How
are U.S.
Originally appeared on 2008-11-03 posted by Patrick Thibodeau
Execs say firm
plans to start offshoring development, project management work
November 3, 2008 (Computerworld) IT workers and
managers who believe their jobs are at too high a level to be sent overseas may
want to look at Affiliated Computer Services Inc.'s plan to boost its offshore outsourcing operations by moving "more complex, higher paying"
jobs to countries outside the U.S.
Dallas-based ACS,
which provides IT and business process outsourcing services to a wide range of
corporate and government clients, currently employs about 63,000 people, 20,000
of them in low-cost offshore locations. But in a conference call last Thursday on its financial results for the quarter that ended
Sept. 30, ACS detailed plans to increase the number of employees working
offshore by 4,200 during its current fiscal year, which began July. (A transcript of the call can be read on Seeking Alpha Ltd.'s Web
site.)
"To have a
greater financial impact, we will be moving a higher percentage of more
complex, higher paying jobs offshore, including management and application
development roles," ACS President and CEO Lynn Blodgett said during the
call.
ACS has been
gradually shifting jobs to offshore and near-shore centers in the Philippines, Jamaica,
Tom Burlin, chief
operating officer at ACS, filled in some of the details about the jobs that
will be affected by the additional offshore moves. "We've done a great job
in moving base production-level jobs offshore but have decided," he said,
"to aggressively move more of our higher level jobs, like production managers, higher-level back-office functions and
higher-level development roles, to lower-cost locations."
The company said
the expected savings from offshoring will give ACS more money to invest in
areas such as sales, innovation and development of new products. "This is
the right thing to do and the right time to do it," Blodgett said.
"This investment will make us stronger, not only during this economic storm, but for years to come."
"High-level
jobs are just as vulnerable [to offshoring] as mid- and low-level jobs,"
said Ron Hira, an assistant professor of public policy at the Rochester Institute of Technology, and co-author of the book Outsourcing America. Every IT services firm,
big or small, is shifting more advanced technology jobs offshore, Hira said.
"For U.S. IT
workers, look out: You're not going to be safe," he added. "The Wall
Street analysts will be pushing companies even more to accelerate their offshoring projects. This is just the beginning of a shift of
technological capabilities to low-cost countries." The relocation of jobs,
Hira claimed, is being "aided and abetted by horrible U.S.
An ACS spokesman
said it's too early to know whether the company's new offshoring moves will
lead to layoffs of U.S.
ACS, which
reported $6.16 billion in revenue for its 2008 fiscal year, does a significant
amount of IT work for government agencies: about 40% of its business comes from
government contracts. But most of the offshore work is being done for corporate
clients, according to the ACS spokesman. The company has more flexibility to
move corporate work offshore than government contracts often allow, he said.
In a separate
move, pharmaceutical maker Pfizer, Inc. detailed cost-reduction strategies in an
earnings call last month and said it had "a wide array of outsourcing
opportunities in various stages of implementation." That included projects
within its manufacturing, logistics, finance, facilities, legal and IT
departments, according to a transcript of the call posted on the Seeking Alpha site.
Citing
unidentified sources, The Day, a newspaper in New London, Conn
A Pfizer
spokeswoman said the company wouldn't comment about the Day's story. In
regard to Pfizer's use of contract workers, the company said via e-mail that
the number of its temporary workers "ebbs and flows." For instance,
Pfizer said that on an average day, it has 800 to 1,000 contract workers at its
sites in Groton and New London
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