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Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Egypt's crisis: where social media threatens global outsourcing

By | January 31, 2011, 6:24am PST

Summary: When the first response of the government, in times of political crisis, is to shut down the Web, this has a massive impact on the nation’s global sourcing infrastructure to support global businesses. While China clearly has the capability to regulate its Internet, you have to ask the question whether smaller, less affluent nations have that level of sophistication.

Egypt's crisis: The sticky topic of political risk with outsourcing is firmly back on the table

Like everyone else, I’ve been glued to the news the past few days trying to comprehend the enormity of the Egyptian crisis and the possible repercussions across the global sourcing industry.

Without dragging us into a political debate, what’s alarming is the dependence global sourcing has on the Internet and political stability. When the first response of the government, in times of political crisis, is to shut down the Web, this has a massive impact on the nation’s global sourcing infrastructure to support global businesses.  While China clearly has the capability to regulate its Internet, you have to ask the question whether smaller, less affluent nations have that level of sophistication.

This is a major concern for businesses when they invest in critical support services in the region. While top-tier providers, such as IBM, Verizon and TCS rely on Egyptian resources, largely for call center work and software support and development, it’s hazardous when the government shuts off the Internet and all hell is breaking loose. What really concerns HfS is the unpredictability of problems like this surfacing, that can seriously impact the security and availability of key support services in areas such as IT services, finance and accounting, payroll, customer services etc.

Egypt, as an example, has proven capable as a good quality resource location for the Middle East, Africa and European regions in areas such as IT, BPO and call center services, and has invested significantly in promoting its capabilities worldwide. For example, Egypt’s Information Technology Industry Development Agency, ITIDA (website currently down) had planned to have a delegation at the forthcoming NASSCOM conference in India, and has invested heavily with McKinsey to support and help develop its capabilities. The country has invested millions to promote its sourcing capabilities - and now, that investment is looking under threat.

The rampant, viral proliferation of social media is clearly fueling unrest in many nations that have high unemployment and undercurrents of dissatisfaction among their younger people. If situations, such as what is currently happening in Egypt, proliferate to other countries with sourcing support services, the first reaction of governments now seems to be to “shut off the Internet”. You have to question how this impacts ITO / BPO services that are hugely reliant on a robust Internet to succeed - not to mention a stable political environment. The Egypt situation is a serious blow to many of the developing nations seeking to take their share of global services, which have potentially questionable political stability.

Advice to organizations with globally-dispersed support operations

1) Ensure your service provider has proven rapid response strategies to cater for unexpected political and geographical risk.  In the case of Egypt, this could entail transitioning services to emergency back up units in locations that can service EMEA countries, such as Jordan, Israel, Dubai, or even Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Romania or Bulgaria.

2) Ensure you know exactly how and where your provider backs up all your critical data and protects it in the event of a government coup.

3) Ensure you have financial provisions to compensate for business impact as a result of unforeseen political and geographical risk. Ensure these provisions are clearly structured, with appropriate metrics to compensate for business downtime and associated lost revenues.

4) Invest in a political risk analysis of countries where critical business and IT processes are being supported. Compare the risks of occurrences, such as the Egypt situation, with the cost-savings and business benefits of using these locations.  Saving 30% from your bottom line will be moot, if you can’t run your business properly for long periods of time!

The bottom-line

What is clear, is that Twitter, Facebook etc. are rapidly inspiring large numbers of people in nations with high unemployment to protest, where they feel their governments don’t “listen” strongly enough to their grievances, and aren’t pushing political reform at the same pace as economic reform.  There is real fear now that the uprisings in Iran, Tunisia and now Egypt will continue to exacerbate in other nations, and this is going to have consequential ramifications on global sourcing decisions.  Surely, this puts those nations with more mature political systems in a much stronger position to develop their services delivery industries.  And in today’s post-recession global environment, this also includes onshore/nearshore/rural shore locations in countries such as the US, UK and Ireland, which have become more attractive in terms of labor costs.

Phil Fersht is Founder and CEO of HfS Research, the leading analyst firm and think-tank dedicated to global outsourcing strategies.  He can be contacted at phil.fersht @ hfsresearch dot com

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RE: Egypt's crisis: where social media threatens global outsourcing
watchesn 23rd Sep
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tha's a good thing
Linux Geek 31st Jan 2011
stay in old good US and you will be safe!
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Gotta agree here
masonwheeler 31st Jan 2011
So shutting off the Internet screws up outsourcing? I suppose there's a silver lining to every dark cloud. Any way we could get this to happen in India? wink
@masonwheeler
while I agree with you in the sense that America has to fix its problems home and outsourcing is just making things worse, looking from the perspective of resident of planet Earth, this is a bad omen. This is 1984 staring us straight in the face. Things like this cause serious problems that tend to span across multiple countries, and whether or not outsourcing is a bad thing, this is something that needs to get fixed, and fast.
@masonwheeler

