Thursday, February 26, 2009

The New US President and the reaction of the World

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Source: Guardian.co. UK

Written by Peter Walker

In a night of near-unanimous praise and congratulation for Barack Obama on his US election victory it was, unexpectedly, the current occupant of the White House who expressed himself in the simplest, most memorable terms.

"What an awesome night for you, your family and your supporters," George Bush said. "You are about to go on one of the great journeys of life. Congratulations and go enjoy yourself."

Elsewhere, the vast majority of world leaders welcomed Obama's win as a landmark moment for both the US and the wider world, while warning of the challenges the new president will face once in office.

A couple were less enthusiastic – Iraq's foreign minister, Hoshyar Zebari, noted that the new president "will not have the same enthusiasm and momentum for this situation (in Iraq)" as did Bush – while Sudan was distinctly underwhelmed.

"When it comes to foreign policy there is no difference between the Republicans and the Democrats," said Ali Al-Sadig, a spokesman for the country's foreign ministry.

Otherwise, world leaders were queuing up to offer their support. Gordon Brown praised Obama's "inspirational campaign".

José Manuel Barroso, the president of the European commission, congratulated Obama, saying it was "time for a renewed commitment between Europe and the United States of America".

Angela Merkel, Germany's chancellor, echoed this idea, saying she was "convinced that Europe and the United States will work closely and in a spirit of mutual trust together to confront new dangers and risks and will seize the opportunities presented by our global world".

Nicolas Sarkozy, France's president, was more effusive still, despite his ostensible ideological differences as a conservative.

"With the world in turmoil and doubt, the American people, faithful to the values that have always defined America's identity, have expressed with force their faith in progress and the future," he said.

Asia's two emerging world powers offered their congratulations, although China was typically muted. The country's president, Hu Jintao, said he hoped to "continuously strengthen dialogue and exchanges between our two countries". India's prime minister, Manmohan Singh, was more effusive, saying Obama's "extraordinary journey to the White House will inspire people not only in your country but also around the world".

In the Middle East, both sides appeared more focused on arguing for continued support. Israel "expects close strategic cooperation with the new administration", said Tzipi Livni, leader of the country's governing Kadima party. An aide to the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, meanwhile said he hoped the "two-state vision will be transferred from a vision to a realistic track immediately".

Elsewhere in the region, Iranian politicians were as much celebrating the end of Bush's presidency as welcoming his successor.

"Obama's victory is ... evidence that Bush's policies have failed," one prominent MP, Gholam Ali Haddad-Adel, said. "Americans have no option but to change their policies to save themselves from the quagmire Bush has created for them."

Afghanistan and Pakistan, who will remain key strategic allies for Obama, were more fulsome. The election "marks a new chapter in the remarkable history of the United States", Pakistan's prime minister, Yousaf Raza Gilani said. The Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, said meanwhile that he wanted to "applaud the American people for their great decision".

Away from the presidential palaces, there was some more personal jubilation. Obama's relatives in Kenya erupted in cheers and singing in the western village of Kogelo, where the president-elect's late father was born, as victory was confirmed.

There was similar celebration in Obama, a small coastal town in southern Japan which has spent the past few weeks cheering on its namesake and acquiring a small measure of global fame in the process.

"I really think this is going to change the world," said Akihiko Mukohama, the signer of a band performing at a party held the mark the election, wearing an "I Love Obama" T-shirt.








New Foreign Policy of Obama and Kashmir

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Source: Time World
Written by
Bobby Ghosh / Washington
Indian officials may be celebrating what they believe to be their thwarting of Richard Holbrooke, the new U.S. Special Envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, but they may want to hold off on the champagne. Despite the fact that India's behind-the-scenes lobbying may have helped ensure that the country was left out of Holbrooke's official mandate, the Obama Administration is unlikely to ease up efforts to pressure India to come to terms with Pakistan over their long, bitter dispute over Kashmir.

New Delhi views its success in avoiding becoming part of Holbrooke's diplomatic portfolio as proof of India's growing clout in Washington. Appearing on Al Jazeera, India's foreign minister, Pranab Mukherjee, evaded questions about the lobbying effort, saying only that relations between New Delhi and Washington had "increased substantially." But an official in his ministry told TIME that New Delhi is "feeling vindicated, because finally the U.S. has given us the respect we deserve."

The official, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the subject, said the campaign to keep Holbrooke out was "not personal...we just objected to being lumped into a category with two of the world's most dangerous countries." Besides, he added, "there was no way we were going to allow Holbrooke, or anybody else, become a broker on Kashmir."

The Indians were alarmed when, during the Presidential campaign, Obama repeatedly said that ending Indo-Pakistani differences over Kashmir was one of the keys to calming tensions in South Asia and winning the war on terror. New Delhi views Kashmir as a bilateral issue, and has long resisted what it regards as third-party interference. In recent years, India has sought to isolate the Kashmir issue even further, by seeking to keep it out of other negotiations (over trade and travel, for instance) with Pakistan. "The Indians are allergic to any indication of outside mediation," says Bruce Riedel, a South Asia expert at the Brookings Institution who served as an Obama campaign foreign policy adviser.

