Asia Business Consulting

From Information to Strategic Knowledge by Asia Business Consulting (www.asiabusinessconsulting.com). What kind of jewels can you find in the news. And how great it is to have a company that fully uses those to support its primary research and consult your company strategically to really improve your business. This blog supports your business already. For more, talk to us - Asia Business Consulting. A better way to do business.

Wednesday, March 31, 2004

One more about China and the mobile market

It has been reported that Datang Mobilecom has unveiled the first China-made 3rd (3G) mobile phone.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Tuesday, March 30, 2004

Customer Satisfaction - We are not alone

I always thought that service in Malaysia is pretty bad and needs some major improvements, and that the service level in the US would be very much better. The US is known to be a marketing and R & D power, so that is where my opinion originates from.No more - the Washington Post describes that the service level in the US is at an all time low.The companies blame other companies, the customer, or anything else possible for product and service failures. Customers are send around when they inquire or complaing. The article puts forward some good reasons for the failure of customer service - that this was supported by companies during the boom times, but that budget cuts were made during bust times. That lay-offs required people to juggle to many tasks and that customer service fall victim. Cost pressures took their toll. Still, sounds very familiar. And I thought that in the experience economy, the customer is King or Queen. And that customer service is the one of the few differentiators remaining. It still does and now more than ever. Don't cut back ! Improve! Constantly. Small things count! Involve everybody.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Selling music via SMS in Malaysia

The Malaysian rockband Search announced that its newest, forthcoming album will be sold exclusively via SMS. They state that this would reduce the price dramatically since it would sideline retail outlets.

It is a new and very interesting distribution channel, and seems to try to counter piracy of CDs and VCDs solde via nightmarkets in many locations across Asia.

The band is quoted in Tech Direct of The Star that they support the government's effort to reduce the CD prices (the Malaysian government initiated a dialogue with the software and the record industry in 2003 with the aim to reduce CD and software prices).

While the success of the experiment is not clear - the record industry, for example, puts forward the argument, that this purchasing process doesn't fit with the Malaysian culture - it surely is an unique way of challenging traditions and trying new things.

Considering the growth and usage of SMS in Malaysia, it might well be a successful experiment. Sure, the ordering process is tedious and it takes a long time until one receives the order (5-7 days).

The main argument against it is the many, many steps that one has to follow to purchase the product. Too much can go wrong here.

But who can think about a "normal" purchase in a shop in Malaysia - when was the last time, one had a real good, and rewarding shopping experiment? Malaysians are surely not pampered with excellent service and it takes time to beat the traffic jams on a Saturday just to enter the parking lot of nearly any shopping mall in Kuala Lumpur.

So I for myself hope that this works!

(by Asia Business Consulting)

Monday, March 29, 2004

Indian company Bharti TeleVentures outsources to IBM

This is said to be take the sting out of the current discussion about outsourcing of company functions to India and job losses in the US.

The article, published in the Financial Times on March 27, 2004 states that Bharti TeleVentures, India's largest private telecommunications company, has signed a 10-years outsourcing deal with IBM. IBM will take care of the hardware and software requirements, consolidate Bharti's data centers and manage the company's help desks and disaster recovery capabilities.

Bharti will outsource all its IT requirements to IBM and about 200 engineers will be transferred to IBM's India function.

Some job functions will apparently be transferred to the US, but also to other countries and as such, we are not sure, how this actually takes the sting out of the outsourcing discussion in the States. The majority of the jobs might just stay in India.

It is just that IBM in Asia Pacific in india won a project from an Indian company to do some work for them in India. And isn't this the reason for any company, wherever they are, namely to win some business? As they would go out of business if this wouldn't be the case.

As such, we don't understand the excitement and the headline : "IBM turns tables on indian outsourcing".

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Ericsson 616 and Ringtones

I am owning an Ericsson 616 and one of the ringtones set is the "old and traditional" ring ring ring. to describe it better, this is the tone that older phones hooked to fixed lines had, back in the the "older times". This is a nice tone, and is easily heard in crowds, and when it is noisy in the surrounding. My problem with the musical ringtones is that while they are nice, it is sometimes difficult to hear them.

