Prelims
The New Era of Global Services: A Framework for Successful Enterprises in Business Services and IT
ISBN: 978-1-83753-627-6, eISBN: 978-1-83753-626-9
Publication date: 11 October 2023
Citation
Capobianco, J.P. (2023), "Prelims", The New Era of Global Services: A Framework for Successful Enterprises in Business Services and IT, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xx. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83753-626-920231007
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2023 Javier Peña Capobianco
Half Title Page
The New Era of Global Services
Title Page
The New Era of Global Services: A Framework for Successful Enterprises in Business Services and IT
BY
JAVIER PEÑA CAPOBIANCO
Catholic University of Uruguay, Uruguay
ORT University, Uruguay
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Emerald Publishing, Floor 5, Northspring, 21-23 Wellington Street, Leeds LS1 4DL.
First edition 2023
Copyright © 2023 Javier Peña Capobianco.
Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited.
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-83753-627-6 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-83753-626-9 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-83753-628-3 (Epub)
Dedication Page
To my mom and me, because of the change in the observer that I am today.
Contents
List of Figures and Tables | ix |
List of Acronyms | xiii |
Foreword | xv |
Acknowledgments | xix |
Introduction | 1 |
Chapter 1: Importance | 5 |
Chapter 2: A New Framework for a New Model | 19 |
Chapter 3: The Keys to Successful Ventures in the Future | 33 |
Chapter 4: Social Changes That Will Consolidate the Model | 149 |
Chapter 5: How Is an Ecosystem for Global Services Generated? | 161 |
Chapter 6: Conclusion | 191 |
Appendix | 199 |
References | 203 |
Index | 227 |
List of Figures and Tables
Graphic
Graphic 1. | Global GDP in Services – Latin America and the Caribbean GDP in Services | 8 |
Graphic 2. | Number of People Employed in Services, Worldwide, and in Latin America and the Caribbean (% of Total) | 9 |
Graphic 3. | World Employment in Services, Industry, and Agriculture, 2000–2020 (% of Total) | 10 |
Graphic 4. | Poverty and Inequality (Gini) Indexes and Percentage of Workers Below the Poverty Line in Ireland, Israel, and OECD (2017) | 11 |
Graphic 5. | Received FDI Per Sector, in 1990 and 2018 (%) | 12 |
Graphic 6. | Annual Compound Growth of World Exports of Goods, Services, and Selected Services Segments, 2010–2019 (%) | 13 |
Graphic 7. | Percentage Variation in Exports for Manufactured Goods, Total Services, and Other Services (2005–2021) | 14 |
Graphic 8. | Services’ Contribution to International Trade in Absolute Terms (2019) and in Terms of Value Added (2018) | 14 |
Graphic 9. | Share in Total Services Exports, Per Type of Economy (1990–2019, %) | 15 |
Graphic 10. | Services Global Exports, 2010–2019 (USD Billion, Current Prices) | 16 |
Graphic 11. | World Services Exports, Per Segment (2019, %) | 16 |
Graphic 12. | Annual Compound Growth Rate for Global Services Exports, Selected Countries in Latin America, and the Caribbean, 2010–2019 (%) | 17 |
Graphic 13. | People Using Internet, 1995–2018 (% of Total Population) | 48 |
Graphic 14. | Global Digitization Impact Per Sector | 49 |
Graphic 15. | Companies Using Electronic Banking Services, Selected Countries in Latin America and the Caribbean (%) | 50 |
Graphic 16. | Total Global Online Shoppers (2015–2018) | 62 |
Graphic 17. | Total B2c Sales Through e-Commerce in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2018 | 62 |
Graphic 18. | Global Fintech Market, 2020–2023 (USD Billion) | 65 |
Graphic 19. | Global e-Health Market, 2020–2027 (USD Billion) | 67 |
Graphic 20. | Global e-Learning Market Size, 2020–2026 (USD Billion) | 68 |
Graphic 21. | Global Agritech Market Size, 2020–2025 (USD Billion) | 70 |
Graphic 22. | Global BPO Market Size, 2020–2027 (USD Billion) | 72 |
Graphic 23. | Global e-Government Market Size, 2017–2022 (USD Billion) | 79 |
Graphic 24. | Latin American Countries’ Performance According to the 2020 e-Government Development Index | 80 |
Graphic 25. | Large Companies’ Executives Which Consider Economic Changes Derived From the COVID-19 Pandemic as a Significant Growth Opportunity, Per Sector (%) | 91 |
Graphic 26. | Importance of Digital Platforms in Companies’ Strategies | 95 |
Graphic 27. | Time Taken by Leading Companies to Reach a Market Capitalization Worth USD 1,000 Million (Years) | 96 |
Graphic 28. | Uses of Working Time Among Human Talent in Latin America, the USA, the UK, and Asia (%) | 100 |
Graphic 29. | Global Microtransactions’ Market, 2019–2023 (USD Million) | 101 |
Graphic 30. | Companies With Jobs at Risk of Becoming Automated, Selected Economies (%) | 126 |
Graphic 31. | Number of IT Vacancies in Latin America, 2019–2025 | 127 |
