This is an updated report on Knowledge Process Outsourcing with figures that analyse the predictions for the future growth of KPO in India that we made more than three years ago. In this new study, we review the evolution of KPO to date and update our predictions for the industry for the rest of the decade.
During the late 1990s, the success of Information Technology and Business Process Outsourcing to low-wage
countries and the resulting cost savings prompted several multinational companies to experiment with outsourcing
higher-end knowledge-based work. For example:
Although a few companies began providing higher-end, knowledge-based services as early as 1997, this trend did
not gain much momentum until 2003, and it was Evalueserve’s Chief Operating Officer, Ashish Gupta, who coined
the term Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO) in an effort to differentiate between his firm’s services and those of the established BPO firms. “KPO” has since come to refer to those outsourcing activities that require significant domain expertise (e.g., market research, business research, investment research, and data mining).
Shortly afterwards, in January 2004, I gave a seminar at Telcordia Laboratories in New Jersey titled, “Moving Up the
Value Chain in Broad Based Outsourcing Services,” wherein I provided Evalueserve’s forecasts regarding the growth
of the KPO industry from 2003-04 to 2010-11. The contents of this talk were later summarized in a July 2004 report,
titled “The Next Big Opportunity – Moving Up the Value Chain – From BPO to KPO” which essentially stated that the
entire KPO sector worldwide would increase from a revenue base of US $1.2 billion in 2003-04 to US $17 billion in
2010-11. Furthermore, within India, this sector would increase from a revenue base of US $1.08 billion in 2003-04 to
US $12 billion in 2010-11, and employ approximately 250,000 professionals in 2010-11.
Since this seminal paper in 2004, the acronym KPO has become part of the lexicon of the outsourcing industry
worldwide. Indeed, more than fifteen independent articles have been written on this topic (including those from
Deloitte Consulting, TPI, and PriceWaterhouseCoopers); at least seven firms providing such services have KPO as
part of their name; there are at least five annual conferences worldwide that are solely about KPO (and some even
have “KPO” as part of their names); about 120 captive units of large multinational companies are providing KPO
services to their offices in North America and Europe; the majority of the mid-sized and large IT and BPO companies
in India have a KPO division; and there are at least 262 “niche” companies in India providing third-party KPO
services.1
In this article, we revisit our July 2004 report and analyse how this sector has changed during the last three years
and how it is expected to grow during the next four. We also delve deeper into the sub-sectors within the KPO
industry that are expected to do well (e.g., banking, finance, securities and insurance research; data mining and
analytics; and contract research organisations and biotech services) versus those that are still at a nascent stage
(e.g., legal and paralegal support services; remote logistic services and procurement support services; and network
optimisation and analytics services.)
A business process that is repeatable, scalable and that does not require the physical presence of a worker near the
client can theoretically be outsourced and offshored; this forms the basis of Business Process Outsourcing or BPO. A
Business Process Outsourcing or Offshoring firm’s function can be simply defined as follows: it acquires a process
from the end-client and runs it at its site until the process has reached its logical conclusion, after which it sends the
results – if any – to the client. In contrast, a KPO or Knowledge Process Outsourcing firm functions at a higher level
and can be differentiated from BPO firms in the following ways:
As a final remark, it is worth mentioning that although most Knowledge Process Offshoring services are being
provided from India, countries such as the Philippines, Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Hungary, China and South Africa
are beginning to provide more and more KPO services. Indeed, in the near future, Knowledge Process Outsourcing
and Offshoring is likely to be driven by factors such as breadth and depth of coverage, domain expertise, location
advantage (e.g., near-shoring and language capabilities), sales and marketing capabilities, data compliance with
respect to regulatory standards (especially those defined by the United States, Canada and the European Union) and
the management of business risks. Hence, it is quite likely that companies – both those with their own captives and
those that use third-party vendors – may use a “hub and spoke” model, in which a provider in India constitutes the
“centre” and other units around the world provide appropriate “spokes.”
According to Evalueserve’s research, the revenue earned by the Knowledge Process Offshoring industry worldwide
was approximately US $1.2 billion in 2003-04 and US $4.4 billion in 2006-07; this implies an annual growth rate of 54
percent. Furthermore, the Knowledge Process Offshoring industry employed approximately 34,000 and 106,000
professionals in 2003-04 and 2006-07 respectively. Our forecasts also show that the industry is expected to grow to
US $16.7 billion in revenue in 2010-11 (which would imply an annual growth rate of 39 percent during the next four
years) and to employ approximately 350,000 professionals globally. In contrast, the rest of the Business Process
Offshoring industry worldwide grew from revenue of US $7.7 billion in 2003-04 to US $15.8 billion in 2006-07, which corresponds to an annual growth rate of approximately 27 percent. During the next four years, the BPO industry is
expected to grow annually at 26 percent, thereby earning US $39.8 billion in revenue during 2010-11.
