Jamaica Gleaner

BPO jobs grow beyond 60,000

Projected to hit 75,000 in five years

- Avia Collinder Business Reporter avia.collinder@gleanerjm.com

THE OUTSOURCIN­G sector grew seven per cent and added ten new customer contact centres in the past year, according to investment promotion agency Jampro.

Half of the 10 sites were set up by existing operators, and half by new market entrants during the period April 2022 and March 2023, Jampro said.

That growth helped to spawn over 5,000 additional jobs.

Outsourcin­g now employs 60,150 overall, Jampro said, but is on track to hit the 75,000 mark within five years.

Today, the market has 75 operators, including the five new entrants that Jampro did not name, and there are services emerging in the knowledge process outsourcin­g and informatio­n technology outsourcin­g segments.

However, Gloria Henry, a past president of the group that speaks for the outsourcin­g community, known as Global Services Sector Jamaica, says GSSJ has more than 90 members. Henry said the Jampro data on market players seemed to refer to only BPO operators, whereas GSSJ membership incorporat­ed other outsourcin­g segments.

Globally, business process outsourcin­g was estimated at around US$240 billion to US$250 billion in 2021, and is forecast to climb above US$500 billion by 2030.

Jamaica’s share of the global market was said to be around US$900 million, at a time when the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank was touting the local sector’s untapped value.

“Companies are demanding more sophistica­ted knowledge process outsourcin­g services, paralegal, medical insurance claims processing, cybersecur­ity,” then

IDB president Mauricio ClaverCaro­ne, who was later voted out of office before his term ended, said in a briefing with journalist­s in March 2022.

“Eighty per cent of Jamaican BPO companies are focused on the traditiona­l outsourcin­g services.

Just 20 per cent of those are prepared to compete in that KPO sector. So huge opportunit­ies are there,” he said.

Jampro hasn’t said what the current estimate is of Jamaica’s outsourcin­g market, which is dominated by foreign-owned companies, only that it “continues to be a leading destinatio­n for outsourcin­g in the Caribbean”.

Locally, one of the top Jamaican-owned outfits is Yoni Epstein’s Outsourcin­g Management Limited, which trades as itel.

Some of the large global operators are Sutherland Global Services, Alorica, Teleperfor­mance, Vistaprint, Conduent and Hinduja Global.

The Jamaican BPO sector has “enjoyed the highest employment growth rate of any sector in the last decade, and presently accounts for approximat­ely 60,000 jobs across the island”, the agency said. That’s up from 55,000 at March 2022 and from 51,000 at March 2021.

The expectatio­n is for outsourcin­g to continue adding about 3,000 to 4,000 new jobs on average, annually, going forward.

“As Jamaica pushes towards attracting and delivering highervalu­e services, the sector could register higher revenue growth in the next two to three years and approximat­ely 75,000 jobs in four to five years,” Jampro said.

Inside Jamaica, the rise of outsourcin­g has fuelled investment­s in commercial real estate, whereby local property owners develop space for firms entering the market or seeking to expand.

In 2021, outsourcin­g companies occupied more than 2.2 million square feet of space, including 200,000 square feet of new

constructi­on completed that year.

 ?? FILE ?? A newly built BPO centre in Portmore is seen in December 2020.
FILE A newly built BPO centre in Portmore is seen in December 2020.

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