Comments on: Outsourcing to Oklahoma?
IT services firm Ciber aims to create 200 jobs in Oklahoma City as part of a plan to open several low-cost "made in America" centers.
IT services firm Ciber aims to create 200 jobs in Oklahoma City as part of a plan to open several low-cost "made in America" centers.
November 29, 2009 9:02 PM PST
November 29, 2009 5:54 PM PST
November 29, 2009 5:10 PM PST
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In this case, starting small won't get you anywhere...
So I wish them the best of luck.
- Outsourcing
- by gwilkins January 21, 2005 9:16 AM PST
- It is about time that Corporate America wises up to the fact that we have to stop sending our Hi Tech jobs overseas. If this trend continues, when they finally wake up and realize there really is no cost benefit savings to boost their bonuses and have to bring the these jobs back home the former trained people will have left that segment of the business; in other words no trained people to fill open positions. America cannot continue to bleed our country of valuable jobs to offshore companies.
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(5 Comments)I have recently had experiences dealing with tech support from two different companies. One was located in India, and the other one was in the Philippines. The second one was so bad, that I hung up on him, a total disaster. While their English was passable, the ability to deal with customers was lacking.
Many areas in the USA that have high unemployment would welcome all such jobs. Not everyone from small rural areas can demand high pay for their services, but would gladly work for better pay and benefits if offered.
A case in point is the Milwaukee Accounting firm that had been using college students to do tax returns for their clients. These students were glad to gain the experience and skills they would be using once they graduate from college. However, this same firm got the brain fart to send their clients? valuable tax and financial information overseas to save a few pennies and boost the CEO's annual bonus. If I were one of their clients, I would raise holly you know what and yank my account from them immediately. To think they can freely send private personal information to a foreign company to do with, who knows what, is unconscionable.
One way to discourage such acts is to levy a tax on these companies making it financially unfeasible to conduct business this way. Another way is for Americans to boycott their services/products.
I saw the same mentality back in the 80's with automobile jobs going to Japan because the Japanese were supposedly more efficient than we were in manufacturing automobiles. While the true reason was, the Japanese government subsidized their auto manufacturers. Only when we increased the import taxes on them did they start to bring jobs here by opening plants here. So if they could do that, were was the competitive advantage of sending jobs to Japan? There was none.
Therefore, I say WAKE CORPORATE AMERICA and stop trying to snow us with your corporate rhetoric.