Showing posts with label Philippine Software Industry Association. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philippine Software Industry Association. Show all posts
Sunday, September 22, 2013
IT-BPO industry drawing more 'balikbayans' to work in PH
MANILA - As the Philippine economy expands, more Filipinos are returning to the country and finding employment in the growing information technology and business process outsourcing (IT-BPO) industry, executives of the Information Technology and Business Process Association of the Philippines (IBPAP) said.
With a relatively higher pay, IT-BPO jobs have become appealing not only to Filipinos who do not want to leave the country but also those who have returned amid rosier opportunities here, Joey Gurango, president of IBPAP member-organization Philippine Software Industry Association (PSIA), told reporters last week.
Gurango’s software firm, for instance, now employs four Filipinos who had previously worked in Australia and Singapore. Gurango left the country in the 1970s to work in the US and landed jobs in top IT companies such as Apple and Microsoft, but returned to the Philippines to help jumpstart local software startups.
“All we have to do is educate Filipinos in developing countries what is there for them to come back,” Gurango said, noting a wide array of opportunities being offered by the fast-rising IT-BPO sector.
IBPAP president Jose Mari P. Mercado said every IT-BPO firm in the country has at least one employee who previously worked abroad but has come back and gained employment in the industry, which has been growing leaps and bounds.
IBPAP senior executive director Gillian Joyce G. Virata said the Philippines is next only to India in providing IT-BPO services, with about a tenth of the global pie being supported here.
As for voice services, which comprises two-thirds of the domestic industry, the Philippines is number one, with a 38-percent share of the global market, Virata said, citing the latest global market size report of research firm Everest Group. She said the country could easily account for two-fifths of the voice sector by 2016.
IBPAP’s roadmap projects industry revenues to hit $25 billion and employment to reach 1.3 million by 2016.
To attain the roadmap’s targets, making IT-BPO services available throughout the country is a key strategy, Mercado said.
At present, 72 percent of IT-BPO operations in the country are based in Metro Manila, but the industry is working to expand the share of provinces to 40 percent by 2016, in line with the commitment made by the Department of Science and Technology’s Information and Communications Technology Office (DOST-ICTO) to President Benigno Aquino III.
“Our value proposition is ‘you need not go out of the country to get a job,’ and will extend it to ‘you need not go out of your own city or province,” Mercado said.
Virata noted that three-fifths of college graduates come from outside Metro Manila, and many of them can be trained to work in the IT-BPO sector.
Mercado said the right matching of skills coupled with local government units’ (LGU) commitment to put in place IT infrastructure would result in increased competitiveness and attractiveness of sites outside Metro Manila for investors.
In line with the public-private “Next Wave Cities” initiative, IBPAP is embarking on a 10-city road show that will cover the cities of Antipolo, Baguio, Butuan. Cagayan de Oro, Iloilo, Laoag, Naga, Puerto Princesa, Tacloban and Tarlac, in a bid to promote ICT in these localities.
Fast-growing IT-BPO hubs such as Bacolod, Cebu and Davao show that more employment can be generated and firms can flourish even outside Metro Manila, Mercado said.
To showcase what the Philippine IT-BPO industry can offer, IBPAP is hosting the 5th International Outsourcing Summit (IOS) with the theme “Unlocking Possibilities, Creating New Vistas” on October 6-8 at the Makati Shangri-La Hotel.
source: interaksyon.com
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Software industry aims for $1-million revenue by 2016
MANILA - Local software developers are eyeing about $1 million in annual revenues as well as global recognition for at least 10 homegrown software products by 2016, the Philippine Software Industry Association (PSIA) said on Wednesday.
“The Philippine software industry will continue to succeed based on two factors: delivering deep technical and professional expertise in specific niches where we can be the best global providers, and creating software intellectual property that will allow Philippine-based companies to achieve ‘top of the food chain’ status within the global software ecosystem,” Joey Gurango, president of PSIA member-firm Gurango Software Corp, said in a statement.
While there is “nascent software products movement in the Philippines” since PSIA was formed in August 2011, the sector should push for more, he said.
Gurango said key to the sector’s growth is PSIA’s product development special interest group (PD/SIG), which helps create and distribute Philippine-made software.
“[A] lot needs to be done in terms of evangelism, capability development, and coaching—areas which the PD/SIG hopes to contribute its energies into,” he said.
This year, PSIA, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Business Processing Association of the Philippines (BPAP) will embark on a joint marketing campaign to highlight the group’s branding, intellectual property and product development efforts.
“We will be showcasing the first batch of software products that PD/SIG will assist in becoming globally successful. These efforts aim to encourage more software product ‘technopreneurship’ in the Philippines and, consequently, attract more members into PD/SIG,” Gurango said.
PSIA groups about 50 software developers in the country.
source: interaksyon.com
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