Two-fifths of development now outsourced

And look beyond India for exactly where it could be done...

By Tony Hallett, 14 November 2003 16:35

NEWS Slashed IT budgets have led increasing numbers of user organisations to outsource and sometimes also offshore new development work, with now over two fifths farming out to a range of countries headed by India.

According to the upcoming Meta Group 2004 Worldwide IT Benchmark Report, 41 per cent are now going down the outsourcing route, using consultants, contractors and others in addition to outsourcing companies.

"IT budget cutbacks have left IT managers little choice but to outsource if they are to get their development projects completed," said Meta executive VP Howard Rubin.

Recent stories have shown companies increasingly outsourcing for reasons of quality as well as cost, though the move remains a political hot potato.

Although India leads the way as chief recipient of this work, the rising stars, says Meta, are Russia, the Philippines, Ireland, Israel and China.

The analyst house has also calculated the areas where staff turnover this year has been highest and lowest - low levels typically denote an economy where IT jobs are harder to come by, staff holding on longer in positions because there are fewer opportunities to move on. Bottom of the churn list was Canada. Top, signalling a strong sector, was India.

Overall, worldwide turnover fell in 2003 to 8.2 per cent from 11.7 per cent in 2002.

Comments

There are 2 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Dharmesh Mistry

    This is no surprise.

    The tech market is following the same pattern as the manufacturing industry, and this is a strong clue about the future !

    The industrial revolution started in the UK. UK had the factories, workers, and products. Soon factories moved to cheaper locations with it the work within the factories.

    Some stuck with this model. Others that needed to be closer to production sought ways of competing. Hence came innovations in factories that required much fewer people. So some factories remained.

    What largely remains is product innovation and engineering expertise: to design smarter factories.

    In IT the development factories have been moving for some time.

  2. 2. anonymous

    Try re-writing the article from a different perspective. 60% are not outsourced! How about some positive success stories!

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