Figure 1 shows the growth of the KPO industry in India from 2000-01 to 2006-07. According to Evalueserve’s
research, although this industry had only 9,000 billable professionals in India that generated total revenue of US
$260 million during 2000-01, this number had already grown to 75,400 by 2006-07 and these billable professionals
generated US $3.05 billion. This implies a cumulative annual growth rate of 51 percent in US Dollar terms and 43
percent with respect to the increase in the number of billable professionals during these six years.2
Interestingly, the growth of the KPO industry
so far seems to be pretty much in line with
Evalueserve’s July 2004 forecasts, where we
estimated that this industry would generate
US $2.9 billion in revenue during 2006-07.
However, we believe that our original
estimate of $11.9 billion being generated by
this industry during 2010-11 may fall short by
6-7 percent, primarily because (a) a few sub-
sectors (e.g., legal, paralegal, intellectual
property services, and medical content
creation) have not been growing as rapidly as
expected earlier, and (b) the KPO sector in
India is experiencing substantial employee
turnover, which hurts this sector in particular
because these employees are unable to gain sufficient domain expertise and knowledge before they move on to their
next job.
Figure 2 depicts Evalueserve’s current
forecasts with respect to the revenue earned
by this sector during the next four years, as
well as the number of billable professionals it
employs. These forecasts imply a
cumulative annual growth rate of 38 percent
in revenue and 36 percent in the number of
billable professionals (during the next four
years). Clearly, the future is very hard – if
not impossible – to predict and any forecast
comes with some associated assumptions.
Some of the assumptions associated with
the forecasts given in Figure 2 include:
Figure 3 provides estimates for the number of billable professionals likely to be employed in various sub-sectors
within the KPO industry in India during 2010-11 and the revenue generated within these sectors. Of course, the
delineation between some of the sectors is somewhat arbitrary and both the revenue and the number of billable
professionals among them are fungible. Of all the sub-segments of India’s KPO sector alluded to in Figure 3, we
describe three in sections 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3 that seem to be poised for substantial growth and one in section 4.4 that
still seems to be at a nascent stage of development:
There are currently 3,500 billable professionals in this sector in India, of which approximately 1,100 are doing
research related to risk management for credit card and capital leasing companies as well as insurance research.
The remaining 2,400 billable professionals are involved in helping sell-side and buy-side analysts in bulge bracket
banks (e.g., Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, and JP Morgan), mid-tier M&A banks, independent research
providers, hedge funds, mutual funds, pension funds and private equity groups. Given the strong M&A activity that is
ongoing worldwide, the demand for investment research analysts has been growing at a furious pace and clients in
high-wage countries would use an even higher number of high-quality professionals, if low-wage countries like India
could train and provide them.
Given the cost pressures related to research and development of new drugs, biotech and pharmaceutical companies
– both large and small – are outsourcing a lot of clinical research trials to countries in Eastern Europe, India and
China. In fact, according to a recent study by McKinsey and Company, the clinical trial segment in India is expected
to earn US $1.5 billion in revenues by 2010.[Please check changes – I think McKinsey is well-known enough not to
need a description.] Furthermore, our forecasts reveal that the Indian Biotech sector is expected to attain $6.6 billion
in revenue during 2010-11, and about one-fourth of this revenue will come from biotech services’ exports, particularly
in the agricultural biotech and bio-pharmaceutical services areas.
This sector has been growing quite substantially and is likely to grow even faster during the next 3-5 years, especially
because it requires mainly quantitative skills and only limited English speaking and writing skills. Within this sector,
three verticals – banking, finance, securities and insurance; biotech, pharmaceuticals and healthcare; and wireless,
wire-line and cable – are likely to witness massive growth. Indeed, three large data providers in the financial services
industry – Thomson Financial, Reuters and Standards & Poor – put together have approximately 8,000 professionals
working in India in this sub-sector (out of the total of 16,000 professionals mentioned in Figure 3). Collecting and
“scrubbing” data at a fairly low cost and with high quality seems also to be an irresistible proposition for other data
providers.
There are currently more than 60 firms providing legal research, and paralegal and intellectual property-related
services from India; about 45 percent of these are established law firms who practise in India and have now started
providing such additional services. Since the culture in these law firms is substantially different from that of the US,
since Indian English is idiomatically different from American and British English, and since lawyers are usually risk-
averse, it is clear that growth in this area will be slow, albeit pronounced (when compared to other sub-sectors within
the KPO industry). Also, companies from the Philippines will compete strongly with those from India in providing legal
support and paralegal services to the US, because the Philippines was an American colony until 1946 and its laws
continue to be similar to those of the United States. Nevertheless, even within this sub-sector, some services, such
as those related to intellectual property research, will be offshored more substantially than others, because of the
availability of a large technical talent pool within India.