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BPO in China: Reality and Potential Sept. 8, 2006 Xiamen Roc Yang, CDG.

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Presentation on theme: "BPO in China: Reality and Potential Sept. 8, 2006 Xiamen Roc Yang, CDG."— Presentation transcript:

1 BPO in China: Reality and Potential Sept. 8, 2006 Xiamen Roc Yang, CDG

2 A real life example of outsourcing

3 Contents  BPO Defined  BPO in China: a reality check  BPO in China: What’s in store  BPO in China: a Case Study  CDG Snapshots

4 BPO Defined “ BPO is the delegation of one or more IT- intensive business processes to an external provider who, in turn, owns, administrates and manages the selected process(es), based upon defined and measurable performance metrics.” Gartner Dataquest

5 Business Process Outsourcing started in the early 90’s, but has recently experienced an increased level of interest and acceptance. Maturation of worldwide BPO service providers Emergence of and acceptance of low-cost location delivery models Improvements in telecommunications and the availability of bandwidth Technological evolution of the Internet, e-Commerce, imaging, and application service providers The key enablers for BPO

6 BPO-Some key statistics (US $bn)200120052008 Total Business Process Outsourcing Market 127234310 Percentage Offshored to Countries such as India, Ireland, etc. 5%15%20% Offshored BPO Market6.435.162.0 India ITES Exports1.59.521

7 Contents  BPO Defined  BPO in China: a reality check  BPO in China: What’s in store  BPO in China: a Case Study  CDG Snapshots

8 Can “World Factory” last forever?

9 Why China should embrace BPO? To fully leverage manufacturing expertise To service world office without having to go abroad It is a “smoke free” industry To fully tap China’s human resources pool To Have facilitate industry migration in China

10 Value Chain Migration as a country “Made in China” “Managed from China” “Created by China” 0-9 years education 12 years-University level education University and above BPO KPO Manufacturing outsourcing

11 Absence of country marketing, leaving China out of the radar screen of global BPO players; Lack of industry self discipline; Lack of necessary supportive measures as a long term strategic industry; Incomplete industry value chain not complete BPO in China: a macro perspective

12 BPO in China: a micro perspective Low end and low value-add services; Business through agents, leaving little or even no margin at all; No industry and process expertise involved; Small workshop or family business without global competitiveness; Purely opportunistic and ad hoc offshore players; Not many visionary companies in the space

13 Contents  BPO Defined  BPO in China: a reality check  BPO in China: What’s in store  BPO in China: a Case Study  CDG Snapshots

14 China: hotspot for BPO MNCs set up captive centers in China; Indian players to leverage on global client base for the Asian pie; Local players grow both in number and service capability and China maturing as both a vendor base and a market

15 China to vie for the top BPO spot Set up “country marketing” engine Improve basic infrastructure Polish the relevant policies Build up the vendor base Improve the industry value chain; e.g. language skills and domain knowledge

16 Contents  BPO Defined  BPO in China: a reality check  BPO in China: What’s in store  BPO in China: a Case Study  CDG Snapshots

17 An IFC Portfolio Bank The Client's Problem  Back office centralization created new bottlenecks and need for a large staff pool  Unbearable management time and efforts to manage cost and business risks CDG's Solutions  Took over one key function of the client’s back office to replace about 180 staff  BPR to decompose the existing processes through technology  Concurrent mass processing to meet real time requirements  Insurance coverage for service failure The Results  Focused on front end customer services  Cut down back office operations cost while making it transparent;  Shortened service delivery time from 15 minutes to 3 minutes ;  Reduced operations management complexity and difficulty, particularly during the holidays and at business peaks.

18 Contents  BPO Defined  BPO in China: a reality check  BPO in China: What’s in store  BPO in China: a Case Study  CDG Snapshots

19 CDG Snapshots History Founded in 1998 as Cybersky Technologies and had been China’s Top Three Imaging System Integrator for the financial services sector. It was restructured into CDG with financial support from CDH, a leading private equity fund in 2005 to focus on BPO. Industries and Services Leveraging on the 8+ years experience in the banking, financial services and insurance sectors, CDG has established “One-stop Shop” business process outsourcing solutions around its mass production capabilities. Management Team The team came from consulting, System integration, IT outsourcing and the BFSI sectors. Their strength lies in their capability to leverage technology and industry know-how to turn BPO business into a low cost mass production in China. Facilities Network CDG’s main data processing operation is in Beijing with 600+ seating capacity on one shift basis. The Shanghai BPO Center is scheduled to open in June 2006. The third facility in Guangzhou is also on the agenda to serve the South China markets. Technology and Operations CDG has the industry’s leading Data Processing System that processes client’s transactions based on scanned images on a JIT basis. The system supports multiple languages and multiple clients simultaneously in a paperless environment.

20 Thank you!


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