[kictanet] Kenyan BPO fails to snap up the subsidy, why?
Harry Hare
harry at africanedevelopment.org
Mon Feb 1 08:53:56 EAT 2010
Good people, please help me out here. I sort of get confused with the BPO
stuff, and especially the business models.
My take is, a BPO entity is a company offering business process outsourcing,
right? It is also limited liability company, right? So, I would assume that
the responsibility of marketing and attracting customers lies squarely on
this entity. So where does the government come in?
And don't say that its because BPO forms part of the vision 2030, because
one of the pillars of the vision is Financial Services and I have never
heard the Kenya Bankers Association asking the Government to market its
members and the sector abroad. Neither have I heard Kenya Association of
manufacturers doing that. So this sorts confuses me.
Wouldn't it be more sustainable if the BPO sector worked on attracting
business (and it does not have to be international I imagine) by packaging
value as the offering? I tend to think Govt subsidies can be used to jump
start a sector but are not sustainable to grow a sector. Govt subsidies are
tied to political considerations and objectives which change with the
government in power. You see, I need some education, don't I?
Good day all.
Harry (not Delano)
On 2/1/10 7:57 AM, "Edwin Onchari" <eonchari at kenyabposociety.or.ke> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> The lack of business can and will be addressed on 2 fronts:
> 1. marketing - The Society is developing a model that will bear fruit
> mid-year (June/July) for key international markets (North America, UK) and
> throughout the year for the local market beginning this month (February). We
> are also developing marketing strategies for the EU market that is more
> targeting ITES operations.
> 2. Capacity- this includes what Charles is talking about, fiber, ease of
> doing business, but most important (especially for international clients)
> data security policy. This policy is being developed (requirements document)
> in collaboration with our partners in key markets and once information
> collection is complete, we'll develop a data security guideline for the
> industry and assist local players comply with this ahead of the June/July
> marketing initiative.
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Edwin M Onchari
> CEO- Kenya BPO Society
> +254-(0)720 755 951
> eonchari at kenyabposociety.or.ke
> www.kenyabposociety.or.ke
> Blogs:
> http://kenyabposociety.blogspot.com/2010/01/discounted-medical-cover-for-ind
> ustry.html
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: kictanet-bounces+eonchari=kenyabposociety.or.ke at lists.kictanet.or.ke
> [mailto:kictanet-bounces+eonchari=kenyabposociety.or.ke at lists.kictanet.or.ke
> ] On Behalf Of charles nduati
> Sent: Monday, February 01, 2010 7:45 AM
> To: eonchari at kenyabposociety.or.ke
> Cc: ke-internetusers at bdix.net; kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke
> Subject: Re: [kictanet] Kenyan BPO fails to snap up the subsidy, why?
>
> hi all,
>
> Nick has hit the nail right on the head
>
> As JKUAT, we have also taken on this challenge and signed on with African
> BPO Academy and BCI to start offering BCI's certifications so that our
> graduates know what it takes to take Kenya where it ought to be in BPO
> space.
> give us the support by sending your staff for trainibg which we are also
> offering at Nairobi CBD.
>
> regards
>
> charles
>
> On Fri, 29 Jan 2010 16:26 EET nicholasnesbitt wrote:
>
>> this biggest concern for this industry is the lack of business. not the
> lack of talent or the high costs. It's the cost of overcoming perceptions,
> reaching out to new prospects, convincing them that kenya is a worthwhile
> outsourcing destination. Marketing! Spreading the word.
>>
>> I have just spent a week in the UK meeting with some of the largest
> outsourcers in the world. They have never heard of Kenya as an outsourcing
> destination. Very interested now, but completely unaware. We stopped
> marketing Kenya as a BPO destination before we had built international
> recognition and credibility, which raises questions in these prospects'
> minds about our commitment as a country to making Kenya an outsourcing
> destination...
>>
>> Nicholas A. Nesbitt
>> Chief Executive Officer
>> KenCall EPZ Ltd
>> P.O. Box 27507 - 00506
>> Sameer Industrial Park, Mombasa Road
>> Nairobi, Kenya
>>
>> +254.20.660.2000 (office)
>> +254.20.660.2222 (fax)
>> +254.721.458.458 (cell)
>> +253.733.458.458 (cell 2)
>>
>> nnesbitt at kencall.com
>> www.kencall.com
>>
>> BEST Non-European Contact Centre 2008
>>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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