BPO: The Indian View
Knowledge@Wharton features an interview with Kiran Karnik, president of Nasscom, India's apex organisation for software companies. Some excerpts:
In India, more than 99% of all call center workers are college graduates. In the U.S., there are no minimum education qualification requirements to work in a call center.
According to a NASSCOM-Hewitt Associates survey, the average salary of a call center worker in India is $180 a month. This is five times the country’s per capita income. For a fresh college graduate, a call center job pays about 2.5 times as much as other job openings.
The software services and BPO services export industry in India has grown its revenues from $6.2 billion in 2000 to $7.7 billion in 2001 and $9.5 billion in 2002. In 2003, NASSCOM estimates the industry will grow its revenues to $12 billion.
Brainstorming
Inc writes about an activity we do all the time and suggests some ways to make it better:
Psychologist Paul Paulus has delved into the science behind eurekas, staging more than 1,000 brainstorming sessions, varying the conditions, and measuring the results. Want to know whether it's better to write ideas down or say them out loud during a session? Paulus has tested it, and knows the answer. (Write it down.) How many breaks should the ideal brainstorm entail? (Plenty.) Do the best ideas come at the beginning of a brainstorm or at the end? (The end.)
Paulus's first piece of advice will strike most as surprising, if not heretical: The group is not God. Group brainstorming, used day in and day out by countless business owners, really doesn't work that well, according to Paulus. You're almost always better off directing your employees to brainstorm individually.
On the other hand, there's no doubt that group brainstorming is an important exercise in team-building. The trick is to capture the efficiencies of an individual while making the most of the bonhomie and synergy of a group brainstorm. Two strategies have been found to yield the best results. The first is to alternate individual brainstorming with group sessions. Then there's what experts call "brainwriting." Rather than staging a face-to-face group, direct participants to write their ideas down on a piece of paper or electronically. One member of the group writes an idea, another reads it, adds feedback and his or her own ideas, and so on. This overcomes a lot of the problems of the group, says Paulus. Plus, it gives people more time to think about, and respond intelligently to, their colleagues' ideas. He's found that brainwriting exercises generate about 40% more ideas than individuals brainstorming alone.
Whether alone or in a group, the most important thing in brainstorming is how you define the problem. You need to be focused enough so that the task is not too daunting (How can we reinvent our industry?), but not so narrow that it discourages creativity (What color should we paint the office?). It sounds easy enough, but most business brainstormers screw this up, observes James D. Feldman, a Chicago-based consultant who works with small companies. "Most people do not identify their problem correctly," he says.
Technology for Greater Good
San Jose Mercury News writes about the winners of the Tech Musuem Awards:
Brij Kothari's idea -- stripping subtitles along the bottom of popular Bollywood Indian music videos -- was enough to earn him a nomination for the third annual Tech Museum Awards. Research has suggested that the Hindi-subtitled music videos improve the reading skills of barely literate viewers.
"Technology's not just about smaller, better, faster,'' said Peter Giles, chief executive of the Tech Museum of Innovation. "It's about the impact it can have in making life better.''
This year's five winners included a low-cost satellite radio that is bringing socially conscious messages to Nepal, a program that trains local videographers across the globe to document human rights abuses, and a wire bridge that allows people in the Himalayan foothills to travel more safely. Each winner receives $50,000.
Additional details are at the
awards website.
At what cost? Most of my friends are working in a call center, all graduates in Electronics and/or Computer Science. Keeping salary aside, what else do students like me get from a call center? Studying four years about Gates, diodes, transistors, micro-processors, all I am doing is answering phone calls to some guy/gal who cannot connect to the internet because the modem is not plugged in. Does this justify my four years of life! Won't I get frustrated once I start thinking retrospectively? You can cover things with a sugar coating, but once it wears off, the taste is _real_bitter_.
BPO has opened jobs, but of what type? Its always quality over quantity. I bet, give any graduate a programming job and pay him $120/month and he will leave the call center job. Its out of no choice that students join call center. Money is not the most important thing. Mr. Kiran Karnik, please get out of the euphoria that you are creating jobs, you are simply creating even more frustrated individuals...... We are a land of immense potential, use it.... a catalyst can perform only when the conditions are viable!!!!
-Anurag
Posted by Anurag PhadkeAnurag:
I agree with you totally.
In India, more than 99% of all call center workers are college graduates. In the U.S., there are no minimum education qualification requirements to work in a call center.
I think there is a logical reason for this difference. And it is that you do not need a college degree for most of the jobs.
In fact one of the better ways would be to make a vocational program for students after X standard and then let them handle the BPO jobs etc. This can be more cost-effective and also not create more wrongly matched individuals.
And for people like Anurag, my advice: $100/$120 whatever get the hell out of the place before you lose even the skills that you have.
Suhit.
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