Advisory
council seen to work on 'next-wave' cities for BPO
Monday, April 14, 2008
MANILA, Philippines--A public-private advisory council will be created
soon to provide general directions for an initiative to attract
business process outsourcing firms to locate their operations outside
Metro Manila.
This was the decision reached during the first meeting of the
"next-wave cities" working group convened by the Business Processing
Association of the Philippines (BPAP), the Commission on Information
and Communications Technology (CICT), and the Department of Trade and
Industry Regional Operations Group (DTI-ROG), according to Gigi Virata,
information and research director of BPAP.
The next-wave cities initiative is part of 2010 roadmap of the BPAP,
which identified possible locations for investment by outsourcing
companies, she added in an interview.
Virata said the convening agencies are inviting more government
agencies and industry associations to form the advisory council. The
group intends to invite representatives from the Board of Investments,
the Commission on Higher Education, and the Philippine Economic Zone
Authority, among others.
The working group also met last week to review the current research
tools being used to help companies evaluate potential cities where they
could set up shop, she said.
The group currently uses a "scorecard" to gauge the number of
graduates, the labor pool, and the density of residents of an
identified city.
The working group has identified at least 18 next wave cities in the
country. Fifteen of these 18 cities have already established
information and communications technology (ICT) councils, which
involves representatives from both government and private sector,
Virata added.
"The advisory council will eventually decide how to go forward," the
BPAP research director said. One of the objectives of the council is to
look at better ways to evaluate cities for possible locations of
outsourcing companies.