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November 16, 2004


Microsoft Expands Operations in India


By SARITHA RAI



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The New York Times








BANGALORE, India, Nov. 15 - The Microsoft
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Corporation announced on Monday that it was significantly expanding its
software development operations in India as it opened a new campus near
Hyderabad, its second-largest campus after its headquarters in Redmond,
Wash.

Microsoft's chief executive, Steven A. Ballmer, formally opened the 28-acre
campus in the suburbs of Hyderabad, which is 250 miles north of Bangalore, a
rival technology center. The campus thus far has only one building, with
capacity for 1,600 workers.

Besides Mr. Ballmer, the chief executive of the Intel
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arketwatch.com/custom/nyt-com/html-companyprofile.asp&symb=INTC>
Corporation, Craig R. Barrett, is to arrive in India this week, highlighting
the country's growing role as a source of skilled technical labor as well as
a sizable market. Mr. Barrett is scheduled to visit Bangalore and Delhi this
week.

The issue of outsourcing, the movement of work to cheaper labor markets like
India, was an issue in this year's presidential elections in the United
States. The Democratic contender, Senator John F. Kerry, had promised to get
tough on companies that were moving jobs overseas.

Even with the re-election of President Bush, corporations like Microsoft are
still wary of being tarred as the cause of job losses. Mr. Ballmer said that
his company would expand in India, but that this would not reduce job
opportunities at its operations in the United States.

"The nature of our business is such that there is enough growth potential
which allows us to hire both at our Redmond headquarters and here in India,"
Mr. Ballmer said after the opening. Microsoft has nearly 450 programmers at
its development center in Hyderabad. "Since we are looking for very high
levels of skills, we are looking to hire in the hundreds," Mr. Ballmer said.

Last year, Microsoft said that it expected its development center to have
500 employees by 2005, but Mr. Ballmer said the company would exceed that
target.

Microsoft is not alone. Global corporations like General
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arketwatch.com/custom/nyt-com/html-companyprofile.asp&symb=GE>  Electric and
American
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arketwatch.com/custom/nyt-com/html-companyprofile.asp&symb=AXP>  Express
started by outsourcing low-end code-writing work to India, but taking
advantage of India's pool of technical workers and lower labor costs, many
multinational companies have recently stepped up outsourcing. Microsoft's
own software development center in Hyderabad opened in 1998 with only 12
employees.

Increasingly, though, these corporations are outsourcing high-end technology
work to India. Microsoft, for instance, outsources work, from call centers
to advanced embedded software development, to India.

"Many corporations have super-, hyperaggressive outsourcing plans to India
to meet their growing needs while keeping costs under check," said Chris
Disher, the Chicago-based vice president and head of Booz Allen Hamilton's
outsourcing advisory service.

While Microsoft's hiring plans are not huge, Mr. Disher said, its moves do
send "an important signal about the competencies and innovation skills that
are available in India."

Mr. Ballmer, who visited three Indian cities on Monday, signed major
agreements with two of India's leading outsourcing companies, Infosys
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arketwatch.com/custom/nyt-com/html-companyprofile.asp&symb=INFY>
Technologies and Wipro
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arketwatch.com/custom/nyt-com/html-companyprofile.asp&symb=WIT>  in
Bangalore. The deals will enable Infosys and Wipro to use Microsoft
technologies to build software for their clients at more favorable terms.
With Infosys, Mr. Ballmer announced an $8 million joint venture.

"These deals signify Indian outsourcing companies' growing clout in
influencing technology decision in American boardrooms," said Sudip Nandy,
chief strategy officer of Wipro.

Microsoft is one of Wipro's top five customers, and Wipro provides it with a
range of services, from call centers to I.T. services to software
development. The work for Microsoft employed 200 Wipro employees in March
2001; now it uses more than 5,000.

"I'm excited about what's going on here in India," Mr. Ballmer told
reporters in Bangalore after signing the two deals.








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