Hello, I mentioned earlier that we should not be reactive to issues that are long term like education. Recently, an institution changed its name to one that is indicative am left wondering what will happen when the trend changes in future that will render such non consequential, will we change the name again?. Jog up your mind, we have technicians who were trained on fixed telephony, when cellular came, are they still relevant? When we talk of HR it is long term therefore narrowing it down (read BPO training) in our institutions would be very short term, am wondering whether we really need to call it BPO training that lasts four years at the university/college graduate with a certificate look for a job in the market! Am a consumer of services, when I call a provider for service, my primary concern is whether my problem has been solved by the person I spoke with, not the accent. I will be so dissatisfied if the fellow speaks very well but no problem sorted out. For this fellow to sort out my problem, she/he needs to understand in detail – technology, culture and the business environment of the institution he is representing. What is critical for us is to come out with basic principles like the accountants have – asset and liabilities, credit and debit, we can copy the same. This can be taught to the young souls at different levels so that they grow with it. Meaning if one is a practising accountant, there is no problem keeping books for a one man outfit, a multinational, an NGO or a church. In the same way outsourcing for a Japanese, Korean, Kenyan or Tanzanian companies In short term, we need to carry out an audit of the requirements of the sector, the likely markets, there needs against the sort of personnel we have. If there is a shortfall, such institutions as MMU and what the BPO society has can be used to train. While in the long run, we need to work on our curriculum to develop graduates who are multi dimensional. Sam