I hope I don't burst your ignorant bubble but USA is heavily dependent on India for things which is beyond the scope my comment. Now if India had a total blackout which is highly improbable as it's a democracy; it would affect USA in a harsher way. The consequences will never be the same.
@masonwheeler

I hope I don't burst your ignorant bubble but USA is heavily dependent on India for things which is beyond the scope my comment. Now if India had a total blackout which is highly improbable as it's a democracy. Moreover it would affect USA in a harsher way.
  • Flagged
OK, guys, the smiley should have been a clue that that was not a completely serious comment. Yes, we need to get rid of outsourcing, but I agree that the cost of it happening in this way would be unreasonably high.
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Burn baby...
james347 31st Jan 2011
...burn.
For now, but not for long. We can only sustain this recovery based on a house of cards for so long. And if people are rioting to get into Wall Mart on black friday what will happen during the coming depression/big terrorist attack?
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Not much.
John Zern 31st Jan 2011
And if people are rioting to get into Wall Mart on black friday what will happen during the coming depression/big terrorist attack?

Two totally different scenerios.
@edkollin
Egypt's political unrest has come about following many years of tyranny and abuse. It's not quite the same situation as we have in the West.

However, I do sense a growing feeling of discontent and general contempt for our own political leaders. Added to which, our economies rely on massive and unsustainable levels of debt, and are powered by consumption of far more than our fair share of the planet's dwindling resources. Sadly, it seems to me that this has to end in tears for us as well, eventually, doesn't it?

Back to technical issues, it seems to me that over-reliance on "the cloud" may prove to be something of a flawed business strategy. Sure, enjoy the cloud. But please ensure you have plenty of encrypted copies of your dataset, that you can physically lay your hands on, if/when the proverbial whotsit hits the fan.

Best wishes, G.
Good thought on the subject. I'm sure enterprises all across are re-evaluating their outsourcing schemes. Politically, the Egyptian leadership demonstrated their lack of understanding for global economics. For outsourcing, find a stable and good partner with a vision and a plan.
@tamouh2 - what is "the plan"? To lower costs, regardless of region. And regardless of short-term consequences. The US is proving to be a safe place for jobs. Terrorism doesn't seem to be as much of a problem here than in other countries, which includes India.
Remember that the internet was designed so it could not be cut off in times of nuclear war. Now it is up to service providers to make it impossible for countries to stop system working by providing many multiple routes as was originally intended to protect their & all business interests. They will do it or lose MONEY which comes before politics.
@ronangel

Think of it this way, Big Corporation, with no military power vs Government with big guns . . . who'd win this scenario?
Who'd win then?
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RIP: The Cloud
Dr_Zinj 31st Jan 2011
So much for reliability. You cloud would evaporate under those conditions.
This is just a real sign that the protestors are right. If the government had done anything to improve the economy and gave a damn about it, they would have realized the impact.
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The downside of outsourcing...
RangerJimK 31st Jan 2011
And now we see the downside of outsourcing IT support services to countries with lower labor costs, but a higher risk of political instability....

But as I seem to recall in an earlier report, Egypt only pulled the plug on internal ISPs, and left the Internet backbones going through there alone.
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A shoot in the foot
wheres_my_stuff 31st Jan 2011
If Egypt's idea of shutting their internet access down was to avoid communicating with the world so the world wouldn't know what's happening there, it was a shoot in the foot. Not only did they show their incompetence in running the country, but they cut their very source of revenue bringing even more poverty to the country and showing that there's something happening there they're rather the world doesn't know.
Whatever image they were trying to save was aggravated instead and whatever people don't know will be left to their imagination - which can work even more wildly.
There is real fear now that the uprisings in Iran, Tunisia and now Egypt will continue to exacerbate in other nations, and this is going to have consequential ramifications on global sourcing decisions.

Exacerbate is a great word, but an intransitive verb like exacerbate, requires an object. So, "the uprisings ... will continue to exacerbate existing problems", but not "the uprisings ... will continue to exacerbate". Perhaps you meant "the uprisings ... will continue to escalate"?
@dave.bailey@...
Good point Dave. Also 'consequential ramifications' is a redundancy.
as in "will continue to spread to other nations", but, in a country where the "uprisings" are already under way, the correct word usage would have been "accelerate", but your word "escalate" is adequate for the situation.
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Shutting down the internet is not the issue
azzeh100@... 31st Jan 2011
Far from technical issues the dictatorship in the Middle East which is ready for killing and destroying people life. Shutting down the internet is not an issue to them.
Back to technicality the U.S and Israel had provided these countries with all aspect of technology and training to follow bloggers s, and social media users. As the latest reports and document discovered in Tunisia.
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Perhaps...
John L. Ries 31st Jan 2011
...offshoring to a dictatorship isn't such a good idea after all. If you have to worry about governments shutting down Internet connections to deal with public unrest, it doesn't look like such a bargain (besides, your site manager might be arrested for insulting El Jefe, or maybe just for not offering his industry minister a large enough bribe).