Graphic 32. | Link Between Us Consumers and Companies that Support Social and Environmental Causes (% of Positive Responses) | 144 |
Graphic 33. | Selected Countries and Number of Adults Who Have Adopted a Vegetarian or Vegan Lifestyle (% of Total Population) | 145 |
Graphic 34. | Life Expectancy at Birth, 1960–2017 (Years) | 155 |
Graphic 35. | Number of Single-person Households in the United States, 1960–2019 (in Millions of People) | 156 |
Graphic 36. | Number of Monthly Users of Social Networks Around the World, 2016–2023 (Est. in Billions) | 157 |
Figures
Fig. 1. | Main Landmarks in Global Services | 7 |
Fig. 2. | Services’ Characteristics | 21 |
Fig. 3. | Modes of Supplying Services | 22 |
Fig. 4. | Main Segments | 23 |
Fig. 5. | Global Services Definition | 24 |
Fig. 6. | E2E Solutions | 26 |
Fig. 7. | Examples of Everything-as-a-Service Modes | 31 |
Fig. 8. | The Pillars of the DIDPAGA Model | 34 |
Fig. 9. | The New Microsourcing Model | 36 |
Fig. 10. | Benefits and Challenges of Adapting to Remote and Distributed Work | 38 |
Fig. 11. | Activities Carried Out at Home and in the Office | 40 |
Fig. 12. | Tools Adopted by Companies | 42 |
Fig. 13. | Difference Between Digitization and Automation | 51 |
Fig. 14. | Salient Technologies | 53 |
Fig. 15. | Key Elements in e-Commerce | 61 |
Fig. 16. | Subsectors of Creative Industries and Main Segments | 76 |
Fig. 17. | Creativity | 77 |
Fig. 18. | Visible and Invisible Innovation | 83 |
Fig. 19. | Ways of Innovating in Services | 85 |
Fig. 20. | Ways of Innovating | 87 |
Fig. 21. | Innovation Life Cycle | 89 |
Fig. 22. | Digital Platforms’ Key Concepts for Service Provision | 94 |
Fig. 23. | Examples of Digital Platforms | 95 |
Fig. 24. | Features of Exponential Organizations | 97 |
Fig. 25. | Amazon’s Vertical and Horizontal Integration | 97 |
Fig. 26. | Agile Methodologies’ Evolution | 104 |
Fig. 27. | Waterfall Model and Iterative Model | 105 |
Fig. 28. | Agile Methodologies Pillars | 106 |
Fig. 29. | Agile Leadership Team’s Manifesto | 112 |
Fig. 30. | Main Elements for the Agile Adaptation | 114 |
Fig. 31. | Tools to Apply Agile Methodologies | 115 |
Fig. 32. | Characteristics of Companies With a Global Reach | 120 |
Fig. 33. | Characteristics of Born Global Companies | 122 |
Fig. 34. | Forces that Promote and Limit Nearshoring Businesses | 123 |
Fig. 35. | The US’ Performance According to Kearney Global Services Location Index and Tholons Services Globalization Index (2017–2020) | 128 |
Fig. 36. | Conscious Sourcing in Global Services | 133 |
Fig. 37. | The Cycle of Impact Sourcing | 139 |
Fig. 38. | Environmental Care | 141 |
Fig. 39. | Ways of Attracting Valuer | 142 |
Fig. 40. | Characteristics of the Next Generations | 151 |
Fig. 41. | Ways to Foster Global Services | 163 |
Fig. 42. | Factors and Indicators Driving Delocalization of Global Services | 165 |
Fig. 43. | Factors Driving the Internationalization of Global Services Startups | 166 |
Fig. 44. | Actors in the Global Services Ecosystem | 168 |
Fig. 45. | Elements Necessary to Foster Global Services | 169 |
Fig. 46. | Mechanisms for Dealing With Double Taxation | 172 |
Fig. 47. | Opportunities for Talent Improvement, According to Companies in the Region | 176 |
Fig. 48. | Strategies to Breach the Gap in Global Services | 177 |
Fig. 49. | Types of Synergies | 181 |
Tables
Table 1. | Automation-related Technologies: Current and Estimated Value and Annual Compound Growth Rate | 54 |
Table 2. | Segments With Greater Digitization and Automation Impact: Current and Estimated Value and Annual Compound Growth Rate | 60 |
Table 3. | Best Outsourcing Locations in Latin America and the Caribbean | 129 |
List of Acronyms
A2B | Administration to business |
A2C | Administration to consumer |
ABSL | Association of Business Service Leaders (Polonia) |
AI | Artificial Intelligence |
AIBEST | Association for Innovation, Business Excellence, Services and Technology (Bulgaria) |
ALES | Latin-American Association of Service Exporters |
APIs | Application Programming Interfaces |
AR | Augmented Reality |
BC/DR | Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery |
BEPS | Base Erosion and Profit Shifting |
BI | Business Intelligence |
BPaaS | Business Process as a Services |
BPESA | Business Process Enabling South Africa |
BPO | Business Process Outsourcing |
B2A | Business to Administration |
B2B | Business to Business |
B2C | Business to Consumers |
B2E | Business to Employee |
B2I | Business to Investor |
B2P | Business to People |
BP | Business Process |
BPM6 | Sixth Edition of the IMF’s Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual |
BT | Blockchain Technology |
C2B | Customer to Business |
C2C | Consumer to Consumer |
CC | Cloud Computing |
CCO | Chief Customer Officer |
CSD | Centers for Software Development |
CEO | Chief Executive Officer |
