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VC funding fuels 24/7 Customer growth
By Kalpana Shah
Economic Times, MONDAY,
JAN 19:In seven months since 24/7 Customer received funds of $22
million from Sequoia Capital - one of the top venture capital firms
in Silicon Valley - the company has grown to a 2,500-strong force.
At the end of this quarter,
another 500 people will be added to its ranks and by the end of
2004; the number should cross the 5,000-mark.
According to Michael
Moritz, the Sequoia partner who led the investment - the VC's first
ever in the outsourcing space - and who is on the board of 24/7,
this growth rate is manageable.
"We have to balance
the growth rate in a business that is as people-intensive as this.
We don't want to be a laggard but we don't want to grow too fast
either," he says.
Mr. Moritz admits to
having great ambitions for 24/7: "We want to be at least among
the top two in our business. The company has so far exceeded our
expectations, and as an investor we want to help wherever possible.
But the credit for getting new and prestigious business belongs
solely to the management."
With over four million
calls being handled each month at its centres in India, the company
is readying to get more.
Where Sequoia helps
the BPO is in shrinking sales cycle. "You can save time if
you approach the right people at the beginning. We help cut the
bureaucracy at the customers' end. We also try and build a prospective
customer list - but meeting the right person can be a massive competitive
advantage," says Mr. Moritz.
According to Mr. Moritz,
the BPO outsourcing trend is an unstoppable force; the only question
is its growth rate. He cites the case of electronic manufacturing
service (EMS), which was looked down upon a decade, or so ago but
now it's a huge business. The dynamics of BPO are similar to EMS,
he says.
"When we invested
in Flextronics, we ran into scepticism. It wasn't fashionable to
invest in EMS. Flextronics was pretty small then - with a turnover
of $15-16 million a quarter. But now they clock $3.5-4 billion a
quarter. It's taken 12 years, but the entire industry has flourished."
Mr. Moritz expects similar good news in the BPO sector in India.
But there's a hint of
realism: "This company has a long runway in front of it and
it needs to roll down it in a methodical fashion. You can never
get the large things done if you don't get the mundane things done
first."
With about 20 California
companies in its portfolio, Sequoia Capital is betting big on India.
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