| e-learning - India as the preferred offshoring destination |
| Thursday, 04 June 2009 | ||||||||||||||||
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With training budgets slumping, and the growing need for maintaining a highly skilled workforce, companies are increasingly turning to incorporating e-learning as a part of their training initiatives. But maintaining e-learning systems within the organization equals more costs. The solution? Outsource, and don’t look back. More companies, realizing cost advantages, are moving from dealing with US e-learning service providers to directly approaching Indian companies.
Key components offshored
Targeted user segments ![]()
Source: ValueNotes Research Report: e-learning Outsourcing 2009 - Advantage India
Service providers of all sizes consider the corporate market to be the easiest to cater to, 91% of whom focus on this user segment. The education segment requires a high level of subject knowledge and ability to handle larger volumes of work, which few providers have. The government segment is targeted the least by Indian roviders, as there are several obstacles in engaging with government agencies, especially in the US. Through our interactions with the industry, we believe the focus on the education segment will rise in the foreseeable future, with governments across nations investing heavily in public education.
India as the preferred offshoring destination
The Indian e-learning industry exploits most of the advantages that the country has in favor of its outsourcing industry. India has a large pool of English-speaking graduates, and specialized talent pools in engineering, IT and management. The country has also maintained its cost advantages over most other nations. The fallout of these two factors is that India has the scalability advantage over certain other countries when it comes to handling large projects. A number of countries have come up as contenders to India for a share of the e-learning offshoring pie. Each has relative strengths and weaknesses against India, makingoffshoring strategies and the overall supply chain all the more complex. China, Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippines are the major Asian countries, apart from India, that take on e-learning projects. ![]() Source: ValueNotes Research Report: e-learning Outsourcing 2009 - Advantage India The graph maps out the competitive advantages / disadvantages that popular offshoring destinations have developed in the e-learning industry. These include the quality of relevant resource pools in the country, the relative cost advantage for operations, the scalability factor, and the industry maturity in terms of the number of years that players in the country have taken on offshored e-learning assignments. ValueNotes then arrived at an overall assessment of the country, which indicates thelevel of threat that these destinations pose for India. From the graph, it is evident that India possesses the maximum competitive advantage as an e-learning offshoring destination.
Steady growth till 2012 ![]() Source: ValueNotes Research Report: e-learning Outsourcing 2009 - Advantage India
We estimate the market size for offshoring e-learning services to India to touch $603 million by 2012.
Indian service provider landscape
One of the first providers to focus exclusively on thee-learning offshoring opportunity was Tata Interactive Systems. For almost a decade, the company had a clear head start. Following its success, large BPOs and KPOs entered the market, followed closely by publishers. ![]() Source: ValueNotes Research Report: e-learning Outsourcing 2009 - Advantage India The market saw an explosive growth after the year 2000, when companies from the IT sector entered the e-learning offshoring market. Interestingly, most of the pure play providers are clustered around this time frame. Today, there are well over a hundred Indian companies who claim to provide e-learning services. The Indian e-learning outsourcing industry consists of both, third-party providers and offshore delivery centers of international providers and consulting firms. We estimate that there are no more than 35 e-learning providers who have more than 100 employees, and over a hundred smaller niche providers. Industry structure We have grouped the players in the Indian market based on their service capabilities and maturity - the number of years that they have been in the industry, the depth and range of their service lines, the user segments that they cater to, their relative position on the value chain, the level of scale offered, and their front end capabilities. Our analysis has thrown up 4 distinct groups, including the market leaders in the industry – the pioneers. It is their movements that will determine the strategic direction for the rest of the players in the industry in the next 4 years.
Source: ValueNotes Research Report: e-learning Outsourcing 2009 - Advantage India
Key trends and insights ![]()
Source: ValueNotes Research Report: e-learning Outsourcing 2009 - Advantage India
In the next 4 years, close to 47% of the Indian service providers that ValueNotes interviewed, plan to target the US more aggressively, 24% will focus on the UK, with countries such as Australia, Singapore and the UAE also evoking interest. Interestingly, 47% of providers are exploring India as a market and plan to release products for the domestic market in the near future. The above article is based on the recently released report by ValueNotes, “e-learning Outsourcing 2009: Advantage India ”. To know more about the report, contact Rakhi at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it |
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