JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

In­vesTT pres­i­dent:

BPO employment in T&T could grow eight times

by

727 days ago
20230409

In­vesTT pres­i­dent Sek­ou Al­leyne says the em­ploy­ment of lo­cals by Busi­ness Process Out­sourc­ing (BPO) op­er­a­tors could grow by sev­en or eight times, giv­en the ad­van­tages that T&T of­fers the call cen­tres.

In­vesTT is the in­vest­ment pro­mo­tion arm of the T&T Gov­ern­ment, and in an in­ter­view ear­ly last month at the Trinidad and To­ba­go High Com­mis­sion in Lon­don, Al­leyne said In­vesTT is look­ing to fur­ther ex­pand BPOs here.

"We see the BPO mar­ket ex­plod­ing, so we want to make sure that we build aware­ness of Trinidad and To­ba­go as an un­sat­u­rat­ed mar­ket for Busi­ness Process Out­sourc­ing," said the In­vesTT pres­i­dent.

Asked to out­line the ad­van­tages that T&T of­fers to po­ten­tial BPO in­vestors, Al­leyne said in the first in­stance T&T is an un­sat­u­rat­ed coun­try.

"Places like Ja­maica that have eight or nine BPOs al­ready set up are see­ing labour costs rise and high at­tri­tion rates as em­ploy­ees can jump from BPO to BPO. Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic is the same thing, ex­cept they have the added chal­lenge of Eng­lish be­ing a sec­ond lan­guage to them. They are see­ing the price of Eng­lish-speak­ing agents go up and hav­ing less ac­cess to them," said Al­leyne, adding that that ex­plains why T&T is see­ing in­ter­est from "a cou­ple" of Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic com­pa­nies.

An­oth­er ad­van­tage that T&T has is the same flight con­nec­tiv­i­ty and East­ern seaboard time-zone con­gruity as Ja­maica and the Do­mini­can Re­publics.

He said the third ad­van­tage that T&T of­fers to po­ten­tial BPO in­vestors is telecom­mu­ni­ca­tions con­nec­tiv­i­ty.

"We have done alot bet­ter than some of the oth­er des­ti­na­tions in the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic. An ex­am­ple of that is the BPO iQor, which is al­ready well es­tab­lished in T&T. IQor was able to tran­si­tion very quick­ly to full re­mote work.

"Our fi­bre con­nec­tiv­i­ty, the last mile to the home, is very high pen­e­tra­tion, al­most 100 per cent. Not just the tele­com con­nec­tiv­i­ty, but the mid­dle-class liv­ing stan­dards, so that you don't just have wi-fi, but you have a clean, tidy and qui­et room from which you can an­swer calls for an eight-hour pe­ri­od."

Al­leyne said In­vesTT ex­pects to see more in­ter­est by BPO firms in T&T be­cause of the com­bi­na­tion of the tal­ent pool, the un­sat­u­rat­ed mar­ket–so that at­tri­tion rates are not be­ing high–the fact that iQor has been very suc­cess­ful and has ex­pand­ed to three lo­ca­tions, the tele­com con­nec­tiv­i­ty and the sup­port of T&T of­fi­cials like High Com­mis­sion­er Vish­nu Dhan­paul.

Asked about the cost of labour in T&T, Al­leyne said it is com­pa­ra­ble to Ja­maica, the Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic and the oth­er coun­tries in the re­gion that are look­ing to at­tract the BPO in­vestors.

He point­ed out that when T&T first start­ed pur­su­ing BPOs eight years ago, many in­vestors did not con­sid­er T&T be­cause of its high GDP per capi­ta.

"Peo­ple au­to­mat­i­cal­ly as­sumed that our labour rates were go­ing to be very high, not un­der­stand­ing that the high GDP per capi­ta was pri­mar­i­ly based on oil and nat­ur­al gas and they do not em­ploy that many peo­ple," Al­leyne said, adding that T&T used the mon­ey from the en­er­gy sec­tor to in­vest in the ed­u­ca­tion sys­tem, in de­vel­op­ing the tal­ent pool and in build­ing the in­fra­struc­ture.

"So, you are get­ting bet­ter in­fra­struc­ture and a bet­ter tal­ent pool at the same cost in T&T and T&T is un­sat­u­rat­ed, so you are not fight­ing with ten oth­er call cen­tres for the same per­son," said the In­vesTT pres­i­dent.

Ques­tioned on how long he thinks it is go­ing to take be­fore T&T be­come sat­u­rat­ed, Al­leyne said: "Let's put it in this per­spec­tive: Ja­maica has 2.4 mil­lion peo­ple and 50,000 BPO seats. We have 1.4 mil­lion peo­ple and we are on­ly at 2,500 seats. That's the op­por­tu­ni­ty. We may not want to get to 50,000 peo­ple em­ployed in the BPO sec­tor, but we cer­tain­ly can get to 15,000 to 20,000 peo­ple."

Asked if that means the em­ploy­ment by BPO op­er­a­tors in T&T could in­crease by sev­en or eight times, Al­leyne said: "Yes, ab­solute­ly. We have just scratched the sur­face, IQor alone want to do an­oth­er 5,000 seats. And that's them in their three lo­ca­tions."

Al­leyne said while the BPO sec­tor can and does em­ploy many peo­ple, it al­so con­ributes to the T&T econ­o­my in oth­er ways.

"It is 100 per cent for­eign ex­change earn­ings. The BPO in­vestors are not com­ing look­ing for clients in Trinidad. They have their clients in the US. They get paid by their clients in US dol­lars and they have to bring those US dol­lars in­to Trinidad to pay salaries, tele­com bills, rents etc."

Al­leyne told the Sun­day Busi­ness Guardian in Lon­don one month ago that the agency had four more BPO op­er­a­tions in the pipeline.

One of the com­pa­nies in the pipeline, he dis­closed, was a Scot­tish com­pa­ny called As­cen­sos. In a news re­lease on March 16, In­vesTT dis­closed that As­cen­sos had se­lect­ed T&T as the ide­al nearshore lo­ca­tion to sup­port its North Amer­i­can clients.

Al­leyne and Quin­cy Flo­res, the In­vesTT man­ag­er of in­vest­ments, were in Lon­don to at­tend the March 8, Cross­Con­nect Fo­rum. The fo­rum was or­gan­ised by a plat­form from the US called Near Shore Amer­i­c­as, which pro­motes Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean as des­ti­na­tions for BPO.

"We want to make it that when in­vestors are con­sid­er­ing Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean­–they al­ways think of Ja­maica, the Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic, Colom­bia and Be­lize–that Trinidad and To­ba­go is on that long list. Be­ing at these shows, vir­tu­al­ly or phys­i­cal­ly, is im­por­tant to us to en­sure that we are part of the con­ver­sa­tion.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored