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Offshore_This
| Offshore This!
So I call my telephone company and someone picks up 15,000 miles
away. I asked the rep where she's from. She said, “I am from
Mary-Land sir. How may I give you excellent service today?” The
accent was… American... in a high society 19th century
ultra-polite sort of way.
“Mary Land?” My brain's editing booth could not screen the
snickers in time.
“Yes sir… this is correct sir.” She pushed to the next level.
“Yes, Mary Land, sir, on thee eastern seaboard. How may I give
you excellent service?”
“The eastern seaboard?” Now laughing out loud.
“Yes sir, on thee eastern seaboard of thee United States. May I
give you excellent service today?”
The ‘broken record’ assertiveness technique broke my resolve and
she proceeded to give me excellent service, in a deceptive kind
of way, though the experience left me queasy thinking about the
whole new class of jobs being shipped overseas.
When manufacturing left the United States, the tech sector was
supposed to be the new frontier. Americans rushed out to be
retrained. Students set their sites on computer engineering. Our
tech sector was so good, it created the very systems that made
it possible to replace itself. Corporations discovered that an
Indian college graduate will work at a call center for 10,000
rupees a month, or just under $60.00 a week. I have no malice
for our Indian friends, they only want to work. But our kids are
going to have to become proficient at more than playing video
games and watching movies to compete with this highly educated
and driven mass of hungry labor! Math anyone?
I remember hearing that the receptionist was the "face and
voice" of the company and the public would get their first and
most lasting impression based on her attitude. (With that much
on her shoulders, they should have raised her pay.) Now the
whole customer interface has been tossed to foreign nationals.
Perhaps there will be a backlash in advertising. "Our tech
support is Made in the USA! If the anecdotal evidence on
Internet posting boards is any measure, many customers would
rather be pierced with punji sticks rather than be taught one
foreign language, (the computer) by someone with another foreign
language! Written scripts are repeated ad nauseum with no
ability to converse off-road and actually make the customer feel
understood. Below is a sample, your results may vary.
Reactions to Foreign Customer Service
“I called HP Cares. They didn't. I spoke with three or four
representatives. They all had limited English and spoke with an
accent. They all asked me the same set of questions. Many asked
the same questions over and over and over again. They all
refused to believe that the sticker was not there. They all
treated me like I was simply too stupid to find it or maybe I
was just blind. And, they all put me on hold…”
“We could not understand each other. Even the simplest English
terms were incomprehensible to her. I said goodbye and went
through the tedious re-calling process, waiting another 20
minutes or so on hold. The second technician could also not
understand English, and the connection broke after a few
minutes, so I called a third time, going through the whole
waiting drill…”
“I will never purchase another Dell product, ever again. And
everyone I know will not purchase their products either…”
It appears that companies may also be outsourcing the trust
they've built in their brand, along with customer loyalty and
retention. I think I'm on to something here. Let's go American
business! Advertise your "Onshore" Calling Center!!!
The call centers are not only in India, they are coming online
anywhere a building can put up some computers, chairs and get
broadband. A Costa Rican tech support rep working for Toshiba
complained in a posting that his job was outsourced to Turkey.
Kencall of Kenya, provides its own generators and satellite
uplink. I bet they don't have an employee snack room though.
Foreign Outsourcing vs. Offshoring
"Foreign Outsourcing" is the hiring of a foreign company to do
some of your work, while "Offshoring" is the creation of a
wholly owned foreign subsidiary which gives the company greater
control. According to the financial consulting firm Deloitte and
Touche, there was a 38% increase in the number of financial
institutions with offshore operations in 2003, with an estimated
500% increase in offshore jobs.
Call center work is only the tip of the iceberg. There is an
ever expanding list of higher level technical positions being
exported from a variety of industries. Engineering positions,
architectural design work, computer programmers,
computer-generated animation, financial and legal research,
insurance claim processing, software coding, AutoCAD, technical
drawings and billions of dollars worth of back office services
are now being moved from the first world to the third world by
mostly the larger companies. This is making it difficult for
medium sized businesses to compete.
India is well positioned to receive much of this work because it
has a large English speaking population from its colonial
history with Great Britain, and a growing pool of Internet-wise
graduates ready to work at low Indian wages.
Concerns over data privacy and data theft loom large. Three
employees of Msource in India allegedly siphoned off $350,000
from Citibank customers recently, using information obtained
over the phone, according to Callcentres.net. The plaintiffs who
will go through a living hell trying to gain back their
financial identities will not be outsourced, nor will the local
judges and jury who will hear the case. A couple other factors
that come to mind when considering foreign outsourcing or
off-shoring, are Islamic terrorists hostile to western
interests, civil unrest, security costs, infrastructure concerns
and the global war on terrorism...just off the top of my head.
Growing up we were told to eat all of our food because people
were starving in other countries. I remember being chastised for
suggesting that we should ship out my left over peas and
carrots. Today we should tell our kids to study hard and think
outside the box because people in other countries are hungry for
their jobs!
Let's Laugh and Have Faith
On a lighter note, my wife called our credit card company and
was transferred to “Mumbai”. (Bombay) In one minute she was
squaring off with the mores of a patriarchal society. She was
told that she would have to “consult with her husband and obtain
his permission and consent, and gain his approval.”
The policy was no doubt born in America, but something in the
tone and wording communicated female inferiority and wifely
subservience. The idea of being "granted approval" was not going
down easy. There may have been some gagging.
“BUT...IF, my husband doesn’t pay his bill, THEN you’ll want to
talk to me! Will I need his "approval" and "consent" and
"permission" for MY credit to be hammered?"
I was handed the phone at a certain mid-point in the
intercontinental shoving match. Something about “your husband
will have to make that decision”.
I got on the phone and had a lovely conversation. We marveled at
how all of this can be taking place over thousands of miles.
Actually I rather enjoyed the experience. Perhaps I can
outsource our marriage counselor.
About the author:
Rick David writes for a Merchant Newsletter @ Merchant
America. He also writes a humor column called, "Don't Laugh It Could Happen To
You" for http://sandiego.mercha
ntamerica.com.
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