But I also realised that many users of this type of handphone actually use this one special ringtone. I find this interesting, since it is actually against the trend of the industry that sells songs as ringtones, or other fancy make-ups. Is this a sign that the ringtone industry has peaked?

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Friday, March 26, 2004

Mail about recruitment interview in certain hotel in Kuala Lumpur

There is a mail going around in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, describing the experience of someone with an interviewer during a recruitment interview in a hotel that belongs to a globally operating hotel chain.

Apparently, the interviewer is a foreigner and instead of really interviewing the candidate, he is ranting about the culture of the country. Complaining about the lack of service standards in Malaysia, that Malaysians are only friendly amongst themselves, but not towards others, and that Malaysians don't have the right caliber and intelligence.

I don't want to roll out the whole e-mail here, but it definitely shows his lack of understanding of the power of new technology, the internet and e-mail. Earlier research in the good, old times (around 1995-2000) showed that bad news or experiences are related to 7 persons in your environment whith one good experiences shared only three times.

This has changed. The click on the button allows to share experiences worldwide with hundreds, thousands or even millions.

It has its advantages - think about smartmobs and how quickly those can be organised or informed if something bad or good is happening. Protests against wars or so. Or our earlier stories about the power of SMS.

On the other hand, it is easy to check ones background via the Internet and a quick Google search already let to the arrest of some bad guys in the US. It also provides the opportunity to reveal and share, what would have otherwise stayed behind closed doors - thus keeping everyone a bit more on the toes.

The basic problem in this story is that no one can verify, if the interviewer really ranting in such a negative light, or if the interviewee is just making up the story, and uses the power of the Internet to actually destroy someone's reputation.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Elections in the Philippines and SMS campaigning

It has started in the Philippines. Election fever is there - the country is voting on May 10 - and to justify its reputation as the SMS capital of the world, the first campaigns are initiated by using SMS.
Asia Business Consulting)

Outsourcing/ Offshoring - Is it an education issue?

Wired News runs a great story today about a report published by the American Electroncs Association. While probably bias, so it disputes it - the association is an industry group - it clearly states the dire state of the US education system as one reason why companies.

It says, and I quote, that "the American school system (...) is failing to provide strong science and math education to students, is largely to blame for lost jobs." It continues to say that companies don't always outsource for the cheap labour advantage that is provided in countries such as India, China or the Philippines, but that they increasingly can't skilled labour in the US. And that once one company takes advantage of offshoring markets, others are likely to follow.

This is interesting, but confirms a lot of comments that were made elsewhere in different contexts about the failures of the US education system.

I once read a comment made by Lizi Weinreib (Associate Producer of CBS News) on "60 Minutes" where she stated that "the Indian Institute of Technology has the combined status of Harvard, MIT, and Princeton graduates in America. In science and technology, IIT undergraduates leave their American counterparts in the dust."

Does this say it all?

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Thursday, March 25, 2004

There are 12,950 rats and 8,631 rat holes in Singapore

This is the statement from the National Environment Agency in Singapore. And the different types? Well, sewer rats are 30 cm long, roof rats 23 cm and house mice 15 cm.

And while Singapore is not under "attack from rats", the country wants to clean it up, before the problem gets out of hand.

That is why they use high-tech to fight them - hunted down with infra-red and closed-circuit cameras after which old, traditional method is being applied: they will be trapped and poisoned.

But it shows the overall efficiency in which this squeeky clean country keeps its high level of standard that already moved it to be the cleanest state in Asia.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Tuesday, March 23, 2004

Oops - a giant stumbles: Citibank "looses" customer information in Singapore

It has been reported in various newspapers, that a magnetic tape containing information about 123,690 customer accounts have gone missing in Singapore.

The tape went missing on Sunday, after being transported by a local securities firm to a data-processing center. So far, the tape has not surfaced again.

Citibank has written a letter to the customers and apologised, stating, that private data could not leak because only special computers would be able to read the information. And, that the information in the tapes was not enough to allow illegal money withdrawels - tell this the people involved.

