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BPO
Bottom Line: Better English
By Debbie
J. Pepito
With around 50,000 agents needed
by call centers every year until 2010 and only 3 to 8 percent
of applicants passing requirements owing to a lack of English
skills, the president of John Clements Consultants Inc. Carol
Dominguez said a national effort to address the “English
proficiency gap” is critically vital.
She
said that if that lack is not met adequately, the industry—in
which the Philippines is second only to India—will gravely
suffer and outsourcing business will go elsewhere.
As
a stop-gap measure, she suggested, “We need to train the
hear-hires and make them good enough to get hired.”
Dominguez
was speaking at a general membership meeting of the Business Process
Association of the Philippines (BPA/P) at the Manila Polo Club
in Makati on Tuesday, March 1, 2006. “We need to train trainers
so they can pass their expertise on to more people who can, in
turn, train other trainers.”
John
Clements is a consultancy firm providing recruitment, outsourcing,
management and training solutions to corporations in the Philippines
and key foreign markets.
Dominguez
estimates the industry needs to hire around 50,000 agents annually
from 2006 to 2010. She added that through various private sector
initiatives, provinces like Camarines Sur and the CALABARZON area
have already produced 5,000 call center agents this year, but
that this is still too small.
The
BPA/P is a private-sector-led organization representing sectors
of IT-enabled services in the country, such as contact center
and transcription services, animation, software development, back-office
processing and computer-aided engineering design.
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This
article was originally published in the Business Mirror, Wednesday,
March 2, 2006, page A1.
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