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Fast Company February 2003 Keith H. Hammonds |
The New Face of Global Competition Not so long ago, India's Wipro Ltd. sold cooking oils and knockoff PCs. Now its 15,000 technologists cook up vital software applications and research for Ericsson, GM, the Home Depot, and other giant customers. Are you prepared to go head-to-head with the best the world has to offer? |
BusinessWeek November 7, 2005 Manjeet Kripalani |
India: Desperately Seeking Talent As India's economy booms, companies are scrambling to find, and keep, skilled workers. |
The Motley Fool July 23, 2008 Kristin Graham |
Is India's Miracle Over? It's been just 16 years since India opened its economic borders to the world -- and the country's transformation has been staggering. The country's amazing growth is just beginning. |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 Robert D. Hof |
India And Silicon Valley: Now The R&D Flows Both Ways Indian talent is adding vitality throughout Silicon Valley, where it's getting hard to find an info-tech startup that doesn't have some research and development in such places as Bangalore, Bombay, or Hyderabad. |
BusinessWeek May 31, 2004 Manjeet Kripalani |
India A shocking election upset means India must spend heavily on social needs. Is this the end of the boom? |
CIO December 1, 2000 Tom Field |
For a Few Rupees More India's outsourcing industry is eager to move beyond its back-office image... |
BusinessWeek October 18, 2004 Manjeet Kripalani |
The Factories Are Humming In India Indian manufacturing is surprisingly strong and fueling an export boom. |
BusinessWeek April 17, 2006 Manjeet Kripalani |
Open Season On Outsourcers More Western software and services companies are snapping up Indian companies that specialize in back-office operations. |
BusinessWeek October 20, 2003 Manjeet Kripalani |
India's Manufacturers In Shackles Without labor-law reform, Indian industries are likely to lose out to China. |
CIO December 1, 2000 Cheryl Bentsen |
DotKarma The future looks bright for India's new, IT-driven economy, but significant obstacles remain... |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 Baker et al. |
Software Programming jobs are heading overseas by the thousands. Is there a way for the U.S. to stay on top? |
BusinessWeek March 19, 2007 Steve Hamm |
The Trouble With India Crumbling roads, jammed airports, and power blackouts could hobble growth in India. |
BusinessWeek January 26, 2004 Kripalani & Hamm |
Scrambling To Stem India's Onslaught Now big Western service outfits have to fight back on both the high and low ends. |
CFO June 1, 2004 Justin Wood |
The View from the East India's upstart IT-services firms face their own challenges from their giant rivals in the West. |
Knowledge@Wharton December 18, 2002 |
What Works, What Doesn't Lessons from two companies that outsource back-office tasks |
CIO December 1, 2000 Tom Field |
The Learning Channel India has developed a global reputation for producing the best and brightest IT minds. What's its secret? |
BusinessWeek November 22, 2004 Manjeet Kripalani |
India: Let The Deals Begin As Bangalore's outsourcing industry surges, takeovers will be fast and furious |
Fast Company December 2004 Alan Deutschman |
Offshoring Creativity As new funding fuels innovation, Silicon Valley venture capital insiders see India and China ultimately eclipsing America as technology markets -- with local companies dominating. |
BusinessWeek October 13, 2003 Kripalani & Einhorn |
India's Tech King Azim Premji transformed a cooking oil company into an IT power. Now he's expanding his global reach. |
BusinessWeek September 3, 2007 Manjeet Kripalani |
A Red-Hot Big Blue In India From inking deals to hiring the best workers, IBM is leading its tech services rivals in India. |
CFO October 1, 2003 Abe De Ramos |
The China Syndrome U.S. companies are beginning to outsource technology research and development to India and China. Will a meltdown in tech jobs follow? |
BusinessWeek July 23, 2009 Mehul Srivastava & Steve Hamm |
India's Outsourcers: Using the Slump to Get Bigger In a bid to become global, Bangalore's info tech companies are preparing for the next upturn by rethinking strategy and hiring more workers. |
BusinessWeek November 20, 2008 David Rocks |
India's Design Boom Offshore and domestic customers seek an edge to satisfy India's consumers, who have more money to spend and are demanding better products |
BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 Manjeet Kripalani |
India: A Nation Of Dropouts The government is slowly responding to the fact that without a much deeper reservoir of educated youth, India may see its gains in software and manufacturing evaporate. |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 Manjeet Kripalani |
India: Big Pharma's New Promised Land? Drugmakers are heeding the siren call of its well-trained, cheap chemists. |
Global Services July 30, 2007 Amrita Singh |