Pakistan, on the other hand, is keen to get Holbrooke involved in the Kashmir dispute, which it has traditionally held is central to its differences with India . President Asif Zardari, in an Op-Ed for the Washington Post, wrote that he hoped the Special Envoy would "work with India and Pakistan...to bring a just and reasonable resolution to [the Kashmir issue]."

Islamabad has long argued that the disputed territory inflames Pakistani sentiment and feeds terrorist groups. More recently, Pakistan has played the terrorism card in other disputes with India. Zardari's Op-Ed noted that the two countries are currently arguing about water from rivers that flow through both countries; Pakistan says it is denied a rightful share of the water by Indian dams. Failure to resolve the water dispute, Zardari warned, "could fuel the fires of discontent that lead to extremism and terrorism." (See pictures of Pakistan's vulnerable northwest passage.)

For the moment, the Obama Administration is being careful to publicly distance the Special Envoy from the region's most intractable problem. State Department spokesman Robert Wood told reporters on Tuesday that "it's not in [Holbrooke's] mandate...to deal with the subject of Kashmir." And the White House has also been careful to deny that India's lobbying played any role in the formation of Holbrooke's diplomatic charge; not only has it insisted that it held no meetings with foreign governments or their representatives with respect to the assignment, but it has also claimed that Obama never actually intended the South-Asian portfolio to include India in the first place.

None of that is to say, however, that the Administration is going to buy India's line that the U.S. should butt out of Kashmir. The President himself plainly believes there's a role for the U.S. to play. In an interview with TIME's Joe Klein in October, Obama said that "working with Pakistan and India to try to resolve the Kashmir crisis in a serious way" would be a critical task. The key, he said, was to "make the argument to the Indians, 'You guys are on the brink of being an economic superpower, why do you want to keep on messing with this?'" Obama added that he would have to "make the argument to the Pakistanis, 'Look at India and what they are doing, why do you want to keep on being bogged down with this, particularly at a time where the biggest threat now is coming from the Afghan border?'"

So it's probably safe to say that after the euphoria of their lobbying victory has died down, Indian officials will probably feel Holbrooke's breath on their neck. Some Indian analysts are already predicting this. C. Raja Mohan writes in the Indian Express that "reworking the India-Pakistan relationship will be an inevitable and important component" of Holbrooke's plans. "Whether India likes it or not, Washington will devote substantive diplomatic energies towards the subcontinent, and New Delhi will be drawn into this dynamic."








Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Staffing for Offshoring

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Source: Zimbio
Globals provides scratch-to-end application development and support services under its success-proven Offshore IT Staffing methodology. Globals is geared-up to take complete ownership of its business partners IT needs through the complete lifecycle - including the requirements analysis activities.


With our state-of-the art infrastructure and competent team of professional developers in PHP, .NET, Ruby, C++, etc, we ensure the delivery of solutions that work for our clients. Our globally acclaimed process allows you to quickly and effortlessly transition and monitor your IT staff from a offshore location thus allowing you to save around 70% on the IT man power costs.

In case if you already have a plan ready with you and wish to outsource only certain phases of the project then we have a right solution for you. Hire dedicated programmers, analysts and quality assurance professionals on a full time appointment basis. This arrangement is best when you are looking to either augment your existing team, have a large project that requires dedicated staff, or if you have a steady stream of maintenance and enhancements requirements for your software product. This approach to contract developers would drastically save your operation, maintenance and recruitment costs and this making it hassle free. Globals offers extremely low monthly charges for contracting our developers and with auxiliary developers at any time so that your project never gets interrupted.

All our PHP / .Net / C++ / Ruby / Java / Perl programmers have extensive industry experience and are well-versed in many aspects of software development in their expertise. They are good communicators that have showed consistency in understanding client requirements and applying their technical, analytical and creative skills to come up with business-oriented solutions not just technological solutions.

When it comes to objective planning, Globals programmers have always displayed excellent entrepreneurial skills and along with their real hands-on programming experience they’ve impacted many clients’ business bottom-line.

Benefits:
  • High quality IT staff with highly competitive costs
  • Utilize your in-house staff on more productive and profitable jobs
  • Ensuring your contracted developers meet your set deadlines and enhancing the resources if needed with our round the clock Arbitrary Programmers
  • Reduce your time on new product launches or speed up your pilot projects
  • Focus on your core competencies and increase your market share
  • Save on your operation and high labour costs, approx. savings up to 70%
  • Save recruitment costs and time, and not to worry about Attrition
  • Hassle free and easy solution to overcome complicated labour laws
  • Highly proficient and professional Project Managers who will report to your team on your assignments and submit daily reports
  • Contract a Developer within 24 hours notice


How will working with Globals be cheaper?

While it’s true that a talented programmer in the US will be in the higher range, the actual cost to company for every employee is substantially more. In addition to the salary, every company needs to make other statutory payments for each employee. In addition, for each role, there will be other infrastructure costs such as hardware, software, utility and space costs that get added as overheads.

In the case of our team of programmers, you will not require all services on a continuous basis. In a typical project, the analysis, architecture and design takes up approximately 15% of the time in terms of effort and costs approximately 20% of the total cost, project management takes up approximately 20% of effort and 28% of cost, and development and testing takes the remaining 65% effort and 52% of the cost.

