Abstract
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
At first glance Mexico' s current internal political quagmire and its external
immigration challenges with the U.S. convey a perception of a state in chaos.
However, a deeper look at the country reflects an economy that is engaged in a
progressive and fundamental structural shift geared at becoming a critical
player in Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) and IT service globalization
provisioning. Over 1 million direct and indirect workers are employed in the
sector. Contact center or voice based BPO has experienced sustained growth
over the past decade. Increase in the total number of call centers reflect an
almost 300% growth - increasing from 3,500 in 1996 to a projected 9,400 by
1Q2007. Three types of service providers define the market and include
In-house, outsourcers and SME service provididers.
Increasing from its base of over 150,000 in 2006, agent density is projected
to exceed 200,000 by the end of 2007. Bilingual agents serving international
customers will exceed 50,000 by 2010 from its current 33,000-agent count.
Annual growth averaged 17% between 2004 - 2006. Its International outsourced
business, however, is growing at 27% annually. Revenues in 2007 are estimated
at US$6.7 billion - a US$700 million increase from YE2006. Its current
numbers now challenge Argentina as the market with the largest bi-lingual
agent density. With a 60% market share in Spanish agents, Mexico provides the
largest nuber of customer care agents serving the Spanish-speaking world.
Approximately, five contact center BPO service providers dominate the Mexican
call center industry with a 60% market share. Five more providers occupy an
additional
10% market share. In the aggregate, 10 centers control 70% market share. While
call center activity can be found in 10 Tier 1 and Tier 2 cities, 80% of its
call center business is generated among 5 cities (Mexico City, Monterrey,
Guadalajara, Tijuana and Puebla). Approximately 70% of the market' s agent
capacity is concentrated in the Mexico City axis. A contingent of smaller
urban areas, especially in northern Mexico (Tijuana, Chihuahua, and
Tamaulipas) are becoming more attractive due to lower wages and improving
talent availability. Compulsory primary education, and affordable university
education access businesses with over 1.5 million university graduates
concentrated in large centers such as Mexico City and Guadalajara. These high
graduated densities, coupled with extensive bilingual education programs,
relatively low attrition rates, falling E1 telecommunication costs and
favorable BPO and IT investment are favorable to Mexico' s contact center BPO
business expansion.
However, Mexico' s contact center BPO market faces a number of internal and
external strategic challenges. The key challenges include relatively higher
wages and real estate prices, high levels of software and intellectual
property costs, and the need to become more Adaptivist™ by expanding and
encouraging its indigenous service providers to grow their international
business. GDP growth of 4.5% expected in 2007 raises concerns about growth
sustainability. Existing political tension and social unrest continue to
negatively affect Mexico' s perception score. Additionally, Central America,
Argentine, and Caribbean Nearshore (Dominican Republic) locations as well as
India and the Philippines in the offshore region offer effective competition.
METHODOLOGY
A team from the Zagada Institute assembled the data and developed the analysis
presented in this executive report. Data was obtained from Regional Economic
Development Agencies (EDAs), Investment Promotion Agencies (IPAs), contact
centers, Business Process Outsourcing (BPO), IT organizations, regional
development banks and trade associations. A mixture of email, phone and
personal interviews were used to gather primary data. The collection of data
from multiple sources allowed for data cross referencing and verification.
Qualitative data on market assessment, promotional strategies, social and
political conditions, projected growth rates and market competitiveness were
also collected and examined. The approach included an exhaustive examination
and review of reports, studies, articles and papers produced by Universities,
Research and Consulting Firms and Think Tanks.
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