Re-engineered Globally As outsourcing moves up several notches from writing code and answering calls, companies such as Boeing, Rolls Royce, Smiths Aerospace and General Motors are betting on getting their engineering components designed abroad. |
BusinessWeek June 19, 2006 Kripalani & Burrows |
India: Why Apple Walked Away Plans for Apple's Indian tech support center have been scrapped. |
Reason June 2006 Samuel R. Staley |
The Rise and Fall of Indian Socialism Why India embraced economic reform. |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2008 Adrienne Selko |
The Rise Of Indian Manufacturing As India's production capabilities increase, U.S. manufacturers would do well to craft a global strategy that addresses the emergence of this no-longer-slumbering giant. |
The Motley Fool June 9, 2006 John Finneran |
IBM: "I" Stands for India IBM will invest $6 billion in India -- but why? |
BusinessWeek August 4, 2003 Bruce Einhorn |
Outsourcing: Make Way for China It's fast becoming an important hub for IT services. Move over, India. |
InternetNews December 5, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
Intel India Earmarks $1B For India Intel will invest more than $1 billion in India over the next five years to increase its presence in a country that continues to evolve into an economic powerhouse. The chipmaker's five-year plan includes R&D and VC investment. |
Knowledge@Wharton June 4, 2003 Ravi Aron |
The Little Start-Up That Could: A Conversation with Raman Roy, Father of Indian BPO Roy shares the story of how he built an upstart outsourcing firm into a leading provider of services for some of the world's largest companies. |
U.S. Banker December 2006 Karen Krebsbach |
Inside the Outsourcing World of India India's outsourcers are offering ever-more specialized services, giving banks added reasons to say "yes" to outsourcing. |
Reason June 2006 Shikha Dalmia |
What Detroit Can Learn From Bangalore The factors that made India the world's economic basket case after it obtained its independence from Britain in 1947 are precisely what have stymied Detroit's resurgence: excessive bureaucracy, destructive taxes, and bad labor laws. |
Bank Technology News August 2003 Karen Krebsbach |
Outsourcing: Fighting a Giant Sucking Sound Banks face backlash on IT job exports overseas |
BusinessWeek June 5, 2006 Steve Hamm |
IBM Wakes Up to India's Skills IBM is ramping up operations with cutting-edge projects while using more low-cost, high-value local labor |
BusinessWeek April 19, 2004 Carol Matlack |
Job Exports: Europe's Turn It's following the offshoring trend -- and much of it is white-collar |
BusinessWeek December 30, 2009 Srivastava & Herbst |
The Return of the Outsourced Job To boost employment, local governments are wooing Indian companies such as Tata, Wipro, and Infosys. But the job gains are a drop in the bucket. |
BusinessWeek May 17, 2004 Manjeet Kripalani |
India: Now It's Hardware's Turn Long a software dynamo, India is powering up PC makers. |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 Michael J. Mandel |
Commentary: Meeting the Asian Challenge As India and China ascend the economic ladder, here are steps that America can take to boost the four key components of innovation: R&D spending, education, finance for invention, and the national willingness to take risks. |
National Real Estate Investor February 1, 2006 Jennifer Popovec |
New Land of Opportunity India is transforming from an exotic locale to the next frontier for American commercial real estate investment. In fact, real estate investment is expected to capture about 18% to 20% of all the money that is coming to India this year from outside its borders. |
Wired February 2004 Daniel H. Pink |
The New Face of the Silicon Age How India became the capital of the computing revolution. |
Global Services April 2, 2008 Adyasha Sinha |
Changing Lanes with ESO A product may be "Made in China" or "Made in U.S.A." but it's the "Engineered Globally" tag that is up for grabs |
IEEE Spectrum November 2008 Hira & Ross |
R&D Goes Global Hidden in corporate research budgets is a shift of R&D work to low-cost countries, particularly China and India. |
BusinessWeek October 30, 2006 |
How This Tiger Got Its Roar Azim Premji transformed a peanut oil company in poverty-ridden India into a tech powerhouse. |
The Motley Fool August 25, 2009 Tim Beyers |
This Is the Next Great Tech Market India is more than an emerging economy. Mumbai and Bangalore, together, may be the world's next alternative to Silicon Valley. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2006 Seema Singh |
Big Players in Chip Design Buy Into India India's position suddenly seems so strong in both market potential and engineering resources that it could soon be driving some of the major global developments in chip design. |
BusinessWeek June 20, 2005 Manjeet Kripalani |
Private Equity Pours Into India A lucrative Warburg Pincus deal sends a signal to other firms: There's big money to be made in India. |
BusinessWeek November 4, 2010 Einhorn & Gokhale |
India Outsourcers Feel Unloved in the U.S. Indian outsourcers fear that a U.S. backlash over job losses will endanger their biggest overseas market. |