
Aegis PeopleSupport workers at their workstations inside the company's offices in Makati City, near Manila, Philippines, Nov. 11, 2011. Many companies have moved their customer service lines to Manila to take advantage of workers who speak American English and are familiar with American culture. Photo: Jes Aznar, New York Times.
Filipino accents and knowledge of America are a  big competitive advantage.
It's midnight in Manila, and the capital is  slowly waking up to the start of another working day. At the Worldwide  Corporate Center office block, thousands of young Filipinos are crowding into  endless open-plan offices. Once seated, they quickly start answering the  questions and calming the frustrations of vexed American consumers beginning  their own day on the other side of the Pacific Ocean.
These Filipinos are call-center workers. To  outsiders it is hardly a glamorous profession, yet -- despite the antisocial  hours -- these men and women have every reason to be as well-motivated and  cheerful as they seem. They are well-paid and know that they work at the heart  of their country's most dynamic industry.
The rise of what is known as business-process  outsourcing (BPO) in the Philippines has been nothing short of phenomenal. The  very first calls weren't taken until 1997, but today the sector employs 638,000  people and enjoys revenues of $11 billion, about 5 percent of the country's  GDP.
Last year the Philippines even overtook India,  long the biggest call-center operator in the world, in "voice-related  services." The country now employs about 400,000 people at call centers,  India only 350,000.
The Southeast Asian upstart, with a population  of 101 million, is unlikely ever to surpass the Indian behemoth of 1.2 billion  people across the entire range of outsourcing offerings, which also include all  kinds of information-technology services.
Growth expected to explode
Yet, given its extraordinary growth so far, it  is hard to ignore the Philippines' projection that its BPO industry could add  another 700,000 jobs by 2016 and generate revenue of $25 billion. At that point  the industry would make up a tenth of the country's GDP.
As in the call-center business so far, some of  these new jobs will come at the expense of India. However, India's relationship  with the Philippines in back-office work is more complex than the numbers  suggest.
The main reason for the success of the  Philippine call centers is that workers speak English with a neutral accent and  are familiar with American idioms, which is exactly what their American  customers want. Of these, many have taken to complaining bitterly about Indian  accents, which no amount of "voice neutralization" coaching seems to  have overcome. As a result, some Indian firms have been helping to move jobs to  the Philippines by setting up call centers in Manila and other parts of the  country.
Infosys and Wipro, as well as scores of other  Indian firms, now have substantial operations there. And they aren't drawn to  Manila by cheap labor: Wages in the Philippines are slightly higher than in  India, since the Filipino accent commands a premium.
It also helps that the country has a big pool  of well-educated workers. The million or so Filipinos who graduate every year  have few other options to choose from, besides emigrating. Working in a call  center is considered a middle-class job: New recruits start at $470 a month.
The big question is whether the Philippine BPO  industry, having conquered the call-center market, can now move up the value  chain. To keep growing rapidly, and profitably, it needs to capture some of the  more sophisticated back-office jobs, such as those processing insurance claims  and conducting due diligence. In these businesses, called knowledge-process  outsourcing and legal-process outsourcing, India still rules supreme.
Integreon offers a glimpse of what the future  may hold. The firm occupies only a few discreet, very secure offices. It  employs 300 people in Manila, 40 of them lawyers who help multinational law  firms with litigation. Familiarity with America helps.
"It makes it very easy for us to do legal research  for American firms," says Benjamin Romualdez, the firm's country manager.
This sort of operation is new in Manila, but  Romualdez expects that he can find the skilled workers to double his workforce  in the next five years. Western banks also have discovered the Philippines.  JPMorgan Chase now has more than 25,000 workers on its payroll in the country,  many of whom do much more than answering phones.
In short, the Philippines is set to compete  with India across the BPO board.
StarTribune