“As the Apple story points out, India’s first-mover advantage is gone — at least in established city centers like Bangalore”
- elKore: The problem is - most companies underestimate the cost of outsourced IT development, thinking that $...
read more - AV: Every large culture has sub-cultures and it breaks down to the level of family culture. It is useles...
read more - Mr. Customer: This is complete crap! Ever try to talk to some Hodgi in India? They freakin' can't speak English an...
read more - Ian Ippolito: I've noticed this trend on a micro-basis on the Rent a Coder site...but it's been happening a while....
read more - Ian Ippolito: One prominent cultural clash I've seen is when a buyer in the U.S. asks a coder in India, "how is it...
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Powergen, part of E.ON, announced Thursday that it will withdraw all inbound call handling from India. All calls to the company will now be answered by Powergen’s own advisers in the UK.
After years in which British companies have outsourced jobs to India, the tide turned yesterday when it was announced that the subcontinent’s biggest outsourcing company plans to develop two centres in Northern Ireland.
“The Russian team will work longer hours without complaining. There is a shorter workday in Denmark.”
Junk the fake accent, young workers in India’s booming outsourcing industry are being told, and instead speak up, speak clearly and get to the point.
Chairman and CEO Sam Palmisano’s announcement that International Business Machnes Corp would invest a fresh $6 billion in India.
Tupe more likely to apply…
