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BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 Kripalani & Engardio |
The Rise Of India Growth is only just starting, but the country's brainpower is already reshaping Corporate America |
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 February 14, 2005 Puliyenthuruthel & Kripalani |
India: Good Help Is Hard To Find Higher wages and lavish perks reign as outsourcing outfits scramble for talent |
The Motley Fool June 9, 2006 John Finneran |
IBM: "I" Stands for India IBM will invest $6 billion in India -- but why? |
Food Engineering February 1, 2007 Kevin T. Higgins |
Outsourcing Engineering Refining Priorities for New Age Engineers The balancing act that engineering teams must master is outsourcing nonessential jobs while retaining the personnel and talent necessary for innovation. |
The Motley Fool November 30, 2009 Jennifer Schonberger |
The Outlook for Outsourcing in India As the global business landscape shifts and the outsourcing industry evolves, how much will it continue to contribute to India's rapid-fire growth? |
BusinessWeek November 7, 2005 Manjeet Kripalani |
India: Desperately Seeking Talent As India's economy booms, companies are scrambling to find, and keep, skilled workers. |
BusinessWeek May 26, 2011 Bruce Einhorn |
India's Scarce Talent, Rising Wages, Balky Clients Faced with a shortage of workers, India's outsourcing industry is struggling to maintain its profit margins -- and its global market share. |
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. |
The Motley Fool January 9, 2006 Rich Smith |
Outsourcing's Endgame Outsourcing will end as soon as it becomes economically illogical to continue it, and not a moment sooner. Already, wages for Indian workers ranging from call center operators to programmers to engineers are increasing at rates of 15% to 30% per annum. |
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 January 16, 2006 Nandini Lakshman |
Subcontinental Drift More Westerners are beefing up their resumes with a stint in India. |
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 June 25, 2007 Steve Hamm |
Guess Who's Hiring In America Infosys and other Indian companies are recruiting more locals in the U.S. |
Reason June 2009 Brian Doherty |
I.T. Go Home Many highly trained immigrants choose to return to countries such as India and China rather than staying in the far wealthier United States. |
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. |
Reason January 2008 Michael C. Moynihan |
Home Again Outsourcing the outsourced: Increasingly India is becoming a clearinghouse for outsourced labor to places like Latin America. |
The Motley Fool January 26, 2004 Rich Smith |
A Passage to India More and more U.S. firms are outsourcing professional services to India. Who will benefit? |
National Defense June 2007 Lawrence P. Farrell Jr. |
Education Trends Portend Trouble for Defense One of the most troubling trends in the U.S. is that our schools are producing fewer U.S.-born science and math graduates than countries such as China, Taiwan, South Korea, India and Mexico. |
Wired February 2004 Daniel H. Pink |
The New Face of the Silicon Age How India became the capital of the computing revolution. |
Bank Technology News August 2003 Karen Krebsbach |
Outsourcing: Fighting a Giant Sucking Sound Banks face backlash on IT job exports overseas |
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. |
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 |
Global Services July 7, 2007 Shyamanuja Das |
The Acquisitive Indian Indian tech and outsourcing companies seem to be on a buying spree. In the last few months, every Indian company worth its name has either acquired another or has set aside a few million to do so in the near future. |
BusinessWeek May 2, 2005 Christopher Farrell |
An Onshore Play In Offshoring Shares in Indian tech consultants are pricey but there's room to grow. There are concerns over rising labor costs, and worries about growth prospects that have put pressure on stock prices. |
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. |
CFO October 1, 2009 Josh Hyatt |
The New Calculus of Offshoring For years the offshoring boom was driven by one factor: savings. Today the decision is much more complicated. |
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. |
BusinessWeek October 17, 2005 Pete Engardio |
Designing Dream Machines -- In India India's Tata Consultancy and other outfits are taking on more complex jobs for the Detroit auto industry. |
Global Services July 27, 2007 Imrana Khan |
$44,172: Highest Salary of Indian Tech Grads The average annual salary of an Indian tech employee has grown by 28%, from $6527 in 2006, to $8,500 in 2007. Wages are rising in India, but demand for well-trained IT professionals is still rising faster. |
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. |
The Motley Fool July 13, 2006 Stephen Ellis |
Infosys: Strong Quarter, Still Expensive The Indian outsourcing company continues to shine, but it's one darn expensive stock. |
BusinessWeek February 23, 2004 Laura D'Andrea Tyson |
Outsourcing: Who's Safe Anymore? The U.S. federal budget deficit will limit help to displaced workers. |
The Motley Fool June 4, 2009 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Throw This Stock Away Satyam fell apart in the mother of all accounting fraud scandals. The Indian outsourcing specialist had been cooking its books, and it paid the price. If you still own it here are three to replace it with. |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Manjeet Kripalani |
Ban Outsourcing? Bad Idea Such legislation in the U.S. could derail India's moves to open its economy |
The Motley Fool April 2, 2004 Martin Hutchinson |
India: Emerging for Your Dollars How can you benefit from the biggest story in world business today? Guest writer Martin Hutchinson offers an overview of India's economy, the risks therein, and good investment choices available to U.S. investors. |
Finance & Development September 1, 2006 Raghuram Rajan |
From Paternalistic to Enabling India needs to adopt a style of government that unleashes the people's entrepreneurial zeal. |
The Motley Fool May 4, 2011 Sarosh Nicholas |
iGate Taps Senior Notes To Fund Patni Deal California-based iGate, an IT company offering business processing solutions, recently announced plans to issue $770 million worth of senior notes to finance its acquisition of Patni Computer Systems. |
Reason June 2006 Samuel R. Staley |
The Rise and Fall of Indian Socialism Why India embraced economic reform. |
Global Services July 29, 2007 Imrana Khan |
China to Lead in Financial Services Outsourcing In the race between China and India for global economic superiority, who will win? A recent report by Deloitte Consulting, cheers for China, argues that China is better poised to be the victor, especially in the area of financial services outsourcing. |
BusinessWeek January 22, 2007 Steve Hamm |
Outsourcing Heads To The Outskirts GramIT brings tech-services jobs to rural areas - and transforms villagers' lives. |
CIO July 30, 2013 John Ribeiro |
Infosys Is Having Its Midlife Crisis Indian outsourcer Infosys -- in the midst of a major transformation -- struggles to supplement its commodity programming services with high-value business offerings |
CIO December 1, 2000 Cheryl Bentsen |
DotKarma The future looks bright for India's new, IT-driven economy, but significant obstacles remain... |