I suspect that some multinationals have been preferring countries with authoritarian governments on the theory that they do a better job of keeping wages low and are less likely to worry about little things like public health. Perhaps that should be rethought.
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IF the US government were threatened...
rtot Updated - 31st Jan 2011
then the US would possibly shut down Facebook, Twitter, or any other portions of the Net with internet "Martial Law" in order to secure the stability of the US government. It was already brought up in the US Congress day before yesterday (but not acted on).
-- R.Totten, E.Kansas
@rtot
'Marshall' law???? or Martial Law?

I have to agree with others... how do you shut down the internet? Yes, you can seriously inconvenience people and/or business by shutting down local ISPs, but any company that is relying on a single point of failure, especially in higher risk scenarios, is asking for failure.
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Ummm - the Internet and VPN
Mahegan 31st Jan 2011
With VPN and *intra* networks, the chances of outsourcing being nailed would appear to be somewhat less.
It is not quite clear what Egypt has shut down - for the Internet, anything that relies on public DNS would be nailed simply by disabling DNS. So, perhaps some light can be cast on what exactly is being shutdown, and how this might affect VPNs.
The end of the innernet is the first sign of 2012, the end of our planet.
Here's an idea, Consider transitioning services back to companies in the United States.
Hmmm...maybe u.s. citizens who need jobs can pick up the slack.
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TRUTH!
BallmerFanBoy 31st Jan 2011
The People want Zunes!
Just another good reason to keep your business in the USA.
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"How do you shut down the Internet?"
rtot Updated - 31st Jan 2011
Somebody asked this; and how did Egypt do it? - - - The Egyptian government contacted/confronted all of the ISPs (service providers) in the country and told them they had to disconnect all internet service, or government enforcers would show up shortly. - - In a few hours Egypt's net was down. - - - And again in the news tonight: Some in the US Congress are also discussing what it would take (if "necessary") to shut down the net in the US. - - So, what would make it "necessary"??
Let them eat cake! Companies that invest in undemocratic countries because labor is cheaper deserve everything they get. If their services suffer people will realize they are unreliable service providers
Hello

I am from Egypt

First i would like to apologize for any of our business partners who are hurt from such internet cut and i would like to assure that Egyptian companies shall secure a fair compensation for any damage happen.

Second, what happen is not a common behaviour for Egyptain government whom support IT & BPO activities to the most extent, based on a very relaible and top notch infrstructure activites and a highly skilled calibers.

So Kindly i appreciate your understanding of such situation, and your support to not hurt such critical business for a developing country like Egypt.

Mohamed
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Reply from Egypt
mohamed_baker@... 2nd Feb 2011
Hello

I am from Egypt

First i would like to apologize for any of our business partners who are hurt from such internet cut and i would like to assure that Egyptian companies shall secure a fair compensation for any damage happen.

Second, what happen is not a common behaviour for Egyptain government whom support IT & BPO activities to the most extent, based on a very relaible and top notch infrstructure activites and a highly skilled calibers.

So Kindly i appreciate your understanding of such situation, and your support to not hurt such critical business for a developing country like Egypt.

Mohamed
My childhood was majorly characterised by different wonderments and points of curiosity; rolex 115200 I always wanted to know more about the things that happened around me. A few times, rolex 114210 I got into deep wahala in my quest for knowledge but most times I came out wiser, brighter; something that gave me the Einstein feeling. But more interested I was, rolex 80319 in a piece that told us when these things happen - the timepiece, wrist watch, or what I later dubbed ???life's compass'.
The fascination the wristwatch engendered at that time was unrivalled;
rolex 116139
it was an enigma of sorts. Unravelling the mechanism of the circular ticks or sweeps, and the silent almost unnoticeable round trips of the hour and minute hands gave me headaches that only time healed. rolex 114234
If there were some micro midgets living in wristwatches, rolex 118346 why didn't they work at the same pace? Why, did the man in charge of the second arm work faster? Maybe the biggest Oga controlled the hour hand, while his deputy manned the minute hand.
rolex 116333 I thought they were all lazy like some staff of government ministries who napped at work and took long breaks to sell their wares on office time rolex 116334.

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