Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • World
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse
Code Project
  1. Home
  2. The Lounge
  3. OutSourcing is great for the American Developer- Fact or Fiction

OutSourcing is great for the American Developer- Fact or Fiction

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
questionlounge
29 Posts 18 Posters 1 Views 1 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • C CodeManX

    Given the economical climate in America today, what are the general feelings about most companies shipping their entire operations overseas and essentially placing the American expertise in the field of software development/engineering in jeopardy?

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Maximilien
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    (applicable to North America, Western Europe, Australia, New-Zealand and a few other places, also applicable to non IT business). It's bad because it does not only sends "brains" away, it also stops economic growth in various accessory domain of business. For 1 good IT ( or pharmacist, chemist, doctors, accountants ... ) you can have a lot of other people doing business with them ( merchant, grocers, restaurant chef, repairmen, builders, ... ). People tend to think that it only affect IT workers, but it affect a lot of people. And most important, it sends a bad message to the youth that even if you study hard in university, your job will probably be shipped in India or China.

    Maximilien Lincourt Your Head A Splode - Strong Bad

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • S SilimSayo

      It depends.... if you're a shareholder of the company, outsourcing means lower costs/higher profits. If you're an employee well... no job.... Question: Are American companies obligated to employ Americans?

      B Offline
      B Offline
      Bert delaVega
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      SilimSayo wrote:

      outsourcing means lower costs/higher profits

      I'd agree with lower costs. Higher profits? Maybe in the short term. In the long term it becomes an expense item when it needs to be re-done. A lot of that "cheap" money becomes dead money with what's delivered and the fact that it wasn't the expectation nor business need. Ask Michael Dell why he cut off the off-shoring. And that was just call center stuff.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • C CodeManX

        Given the economical climate in America today, what are the general feelings about most companies shipping their entire operations overseas and essentially placing the American expertise in the field of software development/engineering in jeopardy?

        M Offline
        M Offline
        Marc Clifton
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        One could write a dissertation subject. Global vs. local economy, analysis of actual cost benefits to the business, short term vs. long term investment/gains, the further economic stratification of society, emerging markets, company loyalty, cost of business in America (taxes, health care, labor laws, etc), shareholder pressure, global market competition, intellectual property, security, transfer of knowledge, the educational system, etc. However, the short answer, from my perspective as a software developer: Screw the dissertation. Outsourcing sucks. Marc

        Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog

        C M M 3 Replies Last reply
        0
        • M Marc Clifton

          One could write a dissertation subject. Global vs. local economy, analysis of actual cost benefits to the business, short term vs. long term investment/gains, the further economic stratification of society, emerging markets, company loyalty, cost of business in America (taxes, health care, labor laws, etc), shareholder pressure, global market competition, intellectual property, security, transfer of knowledge, the educational system, etc. However, the short answer, from my perspective as a software developer: Screw the dissertation. Outsourcing sucks. Marc

          Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog

          C Offline
          C Offline
          CodeManX
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          Marc Clifton wrote:

          However, the short answer, from my perspective as a software developer: Screw the dissertation. Outsourcing sucks.

          Hillarious!!! :-D

          "Building a better future one class at a time"

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • M Marc Clifton

            One could write a dissertation subject. Global vs. local economy, analysis of actual cost benefits to the business, short term vs. long term investment/gains, the further economic stratification of society, emerging markets, company loyalty, cost of business in America (taxes, health care, labor laws, etc), shareholder pressure, global market competition, intellectual property, security, transfer of knowledge, the educational system, etc. However, the short answer, from my perspective as a software developer: Screw the dissertation. Outsourcing sucks. Marc

            Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog

            M Offline
            M Offline
            MidwestLimey
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            Ah, brutal honesty, love it


            I'm largely language agnostic


            After a while they all bug me :doh:


            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • C CodeManX

              Given the economical climate in America today, what are the general feelings about most companies shipping their entire operations overseas and essentially placing the American expertise in the field of software development/engineering in jeopardy?

              E Offline
              E Offline
              Ennis Ray Lynch Jr
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              My primary line of business is cleaning up the mess left behind from incompetent teams.

              Need a C# Consultant? I'm available.
              Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. -- Ernest Hemingway

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • C CodeManX

                Given the economical climate in America today, what are the general feelings about most companies shipping their entire operations overseas and essentially placing the American expertise in the field of software development/engineering in jeopardy?

                P Offline
                P Offline
                Pete OHanlon
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                Judging by the quality of the posts in the C# forum, the American developer has little to fear.

                Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

                My blog | My articles

                K M M 3 Replies Last reply
                0
                • C CodeManX

                  SilimSayo wrote:

                  Question: Are American companies obligated to employ Americans?

                  No not in today's global economy. They should not hire just Americans to do the job. At the same time, should they ship 75-80% of those jobs in question overseas being an American company? It's great idea if you are a shareholder, just as you mentioned. But, that revenue that was generated and spent in America, thus helping the economy, has now disappeared slowly thus giving way to a failing economy. No genertaion of revenue equals a poorer society. Imagine if 70% of organization outsourced their jobs overseas. If that happen, internal revenue decreases, debts to other countries grow larger, internal spending decreases, prices increases; does any of this sound familiar to any Americans? Can you say 2nd world country?

                  "Building a better future one class at a time"

                  W Offline
                  W Offline
                  wout de zeeuw
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  I'll just rebalance at some new equilibrium. Foreign car makers are now putting up new plants in the US because it's getting more affordable to do so. The ball just rolls to the lowest point, and there'll always be a lowest point somewhere.

                  Wout

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • P Pete OHanlon

                    Judging by the quality of the posts in the C# forum, the American developer has little to fear.

                    Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

                    My blog | My articles

                    K Offline
                    K Offline
                    keyboard warrior
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    unless of course you realize that most americans are more concerned about cost over quality.

                    ----------------------------------------------------------- Completion Deadline: two days before the day after tomorrow

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • P Pete OHanlon

                      Judging by the quality of the posts in the C# forum, the American developer has little to fear.

                      Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

                      My blog | My articles

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      Marc Clifton
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

                      Judging by the quality of the posts in the C# forum, the American developer has little to fear.

                      Unfortunately, quality and cost/hr are totally decoupled in the minds of the decision makers. And ironically, the "quality" of management vs. their cost/hr is not something WE, as the lowly employee, have any say over. Funny how that works, isn't it? Marc

                      Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog

                      K 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • M Marc Clifton

                        Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

                        Judging by the quality of the posts in the C# forum, the American developer has little to fear.

                        Unfortunately, quality and cost/hr are totally decoupled in the minds of the decision makers. And ironically, the "quality" of management vs. their cost/hr is not something WE, as the lowly employee, have any say over. Funny how that works, isn't it? Marc

                        Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog

                        K Offline
                        K Offline
                        keyboard warrior
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        always trying to out-do me in the forums aren't you.

                        ----------------------------------------------------------- Completion Deadline: two days before the day after tomorrow

                        M 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • C CodeManX

                          Given the economical climate in America today, what are the general feelings about most companies shipping their entire operations overseas and essentially placing the American expertise in the field of software development/engineering in jeopardy?

                          P Offline
                          P Offline
                          Philip Laureano
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          After personally seeing the quality of some of the outsourced software development work done here in Southeast Asia, you have nothing to worry about. The average level of experience required to be considered "senior" developer level is only three years, and the recruiters here can't seem to find or hire[^] developers who have more than five years of experience. To give you an idea of just how incompetent some of the devs here are, I've run into so-called senior "developers" working in the BPO/Outsourcing industry who claimed to practice "agile techniques" and yet when I went their actual source code (which, btw, claimed to use TDD), I only found ONE test case. As much as I'd like to say that was just an exception, I'm starting to be convinced more and more that it's just the standard practice here in SE Asia. In other words, you get what you pay for. With that in mind, the developers in the U.S. might be more costly, but the cost/quality tradeoff applies there as well. You might pay more to get your development work done in the U.S., but you can throw a rock in any direction and find at least more than a handful of good developers with more than five years of experience in almost any state. If the U.S. can compete when it comes to quality software development, then the only developers whose job will be at stake will be the ones that really, really suck. When the U.S. job market rids itself of the developers that can't do quality work, then everyone benefits because the senior devs that do their job well get to keep their jobs, and the lower-quality developers (i.e., the ones that submit one-rated article templates for the article submission queue) will be forced to find work in other more suitable fields, such as "knitting". So if you're a dev in the U.S. job market right now, your only recourse is to constantly improve the quality of your own work. Otherwise, if there's someone out there in some other country who can do the same quality of work as you can for half the price, then there's nothing stopping your employer from pulling the rug from under you. It's only "bad" for the American developer if they keep themselves isolated and they get complacent with their skills. It can be great if and only if you can ke

                          M V 2 Replies Last reply
                          0
                          • P Philip Laureano

