The Philippines set to led the World for Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO) by 2015

Philippines is set to led KPO in the world by 2015. Philippines is the 3rd - largest English Speaking country in the world. 

By: James Grundvig - Epoch Times Contributor

The Philippines, the World's New Call Center Capital

Interview with Gillian Virata of Business Process Association Philippines

Quietly, with little advertising, the Philippines by has surpassed India as the number one call center in the world.  Now this South China Sea nation of 7,000 islands, 39 million people workforce, and 470,000 English-speaking college students graduating every year is going to overtake India in non-voice (back office) business process outsourcing (BPO) by 2015.

More than an inexpensive labor pool—one quarter of what it costs in the U.S.—has drawn many Fortune 1,000 companies, including Citibank, JP Morgan Chase, HP, Oracle, Cisco, and dozens of others, to the Philippines to outsource parts of their operations to gain a competitive edge.

Beside the Philippines being the third largest English speaking country in the world, with 93 percent literacy rate of 100 million people, its close ties to the United States is also a big draw.  With a good technical education system, a large and diverse talent pool, from animators and software developers to health IT and CPAs, the Philippines is the next Asian tiger on the rise.

Another plus is there's little turnover of employees at Philippine call centers and BPO organizations, which has plagued India's outsourcing.  The reason: the Philippines has a system of meritocracy.  Add the "night differential" pay for those working the graveyard shift and the youngest 25-and-under workforce in the world over the next decade and the Philippines will continue to grow at a rapid pace.

It's the merit system, in which a graduate Filipino can work at call centers, excel and rise up the ranks to the executive office based on performance.  This golden carrot is a key driver for the retention of their employees.

From Business Process Pool to Flourishing Delta

By 2016, healthcare outsourcing in Business Process Management (BPM) is expected to grow to $1 billion in revenues and employ 100,000 people, according to Healthcare Information Management Outsourcing Association of the Philippines.

The expansion into other BPO segments has just begun.

In coming to the Philippines, this author, who has worked more than 25 years in the engineering-construction industry, recognized a building boom when he saw one.  Like U.S. cities during real estate boom of the 1980s, commercial and residential office towers have sprouted up in a half dozen micro-cities in metro Manila,  including Makati City, Pasig City, Quezon City, and Bonifacio Global City.  Viewing the growth on top of a Makati City office tower helipad, I saw the robust growth in terms of new buildings and tower cranes.

How and when did this third world country change into an emerging, business-first nation?

To learn the answer, I sat down with Gillian "Gigi" Virata, Senior Executive Director of Business Processing Association of the Philippines, at its Global City headquarters.

Professional, astute, and well versed in the past, present and future of the Philippines as the next hub in outsourcing, Ms. Virata knew the growth her country was experiencing had deeper roots than many people realized.

The Asian Miracle as Dance

In typical Asian fashion it began with a dance.  It was a ritual dance between two opposing forces.  The modern version of that dance came center stage in the 1980s when the good intentions of politicians met the craftiness of real estate developers. Almost by accident, an edict launched an era of perennial growth.  A nation with 90 percent of its population poor saw the first glimmers of hope.

Manila politicians offered vast stretches of real estate to developers, sweetened with various incentives, to build projects by hectare (1 hectare is 2.47 acres or 107,639 square feet) across the open, flat land around Manila Bay.

Knowing an opportunity when handed one, the real estate developers built vertically, not horizontally as the politicians had imagined. They erected tall buildings to achieve the hectares of space, by adding the accumulative square foot of all the floors for each office tower. They built upwards instead of outwards.  Other developers followed suit and the race was on its way with residential buildings to follow.

During that time, the consulting giant Arthur Andersen (pre Accenture), one of the Big Five accounting firms, came to the Philippines to begin outsourcing many of its back office operations. This was the mid '80s, pre-Internet, pre-email, and little bandwidth. Once they setup shop, other U.S. conglomerates came, too.  By the 1990s, Pixar, Disney, and Hollywood studios, focused to control runaway production costs, courted Filipino animators, not just to save on labor costs, but also to tap into a creative pool of artists.

Interview with Gigi Virata

After rattling off statistics on growth, Ms. Virata's explanation of the dance continued: "During the 1997 Asian financial crisis, the government began breaking up the telecom monopoly and small call centers were setup by Sykes, the American company.  By 2001, startups and small developers arrived.  The government erected economic zones and more high-rises came.

"With the office towers we needed residential buildings.  Access to the work place had to support the mass hiring of new employees.  Soon we had a highly accessible work force with a great public transportation," she said.

"So we came up with a proposition to unlock those valuable assets on healthcare."

—Gillian Virata, Senior Executive Director of BPAP

"Is healthcare outsourcing the next phase of the Philippine outsourcing story?" I asked.

"We have 200,000 nurses in the Philippines that today can't find work overseas.  They have the skill set and education, but are in debt with student loans.  So we came up with a proposition to unlock those valuable assets on healthcare.  We have employed them to tag insurance codes for injuries and illness, and to do medical transcriptions.  It wasn't what they planned for, but they adjusted," Ms. Virata said.

What makes the Philippines a success as an outsource center is its ability to be flexible and continually fine-tune its business model.

"In 2004, BPAP was established.  We were the pioneers that setup Filipino companies for the BPO sector.  Two years later it was growing so fast that the growth needed a roadmap for filling up the buildings.  We also needed to keep the best graduates from moving overseas," she said.  "While the BPO sector is expected to grow 20 percent CAGR for the next five years, healthcare management and information systems, from Accenture and Cognizant to smaller Filipino companies, will grow even faster to serve the global market."

Ms. Virata paused, perhaps to take in how far her country has come in the past decade, and said, "BPAP has over 300 members.  The Philippines Software Association 200 members.  Call centers is the largest segment, with the next being IT."

After the interview, she sent a slide deck she presented on behalf of a half dozen outsourcing associations in October, titled, Experience the Excellence: The Philippine Advantage.

The deck showed the unique dance between government support and private partnerships has morphed from office towers to tax holidays, VAT exemptions, and other incentives to achieve the 20% YOY comprehensive growth as outlined in the BPAP Roadmap 2016.

With the Philippines being number one in outsourced voice—customer care, sales, collections, financial services, and technology—their BPM operations are a mature growing industry.  Today, it services IT, finance and accounting, human resources, healthcare BPO, procurement, banking, utilities, and telecom.  They are fast growing an analytics and Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO) capabilities.

"We have work to do as we move ahead," Ms. Virata emphasized. "We need to beef up the associations, put together more funding for real estate and telecom suppliers, attract more foreign investment just to keep pace of the growth."

To serve a global market starved for growth, she grasps how important the dance will become over the next few years. (http://is.gd/b6oE1S )

The Epoch Times

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