Create knowledge
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Yes
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9
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VS |
16
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No
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Inamur Rehman
| Argues in support of
"Yes"
| 2 years ago
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What is at risk is our human resouce, we know that the risk is imminent, Are we looking for solutions? OR Have we found the solution?
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Deepak Agrawal
| Argues in support of
"No"
| 2 years ago
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No I don't think future of outsourcing job in India is at risk. I think outsourcing is important to both the country that outsource the job and the country that source it. It generates lot of revenue to the country who outsources the job and...
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avena suri
| Argues in support of
"No"
| 3 years ago
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Recession in short team would definitely affect business and no country is immune to recession or market slowdown. However, in long run it will benefit countries like India because we provide competitive advantage like cost arbitrage, time to...
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Debate: "Credit Crisis: Is the future of Outsourcing Jobs in India is at risk? " deleted from your view.
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(rate this)
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Yes
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8
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5
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No
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Makrand Bhave
| Argues in support of
"No"
| 3 years ago
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When you are unaware that TALENT does exist and it was LATENT so far, it just surprises you!! The media is doing good in getting such talent directly into public eye. It helps in developing more vocations and more opportunities for the mass to...
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Girish Kolhe
| Argues in support of
| 3 years ago
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Ayan I don't agree with you, media has not created ordinary people into extraordinary, there are so many good people all around and helping others there is no coverage from the media people for them, but public normally tend to take the news or...
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Lakshmi Eyyunni
| Argues in support of
"Yes"
| 2 years ago
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Excess of anything is bad and its similar thing incase of over exposure of ordianary people to make them extraordinary.
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Debate: "Has media led to where ordinary people are made extraordinary!!!" deleted from your view.
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Technology is a huge sector comprising many industries and markets. The pressures on companies are mounting fast, though the ghost of consolidation won't haunt each of them equally. Indeed, some segments have already consolidated. Where once there were a fair number of operating systems for PCs, midrange computers, and mainframes, for instance, now there are only a few. The database software industry has gone the same way. But other industries, by the very nature of the value propositions their niche companies provide, will probably remain fragmented. As in any sector, scale-driven mergers, to streamline fixed costs over greater volumes and to satisfy the demand for bigger and more stable s...
Insight: "High Tech Mergers Take Shape" deleted from your view.
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The evolution and maturity of the Indian BPO sector has given birth to yet another wave in the global outsourcing scene: KPO or Knowledge Process Outsourcing . The success in outsourcing business process operations to India has encouraged many firms to start outsourcing their high-end knowledge work as well. Cost savings, operational efficiencies, access to a highly talented workforce and improved quality are all underlying expectations in offshoring high-end processes to India. The myth that Indian companies can only provide 'software coolies' is soon changing to the reality of Indian companies being capable of almost anything. India has a large pool of knowledge workers in various sector...
Trends: "Raise of Knowledge Process Outsourcing (KPO)" deleted from your view.
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Girish Kolhe
| Answered
| 4 years ago
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I recommend the MBAfor long-term career progress for an ERP consultant. Without the MBA an ERP consultant can rise through the technical hierarchy in an organization and become a senior manager of technology, e.g., managing all the apps in a...
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Answer: "How important is an MBA consultant for a ERP Consultant ?" deleted from your view.
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Girish Kolhe
| Answered
| 4 years ago
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All the comments made on this subject are very interesting and all are correct in some sense or another, although they often appear contradictory. There is clearly huge variation across the different phases of clinicial trial work as well as the...
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Answer: "Do you see a new trend in Clinical Research industry: less contract positions compare to the number of new “permanent”..." deleted from your view.




