Apple’s pivot to shift its US iPhone manufacturing from China to India by 2026 isn’t just significant—it’s monumental, and it’s...| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries
The focus of a lot of US business is going to be squarely on cost reduction, and this will have a direct impact on global IT service providers. This will result in a double whammy hit for the India-dependent service providers and consultancies as US firms will be incentivized to reshore services work back to the US, and also to invest more heavily in AI to reduce reliance on support staff in areas like application development and business services.| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries
Protectionism isn't just disrupting your current vendor relationships—it's fundamentally transforming how services will be delivered to your organization. The more governments try to lock down supply chains, labor markets, and data flows, service providers are left with no choice but to accelerate their shift toward Services-as-Software.| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries
The changing nature of the US workforce supports the possibility of services coming to the US as anxious businesses look to get ahead of global risk and uncertainty. Only a fool would ignore the magnitude of what is happening in our geopolitical landscape.| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries
Rohan Kulkarni| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries
Tony Filippone| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries
Saurabh Gupta| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries
Phil Fersht| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries
If you can’t move your people, then move your code — Services-as-Software is the new trade route| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries
While tech and BPO service providers have grappled with flagging enterprise demand and other market pressures, GCCs have thrived, with HFS estimating 2000 expected to be in full operation in 2025. So, are these GCCs genuinely the new face of Indian IT? And can they sustain their success and continue leading the charge in global technology services?| Horses for Sources | No Boundaries