                            After personally seeing the quality of some of the outsourced software development work done here in Southeast Asia, you have nothing to worry about. The average level of experience required to be considered "senior" developer level is only three years, and the recruiters here can't seem to find or hire[^] developers who have more than five years of experience. To give you an idea of just how incompetent some of the devs here are, I've run into so-called senior "developers" working in the BPO/Outsourcing industry who claimed to practice "agile techniques" and yet when I went their actual source code (which, btw, claimed to use TDD), I only found ONE test case. As much as I'd like to say that was just an exception, I'm starting to be convinced more and more that it's just the standard practice here in SE Asia. In other words, you get what you pay for. With that in mind, the developers in the U.S. might be more costly, but the cost/quality tradeoff applies there as well. You might pay more to get your development work done in the U.S., but you can throw a rock in any direction and find at least more than a handful of good developers with more than five years of experience in almost any state. If the U.S. can compete when it comes to quality software development, then the only developers whose job will be at stake will be the ones that really, really suck. When the U.S. job market rids itself of the developers that can't do quality work, then everyone benefits because the senior devs that do their job well get to keep their jobs, and the lower-quality developers (i.e., the ones that submit one-rated article templates for the article submission queue) will be forced to find work in other more suitable fields, such as "knitting". So if you're a dev in the U.S. job market right now, your only recourse is to constantly improve the quality of your own work. Otherwise, if there's someone out there in some other country who can do the same quality of work as you can for half the price, then there's nothing stopping your employer from pulling the rug from under you. It's only "bad" for the American developer if they keep themselves isolated and they get complacent with their skills. It can be great if and only if you can ke

                            M Offline
                            M Offline
                            MidwestLimey
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            Philip Laureano wrote:

                            "knitting".

                            My mum used to knit, it takes some skill you know. Stones, glass houses and all that :D


                            I'm largely language agnostic


                            After a while they all bug me :doh:


                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • K keyboard warrior

                              always trying to out-do me in the forums aren't you.

                              ----------------------------------------------------------- Completion Deadline: two days before the day after tomorrow

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              Marc Clifton
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #18

                              jgasm wrote:

                              always trying to out-do me in the forums aren't you.

                              Huh? Marc

                              Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • M Marc Clifton

                                One could write a dissertation subject. Global vs. local economy, analysis of actual cost benefits to the business, short term vs. long term investment/gains, the further economic stratification of society, emerging markets, company loyalty, cost of business in America (taxes, health care, labor laws, etc), shareholder pressure, global market competition, intellectual property, security, transfer of knowledge, the educational system, etc. However, the short answer, from my perspective as a software developer: Screw the dissertation. Outsourcing sucks. Marc

                                Thyme In The Country Interacx My Blog

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                Mycroft Holmes
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #19

                                I don't even think the money is the heartbreaker, how many organisations have you heard of where they decide to outsource and their IP goes with it. Take a company send the bulk of your business knowledge OS and you have a serious problem. I have worked for 3 global organisations that have found they have lost all their internal skills for maintaining their core business software and have had to spend $M+ to build up the teams again. I'm not even convinced offshoring the donkey work is viable.

                                Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

                                L 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • P Pete OHanlon

                                  Judging by the quality of the posts in the C# forum, the American developer has little to fear.

                                  Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

                                  My blog | My articles

                                  M Offline
                                  M Offline
                                  Mycroft Holmes
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #20

                                  Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

                                  American developer has little to fear.

                                  But American (Oz, UK, EU etc) companies should be bloody horrified. You lose your skilled people (the next generation anyway)

                                  Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • C CodeManX

                                    Given the economical climate in America today, what are the general feelings about most companies shipping their entire operations overseas and essentially placing the American expertise in the field of software development/engineering in jeopardy?

                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    Joe Woodbury
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #21

                                    One thing often overlooked in outsourcing/offshoring is that many of these projects would have been canceled, or never started, otherwise. I actually interviewed some Indian developers about such a project (in that case, it never happened at all.)

                                    Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • C CodeManX

                                      Given the economical climate in America today, what are the general feelings about most companies shipping their entire operations overseas and essentially placing the American expertise in the field of software development/engineering in jeopardy?

                                      E Offline
                                      E Offline
                                      El Corazon
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #22

                                      CodeManX wrote:

                                      Given the economical climate in America today, what are the general feelings about most companies shipping their entire operations overseas and essentially placing the American expertise in the field of software development/engineering in jeopardy?