On the whole, a 12 man month project that would take approximately a year for your programmer in the Europe or US (costing you about US$100,000) can be completed in about 6 months by a team in India, and at an approximate total cost less than US$25,000. Contact us now on sales@globalsinc.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it






Outsourcing of Human Resource

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Source: The Hindu

Written by S. VARADHARAJAN

Outsourcing of human resource (HR) processes is happening in a big way in India and many medium and large sized organisations use the services of external consultants to take care of their HR functions.

The recruitment process outsourcing (RPO) in the organised sector is growing at 40 per cent and many organisations are outsourcing their recruitment process right from the entry level jobs.

According to Asim Handa, Country Head of Futurestep, an outsourced recruiting subsidiary of Korn/Ferry International (a premier global provider of talent management solutions), the present value of the RPO industry in India was estimated at $2.5 billion and companies such as Futurestep provide customised solutions to suit clients’ requirements across all sectors.

‘Strategic RPO’

Recently Futurestep had introduced its new comprehensive talent acquisition solution ‘Strategic RPO’ aimed specifically at the business performance needs of enterprise organisations. He said it focussed on identifying and delivering strategic impact at the business level.

According to Mr. Handa, there was a huge opportunity for Futurestep and the organisation was growing at 100 per cent year-on-year in the last three years. RPO was a major component of the worldwide BPO market.

One of the major advantages to organisations, which outsource their recruitment process, is that it helped to save as much as 40 per cent of their recruitment costs. Also, outsourcing enables the human resource professionals of organisations to focus on the core and other HR and strategic issues.

In India Futurestep has a lot of clients including earthmoving equipment manufacturer Caterpillar.









Thursday, February 19, 2009

A policy agenda on Outsourcing

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Source: The Free Library
Key Points


* Although the number of U.S. service jobs lost to outsourcing is currently small relative to the total work force, the fear of a seemingly limitless loss of jobs to lower-wage countries has caused widespread anxiety.

* U.S. companies dominate global services outsourcing, and India is the top developing-country destination.

* National and state legislators have introduced a flurry of anti-outsourcing bills, but corporations are mounting a strong counter-attack.

"Don't worry; they'll get better jobs in the service sector." During the last three decades of the 20th century, this was the mantra of most government and business leaders when corporations transferred auto or apparel jobs to Mexico or China. That line doesn't work anymore, since U.S. companies have started shifting a wide range of service jobs as well--from high-skill computer programming to entry-level call center jobs--to India and other lower-wage nations. This breaching of the final frontier of American jobs has caused understandable anxiety and has become a hot-button issue Noun 1. hot-button issue - an issue that elicits strong emotional reactions
gut issue

issue - an important question that is in dispute and must be settled; "the issue could be settled by requiring public education for everyone"; "politicians never discuss
in the presidential election campaign.






Outsourcing and its Economics

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Source: Foreign Policy in Focus

Written by
Thomas Palley

Abstract

Outsourcing is a central element of economic globalization, representing a new form of competition. Responding to outsourcing calls for policies that enhance national competitiveness and establish rules ensuring acceptable forms of competition. Viewing outsourcing through the lens of competition connects with early 20 th century American institutional economics. The policy challenge is to construct institutions that ensure stable, robust flows of demand and income, thereby addressing the Keynesian problem while preserving incentives for economic action. This was the approach embedded in the New Deal, which successfully addressed the problems of the Depression era. Global outsourcing poses the challenge anew and calls for creative institutional arrangements to shape the nature of competition.

“A wild horse can do a lot of damage, but a bridled horse can be an invaluable asset.” Posted by Proud UAW Member in response to “Politics of Globalization” at www.thomaspalley.com, December 27, 2005.

I. Understanding outsourcing

Outsourcing is a central element of globalization, and policymakers need to understand its economic basis if they are to develop effective policy responses. The practice of outsourcing should be understood as a new form of competition, and responding to it calls for the development of policies that enhance national competitiveness and establish new rules governing the nature of global competition.

Viewing outsourcing through the lens of competition connects with early 20 th century American institutional economics. The policy challenge is to construct institutions that ensure stable flows of demand and income, thereby addressing the Keynesian problem while preserving incentives for economic action. This was the approach that was embedded in the New Deal, which successfully addressed the problems of the Depression era. Global outsourcing poses our current economic challenge and its solution requires a new set of institutions. The task is compounded by problems associated with a lack of global regulatory institutions and changes in the balance of political power that make it difficult to enact needed reforms.

Global outsourcing is enormously facilitated by technological innovations associated with computing, electronic communication, and the Internet. However, it is important to recognize that the debate surrounding outsourcing is not about the benefits of technology. It is a debate about the nature of competition and what constitute appropriate rules for governing competition within and between countries. Failure to recognize this can distract and confuse the issue.

