- Published on Saturday, 10 November 2012 18:36
“Of our more than 800 
BPO players, we see the heavyweights hiring most aggressively over the 
next three years,” said House Deputy Majority Leader Roman Romulo in a 
news statement.
“Their economies of 
scale will enable them to quickly draw in more business that will 
necessitate the recruitment of thousands of additional staff,” he added.
“The larger BPO firms 
have cost advantages. Owing to their size, they can easily offer both 
existing and new clients all kinds of back-office and business-support 
services at highly competitive prices,” Romulo said.
Accenture Inc., 
Convergys Philippines Services Corp. and TeleTech Customer Care 
Management Philippines Inc. have emerged as the country’s largest BPO 
entities by gross revenues and full-time staff.
With over 25,000 
employees in 13 locations in the Philippines, Accenture reported 
P22.256-billion revenues in 2011, up 27.7 percent from 2010.
Convergys and TeleTech posted P14.400 billion (up 21 percent) and P11.250 billion (up 19.5 percent) in revenues, respectively.
Convergys employs 
about 30,000 personnel in 19 sites all over the Philippines, while 
TeleTech has a staff of around 20,000 in 14 facilities.
Based on their 2011 
revenues, the other leading BPO firms, to include the in-house back 
offices here of global corporations, are:
• JPMorgan Chase Bank 
N.A.—Philippine Global Service Center (P9.888 billion); Stream 
International Global Services Philippines Inc. (P6.803 billion); Sitel 
Philippines Corp. (P6.501 billion); Telephilippines Inc. (P5.598 
billion); Sutherland Global Services Philippines Inc. (P6.438 billion);
• Deutsche Knowledge 
Services Pte. Ltd. (P6.419 billion); Sykes Asia Inc. (P5.790 billion); 
Aegis PeopleSupport Inc. (P5.442 billion); Telus International 
Philippines Inc.  (P5.431 billion); IBM Daksh Business Process Services 
Philippines Inc. (P5.122 billion);
• HSBC Electronic Data
 Processing Philippines Inc. (P4.805 billion); IBM Business Services 
Inc. (P4.481 billion); Shell Shared Services Asia B.V. (P4.235 billion);
 Sykes Marketing Services Inc. (P3.170 billion); SPi CRM Inc. (P2.953 
billion); Apac Customer Services Inc. (P2.912 billion);
• RMH Teleservices 
Asia Pacific Inc. (P2.836 billion); IBM Solutions Delivery Inc. (P2.553 
billion); 24/7 Customer Philippines Inc. (P2.497 billion);
• Genpact Services Llc. (P2.415 billion); ePLDT Inc. (P2.373 billion); Transcom Worldwide Philippines Inc. (P2.354 billion);
• StarTek 
International Ltd. (P2.323 billion); Hinduja Global Solutions Ltd. 
(P2.225 billion); Thomson Reuters Corp. Pte. Ltd. (P2.203 billion); SPi 
Technologies Inc. (P2.165 billion); Lexmark Research & Development 
Corp. (P2.005 billion);
• Chartis Technology 
& Operations Management Corp. Philippines (P1.702 billion); Alorica 
Pacific Rim Inc. (P1.473 billion); kgb Philippines Inc. (P1.366 
billion); Manulife Data Services Inc. (P1.350 billion); and Dell 
International Services Philippines Inc. (P1.335 billion). The 35 firms 
alone raked in an aggregate of P168 billion in revenues in 2011.
Romulo is author of 
the new Data Privacy Act, which is anticipated to help entice global 
corporations to either establish new in-house back offices in Manila, or
 transfer their non-core, business-support activities to independent BPO
 firms operating here.
The new law mandates 
all entities, including BPO firms, to protect the confidentiality of 
personal information collected from clients and stored in 
information-technology (IT) systems, in compliance with rigorous 
international privacy standards.
The Philippines’s 
highly labor-intensive BPO and IT-enabled services industry includes 
contact-center services; back offices; medical, legal and other data 
transcription; animation; software development; engineering design; and 
digital content.
The Business 
Processing Association of the Philippines projects the industry to yield
 up to $27 billion in annual revenues and directly employ some 1.3 
million Filipinos by 2016.
The forecast implies the creation of up to 536,000 new jobs and the doubling of annual revenues over the next three years
 
 
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