CFO | Chief Financial Officer |
CI | Creative Industries |
CTO | Chief Technology Officer |
CX | Customer Experience |
CXM | Customer Experience Management |
DA | Data Analytics |
DEPA | Digital Economy Partnership Agreement |
E2E | End to End |
EaaS | Everything as a Service |
EU | European Union |
F&A | Finance and Accounting |
IaaS | Infrastructure as a Service |
GATS | General Agreement on Trade in Services |
GDP | Gross Domestic Product |
HMD | Head Mounted Display |
IDB | Inter-American Development Bank |
IMF | International Monetary Fund |
IoT | Internet of Things |
IP | Intellectual Property |
IT | Information Technology |
ICTs | Information and Communication Technologies |
ITIDA | Information Technology Industry Development Agency (Egypt) |
ITO | Information Technology Outsourcing |
KIS | Knowledge-intensive Services |
M&A | Mergers and Acquisitions |
MBA | Master in Business Administration |
ML | Machine Learning |
MVP | Minimum Viable Product |
NLP | Natural Language Processing |
GATS | General Agreement on Trade in Services |
GATT | General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade |
GDPR | General Data Protection Regulation |
GSA | Global Sourcing Association (Reino Unido) |
KPI | Key Performance Indicator |
KPO | Knowledge Process Outsourcing |
OECD | Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development |
OM | Outsourcing Malaysia |
P2P | Peer-to-Peer |
R&D | Research and Development |
RPA | Robotic Process Automation |
SLASSCOM | Sri Lanka Association of Software and Service Companies |
SaaS | Software as a Service |
SMEs | Small- and Medium-sized enterprises |
SSC | Share Service Center |
STEM | Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics |
UNESCO | United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization |
VLCM | Vegan Leaders in Corporate Management |
VPN | Virtual Private Network |
VR | Virtual Reality |
WIPO | World International Property Organization |
WTO | World Trade Organization |
XaaS | Anything as a Service |
Foreword
There is no doubt that Javier is a bold person; only someone like him can attempt to predict the future characteristics of one of the most dynamic and changing industries of the last few decades, and moreover, do so at a time when the world is experiencing one of the biggest disruptions in its history due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, audacity is appropriate at the present time, and this book is particularly relevant not only because of the subject matter it deals with but also because of the moment in which it is presented.
The global services industry has been showing increasing importance in the world for decades and has played a key role during the pandemic. In fact, services have now become the main sector of activity for most economies, generating the majority of employment and gross domestic product (GDP) in the developed world and in much of the developing countries. In terms of international trade, services are growing at higher rates than goods and are progressively contributing to the value added of exported manufacturing.
Within services, global services are the most dynamic sector, capturing more than half of the world’s exports of services, and their exports have been more resilient than exports of goods or other services during the pandemic (just as they did during the global financial crisis of 2008 and 2009).
This book has great timing and highlights an industry that has enormous potential for job creation and generating foreign exchange. Global services provide the countries in the region with the opportunity to promote successful international integration that supports their development processes. Latin America and the Caribbean’s participation in the international trade of global services is clearly limited despite the many relative advantages that countries in the region have to position themselves in this industry. We should see this as a clear opportunity. The efforts we make to successfully integrate into this industry will be key to the future growth of our countries, and this book is a great contribution to designing those efforts.
The global services industry has also played a key role in the management and response to the pandemic. This type of service has played a highly relevant role, for example, collaborating in reducing health risks through telemedicine and the remote design of medical devices or facilitating the continuity of interactions that nourish the economic and social life of people through distance learning, online shopping, and video call platforms, among many other functionalities. Global services involve sophisticated and distinctive tasks from the digital era, which undoubtedly will lead the economy of the future (not-so-distant) and play a key role in the post-pandemic economic recovery.
