During the launch last Saturday of the BPO
Standards and Ethics guidelines drafted by the Kenya BPO & Contact Centre Society,
Dr Ndemo mentioned that government would soon be outsourcing, beginning with
Ministry of Lands. This was quite encouraging. Dr Ndemo, are there any
timelines to this? I would imagine that with all the documents at Lands that
need to be digitised, there is no BPO operator who will fail to get a piece of
the pie…
Best regards
Peres Were
Managing Director
CASCADE
GLOBAL
From:
kictanet-bounces+pwere=cascadegl.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke
[mailto:kictanet-bounces+pwere=cascadegl.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke] On Behalf Of Marilyn Kamuru
Sent: 23 June 2008 11:01
To: pwere@cascadegl.com
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy
Discussions
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Marketing
Kenya as a BPO Destination (within andwithout the country)
Could we please stop equating the BPO sector with Call Centers.
Every time a discussion on the BPO sector starts it is inevitably reduced to a
discussion on call centers.
This is one of the biggest problems domestic outsourcing companies face
since the BPO discussion seems to be only about call centers (for those of you
at the CEO Breakfast earlier this year you will recall it was one of the main
issues CEOs identified . They said the message they received was
essentially BPO=Call Centers). There are numerous BPOs in the country
that offer back office processing services from imaging and data storage to
mail sorting and delivery (perhaps the stock brokers would have been advised to
use them to prevent the Safaricom refund fiasco), and when we fail to highlight
the diversity of the industry we lose valuable opportunities for marketing and
visibility for these companies and the industry as a whole.
Business Process Outsourcing is much larger that call centers and if we
on this list cannot seem to make that distinction that is a major problem.
May I also suggest that the ICT Board has more work to do on
promoting domestic
as well as international BPO work. Without a viable
domestic market, we will not be able to nuture and grow local companies.
Before the international business comes it would be helpful if local companies
had local business to help sustain them, provide refernces as well as cushion
them against the longer sales cycle for international contracts.
Government can help by leading the way as it looks at implementing the
eGovernment initiative as well as in providing incentives for local
business to outsource.
Marilyn
Many thanks and best
regards,
Marilyn M. Kamuru
eManage Africa Ltd.
P.O. Box 18136 00500
Nairobi, Kenya
Tel: (254) 20828 383;
20 34550
Cell : (254) 725 525
972, 736 225 384
www.emanageafrica.com