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Employees at the Techtonic Group in Boulder, Colorado. Once a committed offshore outsourcer, Techtonic has made nurturing homegrown talent the centrepiece of its business. Image Credit: New York Times

For years, US companies have been saving money by “offshoring” jobs — hiring people in India and other distant cubicle farms. Today, some of those jobs are being outsourced again — in the US.

Nexient, a software outsourcing company, reflects the evolving geography of technology work. It holds daily video meetings with one of its clients, Bill.com, where team members stand up and say into the camera what they accomplished yesterday for Bill.com, and what they plan to do tomorrow. The difference is, they are phoning in from Michigan, not Mumbai.

“It’s the first time we’ve been happy outsourcing,” said René Lacerte, chief executive of Bill.com, a bill payment-and-collection service based in Palo Alto, California.

Nexient is a UA-based outsourcer, a flourishing niche in the tech world as some US companies pull back from the idea of hiring programmers a world away. Salaries have risen in places like South Asia, making outsourcing there less of a bargain.

In addition, as brands pour energy and money into their websites and mobile apps, more of them are deciding that there is value in having developers in the same time zone, or at least on the same continent. Many of these domestic outsources are private, little-known companies like Rural Sourcing, Catalyte, Eagle Creek Software Services and Onshore Outsourcing.

But IBM, one of the country’s foremost champions of the offshore outsourcing model, has announced plans to hire 25,000 more workers in the US during the next four years. As a result, the growth of offshore software work is slowing, to nearly half the pace of recent years.

“The nature of work is changing,” said Vishal Sikka, chief executive of Infosys, an Indian outsourcing giant. “It is very local. And you often need whole teams locally,” a departure from the offshore formula of having a project manager on-site but the work done abroad. “It’s not enough to have people offshore in India,” he added.

Infosys announced in May that it planned to hire 10,000 workers in the US over the next two years, starting with centers in Indiana and North Carolina. The offshore industry is not imperilled, analysts say. But from 2016-21, the offshore services industry will have average yearly growth of 8 per cent, the research firm IDC estimated. The rate in the previous five years was 15 per cent.

“Domestic sourcing is here to stay, and it’s going to grow rapidly,” said Helen Huntley, an analyst at the research firm Gartner. The first wave of internet-era digital change in business, starting in the 1990s, focused mainly on automating back-office tasks like payrolls and financial reporting. The software involved was a collection of huge programmes maintained by armies of engineers.

The internet allowed that work to be sent to low-wage nations, especially India. That brought the rise of the big outsourcing companies like Tata Consultancy Services and Infosys. Offshore services companies still excel at maintaining the software that runs the essential back-office systems of corporations.

But today, companies in every industry need mobile apps and appealing websites, which can be made smarter with data and constantly updated. That software is best created by small, nimble teams, working closely with businesses and customers — not shipped to programmers half a world away.

Nexient, which has its headquarters in Newark, California, has three delivery centers in the US Midwest. It employs 400 people, up from 250 two years ago, and plans to hire a few hundred more during the next year, Mark Orttung, the company’s chief executive, said.

The company’s business model is fairly typical for onshore companies. On projects, it will send members of a team to the client for a couple of weeks to study the business and meet their counterparts. Bill.com even interviewed and shared in the selection of five Nexient engineers who would work on the joint team.

Lacerte of Bill.com had farmed out technology work over the years, but the headaches of navigating time zones, cultures and language often outweighed the cost savings. Those problems went away when he hired a domestic outsourcer.

Nexient has set up its centers away from the coastal high-tech hubs, like the Bay Area and New York, to tap skilled people who want jobs in the technology economy without leaving the Midwest, where living costs are far less. Monty Hamilton, a former Accenture consultant, took over Rural Sourcing in 2009, when it had just a dozen employees. Today, the company has 300 workers in four delivery centers

“Every business now realises it’s a digital business,” Hamilton said. “They need technical help, and that’s really driven the demand for our US-based talent.”

Politics seem to be playing a role, too. The US onshore companies say they are seeing a postelection spike in client inquiries, as President Donald Trump lobbies businesses to create more jobs in the US and seeks to curb immigrant work visas. “The election has brought a lot of attention to these issues and to us,” Orttung said. “But nobody buys because of that.”

Rising labour costs abroad also make domestic sourcing more attractive. A decade ago, Hamilton said, an American software developer cost five to seven times as much as an Indian developer. Now, he estimates, the gap has shrunk to two times. The standard billing rate for his engineers is $60 to $70 an hour, compared with $30 to $35 in India, Hamilton said. But the sales pitch made by onshore companies is not about raw labour costs. Instead, they claim the ability to deliver excellent work more efficiently than the offshore providers and less expensively than large technology services companies.

New York Times News Service