Many global cos. are moving their R&D to India

Because of abundance of skilled resources and global economy downturn , Many global cos. are moving their R&D to India. Outsourcing to India would increase to cut down costs.

Global technology companies are stepping up their research and development work in India. Here are some of the things they have been doing:

  • MICROSOFT
    – Microsoft employs 1,500 people at its Indian R&D center. It started off with 20 people about a decade ago. – Some of the work for key Microsoft projects such as its search engine Bing and the upcoming Windows 7 operating system was done in India.

  • SAP
    – SAP Labs India, the company’s largest R&D center outside Germany, employs 4,200 people. It does two-fifths of SAP’s global enterprise resource planning development.
    – Half of the global development of SAP’s customer relationship management software such as CRM 7.0 was done in India, as well as a fifth of the development of SAP Business ByDesign.

  • GOOGLE
    – Bangalore was Google’s first R&D center outside the United States. – Google Map Maker, a global product conceived and developed by the Indian engineering team, allows users to add or edit features, such as roads, businesses, parks, schools, apartment buildings and localities.
    – News Archive Search helps users search historical archives for events, people or ideas and get a sense of how they have been described over time. The product was developed in India and deployed on a global scale.

  • IBM
    – International Business Machines has said it will invest $100 million in global mobile services research over the next five years. The majority of the research for the project would be directed from India.

  • INTEL
    – Intel’s Digital Enterprise Group’s efforts have resulted in the company’s first six-core processor, the Intel Xeon Processor 7400 series, currently the highest-performing server chip that Intel offers.
    – Its Corporate Technology Group developed the world’s first programmable processor delivering teraflops performance from its Bangalore center.

  • HEWLETT-PACKARD
    – HP engineers in Bangalore contributed to the HP Dynamic Smart Cooling technology that cools systems in data centers on a customized basis and saves energy. The system was tested at HP’s Palo Alto headquarters and deployed first in Bangalore. It is now deployed globally.

  • CISCO SYSTEMS
    – Cisco has filed more than 600 patents from India. (Reporting by S. John Tilak and Sayantani Ghosh in Bangalore; Editing by Mike Miller and Himani Sarkar)

RPT-FACTBOX-Multinational companies expand tech R&D in India | Reuters

As the world prepared for the launch of Intel's server processor Xeon 7400 last September, engineers in Bangalore -- dubbed the Silicon Valley of India -- were putting the finishing touches on what would become the company's best-performing server chip yet. The chip was designed end-to-end by Intel Corp's digital enterprise group in Bangalore.

Increasingly, the Indian arms of multinational tech giants are working on global brands such as Microsoft Corp's search engine Bing, its upcoming Windows 7 operating system and Google Inc's Map Maker.

The country, perceived as a necessary low-cost option only a few years ago, is fast becoming a destination for higher-end R&D work, with skilled engineering talent and India's own rising economic might adding to the appeal.
While India may not yet have shrugged off its "cheap labor" tag and is periodically the target of populist rhetoric from Western politicians, for technology firms the country has new connotations.

Faced with maturing home markets and aging workforces in the United States and Europe, companies are looking at India for a growing supplier base and young, agile workers.

"Today if you were to ask any of the product companies if they could do without their India-based hubs, I think the answer would be no," said Noshir Kaka, director at McKinsey & Co, a global consultancy firm.

"We're actually seeing the creation of new products and new services that may not have seen the light of day if we had only used a developed-market workforce for them," he said.

Hewlett-Packard, which set up its India R&D center in 1989, started out with cost efficiencies in mind, said Rick Steffens, who heads its systems technology and software division.

"As those teams started to get some experience and do more development, what we started noticing was that they were also capable of making changes to and enhancing the product."
Recent comments from U.S. President Barack Obama about ending tax incentives for U.S. companies that ship jobs abroad caused a flutter among tech firms. But they appear to be going ahead with their India investment plans.
German software company SAP's plan to pump $1 billion into India between 2006 and 2010 is on track, said Kush Desai, managing director of SAP Labs India.

"Germany's confidence in India has constantly risen, along with the experience that people have gained in their work over the years," Desai said.
The attractive Asia-Pacific market is another draw.

In 2006, Cisco established its Globalisation Centre East in Bangalore for, among other reasons, "its proximity to 70 percent of the world's population within a five-hour flight," said Chief Globalization Officer Wim Elfrink.

LACKING DEPTH
But all is not rosy. As these companies spread their roots they face challenges, some of which are unique to the developing world.

Some companies looking to do high-end research in India say there is a shortage of Ph.D. scholars and workers with deep technical knowledge.
"If 10 companies of Microsoft's type of global product engineering want to do real core R&D work here, then do we have enough talent on the (university) campuses? Maybe not," said Srini Koppolu, managing director of the Microsoft India Development Center in Hyderabad.

HP's Steffens said engineers who frequently change companies hamper their chances of developing niche technical knowledge.

The difference between what was done offshore and what was done onshore is changing, said Vikas Saggi, an R&D expert at Bain & Co. "The gap is decreasing, but the gap is still there."

And India, with an R&D market worth $6.5 billion, according to Saggi, has competition for those dollars.

Giving India a run for its money are China, Russia and several Eastern European countries

"The focus is to tap the intellectual talent, growth opportunities and innovation," said Elfrink, who is based in Bangalore and reports to CEO John Chambers.

So far, the company has filed more than 600 patents from India, Elfrink said.
India's R&D labs are second only to the United States for many of these technology firms

Re: Many global cos. are moving their R&D to India

Asian nations, in particular China and India benefit from the economic crunch because higher American wages are eating into the Industrial profits. The same job can be done abroad for nearly half the wage, and just as much quality, and in some cases more quantity.

I wonder what jobs would remain in United States? What profession should the next generation of US kids choose?

Re: Many global cos. are moving their R&D to India

To be honest, most jobs in America right now are either IT, or Healthcare. Both are at peak right now.

Engineering and Construction is booming in Middle East and Asia.

I think the fields that may boom are:

Genetic Engineering (as more interest is shown in stretching the limits of human capability)
Pharmaceutical (both for healthcare/cure, and warfare)
IT/Computer Sciences (Cyber will play a major role in the future handling of all affairs)

Just my views....future is unpredictable.

Any job which is customer facing and needs face to face contact would stay in America. Rest can be outsourced.

It is hard to choose a profession for kids where they are marketable for long time.

Re: Many global cos. are moving their R&D to India

Let the kids choose a profession for themselves. You'd be doing well financially as long as you like what you do and you are good at it.