II. The economics of outsourcing

Globalization has dramatically changed the structure of international competition. In many regards the process of change can be identified as beginning in the 1950s and 1960s with the emergence of multinational corporation (MNC) production. Initially, this output was primarily for local markets, as evidenced by the activities of such companies as Ford Europe and General Motors Europe, which manufactured for the European rather than the U.S. market. However, in the 1980s and 1990s the pattern changed significantly, when MNC production became increasingly targeted for export back to the United States . This change is exemplified in Mexico and China , which have become MNC production platforms.

There are two important economic features about the MNC revolution. First, MNC manufacturing has provided an important arena for business to learn how to render state-of-the-art technology and production methods globally mobile. Second, MNC activities offered a first margin within which capital was able to put American labor in international competition, and this competition has had significant adverse impacts on manufacturing wages, employment, and union membership (Bronfenbrenner, 2000; Bronfenbrenner and Luce, 2004).

The MNC revolution has received considerable attention. However, while this was taking place, a parallel and equally important revolution was occurring in the retail sector. This retail shake-up was linked to a new sourcing model based on big-box discount stores. 1

Stage one of the retail revolution started 40 years ago with the emergence of large-volume discount stores like Wal-Mart, which was created in 1962. Initially, the business model was based on national sourcing, with the big-box stores buying from the cheapest national manufacturer. Such stores pitted producers against each other nationally, so that companies in New York were forced to compete with those in California . This new national rivalry provided lower prices, and it was largely beneficial because all suppliers were located in the United States and operated under broadly similar laws. However, even then there were negative effects, as the new competition encouraged manufacturing to move South to nonunion “right-to-work” states where organizing workers was more difficult and labor costs were lower.

Stage two of the retail revolution began in the 1980s, when the big-box discount stores started going global with their sourcing model. As a result, U.S. suppliers were not just in national rivalry, they were now in an international bidding contest. No longer was New York just competing with California ; U.S. producers were now measured against companies in Mexico , Indonesia , and China . The economic logic of this global sourcing model is simple. Scour the world for the cheapest supplier and lowest cost—the so-called “ China price”—and then require U.S. manufacturers and workers to match it if they wish to keep your business.

This new global sourcing retail model has had profound effects. The commercial success of the model means that once one retailer adopts it, others are compelled to also adopt it in order to remain competitive. Consequently, big-box discounting has spread to every corner of retailing, putting the entire consumer goods manufacturing sector in international competition. Additionally, the model pressures domestic companies to pursue offshore production (i.e., become multinational) in order to compete with foreign suppliers. These dynamics, though originating in the retail sector, have also eroded manufacturing jobs and wages. The model does indeed deliver low prices, but it does so at a high cost.

Outsourcing can be viewed as an application of the retail sector's global sourcing model to manufacturing. In effect, manufacturers are now also looking to source globally, and they too are asking their suppliers to meet the “ China price.” The spread of global sourcing is exemplified by auto component giants Visteon and Delphi . Initially spun off from their respective parent companies, Ford and General Motors, Visteon and Delphi engaged in national competition. In 2005, Ford and General Motors both announced that they were shifting to a global sourcing model and that their spin-offs would in future have to meet the China price if they wished to keep business. Given their higher union wages and benefits, both Visteon and Delphi have been shedding jobs and shifting production offshore, including to China . However, both have found it increasingly difficult to compete, and Delphi filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in October 2005.

It is now becoming clear that the global sourcing business model can also be applied to the services sector. Owing to improvements in electronic communication and the Internet, many services that were previously nontradable have become tradable. These include basic computer systems maintenance and software programming, tax preparation and accounting, architectural planning, and telephone call centers. Even retail sales is potentially tradable, as indicated by the success of the Amazon.com business model. This means that services will be the next area where the global sourcing model will be applied, with corresponding effects on compensation and employment security.

III. Outsourcing and the maturation of globalization

The maturation of globalization can be viewed as combining the developments of the last several decades into a highly synergistic system. There are three facets to this mature system. The first element is the global sourcing model discussed above, which was initially developed in the retail sector and is now being applied everywhere. The second element is the mobility of capital, technology, and methods of production. This mobility combines MNC experience in foreign production platforms with policies that have dismantled trade barriers and promoted international economic integration. Whereas the initial globalization era was one of classical free trade involving the movement of goods across international boundaries, the new era also includes mobile capital and technology. Consequently, all countries have access to similar methods of production, so cost arbitrage (especially wage arbitrage) becomes a critical driver of the system. The third element of mature globalization is the addition of two billion workers to the global labor market, given the end of economic isolationism in India , China , and the former Soviet bloc countries. 2

Putting the pieces together, changed competition (the Wal-Mart business model) plus changed technological conditions and policy (globalization of production) plus two billion new workers (the end of economic isolationism) add up to downward wage and benefit pressures in U.S. labor markets and rising income inequality. The economic logic is simple. When two swimming pools are joined together, the contrasting water levels will equalize.

Free trade theorists (Stolper and Samuelson, 1941) have long acknowledged that when a rich capital-abundant country engages in free trade with a poor labor-abundant country, wages in the rich country fall. By combining global sourcing with globalization of production, the new system puts the Stolper—Samuelson effect into hyperdrive.

IV. How should policy respond? Rediscovering the economics of American institutionalists

If we view global outsourcing as an evolution in the structure of competition, we link with the thinking of early 20 th century American institutionalist economists. 3 The leading lights of institutionalism were John Commons , Thorsten Veblen, and Wesley Mitchell. The leading living proponent is John Kenneth Galbraith.

Institutionalists emphasized the importance of the nature of competition and the problem of destructive rivalry—what Commons (1909, 68-69) termed the “competitive menace.” This idea resonates with today's notion of the “race to the bottom.” What appears to maximize well-being from an individual perspective can be suboptimal once the competitive interplay of actions is taken into account.

Institutionalist thinking constructs the policy problem in terms of “regimes of competition,” with some regimes promoting societal welfare better than others. In the 1930s the New Deal embodied institutionalist thinking. In combination with the adoption of a Keynesian macroeconomic stabilization policy, the New Deal solved the crisis of the Depression era and made way for the prosperity that followed World War II. The innovations of the period included new labor laws establishing the right to organize, the minimum wage, the 40-hour work week, and the right to overtime pay. In the financial realm, creative reforms included the establishment of the Securities and Exchange Commission to oversee financial markets. Today's challenge is to come up with a similarly innovative set of arrangements that addresses globalization and outsourcing.

The New Deal incorporated a collection of bold policies that fashioned an acceptable regime of competition. Responding to global sourcing will also require an insightful array of policies. As with the New Deal, there is no silver bullet. With regard to rules governing worldwide competition, international labor standards are key to establishing a floor under the global labor market and ruling out retrograde competition. At the same time, they are good for economic efficiency and development (Palley, 2004, 2005). Concerning domestic issues, unions are key to ensuring that productivity gains are shared equitably and result in a distribution of income that generates full employment. This calls for labor law reform that gives real meaning to the legal right to organize.

There is also a need for new arrangements—both within the United States and between countries—that prevents tax competition. Such competition is generated by corporations shopping for tax abatements and lower rates as conditions of making investments. The result is either an unfair shift of the tax burden onto labor incomes or an underfunding of needed public investment and spending when corporate tax avoidance strips the public purse of revenue.

Another area requiring new institutional arrangements is exchange rates. Here, the need is to prevent countries from using undervalued exchange rates as a means of competing. Engaging in competitive devaluation is a form of beggar-thy-neighbor economics wherein countries rely on demand in foreign markets rather than building domestic markets. Undervalued exchange rates are an unfair subsidy that distorts the pattern of trade. They also risk causing global deflation because they promote increased supply of exports without increasing global demand.

With regard to national competitiveness, countries need to invest in education that raises worker productivity. There is also a need for job loss assistance and active labor market policies that help displaced workers cope with income losses and obtain training that prepares them for productive future employment. In the United States there is a special need to attend to the problem of health insurance, which is currently a job cost, since premiums are tied to employment. This crisis is exemplified by General Motors, where the cost of each car includes $1,500 of worker health insurance. Health insurance coverage needs to be detached from jobs, and this suggests a national health plan financed out of general tax revenues.

V. Conclusion: the politics of policy response

The emergence of global outsourcing enormously complicates policy issues, both intellectually and politically. The ability to outsource worldwide calls for new forms of international regulation because it undermines the effectiveness of many existing national arrangements. Yet, construction of an acceptable regime of international competition must be accomplished in a political environment lacking effective institutions of international economic governance and in which national governments are weakened and corporations strengthened by the enhanced mobility of capital.

Creating a political climate that can secure the needed policy responses calls for the development of popularly shared understandings of globalization. That is why economics is so politically important. Economists tell stories about what is going on in the economy. Today there is need for a different story than that spun by neoliberal economists.








Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Industry and Offshore Software Development

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Source: Articlesbase
Written by
Editor-123
Offshore software development services are considered as the market leader to get the best of offshore services available in the world. This growing technical market gives you all the latest technical benefits to expand your business to a height and increase your net profit. Offshore software development services give you ample opportunity to grow in the customized market of software and website development areas. Due to its benefits, software development India market is gaining a distinct position in the global arena. The Indian market has considered as an expert in providing software solutions and professional services company undertaking offshore programming, offshore software development and technical support help desk services for foreign companies with enhancing solution.

With effective and efficient solutions in the areas like content management, web application development for wireless and smart cards, outsource help desk support, consulting and global staffing, Indian offshoring software development companies have proved their real worth. These companies are equipped with the best team of professionals to give specialized experience in website development, web development, software development, application development, web programming, database site programming, and website programming to satisfy its clients placed all round the world.

If you have decided to hire the services of an offshore software development company, you can have sure of many advantages that will come in your way. First of all, you can get the best quality that will lure your heart away really effectively. Secondly, the cost effectiveness, offshoring the work can save thousands of dollars straight away giving you more room on concentrating on other aspects of software development activity. Third is the sharing of responsibility, the system of offshoring services can give you a chance to divide your work responsibility with another company may be located at the different corner of the world. It also brings more efficiency and competence in the work by generating positive results very soon. Also, offshoring services companies showcase great technical skills and capability to get the best deal out there.

