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Re: Job flight
Doug Henwood wrote:
joanna bujes wrote:
More interesting is the thesis that outsourcing is profitable for
hi-tech companies. I wonder how they figure out that profit. The very
large hi tech company I work for has outsourced a number of projects to
India and China. I know first hand that the results of this off-shoring
were nothing short of disastrous. Because of communication problems and
inept management, the work done offshore had to be done over, about
three times so far. This not only cost more time-wise and money-wise,
but in the meantime, my company shipped products that looked like they
were done in somebody's garage (while charging "enterprise" prices) and,
I suspect, considerably tarnished their reputation and credibility.
This line is now emerging in the biz press. I saw something from one
of the brand-name consultants the other day saying that 2004 will be
the year of "reality-check" or some such for the whole trend. The
savings turn out to be far smaller than the raw wage gap makes them
appear.
i am not an expert on the matter, so this is just my opinion: i believe
the above effect is temporary. programming is not difficult and it is
well suited for outsourcing. those going through outsourcing disaster
will learn from their mistakes... already, i know of many fellow indians
in the US who are getting into the very lucrative career path of acting
as a sort of outsourcing liaison, leveraging their knowledge of both worlds.
joanna, i actually greatly admire your company. they were internet
pioneers and the geek in me looks up to their innovative work. but they
were charging enterprice prices for badly put together products long
before there was any outsourcing.
my guess is that when you add up the numbers, outsourcing will still be
cheaper. i just read an article (i believe in business week) in which a
programmer, who was earning $200,000 (!!!) a year, was complaining about
the loss of her job and questioning what was wrong with america, etc.
$200,000/year??? i could probably count on my fingers the number of
programmers who deserve that kind of pay!
--ravi
- Thread context:
- Re: Job flight, (continued)
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