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PESTLE Analysis On Indian IT Sector
PESTLE Analysis On Indian IT Sector
GUIDED BY:
Mr.. Vishwas chakranarayn
SUBMITTED TO
Department of management Lovely Professional University Phagwara
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I take this opportunity to present my vote of thanks to all those guidepost who
really acted as lightening pillars to enlighten our way throughout this project that
has led to successful and satisfactory completion of this study.
We are really grateful to our COD Mr.Devdhar shetty for providing us with an
opportunity to undertake this project in this university and providing us with all the
facilities. We are highly thankful to Mr.vishwas chakranarayan for his active
support, valuable time and advice, whole-hearted guidance, sincere cooperation
and pains-taking involvement during the study and in completing the assignment
of preparing the said project within the time stipulated.
Lastly, We are thankful to all those, particularly the various friends , who have
been instrumental in creating proper, healthy and conductive environment and
including new and fresh innovative ideas for us during the project, their help, it
would have been extremely difficult for us to prepare the project in a time bound
framework.
Name - MOHAMMAD ABBAS
Regd.No 10906034
Roll no. RS1904A24
INDEX
ABSTRACT
KEYWORDS
INTRODUCTION
ROLE OF IT
INDUSTRY.
MARKET
STRUCTURE.........
IT SERVICES, ENGINEERING SERVICES, R&D
AND SOFTWARE
PRODUCTS
IT INDUSTRY IN INDIA
.........
PESTLE ANALYSIS OF IT SECTOR
..........
POLITICAL FACTOR
...
ECONOMICAL FACTOR
SOCIAL FACTOR
.
TECNOLOGICAL FACTOR
..
LEGAL FACTOR
.
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTOR
CONCLUSION
BIBLOGRAPH
..
ABSTRACT :Information Technology is what constitutes the most important sector in the present
day trend of carrying out business. It is because you cannot be present everywhere
to monitor the work, but with networking and communications, you can always stay
in contact with the other business sites of yours.
With time and the continuous growth across the world, the country continued
struggling and came up as the world leader in Information Technology Sector.
The industry has grown up to US $ 5.7 billion (including over $4 billion worth of
software exports) in 1999-2000, with the annual growth rate not sliding below 50
percent since 1991.
Today, the term information has ballooned to encompass many aspects of computing
and technology, and the term has become very recognizable. IT professionals
perform a variety of duties that range from installing applications to designing
complex computer networks and information databases. A few of the duties that IT
professionals perform may include data management, networking, engineering
computer hardware, database and software design, as well as the management and
administration of entire systems.
KEYWORDS:-
INTRODUCTION
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (IT), as defined by the Information Technology
Association of America (ITAA), is "The study, design, development, implementation,
support or management of computer-based information systems, particularly
software applications and computer hardware." IT deals with the use of electronic
computers and computer software to convert, store, protect process, transmit, and
securely retrieve information. When computer and communications technologies are
combined, the result is information technology,
INFOTECH
". Information Technology (IT) is a general term that describes any technology that
helps to produce, manipulate, store, communicate, and/or disseminate information.
When computer and communications technologies are combined, the result is
information technology, or "infotech". Information technology is a general term that
describes any technology that helps to produce, manipulate, store, communicate,
and/or disseminate information. Presumably, when speaking of Information
Technology (IT) as a whole, it is noted that the use of computers and information are
associated.
Today, the term information technology has ballooned to encompass many aspects
of computing and technology. IT professionals perform a variety of duties that range
from installing applications to designing complex computer networks and information
databases. A few of the duties that IT professionals perform may include data
management, networking, engineering computer hardware, database and software
design, as well as the management and administration of entire systems. Owing to
its easy accessibility and the wide range of IT products available, the demand for IT
services has increased substantially over the years. The IT sector has emerged as a
major global source of both growth and employment.
It exports software and services to nearly 95 countries around the world. The share
of North America (U.S. & Canada) in Indias software exports is about 61 per cent
ROLE OF IT INDUSTRY
The IT industry can serve as a medium of e-governance, as it assures easy
accessibility to information. The use of information technology in the service sector
improves operational efficiency and adds to transparency. It also serves as a
medium of skill formation.
Economies of scale for the information technology industry are high. The marginal
cost of each unit of additional software or hardware is insignificant compared to the
value addition that results from it.
Unlike other common industries, the IT industry is knowledge-based.
Efficient utilization of skilled labor forces in the IT sector can help an economy
achieve a rapid pace of economic growth.
The IT industry helps many other sectors in the growth process of the economy
including the services and manufacturing sectors.
