold our "talents" to the world. But on the flip side we were in such a goddamn hurry that we forgot to build stronger foundations. So the ones on the highway kept racing ahead without leaving behind enough information for the laggards to build on. Hence the lack of ATD. We just didnt develop such stuff. And that is OUR fault or shortcoming.

Hopefully the next generation will plug these shortcomings.

But this is not sufficient reason to put down what has been achieved.

You father never dreamt of a Maruti but you can today buy a Porsche from a showroom. If that is not change in lifestyle nothing is.

21 March 2006 at 05:49

 
Blogger R Girls said...

I agree with the other two commentators. When you see internally every country and their employment strategies its all one and the same like India. Its we Indians degrading ourselves internally and not the rest of the world. Whether is maids job or a layman work its paying back enormously and this is what we choose and not forced. If every individual instead of getting 'OUTSOURCED' can do something of their own, who is stopping them. As nondescriptindian said we have no book to sell, no magazine to cover the front page but a life to live with comforts. I go by what pays that.

21 March 2006 at 10:09

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

This is probably one of the best articles written. You are very right in your understanding. No harm in taking a "simplistic" and "detached" view point especially if it gives you 'spot on' clarity! Outsourcing may have given everyone fancy salaries (by Indian standards) and posh lifestyles but that does not take away the fact that it is low end work and its given to us because we are a huge population, we will work 28 hours a day, say 'yes' to everything we are asked to do, we speak English, we have a pretty decent education system and last but not the least, we are inexpensive. Lets not forget the reasons behind which we so proudly claim to be "Rising"

26 March 2006 at 11:42

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sridhar i heard this point of view from Reena herelf a long long time ago ...............whats happening here ?

Not got over her dumping you as yet

29 March 2006 at 08:30

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The write up was good and fresh , but your view is quite closed. There is no openness in your vision. Yes you are right in saying that the low-end jobs are coming to India but we are growing substantially. We cannot be taken for granted or neglected. Though we are not very important part of the world but yes we are reaching there. We have not done much in research lately but yes once we get the money rolling we might come up with some discoveries. The point what I am trying to make here is that we are not there what you want India to be at but yes, we can reach there slowly and steadily as we always do.

30 March 2006 at 12:52

 

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