However, it once again shows that one cannot underestimate the importance of people - or their weaknesses. A value chain is only as strong as the weakest link, and once trust in a brand is damaged, it will take a lot to get it back.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Elections in Taiwan and Malaysia - Part II

Malaysia: Election results in Malaysia show a crushing success of the ruling coalition. The party was able to win back Terengganu as a State that was lost to the opposition party PAS in the 1999 election. It also appears that they might have won or at least made major inroads in another state called Kelantan that was hold by PAS since 1990.

Taiwan: Taiwan appears to be in an "unhappy" state after the close victory of incumbent Chen Shui Bian. As reported, he won by a thin margin of about 30,000 votes. His victory has been attributed to the assassination attempt on Friday, March 19 and critics claim that the attempt was staged to give him an emotional advantage. However, this might be difficult – how to stage an assassination attempt? The car was moving, he was moving or waving to supporters, there were plenty of people around – dangerous. One wrong move, wrong timing, and the shot would have gone elsewhere. Investigations are ongoing and we will keep reporting.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Monday, March 22, 2004

Business Process Outsourcing - Another comment

On March 5, 2004, we wrote that market forces would work against India as preferred outsourcing center in the long run - but still nogood news for displaced workers in the US.

ComputerWire quoted a study by PMG and Nasscom (the Indian Association of Software and Services Companies) in its March 17 edition, that India would face labour shortages in the IT and ITES industry in 2009 when the market for employees would have grown from 400,000 in 2003 to 2.1 million in 2009. Apparently, these estimates are based on the current 13% annuial increase in graduate supply, but of those, only 1-2% are capable of or will choose to enter the IT-enabled services industry.

This is compounding already high attrition rates (30-40%) and growing salary levels. It states, and here it comes, that the average cost for an employee has grown from a level of US$200 per month in 2001 to US$300 per month in 2003.

The article doesn't state what is included in these costs - is it only salary, or material that is used for working (computers, telephones) or even the costs of space occupied by the employee. But what it shows is that India is succumbing to cost pressures, just as any other country. And that other countries line up to take the space - but what, if there is no other country left, after all the Vietnam, China, Mexico, Ghana? It shows, that costs alone is not enough to compete on and that in the end, it is value that counts. Might this also be a recipe for all the other countries affected by this?

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Election carousel in Asia

The round of elections in different countries in Asia has begun with Ttaiwan going ahead. Everybody actually expected a landslide win of the incumbent president Chen Shui Bian and his deputy prime minister Lu after the assassination attempt on them – however, the margin was razor thin – just 33,000 votes separated them.

Today is Malaysia's turn - everybody expects Prime Minister Badawi to win – and the greatest concern of the ruling coalition is that a low voter turnout would benefit the opposition.

We won’t comment on any of the elections until the picture is clearer, how an incumbent will further stir his or her country ahead, or if a winning opposition implements a different direction.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Friday, March 12, 2004

SMS in use during election campaign in Malaysia

Elections are coming up in Malaysia on March 21, with an official campaigning period of only 8 days. What better way to take for the parties than to go mobile and use SMS or Short Message Services to reach potential voters?

This follows the great example of the Philippines and Manila – which is called the capital of SMS or. In January 2001, hundreds of thousands took to the streets, spurred on by mass texting, and literally bought down an entire government. During that crucial days messaging or texting jumped from 70 to over 100 million in the space of just a few hours. The end result was the ousting of the then President Estrada and the rise to power of Gloria Macapagel Arroyo.

In Malaysia, the ruling party UMNO intends to send some 50,000 SMS daily to remind Malaysians why Abdullah Badawi, the current Prime Minister, should be supported.

Even the conservative opposition party PAS, which rules in the East Malaysian states Kelantan and Terengganu jumps on the bandwagon. Senior PAS official Mohamad Hatta Ramli is quoted as saying "We have to keep up with the current trend. We have been shut out of the mainstream media so campaigning through the SMS gives us an edge to reach out especially to the middle-class and educated community".