In this context, the timing for a detailed analysis of this industry could not be more appropriate. The industry is at a turning point. The pandemic has led to many changes that were expected to occur over decades to materialize in months. In particular, changes related to the advancement of digitalization, the adoption of disruptive technologies, new mechanisms for service provision, and changes in consumption and labor organization habits. At the same time, this accelerated process of change has led to the emergence of new trends that were not on anyone’s agenda.
As a result of social distancing measures, the world witnessed a historic escalation in the use of the Internet and digital services, which has caused an unprecedented increase in global demand for information and communication technologies. In turn, the pandemic has created new consumption habits that generate both challenges and opportunities for the industry. For example, online shopping has become more natural, consumers are more careful about the health standards of what they consume, virtual provision of services has advanced, such as childcare using digital platforms or live participation in cultural activities virtually. This undoubtedly generates areas for the growth of the global services industry, but also generates challenges, given that competition is more global than ever. For example, a postgraduate university course no longer competes only with offers from universities in the same city or country but also with all similar courses offered virtually around the world.
The pandemic also has accelerated changes in the organization of work. Remote work has ceased to be the exception and has become the norm, and everything indicates that this will continue even after the pandemic is over. Work teams are becoming more flexible, and competition for human capital is now global. Human resources teams no longer focus on attracting the best programmers in their area or convincing them to move to the city where their company is located. Instead, they focus on creating the conditions for the best programmers in the world to want to work remotely for their company. These changes are compounded by others, such as the new forms of social interaction that people were forced to implement, or new environmental and social concerns that permeate society. All of this is leading to paradigmatic changes in the industry, changes that Javier systematically addresses (and anticipates).
The book you are about to read not only presents an exhaustive characterization of the industry, its organizational forms, its modes of delivery, and its evolution, but it also investigates the fundamental factors that companies must address for their success in the not-so-distant future. It does so in a novel and multidisciplinary way, systematizing quantitative and qualitative information and collecting the vision of more than 70 industry leaders.
I would like to highlight two factors that are combined in the analysis and, in my opinion, make it as original as it is interesting. On the one hand, the interaction between technology, business, and the human being. Studying the impact of new technologies such as artificial intelligence, blockchain, process automation, 3D printing, etc., on the evolution of business is key. But even more relevant is doing so considering that this evolution is not independent of the human being, their environment, their beliefs, and their values. Undoubtedly, the relationship of causality is not unidirectional between these variables, and the future configuration of this industry will be the result of the interaction of these factors.
A second aspect to highlight is the impact that “new” generations will have on shaping the future evolution of the global services industry. The resulting configuration of the interaction between technology, business, and the human being will not be independent of those who will lead the industry in the near future, and those who will do so will be millennials, centennials, and digital natives who have different preferences and beliefs than those who currently lead it. They are people with a preference for remote work in close connection with technology, they demand greater work flexibility, they have a preference for horizontal relationships, a certain detachment from material matters, and a growing interest in the social and environmental impact of what they do and where they do it.
Understanding these characteristics and their future impact on the industry is key to designing better public policies that allow us to take advantage of the opportunity that we discussed earlier. Designing specific actions that enable us to take advantage of the opportunity that the sector offers to our countries is a challenging issue given the distinctive characteristics of the sector and the preconceptions that exist regarding it.
In short, the journey you are about to embark on is a fascinating path that, building from today, seeks to anticipate the future of an industry in constant evolution, exposed to dizzying technological advances, and that will be led by generations with very different preferences than the current ones. I told you that Javier was an audacious guy!
Pablo M. Garcia
Head of Regional Integration Unit
Inter-American Development Bank
Acknowledgments
First, I would like to express my deepest gratitude to my mom, who gave me the gift of perseverance, and to my dad, from whom I learned resilience. I would also thank each one of the 70 world and regional leaders who generously shared their time and ideas with me. Special thanks to Claudio Piacenza, who introduced me to the topic of service exports in 2004, and Pablo García, who encouraged me to think about the future of global services in early 2020. Also, this book would not have been possible without the contributions of Javier da Silveira, who carried out the research work for most of its chapters; Anderson Parra, who collaborated in the topic of agile methodologies; and José Carlos Tol, who was in charge of the statistical analysis presented at the beginning of this publication. Last but not the least, I would like to thank the Latin American Association of Service Exporters (ALES), whose participation was vital for making this book possible, and, in particular, to each one of its members, whom, after more than 10 years of joint work, I consider part of a great family.
- Prelims
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Importance
- Chapter 2: A New Framework for a New Model
- Chapter 3: The Keys to Successful Ventures in the Future
- Chapter 4: Social Changes That Will Consolidate the Model
- Chapter 5: How is an Ecosystem for Global Services Generated?
- Chapter 6: Conclusion
- Appendix
- References
- Index