MARKET STRUCTURE
GLOBAL & INDIAN SCENARIO
:
Global Sourcing Trends
The fundamental contribution of information technology is the expansion of
knowledge, which is necessarily accompanied by a reduction in uncertainty. This
becomes relevant for market structure in several ways.
IDC estimates that in 2008, the worldwide IT market growth will be lower at about
5.5-6.0 per cent, mainly due to the economic slowdown in the US and elsewhere.
IT-BPO services grew at an above-sector-average rate of nearly 8 per cent and
remained the largest category, accounting for an increasing share of the worldwide
technology sector revenue aggregate.
Outsourcing continued to be the primary growth driver, sustained by gradual shifts in
regional spending patterns with increasing traction in Europe and Asia Pacific
offsetting a marginal decline in share of the Americas. IT spending in the BRIC
countries - Brazil, Russia, India, and China is expected to grow by 16 per cent in
2008, reaching USD 115 billion. Other emerging economies (based on 10%+ growth
rates and the greatest net-new IT spending potential in the next four years) include
Mexico, Poland and Turkey, followed by Vietnam, Thailand, Saudi Arabia, Argentina,
Colombia, and United Arab Emirates.
Green IT is expected to be an important highlight during 2008. According to the
Green IT Survey conducted by IDC, over 50 per cent consider suppliers greenness
when buying IT, almost 80 per cent think the importance of greenness as an IT
buying consideration is growing, and over one-third have policies that favor green
vendors. 2008 will see the introduction of green products (energy-efficient, spaceefficient, materials efficient, regulatory-compliant) that will create meaningful
differentiation and move market share.
IT SERVICES, ENGINEERING SERVICES, R&D AND SOFTWARE PRODUCTS
IT Services involves a full range of engagement types that include consulting,
systems integration, IT outsourcing/managed services/hosting services, training and
support/maintenance.
facilitate changes in the curriculum and pedagogy, which directly influence the quality
of graduate output.
Why India?
Inspired by the Indian IT-ITES success story, several other locations have been
presented as alternate options for offshore outsourcing. However, feedback received
from several MNCs having multi-country operations as well as syndicated analyses
comparing the various sourcing locations has revealed that India continues to offer
and deliver the best bundle of benefits sought from global sourcing. With significant
potential still untapped, it is expected that the global sourcing phenomenon will
continue to expand in scope, scale and geographic coverage. As global delivery
matures, multi-location strategies will become the norm and most sourcing
destinations, including emerging locations, will grow in size. Building on its existing
strengths, India will remain the leading destination and will continue to play an
important role in most global sourcing strategies.
Strengths
Large Human Resource:Every year, approximately 19 million students are enrolled in high schools and 10
million students in pre-graduate degree courses across India. Moreover, 2.1 million
graduates and 0.3 million post-graduates pass out of India's non-engineering
colleges. While 2.5-3 percent of them find jobs in other fields or pursue further
studies abroad, the rest opt for employment in the IT industry. If the flow from high
schools to graduate courses increases even marginally, there will be a massive
increase in the number of skilled workers available to the industry. Even at current
rates, there will approximately be 17 million people available to the IT industry by
2008.
Indian Education System
The Indian education system places strong emphasis on mathematics and science,
resulting in a large number of science and engineering graduates. Mastery over
quantitative concepts coupled with English proficiency has resulted in a skill set that
has enabled the country to take advantage of the current international demand for IT.
Quality Manpower
Indian programmers are known for their strong technical skills and their eagerness to
accommodate clients. In some cases, clients outsource work to get access to more
specialized engineering talent, particularly in the area of telecommunications. India
also has one of the largest pools of English-speaking professionals. Strengths at a
Glance
Great history in software development
English Language proficiency
Government Support and policies
Cost advantage
Strong tertiary education
Process quality focus
Skilled workforce
Expertise in new technologies
Entrepreneurship
Reasonable technical innovations
Reverse brain drain
Existing long term relationships
Creation of global brands
BPO & Call center offerings
Expansion of existing relationships
Chinese domestic & export market
Leverage relationships in West to access overseas markets
Indian domestic-market growth
IT INDUSTRY IN INDIA
The Indian information technology sector has been instrumental in driving the
nation's economy onto the rapid growth curve. According to the Nasscom-Deloitte
study, the IT/ITES industry's contribution to the country's GDP has increased to a
share of 5.2 per cent in 2007, as against 1.2 per cent in 1998. Further, the IT and
BPO industries are poised to clock revenues worth US$ 64 billion by the end of fiscal
year 2008, registering a growth of 33 per cent with exports expected to cross US$ 40
billion and the domestic market estimated to clock over US$ 23 billion, according to a
study. Simultaneously, the Indian IT services market is estimated to remain the
fastest growing in the Asia Pacific region with a CAGR of 18.6 per cent, as per a
study by Springboard Research. India's IT growth in the world is primarily dominated
by IT software and services such as Custom Application Development and
Maintenance (CADM), System Integration, IT Consulting, Application Management,
Infrastructure Management Services, Software testing, Service-oriented architecture
and Web services. A report by the Electronics and Software Export Promotion
Council (ESC) estimates software exports to register a 33 per cent growth in the
current financial year with export figures during FY 2008 expected to reach US$ 45
billion. The country's IT exports have, in fact, come quite far, starting from a few
million dollars in the early 1990s. The Government expects the exports turnover to
touch US$ 80 billion by 2011, growing at an annual rate of 30 per cent per annum.
