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Climbing the offshoring ladder
The falling value of the dollar has hit the
export-driven Indian IT industry. The way ahead is to mitigate
losses on this account by adopting sustainable strategies and
focusing on offshore product development, writes Kushal
Shah.
“If we are growing, we are always going to be
out of our comfort zone….”
The above statement reflects what is the case with our
ever growing economy in general and the IT industry in particular,
which is going through an uncomfortable phase thanks to the falling
dollar and the appreciating rupee. In little over a year, we have
seen the rupee appreciating by over 14% hovering around Rs. 39 per
dollar. To a large extent it has been more of a case of the dollar
falling against all currencies, contributed to by subprime losses in
the US economy. Combine that with a surging Rupee fueled by rapid
economic growth in India and you have a recipe for trouble as far as
our US-dependent software exporters are concerned. This rapid change
in the currency has been instrumental in fomenting concerns across
the boardrooms of leading IT companies. Business heads have been
putting their noses to the grindstone trying to find the right
approach for this export driven business where the bulk of revenues
accrue as dollars.
According to NASSCOM, revenue from the Indian IT
software and services sector (including the domestic and exports
segments and excluding hardware), touched nearly $40 billion during
FY 2007 and is expected to grow by nearly 27% to clock $49 to 50
billion in FY 2008. Of this, software services remains the mainstay
of the sector contributing $31.3 billion during FY 2007, beating
forecasts to register a 33% growth. This high dependence on exports
and almost 70% billing in dollar terms is a matter of deep concern
for the industry, even the giants, and will force them come up with
long-term solutions.
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"Due to the rise in the value of the rupee, Indian
IT companies have lost about 2 to 4% in margins and are
becoming less competitive on the global front and with respect
to MNCs in India. They will now have to restructure their
pricing models"
- Arup
Roy |
There is a need to take a fresh look at the
business models adopted by IT companies and the way in which they
are headed to ensure that they are relatively unaffected by changes
in global and local scenario such as currency fluctuations and the
cost of labor. Primarily, in terms of IT software exports, we see
two trends—Offshore Product Development (OPD) and Offshore Software
Development (OSD)—two distinctively different terms, but part of the
same industry. These need to be looked at and the future approach
for better positioning globally has to be determined based upon that
evaluation. “Due to the rise in rupee value, Indian IT companies
have lost about 2 to 4% in margins and are becoming less competitive
on the global front and with respect to MNCs in India. They will now
have to restructure their pricing models,” said Arup Roy, Senior
Research Analyst, Gartner. There are many ways in which the entire
industry needs to evolve to stay competitive globally—the key being
leveraging on the availability of higher expertise (and not on lower
costs).
OPD vs. OSD
Simply put, Offshore Product Development (OPD)
refers to transferring design, development, testing and other
related services of the product development life cycle to a
third-party service provider. The third party does most or all of
the work and the final product is marketed and its IP owned by the
original company that farmed out the work. “The work could include
product conceptualization, architecture and design, implementation
and development, enhancements, and support—helping the client or
sometimes even the product’s end users in optimally generating value
from the software product,” said Praveen Kankariya, CEO, Impetus
Technologies. Work and definitions vary from company to company.
Some companies make a part of a particular product; some do
re-engineering work, while a few develop an entire product.
OSD, as we all know is third-party customized
application development or services for a company’s own usage and is
usually non-distributive in nature—this could be customized
application development, application migration, software
functionality testing, packaged software implementation, etc.
OPD differs from OSD in terms of its development
methods. OPD needs teams that have a vastly different set of skills
that are, in some ways, more skilled than those that work on vanilla
OSD for which according industry folk only knowledge of a
programming language and syntax is sufficient. OPD also provides
better operational efficiency due to its automation capabilities. In
terms of development, OPD is far more difficult. “Usually, in the
case of OPD, your customer is not the end-user and you are not aware
of the end-user’s preferences and platforms. So you have to make
your product flexible enough that it can be used by a wide gamut of
users,” said Ramanan RV, Chief Software Architect, Hexaware
Technologies. In case of OSD, you know your users well and can
interact with them, this makes the job a lot easier for the
developers involved. With the maturing of the Indian talent pool,
more companies are jumping into OPD and heading towards the dream of
making their own IP one day. Some of the large organizations are
already generating about 30% of their revenues through OPD and some
new and small companies have focused their entire business on this
strategy.
OPD came to Indian shores even before software
services did, but could not capitalize on its early entry due to the
high demand for IT services across the globe. Now it is ready to
strengthen its position in the country. The rising popularity of
offshore product development and engineering services is
supplementing India’s efforts in IP creation. According to NASSCOM,
this segment has grown by 22 to 23% to touch $4.9 billion in export
revenues.
OSD—Marginally higher
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"If you are an efficient product developer, OPD
does provide a 4 to 5% better profit margin than generic
software development. As it revolves around architecture,
design and engineering, there are not many companies offering
such services and the margins go up"
- Ganesh
Natarajan |
Apart from differences in the mode of development
and definition, these two categories also vary in terms of business.
