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In this BPO
Corner:
US Call Centre Jobs Worst Hit by Offshore Outsourcing
A quarter of positions to go by 2008, says Datamonitor
By Andy McCue
A quarter of outsourced US call centre jobs will
be lost over the next three years as companies are increasingly
forced to move the work to cheaper overseas locations or use automation,
according to a new report by analyst Datamonitor.
The US had 37 per cent of the world's outsourced
call centre positions in 2004 but the Datamonitor report, Contact
Centre Outsourcing in the US predicts that global market share will
shrink by a quarter by 2008, from 315,000 jobs to 291,000.
Outbound telemarketing positions will be worst
hit, accounting for 90 per cent of the US call centre jobs lost,
mainly due to the introduction of the 'Do Not Call' registry and
the higher revenues available from inbound call centre work.
Narrow profit margins are increasingly forcing
outsourcers to move call centre work from the US to cheaper locations
such as Canada, India and the Philippines, or to automate the service
altogether where viable. This will lead to a corresponding increase
in the number of outsourced call centre positions in offshore locations
such as India.
Ri Pierce-Grove, associate analyst at Datamonitor,
said call centre outsourcers are also combating this threat to revenues
by reinventing themselves and extending into the more lucrative
business process outsourcing market.
He said in the report: "The boundaries between
US-based contact centre providers and other business process outsourcers
are dissolving, and firms are invading each others' territories.
There have been at least eight publicly announced acquisitions since
2003, and Datamonitor expects this trend to continue."
The report follows statistics earlier this month
showing that UK IT and call centre jobs have not been hit by offshore
outsourcing. That report by the Office for National Statistics showed
employment growth in call centre positions has been three times
that of overall employment growth since 2001, and that redundancy
levels have also fallen consistently.
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Originally published in Datamonitor, September 16, 2005
www.datamonitor.com
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