POLITICAL FACTORS:This is political factors which affect a business which can be government rules and
regulation toward that particular business environment. For IT industry the Indian
political structure is stable, but there are fears of hung parliament due to a lack of
clear majority in parliament creating fear of wrong investing in the minds of investor
thereby reducing capital. U.S government has declared that U.S firm that outsource
IT works outside the U.S will not get tax benefits, this has caused reduction in U.S
BPO contract from the U.S in the last fiscal year thereby reducing revenue from the
U.S. Indian government has decided to contract IT job to Indian IT companies
creating more opportunities for the company and the industry at large. In software
development different countries is configuration rules and regulation are considered
since client demand differs because of different system requirement. NASSCOM and
DELIOTTE study (impacting economy and society 2007/2008), states that Indian
government has strengthened the IT act, 2000 to provide a sound legal environment
for companies to operate related to security of data in transmission and storage etc
this has served as a positive factor. Infosys has to put Indian relationship with
different countries of business into consideration before investing. Other factors to be
considered are customer protection law, competitive regulations, and terrorist
attacks.
POLITICAL STABILITY: _
India suffered political instability for a few years due to the failure of any party to win
an absolute majority in Parliament. However, political stability has returned since the
previous general elections in 1999. However, political instability did not change
India's economic course though it delayed certain decisions relating to the economy.
The political divide in India is not one of policy, but essentially of personalities.
Economic liberalisation (which is what foreign investors are interested in) has been
accepted as a necessity by all parties including the Communist Party of India
(Marxist).
Thus, political instability in India, in practical terms, posed no risk to foreign direct
investors because no policy framed by a past government has been reversed by any
successive government so far. You can find a comparison in Italy which has had
some 45 governments in 50 years, yet overall economic policy remains unchanged.
Even if political instability is to return in the future, chances of a reversal in economic
policy are next to nil.
As for terrorism, no terrorist outfit is strong enough to disturb the state. Except for
Kashmir in the north and parts of the north-east, terrorist activity is either nonexistent or too weak to be of any significance. It would take an extreme stretching of
the imagination to visualize a Bangladesh-type state-disrupting revolution in India or
a Kuwait-type annexation of India by a foreign power.
Hence, political risk in India is practically non-existent.
Likewise the IT sector does not have any influence of political stability on
industry. And if the govt. changes there is little effect on the industry of that
political step.
ECONOMICAL FACTORS
These includes factors affecting IT industry ranging from rising working pay, global
recession, competition, contract availability and fee. Domestic IT spending grew by
20% and reached $20 billion in 2009. Currency fluctuations caused by the
devaluation of the dollar has affected the industry during the last global recession.
Real estate prices decline resulted in rental expenditure forcing customer to leave
luxuries goods such as electronic and computers that need software to work.
Recession cause low attribute rate due to job layouts and job cuts. India economic
attraction has helped in convincing investors due to low cost advantage. With Indias
global IT spending yet to decline due to entry of new IS companies and the cause of
the recession. With clients industry faced with reduction of work force due to job
layoffs and unsuitable balance sheet most companies have decided not to make
much expenditure in purchase, but make optimum use of existing facilities to make
profits. Most debtors with financial crisis have been granted more time to pay up
causing large debt deficit. With the decline of banking and financial sectors, the
revenue from there is expected to decline, hurting the bottom line of IT majors
DOMESTIC IT SPENDING:India's domestic IT market will grow around 14% this year, showing a minor decline
as compared to last year's growth of 16-18%. Hence, it is expected that the country
will see a minor decline in IT budget coming from its domestic market.
