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BusinessWeek December 30, 2009 Srivastava & Herbst |
The Return of the Outsourced Job To boost employment, local governments are wooing Indian companies such as Tata, Wipro, and Infosys. But the job gains are a drop in the bucket. |
Global Services July 23, 2007 Juhi Bhambal |
Temp. Visas: Outsourcing's Thorny Issue As two Senators charge tech companies of bringing cheap foreign workers to the U.S., costing Americans their jobs, the thorny issue of supposed visa abuse once again mars an otherwise rosy outsourcing story. We trace the events of the last two months. |
BusinessWeek November 4, 2010 Einhorn & Gokhale |
India Outsourcers Feel Unloved in the U.S. Indian outsourcers fear that a U.S. backlash over job losses will endanger their biggest overseas market. |
CIO December 1, 2000 Tom Field |
For a Few Rupees More India's outsourcing industry is eager to move beyond its back-office image... |
Reason January 2008 Michael C. Moynihan |
Home Again Outsourcing the outsourced: Increasingly India is becoming a clearinghouse for outsourced labor to places like Latin America. |
BusinessWeek May 26, 2011 Bruce Einhorn |
India's Scarce Talent, Rising Wages, Balky Clients Faced with a shortage of workers, India's outsourcing industry is struggling to maintain its profit margins -- and its global market share. |
BusinessWeek February 14, 2005 Puliyenthuruthel & Kripalani |
India: Good Help Is Hard To Find Higher wages and lavish perks reign as outsourcing outfits scramble for talent |
BusinessWeek January 16, 2006 Nandini Lakshman |
Subcontinental Drift More Westerners are beefing up their resumes with a stint in India. |
CFO June 1, 2004 Justin Wood |
The View from the East India's upstart IT-services firms face their own challenges from their giant rivals in the West. |
BusinessWeek July 23, 2009 Mehul Srivastava & Steve Hamm |
India's Outsourcers: Using the Slump to Get Bigger In a bid to become global, Bangalore's info tech companies are preparing for the next upturn by rethinking strategy and hiring more workers. |
BusinessWeek June 5, 2006 Steve Hamm |
IBM Wakes Up to India's Skills IBM is ramping up operations with cutting-edge projects while using more low-cost, high-value local labor |
BusinessWeek May 20, 2010 Bruce Einhorn |
Bangalore: Big Pay Raises Are Back With the recession over, India's tech giants are hiring again - sending payrolls skyward and enlivening a sleepy job market. |
Global Services September 14, 2007 Rinku Tyagi |
Great Paymasters, Not Best Employers! In the Indian tech industry, employee satisfaction is no longer a derivative of higher salaries. |
The Motley Fool June 9, 2006 John Finneran |
IBM: "I" Stands for India IBM will invest $6 billion in India -- but why? |
BusinessWeek December 10, 2009 Moira Herbst |
Still Wanted: Foreign Talent -- and Visas With the U.S. jobless rate at 10%, continued hiring of workers from abroad may stoke controversy. |
BusinessWeek November 7, 2005 Manjeet Kripalani |
India: Desperately Seeking Talent As India's economy booms, companies are scrambling to find, and keep, skilled workers. |
BusinessWeek April 26, 2004 Kripalani & Hamm |
Merger Fever Breaks Out In Bangalore IBM's $150 million purchase of Daksh eServices, the third-largest Indian call center and back-office service provider, may trigger a wave of acquisitions. |
The Motley Fool July 13, 2006 Stephen Ellis |
Infosys: Strong Quarter, Still Expensive The Indian outsourcing company continues to shine, but it's one darn expensive stock. |
BusinessWeek July 25, 2005 Steve Hamm |
Home Is Where The Work Is The latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics contain a pleasant surprise: Software writers with solid skills are finding plenty of jobs stateside. |
Fast Company October 2006 Tonya Garcia |
We're Not In Palo Alto Anymore... You're a new tech grad looking for work. Check out Mysore. |
BusinessWeek April 23, 2007 Steve Hamm |
How Accenture One-Upped Bangalore Accenture leads the pack in tech services, melding offshoring and classic consulting. |
BusinessWeek June 21, 2004 Manjeet Kripalani |
Now It's Bombay Calling The U.S. In the past two years Indian companies have snapped up a dozen U.S. call centers and business processing outsourcers. |
BusinessWeek September 3, 2007 Manjeet Kripalani |
A Red-Hot Big Blue In India From inking deals to hiring the best workers, IBM is leading its tech services rivals in India. |
Global Services September 1, 2008 |
A New Training Center for TCS in Assam, India Tata Consultancy Services, a leading IT services, business solutions and outsourcing organization, announced the launch of its pioneering initiative to train and develop talent available in the North East of India. |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 Kripalani & Engardio |
The Rise Of India Growth is only just starting, but the country's brainpower is already reshaping Corporate America |
The Motley Fool May 19, 2006 Bobby Shethia |
Considering a Costly Cognizant Wall Street values the software outsourcing company's stock at too steep a premium to its business. Investors, take note. |