Want to know more about Indian offshore software companies? Search online and get all the relevant services to get the real knowledge. You can see their work experience and see the testimonials to get the satisfaction. Further you can order your work and actually plan for its execution and wait for the result. Experience and just indulge into the Indian software development industry to have the best of technical service within a short period of time and increase your profit net.






Offshore Software Development and India

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Source: Articlesbase
Written by Kelly
Indian
Internet IT service companies (software and web developers) are considered a viable outsourcing option today. What they offer is a strategic initiative to cut costs as well as provision of access to intellectual capital, which may not be available in-house. Virtual web companies are a natural outgrowth of the omnipresence of the Internet. But is the company in concern just a web page or does it comprise all the qualities to become the perfect offshore software development company that follow established processes and possess a solid infrastructure?

Surveys and studies have proven that more than 90% of Fortune 500 companies outsource a certain part of their operations. In the face of such clear indicators, why would some organizations hesitate to outsource to these offshore software development companies? The answer could lie in the bad experiences with previous outsourcing attempts. There are many issues that need to be addressed before choosing an outsourcing partner. Moreover, once the developer or service provider is selected, it is not enough to just sit on one's heels and assume that the outsourced projects would just work fine. Understanding outsourcing relationships is primary to the success of a project.

According to studies conducted by major research groups, more than 50% of software projects fail today. Why is this so? What does it take to turn the tide and be successful? Why is this so? Are there any safety measures that can be taken to prevent this from happening? How can one make sure that a software project succeeds no matter what? Is there a method of controlling and handling risk effectively?

With all the research studies that show the advantages of outsourcing software development to Indian offshore software development companies, the only question that really needs to be asked is this - which company should I outsource to? You know that choosing the right partner can put you onto an expressway to growth and financial success. Based on this understanding, you could spend the next few months wading through reams of data, speaking to hundreds of well wishers to find that right partner or vendor etc..., or you could outsource your operations to RapidSoft Technologies, an offshore software development company with a track record of successful project implementations to clients in US, Canada, EU and Asia. Choose the latter and save time, energy and your reputation as well!

Offshore software development companies in India understand that technical competency is an absolute necessity but in today's business scenario - understanding the needs and desires of the customers is of even greater importance. Technical competence is pretty much available but understanding business and marketing concepts is not .

They are a mid sized but growing company and becoming the choice of starting from startups. And the main reason for it is not only Cost Effectiveness that every outsourcing company claims to be! Rather it's the quality of service and client satisfaction that sets them apart from the other offshore software development companies in India.








Offshore Software Development Company and the Tips to Choose

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Source: Articlesbase
Written by
Dane Phillip
Technology is a wide arena, like our outer space in the galaxy. IT outsourcing isn’t much different than any other kind of outsourcing. However, if there is danger that you will bite off more than you can chew, it’s about time to take into consideration. Anyone who has experience in outsourcing knows that there are advantages as well as disadvantages in offshore software development. some tips to cut down risks.

It’s not only about saving the bucks:

The most obvious benefit that tends to strengthen the demand of custom software development to an extensive extent is the cost cutting factor. Selecting the least expensive Offshore Software Development Company often backfires and ends up costing the client much more than initially thought. Offshore vendors are all facing cost pressures from wage inflation. Choosing the least expensive vendor just means you have chosen a company with very little leeway in its profit margins. This will affect everything adversely: hiring the right people, retaining the people who are working on your projects and providing the right resources for people to do the work on your development effort. Successful vendors may be better bets even if they're bit more expensive, given the realities in outsourcing and offshoring.

Hear their Story:

The Story of the provider speaks volumes about their professionalism, their business goals, their achievements, and their credibility. This will help you analyze how much you need to rely on them. How active and involved will they be and how much ownership they will take it helping you achieve your goals. If possible try hearing their story from other businesses who have worked with them. It will help you decide and understand how they practically function. Try to choose a provider you can have a long term relationship with. You will save time starting from scratch again.

Put Communication on high priority:

The basic reason is very simple: you know your business requirements best. Software services companies working in another part of the world can only develop a solution based on the input provided by you. But there will be loopholes unless the Communication is crystal clear. Fairly large projects demands for a dedicated project manager who is a single point of contact of the offshore team and acts as a virtual bridge between the business and the software developers. Agile methodologies are more realistic when it comes to making sure communication is facilitated properly and often with real code sent back for verification, reflection and fine-tuning.

Adhere to high standards:

Lookout for standards the provider adheres to, You need to understand that successful custom software development depends upon standards the provider follows in the process, documentation, coding in short the entire development cycle For example, The most dependable companies use the highest industry standards in testing each aspect of the products they create so that you receive a product that is ready to implement.

Check out their past experience:

The work done in past speaks a lot about the experience and expertise the provider has. It also talks about the domain they have been exposed to and the learnings they have picked up along the way which may help your goal. In theory, offshore software development companies should be able to perform custom software development for any type of business. There will be less of a learning curve, though, and greater chances for success, if the company has knowledge of your industry or a related industry.

Technology Expertise:

The most agile software development companies have an extensive network of specialists but they may be not adequate in terms of the technology expertise your project demands. So you will need to compare not only the domain expertise but also the technology expertise of a provider. Essentially, the provider needs to be competent and flexible, and see their role as an information technology partner who solves your software problems, supports your team, and manages your projects from beginning to end.

