Interesting article on transformation of tech sector in India

Now the fiercest competition is to get an I.T. job in India: "It is no
longer, 'Well I have to stay here,' but, 'Do I get a chance to stay
here?' "


June 8, 2005
Bangalore: Hot and Hotter
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
New York Times

Bangalore, India

Every time I visit India, Indians always ask me to compare India with
China. Lately, I have responded like this: If India and China were
both highways, the Chinese highway would be a six-lane, perfectly
paved road, but with a huge speed bump off in the distance labeled
"Political reform: how in the world do we get from Communism to a more
open society?" When 1.3 billion people going 80 miles an hour hit a
speed bump, one of two things happens: Either the car flies into the
air and slams down, and all the parts hold together and it keeps on
moving - or the car flies into the air, slams down and all the wheels
fall off. Which it will be with China, I don't know. India, by
contrast, is like a highway full of potholes, with no sidewalks and
half the streetlamps broken. But off in the distance, the road seems
to smooth out, and if it does, this country will be a dynamo. The
question is: Is that smoother road in the distance a mirage or the
real thing?

At first blush, coming back to Bangalore, India's Silicon Valley, that
smoother road seems like a mirage. The infrastructure here is still a
total mess. But looks can be deceiving. Beneath the mess, Bangalore is
entering a mature new phase as a technology center by starting to
produce its own high-tech products, research, venture capital firms
and start-ups.

"The ecosystem for innovation is now starting to be created here,"
said Nandan Nilekani, the C.E.O. of Infosys. For several years now,
when venture capitalists funded companies in the U.S., they insisted
that the R.&D. for the products be done in India. But now,
increasingly, Western companies will come up with a new idea and then
tell Infosys, Wipro or Tata, India's premier technology companies, to
research, develop and produce the whole thing.

As one Wipro executive put it, "You go from solving my problem to
serving my business to knowing my business to being my business." What
will be left for the Western companies is the "ideation," the original
concept and design of a flagship product (which is a big deal), and
then the sales and marketing.

"We're going from a model of doing piecework to where the entire
product and entire innovation stream is done by companies here," Mr.
Nilekani added. All of this means that innovation will happen faster
and cheaper, with much more global collaboration.

The best indication that Bangalore is becoming hot is how many foreign
techies - non-Indians - are now coming here to work. P. Anandan, an
Indian-American who worked for Microsoft for 28 years in Redmond,
Wash., just opened Microsoft's research center in Bangalore, which
follows the ones in Redmond, Cambridge and Beijing.

"I have two non-Indians working for me here, one Japanese and one
American, and they could work anywhere in the world," Mr. Anandan
said. He added that when he got his engineering degree in India 28
years ago, all the competition was to get a job abroad. Now the
fiercest competition is to get an I.T. job in India: "It is no longer,
'Well I have to stay here,' but, 'Do I get a chance to stay here?' "

In the past year, Infosys received 9,600 applications from abroad,
including from China, France and Germany, for internships, and it
accepted 100. I asked one of these interns, Vicki Chen, a
Chinese-American business student from the Claremont Colleges, why she
came. "All the business is coming to India, and I don't see why I
shouldn't follow the business," she said. "If this is where the center
of gravity is, you should go check it out, and then you become more
valuable."

Even more interesting is how Indian firms are taking the skills they
learned from outsourcing and using them to develop low-cost products
for the low-wage Indian market: a medical insurance plan for the poor
for as little as $10 a year, a $2,000 car, a $200 laptop, supercheap
cellphones, a low-fare airline ($75 one-way for the three-hour
Bangalore-Delhi flight) that sells tickets from Internet kiosks in gas
stations. Indian companies know that if they can make money producing
low-cost technology for poor Indians, it gives them an incredible
platform to then take these products global. (Imagine the profit
potential if they work in the West?) China is doing the exact same thing.

Indeed, I now understand why, when China's prime minister, Wen Jiabao,
visited India for the first time last April, he didn't fly into the
capital, New Delhi - as foreign leaders usually do. He flew directly
from Beijing to Bangalore - for a tech-tour - and then went on to New
Delhi.

No U.S. president or vice president has ever visited Bangalore.






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