Fast Company February 2003 Keith H. Hammonds |
The New Face of Global Competition Not so long ago, India's Wipro Ltd. sold cooking oils and knockoff PCs. Now its 15,000 technologists cook up vital software applications and research for Ericsson, GM, the Home Depot, and other giant customers. Are you prepared to go head-to-head with the best the world has to offer? |
Global Services August 28, 2008 Ed Nair |
Are We at the End of the India Story? Every crisis brings with it some opportunity for Indian services companies. |
The Motley Fool April 16, 2008 Anand Chokkavelu |
Inside Infosys: A Chat With the CFO A conversation with Vibin Balakrishnan, Infosys' CFO, who answers some of our post-earnings questions. |
CIO July 30, 2013 John Ribeiro |
Infosys Is Having Its Midlife Crisis Indian outsourcer Infosys -- in the midst of a major transformation -- struggles to supplement its commodity programming services with high-value business offerings |
Global Services July 27, 2007 Imrana Khan |
$44,172: Highest Salary of Indian Tech Grads The average annual salary of an Indian tech employee has grown by 28%, from $6527 in 2006, to $8,500 in 2007. Wages are rising in India, but demand for well-trained IT professionals is still rising faster. |
The Motley Fool November 30, 2009 Jennifer Schonberger |
The Outlook for Outsourcing in India As the global business landscape shifts and the outsourcing industry evolves, how much will it continue to contribute to India's rapid-fire growth? |
Global Services May 27, 2007 Shyamanuja Das |
Protectionism v2.0: Anti-offshoring or Anti-Indian? Two members of U.S. Senate have sent out letters to nine Indian tech companies demanding to know how they are using the H-1B visas issued to them. |
The Motley Fool April 10, 2007 Khattab & Taulli |
Foolish Forum: Bullish on Indian IT? The Indian outsourcing market grew 33% to $23.6 billion in 2006, creating enormous opportunities for firms in India. Here, analysts discuss the software tigers of the Subcontinent. |
Global Services September 3, 2008 Imrana Khan |
Infosys, TCS Set to Compete with Accenture, CSC & IBM In 2008 India's top three companies Infosys, TCS and Wipro collectively claimed 46 percent (up from 41 percent in 2007) revenue share in the total IT-services export earnings from India, according to a recently released study by Forrester |
The Motley Fool January 26, 2004 Rich Smith |
A Passage to India More and more U.S. firms are outsourcing professional services to India. Who will benefit? |
BusinessWeek May 2, 2005 Christopher Farrell |
An Onshore Play In Offshoring Shares in Indian tech consultants are pricey but there's room to grow. There are concerns over rising labor costs, and worries about growth prospects that have put pressure on stock prices. |
IndustryWeek July 22, 2009 |
The Promise of India Big, young, educated and ambitious. Can India become the next industrial superpower? |
The Motley Fool January 9, 2006 Rich Smith |
Outsourcing's Endgame Outsourcing will end as soon as it becomes economically illogical to continue it, and not a moment sooner. Already, wages for Indian workers ranging from call center operators to programmers to engineers are increasing at rates of 15% to 30% per annum. |
The Motley Fool June 17, 2004 Selena Maranjian |
Is Outsourcing Overblown? Maybe Americans aren't losing as many jobs overseas as we first thought. |
Knowledge@Wharton December 18, 2002 |
What Works, What Doesn't Lessons from two companies that outsource back-office tasks |
BusinessWeek October 20, 2003 Manjeet Kripalani |
India's Manufacturers In Shackles Without labor-law reform, Indian industries are likely to lose out to China. |
Reason June 2006 Samuel R. Staley |
The Rise and Fall of Indian Socialism Why India embraced economic reform. |
The Motley Fool January 19, 2007 Tom Taulli |
Wipro Whips Up Another Strong Quarter The Indian software consulting firm's business continues its momentum, but look out for increased competition and higher wages. Investors, take note. |
IndustryWeek October 1, 2007 Brad Kenney |
Offshoring in Reverse U.S. tech workers suddenly in demand are being courted by Indian IT companies. |
The Motley Fool July 23, 2007 Tom Taulli |
The Rupee Raps Wipro External cost pressures dragged on the Indian consulting firm's first-quarter results. Investors, take note. |
Inc. December 2005 Stephanie Clifford |
Cracks in the Melting Pot Visa restrictions are keeping entrepreneurial immigrants away, and they're finding new opportunities overseas. |
BusinessWeek January 26, 2004 Kripalani & Hamm |
Scrambling To Stem India's Onslaught Now big Western service outfits have to fight back on both the high and low ends. |
BusinessWeek April 17, 2006 Manjeet Kripalani |
Open Season On Outsourcers More Western software and services companies are snapping up Indian companies that specialize in back-office operations. |
The Motley Fool October 13, 2006 John Finneran |
Infosys: Flat World, Flat Investment? Indian IT outsourcer Infosys adopted the "The World Is Flat" phrase as a corporate mantra, and the stock has been exploding ever since. Investors, is the flat world also a flat investment? |