Naturally, circulation of rumours is rampant and messages attacking individuals or parties have been circulated with the sources withheld, prompting UMNO youth wing to set up a monitoring unit in an attempt to counter them.

Telecommunication companies in Malaysia are preparing for the surge in SMS. Celcom vice-president of mobile data, Mohd Jafri Kudus, said his company is expecting some 30 per cent increase in SMS traffic from its normal daily average billable SMS traffic of 15 million.

This is definitely and interesting way to promote politics, in a country, where political participation rate appears low. And it might be more effective than the traditional banners, flyers, and party literature – people tend to read SMS, which becomes a way of life in Malaysia, while those traditional promotional material can easily be discarded or ignored. True – a vast share of Malaysia is still rural and those might still be better to attract more "traditional" voters in those areas. But it is clear that messages are heard better via SMS. This is true as long as those distribution means are ahead of direct marketing campaigns from commercial providers - once those start spamming via mobile phones, the effectiveness of SMS for serious reasons might decline.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Thursday, March 11, 2004

Outsourcing number 2 - Just dial your option

I just read over at Techdirt about the newest twist in outsourcing as offered by E-Loan Inc. and tracked some related articles down to highlight the story.

Apparently, consumers calling the company have the option to choose in which call center their call is handled: Press 1 for an outsourcing centre in India or 2 for centre in the U.S. Disadvantage? Processing in India is faster – instead of 12 days, the wait is ten days. I am not sure why this would be like this, but at least it provides the choice of mode. I am also not sure, what are the cost structures – is a faster delivery via India cheaper? Apparently not yet, also it does not make sense. However, Chris Larson, CEO of Dublin-based E-Loan Inc says that E-Loan might also offer price breaks if customers go this route. And so far, nine out of ten customers have chosen to dial via India.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Business Process Outsourcing - some thoughts

Have you realised the logic recently? Everybody talks about business process outsourcing, outsourcing or offshoring of jobs to India. More and more survey data and documents are being published describing the facts and outlining the fears. We don’t necessarily want to reiterate what has been said all around but let us look at some numbers that are not necessarily mentioned together all the time:

It has to be admitted that the numbers are huge, and we understand the fear. Forrester Research Inc. estimates as many as 3.3 million U.S. service jobs will migrate offshore by 2017. And the American Electronics Association reports that more than 770,000 U.S. technology jobs have been lost since 2001. And the recent jobless recovery in the US is adding fear, especially when employees learn that their employers hire overseas.

But is it that much?

BusinessWorld Philippines (March 5, 2004) states that India's call center revenues last year amounted to one-fourth of one per cent of America's domestic call center expenditures. Even if India were to double its work volume every year, India would not reach three per cent of the US domestic volume until 2006. But this is for callcenters only.

But further: Goldman Sachs tallied up the number of employees of the top American IT services companies (the likes of IBM Global Services and Accenture) and compared this total with that of the top six Indian IT firms (Infosys, Wipro, etc). It found out that the US employees outnumbered the Indians by a ratio of 8 to 1.

IDC estimated total global IT services spending in 2003 at US$454 billion. On the other hand, the Indian software association NASSCOM estimated total 2003 India software and services exports at US$7.2 billion, or less than two per cent penetration of the world market.

The global offshoring market is pegged at US$30-35 billion in 2002 by McKinsey. This is projected to grow by 30-40 per cent annually over the next five years – which would then reach around US$155 billion (taken US$35 bn as the basis and a growth rate of 35%) - which is pretty huge and surely puts pressure on affected countries.

Let us see, how the market works and start by reiterating the drivers behind outsourcing? The main reasons are:

Development of infocommunications – it is easy for companies to operate frictionless across the globe on a 24/7 schedule;
Companies look for cost savings – The Walmartisation of the economies puts the pressure on companies to lower their prices for products. In addition, countries like China and other emerging tigers establish companies after companies after companies. The ability to put together pieces of different products together quickly via contract manufacturing, and brand the final product under your own name allows companies to enter markets quickly, even if they have not much of an experience in the market. Just do it is the motto here. The markets than become flooded with products, providing many more choices to consumers. And the products are good, most of the time or at least provide value for money – and how much can you expect if a full-fledged DVD recorder costs way less than US$100;
Consumers were taught over the last couple of years that many products are free or extremely – look at the peer-to-peer networks on the Internet, or the time before the dot.com bust, when companies offered products on the Internet for free or at a loss. Nowadays, there is a sale anywhere – prices drop dramatically. And as a consequence, the function that you get low quality if you buy something cheap doesn’t work anymore. Consumers learnt to go for cheap products, expect high quality, and were trained to think like that by the companies themselves. Value propositions that allowed for better bargaining power are gone, and only subtly come back – think Starbucks. Another reason for companies to slash costs wherever possible to compete in a race that ultimately might be lost.
Ultimately, the demographic balance will also favour outsourcing. The educated white-collar "boomer" generation in the US will be retiring in this decade, and will be replaced by a successor generation which is much smaller in number. There will thus be a skilled worker shortfall in the US of about 5 million by the end of this decade (BusinessWorld Philippines, March 5, 2004).
India is in the news as the main destination for outsourcing, but market forces work against it already, which might be a surprise for some:

The market for good employees is empty – those that are good are employed already. Other employees are hired and subsequently, might not provide the level of quality service that is needed – a danger for companies to damage their reputation.
Poaching of good employees becomes rampant – Companies with big pockets poach good employees from other companies, putting pressure on salary levels. According to a recent Hewitt-Nasscom Survey, conducted on small and medium IT enterprises (SMEs), 45 per cent of the respondents said they will seriously consider a job switch for a 20 per cent higher compensation. This could go up to as much as 50 per cent in the next two years.
Employees, especially those in lower ranks, which might still earn less, see job-hopping as a way to increase their salaries. Turnover rates of up to 40% in the call-center industry are common. Many multinational firms are blamed for that;
Complacency: The competition for India is there. Infoworld (March 8, 2004) quoted Ravi Ramu, CFO of MphasiS BFL Group as saying: "It's unlikely that anything can go wrong for the Indian outsourcing industry. There is no competition for India at present, as countries like the Philippines and China cannot scale to offer the large number of skilled, English-speaking people that we have in India." – and this is exactly the reason, why companies and countries fail. It is the feeling of being unstoppable and unbeatable which makes them complacent! Goldman Sachs research has already identified the five top countries today for cost-effective outsourcing of IT services and business processes. These are (in descending order of business volume): India, the Philippines, China, Mexico, Russia. And a recent BusinessWeek article had the headline: Forget India – Let’s go to Bulgaria (March 1, 2004).
Other reasons are based on geopolitical risks, social upheaval, lacking infrastructure – India is not necessarily world class in any of these.
These are the dangers for India. What is the remedy? Indian outsourcers say they are moving up the value curve, from primarily software coding and maintenance to new areas such as IT consulting, systems integration, infrastructure management, package implementation, and product development, since lower-valued service like call-centers becomes a commodity.

This will put more pressure on the US and other countries to move up – Nandan Nilekani, CEO of Bangalore-based Infosys Technologies, succinctly addressed the transformation in January 2004 at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. "Everything you can send down a wire is up for grabs."

It is a scary world out there, but it also provides great opportunities. Is your company prepared? Has it strategies in place to play along the game, or stay atop? Be sure to do it now, since tomorrow, it might be too late.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Sunday, March 07, 2004

In Singapore, mobile devices double up as travel guides

Is this the newest graze in Singapore? The Malaysian New Straits Times reported that tourists in Singapore wouldn't need any travel guides anymore, since the country unveiled Asia's first wireless information and entertainment guide. Tourists would have to register in a webstie, choose the type of information they like to receive and off they are on the roll in the city.

