A New Capital of Call Centers
International New York Times | 25 February 2016
MANILA
— Americans calling the customer service lines of their airlines, phone
companies and banks are now more likely to speak to Mark in Manila than
Bharat in Bangalore.
Over
the last several years, a quiet revolution has been reshaping the call
center business: the rise of the Philippines, a former United States
colony that has a large population of young people who speak lightly
accented English and, unlike many Indians, are steeped in American
culture.
More
Filipinos — about 400,000 — than Indians now spend their nights talking
to mostly American consumers, industry officials said, as companies
like AT&T, JPMorgan Chase and Expedia have hired call centers here,
or built their own. The jobs have come from the United States, Europe
and, to some extent, India as outsourcers followed their clients to the
Philippines.
India,
where offshore call centers first took off in a big way, fields as many
as 350,000 call center agents, according to some industry estimates.
The Philippines, which has a population one-tenth as big as India’s,
overtook India this year, according to Jojo Uligan, executive director
of the Contact Center Association of the Philippines.
The
growing preference for the Philippines reflects in part the maturation
of the outsourcing business and in part a preference for American
English. In the early days, the industry focused simply on finding and
setting up shop in countries with large English-speaking populations and
low labor costs, which mostly led them to India. But executives say
they are now increasingly identifying places best suited for specific
tasks. India remains the biggest destination by far for software
outsourcing, for instance.
Executives
say the growth was not motivated by wage considerations. Filipino call
center agents typically earn more than their Indian counterparts ($300 a
month, rather than $250, at the entry level), but executives say they
are worth the extra cost because American customers find them easier to
understand than they do Indian agents, who speak British-style English
and use unfamiliar idioms. Indians, for example, might say, “I will
revert on the same,” rather than, “I will follow up on that.”
It helps that Filipinos learn American English in the first grade, eat hamburgers, follow the N.B.A. and watch the TV show “Friends” long before they enter a call center. In India, by contrast, public schools introduce British English in the third grade, only the urban elite eat American fast food, cricket is the national pastime and “Friends” is a teaching aid for Indian call center trainers. English is an official language in both countries.
The
Philippines has “a unique combination of Eastern, attentive hospitality
and attitude of care and compassion mixed with what I call
Americanization,” said Aparup Sengupta, chief executive of Aegis Global,
an outsourcing firm based in Mumbai, India, that acquired Manila-based
People Support in 2008 and now employs nearly 13,000 Filipinos. American
companies are reluctant to discuss their outsourcing strategies, but
privately some executives acknowledged that early on, they focused
primarily on saving money. But as they gained experience in different
countries, they realized that was not the best strategy.
“Certain
phrases people use and idioms are important,” said an executive at a
large American company that handles service calls through the
Philippines. He spoke on the condition that he and his firm not be
identified. “We are getting better at it, but of course it is still a
hot button.”
Analysts
said call centers in the Philippines appeared to have helped American
businesses respond to complaints from consumers who said they could not
understand Indian agents. But it is unlikely to satisfy critics who say
outsourcing is sending too many jobs abroad as millions of Americans
struggle to find work.
This
year, for instance, US Airways stopped outsourcing customer service to
Manila and hired 400 agents in Arizona, California and North Carolina as
part of an agreement with the Communications Workers of America union.
Some
American companies like Delta Airlines have said they moved call
centers back to the United States to appease angry customers who wanted
better English. Entry-level American call center agents earn about
$20,000 a year, about five times as much as similar agents in the
Philippines and six times as much as Indian agents.
Nevertheless,
the financial benefits of outsourcing remain strong enough that the
call center business is growing at 25 to 30 percent a year here in the
Philippines, compared to 10 to 15 percent in India, according to Salil
Dani, research director at the Everest Group, a firm that tracks the
market.
American
outsourcing or back-end companies like I.B.M., Accenture and Convergys
along with Indian firms like Aegis, Infosys and Tech Mahindra have
thousands of employees working from gleaming glass towers and even
inside malls, which executives say young workers prefer so they can be
close to shops and restaurants.
In
addition to language skills, the Philippines has better utility
infrastructure than India — so companies spend little on generators and
diesel fuel. Also, cities here are safer and have better public
transportation, so employers do not have to bus employees to and from
work as they do in India.
Many
of the workers are like Mark, 26, who answers tech support calls from
employees of an American chemical company. He studied engineering but
dropped out of college to support his parents and two younger siblings.
He now makes 26,000 pesos ($600) a month, about the same as his father,
who has a small school-bus business. (The average Filipino family earns
17,000 pesos a month.)
He
spoke on the condition that his full name and the name of his employer
were not revealed because he was not authorized to talk to reporters.
His office is in a new development known as Eastwood City, east of
Manila that, locals said, used to be fields a few years ago. Now, it is
home to companies like I.B.M. and Dell, and has McDonald’s, Starbucks
and bars where happy hour starts at 6 a.m. for call center workers who
want a beer after their shift.
Mark
is trim and has sharp features. He wears stylish canvas shoes and a
striped shirt. His accent is more middle America than eastern Manila. He
said his parents made him watch American movies and TV shows, read
English books and speak the language starting at age 5. Still, he said
he was fired from his first call center job after just two weeks because
customers said they could not understand him.
“Sometimes,
they would insist on being transferred to an American agent,” he said.
“After a year, I was able to speak in an accent that they would like to
hear.”
But
now he is tiring of answering phones and is thinking about trying his
hand at acting because he has a little money in the bank and his
siblings have college degrees and are working.
The
call center boom has also benefitted his country, previously a laggard
among Southeast Asia’s tiger economies — its most popular exports were
nurses. Last year, revenue from outsourcing, which also includes things
like health insurance processing, animation development and software
programming, totaled $9 billion, or 4.5 percent of the Philippine gross
domestic product, up from virtually nothing in 2000. The government has
tried to support the industry with tax breaks and subsidies.
In
spite of its recent growth, the Philippines is a much smaller
destination for outsourcing more broadly — India earns about 10 times as
much revenue from outsourcing. That is unlikely to change in the
foreseeable future given India’s 1.2 billion people, 31 percent of whom
are 14 years old or younger. (The Philippines has 93 million people,
about 35 percent of them 14 or younger.)
Executives
expect the Philippines to continue growing at a fast pace and move up
to higher-value services like accounting or the processing of insurance
claims. But, like India, companies are grappling with higher costs and
losing their best workers because of high domestic inflation and a
shortage of skilled professionals. In the last two years, the Philippine
peso climbed nearly 10 percent against the dollar, to 42.14, before
weakening recently.
If
the peso appreciates to 35 to the dollar, many of the call centers in
the Philippines will not survive, said Narasimha Murthy, president of
HGS USA, the American arm of an Indian outsourcing company that employs
4,000 people here. But things look upbeat for now, and Mr. Murthy was
recently in Manila with a prospective American client.
Five
years ago, he said, many clients would ask him if customer calls could
be handled in the Philippines. “From that,” he said, “it has gone to
‘How well will you do it?’ ”
It could have been Phnom Pen instead of Manila.
ReplyDeleteFor the most part, Khmers have better English accent than Philipinos.