                                      okay, my two cents. The problem is not the jobs going overseas, that is a symptom, and it was long expected. It is only partly about the money/profit. The problem ultimately is the number of owners/managers who know absolutely nothing about the product they manage. I have worked for an owner who didn't know the difference between a one line change on his profit loss statement and a full scale bank reconciliation and W2 reporting programs. The cost analysis and prediction system was wasted on him, even though it gained him about 10 million during the first gulf war. He was ready to replace me long before I left, because a one line change took 2 hours, and the bank reconciliation two weeks, and the w2 magnetic media took me two weeks to write and two weeks to iron out communication with the IRS through official test channels. If one thing took two hours, then ALL things should take two hours. He was searching for a more cost effective employee long before I jumped ship. Those are the type of people that are looking at the buck and knowing nothing about quality, taking all the work elsewhere. If they were looking for quality the rarity of the person even overseas would quickly run the cost up with supply/demand. But as long as you remove quality supply is high therefore cost is low. There is your problem.

                                      ------------------ John Andrew Holmes "It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others."

                                      L 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • P Philip Laureano

                                        After personally seeing the quality of some of the outsourced software development work done here in Southeast Asia, you have nothing to worry about. The average level of experience required to be considered "senior" developer level is only three years, and the recruiters here can't seem to find or hire[^] developers who have more than five years of experience. To give you an idea of just how incompetent some of the devs here are, I've run into so-called senior "developers" working in the BPO/Outsourcing industry who claimed to practice "agile techniques" and yet when I went their actual source code (which, btw, claimed to use TDD), I only found ONE test case. As much as I'd like to say that was just an exception, I'm starting to be convinced more and more that it's just the standard practice here in SE Asia. In other words, you get what you pay for. With that in mind, the developers in the U.S. might be more costly, but the cost/quality tradeoff applies there as well. You might pay more to get your development work done in the U.S., but you can throw a rock in any direction and find at least more than a handful of good developers with more than five years of experience in almost any state. If the U.S. can compete when it comes to quality software development, then the only developers whose job will be at stake will be the ones that really, really suck. When the U.S. job market rids itself of the developers that can't do quality work, then everyone benefits because the senior devs that do their job well get to keep their jobs, and the lower-quality developers (i.e., the ones that submit one-rated article templates for the article submission queue) will be forced to find work in other more suitable fields, such as "knitting". So if you're a dev in the U.S. job market right now, your only recourse is to constantly improve the quality of your own work. Otherwise, if there's someone out there in some other country who can do the same quality of work as you can for half the price, then there's nothing stopping your employer from pulling the rug from under you. It's only "bad" for the American developer if they keep themselves isolated and they get complacent with their skills. It can be great if and only if you can ke

                                        V Offline
                                        V Offline
                                        Vivi Chellappa
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #23

                                        Just like competent programmers, incompetent programmers can also be found everywhere. I can point to the California DMV (Department of Motor Vehicles) blowing $92 million on a new re-vamped driver licensing and vehicle registration system, with nothing to show for it. All the work was done by local people. The Bay Area Rapid Transit gave a contract to Logica PLC (a UK company) to develop new train control software so that they could run trains with greater frequency and failed miserably. The budget was $42 million. The UK government under Tony Blair spent $6 billion to develop an integrated medical records system for its National Health Service and has diddly squat at this point in time for the exoenditure. Has anybody blown $6 billion on an outsourced project? Perhaps, the knee-jerk reactions we see on this site is an indication of the poor logical thinking ability among US and European programmers that might have led to the outsourcing of software projects in the first place. Now, I shall sit back and watch the drive-by 1 voters!

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • S SilimSayo

                                          It depends.... if you're a shareholder of the company, outsourcing means lower costs/higher profits. If you're an employee well... no job.... Question: Are American companies obligated to employ Americans?

                                          H Offline
                                          H Offline
                                          Hamed Musavi
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #24

                                          SilimSayo wrote:

                                          If you're an employee well... no job....

                                          What prevents an employee to send some or all of his/her works to those who do it much cheaper, then just act as a supervisor, unless her/his boss prohibits that?

                                          // "In the end it's a little boy expressing himself." Yanni while (I_am_alive)
                                          {
                                              cout<<"I love to do more than just programming.";
                                          }

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          0
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes


                                          • Login

                                          • Don't have an account? Register

                                          • Login or register to search.
                                          • First post
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • Categories
                                          • Recent
                                          • Tags
                                          • Popular
                                          • World
                                          • Users
                                          • Groups