Is this the end of travel guides and tour operators? Surely not but if this is going to make an impact, they would need to personalise their services and provide a better experience to the customers. But there is a big "but" behind it. Firstly, how many tourists brng their handphone to Singapore? I doubt there are many, besides business travellers - but would they have the time? They might choose the "after-five" option in the menu. Added to this is the point that Singapore is frequently the starting point for many tourists. Now, when I bring my mobile device to Singapore for this service, but what do I do in Malaysia or Thailand? To solve this issue, travellers will receive a Pocket PC fully loaded with information, activated with phone service and GPRS. Good - but also a manual? It still sounds like a low-end service to me - cheap. And probably also for travellers who don't need more background about things happening around them and who are happy to know about the various monuments and statues. But what if I am curious about soemthing that just happens in front of me? A tour guide would be able to explain the event to me - a mobile device not! And, to sign up for the service? Not sure if I want this - as far as I know, there will be plenty of questions to be filled out to capture more data about my stay! I couldn't check it out, since the webpage was down, when I wanted to try it. Makes me think!

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Singapore moves - SingTel purchases shares in Telekom Malaysia via Temasek Holdings

Some time ago, we reported that Temasek Holdings of Singapore was interested in a stake in a smaller Malaysian bank. March 2, 2004 was the day, when the holdings group acquired a 5% stake in Telekom Malaysia from Khazanah Nasional, the Malaysian government's investment arm. Temasek Holdings also has shares in Singapore Telecommunications or in short, SingTel, and here, the story becomes interesting.

All kinds or arguments have been put forward for the acquisition:

A sign that the relations between Malaysia and Singapore are finally warming, after they cooled down dramatically over certain, other issues;
An attempt to up the momentum in Telekom Malaysia. For a while, the company was the market leader in Malaysia, after their acquisition of Celcom (which was followed by their main competitor Maxis, with TimeDotCom). However, those gains have been lost again and Maxis Communications leads once again;
With the Ringgit being undervalued, it is a less cost intensive move by Temasek
All those are valid and solid reasons and there are probably more. However, what we haven't read about yet is that the entry of SingTel into the Malaysian market is also another piece of their strategy to position themselves as the dominant regional player - something, that looks increasingly successful. I remember how frustrated they were when their bid to purchase a stake in TimeDotCom in 2000 was rejected by the former Malaysian Prime Minister. Singtel bought Optus in Australia back in 2001- which now is a crown jewel in their total portfolio. Besides Optus, SingTel has shares in Telkomsel in Indonesia, Advanced Info Services (AIS) in Thailand, Philippines's Globe Telecom and Bharti Televenture in India. Can you see how it all falls together? Malaysia was the missing piece, something that has been added now!

And the company is solid. Third quarter 2003 profits rose by 188% - mainly due to the Optus acquisition, where the integration was smoother than expected, but more is surely to come.

(By Asia Business Consulting)

Tuesday, March 02, 2004

Camera Phones in Korea

Asia does it again – this time Korea. You will recall that last week, we indicated that China is a country that takes serious efforts to ban Spam. This week, it is Korea, who is doing a first – this time with camera phones. Korea is facing elections in April, and it wants to make sure that this elections will be the cleanest ever.

As reported, a surveillance system using camera phones will be introduced.

The National Election Commission (NEC) will run a hotline center around March 15 and camera phone owners can report any illegal activities by taking snaps of the actual scene. If this hotline center is put into operation, camera phone owners can take pictures of the illegal election campaign on the spot with their cell phones and report them to the NEC's mobile internet homepage immediately.

Korea is a country where broadband is widespread, where a lot of action takes place via the Internet. See our earlier posting about one candidate and his election campaign via the Internet. This story definitely shows that camera phones can be used effectively – in contrast to other opinions condemning them as a tool to conduct fraud. It is mentioned that camera phones are used to take pictures of credit card numbers at ATM machines, to use them during examination, to copy recipes from books (see Amazon.com, which allows you to take a look into books as well since a couple of months) or for pornographic purposes.

True – but how widespread are these cases. Shouldn’t we stop condemning this innovation and take camera phones as opportunity? To catch a picture of my kid with a camera phone is better than to say – oh , sorry, I forgot the camera at home. Or to capture a great scenery a post it online in one of the moblogs. Catch a burglar or take pictures of a bank robbery? More dangerous, but surely in the making.

So let’s focus on the positive aspects of innovation and stop complaining!

(By Asia Business Consulting)