Virus Upends Outsourcing as Firms 'Reshore', Embrace AI

Restrictions on normal activity in these countries and others have created a logistical nightmare for the managers of call centres.

Advertisement
By Agence France-Presse | Updated: 21 April 2020 11:22 IST
Highlights
  • Many workers live in crowded housing with poor-quality broadband
  • Some firms have resorted to having staff live at their place of work
  • Work from home is difficult because of rules governing sensitive material

Restrictions on normal activity have created a logistical nightmare for the managers of call centres

Coronavirus is permanently shaking up the global outsourcing industry as lockdowns from Bangalore to Manila prompt firms to "reshore" jobs and, with AI, to move further away from needing humans at all.

Restrictions on normal activity in these countries and others have created a logistical nightmare for the managers of call centres and other back-office operations for foreign corporations.

Having their staff work from home is difficult because of rules governing the handling of sensitive material such as financial transactions for bank customers from Scotland to San Francisco.

Advertisement

Also, many workers in places like India and the Philippines live in crowded housing with poor-quality broadband, while some firms do not have enough equipment like laptops to provide to employees.

Advertisement

"The outsourcing industry doesn't lend itself to working from home," consultant Vivek Sood, author of "Outsourcing 3.0", told AFP.

"We are talking about companies which used to ask employees to leave even their pens and pencils outside the office because of security concerns."

Advertisement

'Temporary stay arrangements'
Desperate to stay operational, some firms have resorted to having staff live at their place of work.

Vodafone India, for example, says it has "organised temporary stay arrangements at our data centre locations, (and) made food and groceries available at critical locations".

Advertisement

Similar practices by others have sparked the ire of trade unions.

Mylene Cabalona, president of the Business Process Outsourcing Industry Employees' Network (BIEN), told AFP the union had received reports of some workers "effectively quarantined and locked down in their offices".

The Financial Times in early April published photos that it said appeared to show workers sleeping on the floor of a call centre in the Philippines, living in what they described as "subhuman" conditions.

Don't call
Anthony Esguerra, who works at a Manila firm handling data for a Chinese online gaming company, admitted that 80 percent of its operations were disrupted.

"The workflow of processing players' requests really slowed down, since our internet access was limited compared to when we were working at the office," he told AFP.

Companies like telecom firm Spark New Zealand and Taiwanese computer maker Acer, which uses a Philippine facility to serve Australian and Kiwi customers, have simply told people not to call.

Australia's Telstra and Optus and Britain's Virgin Media -- all of which have offshore units in India and the Philippines -- have announced plans to recruit hundreds of staff back home.

Telstra, which heavily relies on its Philippine facility for customer service, initially said it would hire 1,000 temporary workers, but later raised that figure to 3,500.

Optus sought to fill 500 vacancies, saying that while the company had previously believed "its diversity of locations would make us resilient to any disruptions", this was no longer the case.

OK computer
But the bigger lasting change from the pandemic will likely involve the wider use of artificial intelligence to handle tasks currently performed by human beings, experts said.

"AI doesn't go on strike, it can work 24/7 and throws up fewer complications," said Michael Czinkota, who teaches international business at Washington's Georgetown University.

Telstra, for instance, which was already planning to slash customer service calls by two-thirds by 2022, now intends to accelerate its use of AI.

"(We) will be using this as an opportunity to further digitise and automate our business," CEO Andy Penn told The Sydney Morning Herald this month.

Trailblazer
"COVID-19 (has) achieved in six to eight weeks what the evangelists of automation have not managed... for more than five years," Ilan Oshri from the University of Auckland's Graduate School of Management told AFP.

But the "onshoring" of jobs and the increased use of AI will have a big impact on countries that for years have benefitted from taking on the back-office operations of multinationals.

India, in particular, was a trailblazer. As of 2017, the industry employed nearly four million Indians and raked in revenues of more than $150 billion (roughly Rs. 11.5 lakh crores), according to trade body NASSCOM.

In the Philippines, the industry started from scratch in the early 1990s but by 2019 its revenues were equal to 7.3 percent of the country's gross domestic product, employing 1.3 million people.

"We will have to rethink the whole outsourcing model," said consultant Sood.

"The assumption that you can offshore everything to Bangalore and Manila and relax has gone out of the window."

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Amazon Great Indian Festival 2025 Sale Will Begin on This Date
  2. Top OTT Releases of the Week (Sept 1 - Sept 7): Know What to Watch
  3. Flipkart Big Billion Days Sale Date Revealed, Will Compete With Amazon Sale
  4. Vivo X300 Pro Might Not Arrive With Faster Charging Support
  5. Samsung Galaxy S25 FE Launched With Exynos 2400 SoC: See Price
  6. Samsung Launches Galaxy Tab S11 Series With Galaxy AI, These Features
  7. Oppo Reno 14 FS 5G Launches in Select Global Markets With These Features
  8. WhatsApp Could Implement iOS 26's Liquid Glass Across its iPhone App
  9. Huawei Mate XTs Triple Folding Smartphone With Kirin 9020 Chipset Launched
  10. OpenAI Said to Launch Its First AI Chip in 2026 With Broadcom
  1. Hollow Knight: Silksong's Massive Launch Crashes Steam, PlayStation, Xbox and Nintendo Storefronts
  2. Amazon Great Indian Festival 2025: Deals on Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra, iPhone 15, OnePlus 13s Teased Ahead of Sale
  3. Adobe Premiere App for iOS Introduced With Desktop-Like Controls, Generative AI Tools
  4. Motorola G06 to Reportedly Debut With MediaTek Helio G81 Extreme SoC; Check Expected Price, Features
  5. Samsung Galaxy S26 Series Leaked Dummy Images Hint at iPhone-Inspired Design
  6. OpenAI Said to Launch Its First AI Chip in 2026 With Broadcom
  7. Japan’s Financial Services Agency Mulls Crypto Regulation Under FIEA
  8. WhatsApp for iPhone Testing Implementation of Apple’s iOS 26 Liquid Glass in Beta App
  9. iPhone 17 Series Predicted to Outsell iPhone 16 Models With RAM Upgrades, Improved Cameras, and More
  10. ISRO Tests Parachutes for Gaganyaan Crew Module in Key Rocket-Sled Trial
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.