Study the Methodology the provider adapts:

We should remember that software development methodologies are all milestones in the continuing evolution of software engineering. This evolution is still continuing and there will be more variants in the future. And, depending upon the nature of the software development project, the choice needs to be different. A compatible Process Methodology accelerates the delivery of high quality custom software. An Agile Process Methodology follows a controlled, iterative development and prototyping process.








Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Offshore Software Outsourcing

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Source: Webraydian
Written by S
ohali
Offshore software development company is what Yantrambpo does, and has been doing for the past 4 years. We know for a fact, that offshore and outsourcing (Outsource) partnerships convert into tangible savings for our customers. As an outsourcing services provider, Yantrambpo can deliver important advantages to its customers. Not only do we offer some of the best IT specialists in the outsourcing industry; we are also committed to starting smooth, risk-free and well-managed engagements with our clients.

"No matter what your project entails - whether it's a custom application, a complex IT solution or a redesign of an existing network structure - Yantrambpo can create a development structure that will provide you with the value, timeline and the budget you need"

Yantrambpo Offshore software development India market has been providing an expertise solutions in areas including content management, web application development for wireless and smart cards, outsource help desk support with consulting and global staffing with it consultants. Indian website development company are also equipped with best team of professionals to give specialized experience in website development, web development, software development, application development, web programming, database site programming, and website programming. Talking about the possible advantages of increasing craze of offshore software development in India, one cannot ignore the role of the power on the hold of English language, labor effectiveness, cost effectiveness and assurance of best quality control. With an army of trained population of information technology professionals, it becomes really easier to provide better results with better efficiency and effectiveness. As a result, global corporations are queuing up for getting the best by paying less.

Outsourcing software development has emerged as a recent trend in business. There are various factors which needs to be considered while deciding the kinds of software to be hired. There are myriad advantages of offshore software development. Access to global expertise can be achieved through offshoring in a very cost effective manner. It can also provide with ways of achieving business goals in a very speedy and efficient way.






Major Decline in Indian Software Tech Sector??

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Source: India Daily

Written by Nathan Gulash

Indian outsourcing sectors face a down ward spiral of deflation as IT purchases in the US is expected to drop sharply. “On a full year 2009 basis, a sustained recession could lead to annual US IT spending growth of 2-3 per cent and global IT spending growth of 3-4 per cent. This is just a scenario as an acute financial crisis has hit not only the US but also countries in Europe and Asia,” said Andrew Bartels, VP & Principal Analyst, Forrester Research.

The report titled-- What The Financial Crisis Means To The Tech Market--notes that the Software and IT services vendors will anyways – with or without the said scenario – start to feel the pain. They will be hit hard in the next three quarters. Vendors in these categories will have on average 3 to 5 per cent growth instead of the 9 to 12 per cent growth they have seen earlier in 2008.

Can Indian outsourcing survive in absence of American inflow of cash in exchange of cheap labor? One good thing for the outsourcing industry is that Indian Rupees has crashed. That means $1 fetches much more Rupees. But the American Administration in 2009 will not tolerate currency-manipulated schemes of draining American well paying jobs into India and China.








Indian IT companies continue to take advantage of H1B visa loophole

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Source: India Daily

Written by Juhi Singhal

H1B visa allows Indian body shoppers (so called IT companies!) to transfer human beings as cyber slaves. The debate is furious in Washington. Miscrosoft wants cheap Indian talent. Other American companies want the virtual slaves from India so that can circumvent labor laws in United States. Indian companies like to make the differentials on hourly trade per human bei9ng – nothing different from African slave dealers sending slaves to American cotton plantations three hundred years ago.

American politicians should stop this morally incomprehensible business of human trafficking. The Indian and American companies transport cyber slaves through two kinds of visa mechanisms. First, they use H1B. This is a temporary work visa The high tech worker is normally paid 40% less than his or her American counterpart. Unlike labor certification requirement for green card, no one really checks if there is a willing and able American available for the job.

The second way is to use L1 visa. The Indian companies send these cyber slaves as managers of internat6ional companies. In reality these are software technicians – never perform any managerial work. L1 visa is designed for temporary extended stay of foreign nationals for international corporations.

American lawmakers that support H1B are bought by lobbyists working for American companies and Indian body shoppers. The money floating in Washington to bribe the American lawmakers are in billions. Corporations will do anything to have slave labors from India, China, Philippines and other countries.








Obama promises jobs for America but....

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Source: India Daily

Written by Harish Baliga

George Bush is like by the ignorance of the ‘quick rich’ schemes of Indian oligarchs. He allowed export of American jobs to India. Bush’s oligarch friends, the rich owners of American corporations made handsome profits by hiring cheap educated work force in India and firing qualified, efficient and hard working American workers in America. Obama promises to change that. The Bush oligarchy is coming to an end unless McCain oligarchy takes it over!

Interestingly the self centered money mongering Indians especially the oligarchs and their political agents and employees cannot take it.