OPD needs greater expertise and is skilled work
and can offer superior profit margins. “I feel that if you are an
efficient product developer then, yes, it does provide a 4 to 5%
better profit margin than generic software development. As it
revolves around architecture, design and engineering, there are not
many companies offering such services and hence the margins go up,”
said Ganesh Natarajan, Deputy Chairman and Managing Director, Zensar
Technologies.
At a time when margins are the biggest problem for
the dollar dependent industry, even a marginal improvement in
profits will come as a relief.
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"A product development team needs to harness
‘brightest of the bright’ engineering skill sets, and
engineering experise, which costs more money to hire and
develop. So, profit margins tend to be equal to those of the
OSD companies as of now"
- Bhoovarahan
Thirumalai |
Some in the industry believe that there is a flip
side to this cost advantage. They feel that OPD is equivalent to OSD
when all factors are taken into account including manpower costs
which are higher in the case of the former. “A product development
team needs to harness the ‘brightest of the bright’ engineering
skill sets, and ‘engineering expertise’, which costs more money to
hire and develop. So, profit margins tend to be equal to that of the
OSD companies as of now,” said Bhoovarahan Thirumalai, President–US
Operations, Aspire Systems.
That said, most of the people we talked to believe
that OPD provides marginally better profits.
On the other hand, owing to its simplicity and
ease of work compared to OPD, OSD comprises the biggest chunk of any
big software company’s business. Over the years, Indian IT companies
have created a niche and dominance in this business across the
world. Indian companies have become the world’s software factory for
services and software development. On the other hand, attracting
customers for OPD involves proving a company’s worth for product
development capabilities and that takes time.
The Rupee and the IT sector
Arguably the biggest problem faced by the IT
industry as a whole, be it OSD or OPD, or any other segment, is that
of the rising rupee. This problem is totally dependent on location
and the currency used for billing the client. As almost 70% of India
Software Inc.’s clients are from the US, billing in dollars has had
a deleterious impact upon business.
In the midst of all this, Indian IT companies
might lose their long held advantages. According to Roy, apart from
losing ground due to a higher asking price, they will face tough
weather while hiring and retaining employees as they have to
optimize their resource utilization.
There are many factors that lead us to believe
that OPD relatively unaffected by the dance of the Rupee and the US
dollar. The primary reason for this is the inherent nature of OPD
work. In the case of product development, companies often get the
work of making a new version of an existing product. In such
scenarios, most of the work is automated and this involves minimal
human intervention, which, in turn, saves a lot of operational cost
mitigating the impact of currency instability.
In some cases, due to the importance of the work
and value of the end product, OPD is less affected by currency
fluctuations. “The product development companies that are offshoring
their product development work have higher profit margins so that
they can pay well in comparison to those involved in application
development,” said Eddie Chandhok, President -Global Delivery,
Infogain Corporation.
On the other hand, some feel that it depends on
how you can get the best rates even in tough situations. “The impact
is probably same. However, in some cases such as OPD, you are able
to manage impact of a rising rupee a lot better as royalties and
AMCs can be worked out in OPD,” said Edwin Moses, Senior
Vice-president (Products), Sasken Communication Technologies.
With the Indian economy growing steadily at 8
percent plus, the rise of the Rupee is inevitable. There has been a
demand from certain quarters for RBI intervention to keep it down.
This demand seems short-sighted and does not take into account the
enormous opportunity that the rising rupee presents to change
business models and strategies.
Managing change
India’s software exporters have to come up with
different solutions to deal with the situation. According to Roy,
most IT companies are now charging a premium of 4 to 5% when signing
a new contract and are renegotiating existing contracts for a 3 to
4% hike in pricing. This trend and support from clients would
certainly ease the pressure. In order to be more market worthy and
to enjoy inorganic growth despite Rupee problems, companies are
looking to move up the value chain by providing consulting services.
There are more ways than one to fight this problem
and the industry seems ready. “Apart from increasing the asking
price by 4 to 5%, we are going to tighten utilization and
productivity. We are still able to maintain profit due to higher
realization and better productivity,” said Natarajan.
Companies need to set their pricing keeping in
mind some aspects which can be beneficial in the long run for the
industry as a whole. IT companies need to demand because ‘we know
better’ and not because ‘we are cheaper’. The Indian IT industry
needs to leverage its talent pool which will put it back in the
driver’s seat.
There are a few more ways to deal with this
problem. One is by changing the billing currency to a more stable
one, which seems difficult but some companies have started doing
this. Another mechanism is to resort to hedging wherein a company
can hedge its anticipated risk of a loss in margins by investing in
another instrument. These are some of the common practices to deal
with currency fluctuations.
Whichever strategy a company chooses, the
combination of different options can help mitigate the problem. As
far as OSD and OPD are concerned, OPD will continue to rise in
popularity as Indian companies look to starting their own ranges of
products which will eventually make them independent of currency
issues to a great extent. Then, we can surely expect some world
class products out of our own backyard for ‘us’ to sell and not for
the ‘US’ to sell.
kushal.shah@expressindia.com |