According to media reports from India, So when India woke up on Friday and caught on to the Democratic Presidential candidate's power speech, there were nervous exchanges of what Obama's anti-sourcing pitch could have meant or not meant.

Infosys quarters started ringing with the reaction on how in a globalised world outsourcing is realty. HR Director of Infosys, Mohandas Pai said his company would wait and watch.

According to the nation's premier IT lobbying association NASSCOM, "Obama probably meant manufacturing and not software. US companies themselves will back outsourcing. NASSCOM President Som Mittal said US companies would find the right balance, but having worked with us in the past, most companies increase their competitiveness when they work with India.

Earlier on August 26, Hillary Clinton's Speech at the Democratic National Convention had similar overtones. "We need to elect Barack Obama because we need a President who understands that America can''t compete in a global economy by padding the pockets of energy speculators, while ignoring the workers whose jobs have been shipped overseas."








"India, rejoice!!! The waves of the reverse outsourcing starts"

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Source: India Daily

Written by Harish Baliga

You must be thinking what is reverse outsourcing? Well the concept is simple. India now starts outsourcing nuclear reactors, expertise, and fuel from the United States.

The actual fun starts now. America is thinking India will buy reactors from Westinghouse, GE, and other American companies. Close $100 billion will come back to US that Americans sent to get software work done with cheap Indian labor.

Indian politicians have other plans. They already have in place plans to buy these reactors slowly from Russia and France. America will get some orders, perhaps to the tune of $10 billion.

That will make the US Administration very unhappy!

The NSG waiver is noteworthy. What India needed was a waiver from the NSG to engage in nuclear commerce without signing the Nuclear non-Proliferation treaty (NPT). However, against the background of illegal sale of nuclear technology to countries like DPR Korea, at least three countries said they needed many more assurances from India that it would never conduct a nuclear test again. These countries also wanted assurances that India would not pass on uranium enrichment technologies to other non-signatories of NPT.

Ireland and Austria demanded India amend the draft. Yesterday, Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee issued a covering statement (full text on Page 12), which spelt out and emphasized India’s voluntary moratorium on testing. However, he said nowhere that India would not test again. Chairman of the Atomic Energy Board, Anil Kakodkar, repeated this. Mukherjee also stressed India’s commitment to non-proliferation but added that as NPT was discriminatory, India would not sign it.

This testament of India’s nuclear doctrine appears to have been accepted as India’s commitment to non-proliferation. Achieving this cannot have been easy because, as India is not a member of NSG, it was the United States that was doing the heavy lifting for New Delhi.








End of Outsourcing?????

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Source: India Daily

Written by Harish Baliga

The worldwide depression has finally restructured the world. The so-called slavish outsourcing servicing American and European companies is coming to an end. Just like in Second World War Europe went bankrupt and gave way for America to rise, in this current financial world war, America and Europe both are broke giving rise to India and China to rise up.

Indian outsourcing industry is dying because Americans and Europeans cannot pay their bills. The western world is in deep depression that may get worse and linger for much of this century.

But that is not the end of Indian adventure to manifest superiority in science and technology. The fundamental research in India has started again. India is moving fast in the area of bioengineering, genetics, and implementing the concepts of life in building the technology of the future.

India’s second-largest information technology services provider, Infosys Technologies, has issued letters to its employees stating they could opt for a one-year sabbatical to engage themselves in philanthropic activities. They would continue to draw 50 per cent of their salary during the period. Infosys crossed the 100,000-employee mark in India in the quarter ended September 30, 2008.

The company said that while the move may have coincided with the global financial turmoil and slowing growth rates of IT firms, it should be perceived as a pure voluntary act by employees who are prompted by altruistic motives and inspired by the example of its chairman and chief mentor, NR Narayana Murthy.

Well that is how AT&T Bell Labs started getting dismantled.

Although Indian outsourcing, call centers and so called low end software body shops are doomed, bright days are ahead of India starting from space exploration to creating artificial life.








Obama Plans ' to Buy America '

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Source: India Daily

Written by Harish Baliga

The outsourcing schemes of India Inc. have collapsed. It is now time for its complete uproot. America under Obama administration is ready to bring the nail to coffin for Indian Inc.’s outsourcing schemes. America has to start thinking about America. Fairness must dominate the global trade – not currency manipulated unfair trade as conducted by India and China.

President-elect Barack Obama’s advisers are looking at including a “buy American” provision in the economic-stimulus legislation that the incoming administration has made its first priority.

That may spell the death for unfair trade practices by the IT and call center outsourcing schemes of India Inc. The honeymoon for Indian and Chinese unfair trade is over. The trade will be dominated with fair trade practices, fair currency valuation, human rights concerns, child and prison labor issues, principles against cyber slave trading, environmental issues, and above all fully reciprocal nature of global trade.

India and China must buy as much from America as they sell to America. The Indian and Chinese currencies must be brought to some parity so that slave traders in both countries find it difficult to trade human bodies.

With the U.S. amid its worst economic slump since World War II, Obama is working on a package combining tax cuts and spending on infrastructure, such as roads, bridges and transit systems, to boost growth.

The stimulus package must pass Congress. Obama transition team and US Congress are focused on investments in areas where American industry will benefit.