"Compared to other countries, India is in a better position. Its domestic market is
expected to grow around 14% this year. We also expect that IT spend in India will
see a minor decline as compared to last year. There could be some 2-3% decline as
compared to last year's budget," commented Arup Roy, senior research analyst at
Gartner.
GLOBAL IT SPENDING:Indian enterprises spending on information communications and technology (ICT) in
2005 is expected to grow at more than twice the rate in the Asia Pacific region.
Enterprise spending in the Asia Pacific (APAC) on hardware next year will rise 6.3
per cent to $36.9bn, with software increasing 12.4 per cent to $5.6bn while telecom
will grow 7.5 per cent to $132.5bn and IT services will gain 8.4 per cent to $33.6bn.
In India, of the $22.88bn spend in 2005 on enterprise ICT, $3.34bn is the projected
spend on hardware, an increase of 21.1 per cent over 2004; $0.52bn (16.4 per cent
increase) on software; $16.7bn (15.5 per cent increase) on telecom and $2.32bn
(18.3 per cent increase) on IT services. India will remain the highest growth market
for telecommunications with around 35 million new subscribers in 2005, an 18 per
cent increase from 2004, with the growth occurring in selected technologies mainly
mobile. This accounts for almost one fourth of the new subscribers forecasted in Asia
Pacific. Consumer segment is rapidly gaining importance, driven by adoption of
mobile services. This is reflected in their increased contribution towards spending for
telecommunication services, from 35 per cent in 2002 to 43 per cent in 2005. By
2008 the consumer segment will account for more than half of telecommunications
spending, the report said. Gartner also said that open source and offshore IT
services will continue to grow, while it warned global IT vendors to take emerging
competition from China seriously with at least three Chinese IT companies becoming
significant global competitors by 2010. The growth in offshore BPO services
outpaces the growth in global sourcing of IT services. Offshore component of global
BPO services spend is expected to grow from $3 billion (2.4 per cent of total markets
spend of $124 billion in 2004) to $24 billion (15 per cent of the total markets spend of
$161 billion in 2007).
REAL STATES PRICES :Decline in real estate prices has resulted reducing the rental expenditure thus
the industry will grow if the real estate price goes down.
ATTRITION:-\
Almost every sector in India is facing high rates of attrition these days. A recent study
course creating room for availability of IT professional at lower cost since there is job
competition. India has to produces great numbers of IT professional each year to
meet its demand. India continue to produce IT professionals each year, this has help
industry for IT professionals inwards. Industries have to consider the type of services
the software is meant for, age difference of users, life style of the different countries
of supply. It should be noted that there will always be difference in client behaviours
which is supported by the fact that different customers have different taste.
SOCIAL ISSUES;Should Industry be concern with the issue of global warming? Yes it is affected by
many government laws regarding it like in china, where company with great amount
of carbon emission are charge great amount of tax. Likewise being a major player in
the global IT market Infosys has introduces measure to help in the reduction of
carbon emission by trying to reduce its water consumption, electricity utilization,
carbon emission and partnering with other companies in troubleshooting this global
dilemma..
EDUCATION:There are large number of universities and institutes in India offering IT education.
And there are large numbers of students which everyear passed these courses and
join the IT industry.
The Indian labor is not only cheap but is technically skilled too to the world class
level. It is due to the Indian Education System that includes in its course curriculum
the practical knowledge of the latest technology that is developed in world along with
the fluency in English Language that imparts compatibility in an Indian technician to
communicate and work throughout the world.
CAREER PROSPECTS
In the year 2006-07, the industry hired approximately 3, 80,000 people. Out of
these, the ITeS sector hired 2, 00,000 people and the rest were taken by IT sector.
The recruitment trends of some IT giants are given below: TCS- 35,000 Infosys30,000 Wipro-28,000 Satyam-20,000 Some of the areas of specialization in the IT
Industry areDesigning
Research and Development in Peripheral Integration
Product Quality Control and Reliability Testing
Computer Manufacturing
Maintenance Service
System Developing /Programming /Software Engineering
Networking
Application Programming
EDP/ E- Commerce
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
Database Warehousing and Management
applications. As with any technological transition, for an enterprise this implies that
there are new opportunities to be explored and new challenges to be negotiated. To
maximize the benefits of Web2.O, an enterprise should assess. SOA has benefited
enterprises with benefits such as standardized patterns, interoperability, centralized
governance, easy integration etc. Almost all industry domains have benefited from
SOA strategy in order to build more flexible and malleable IT architecture involving
re-usable services. On the other hand, Web 2.0 practices like communities and
folksonomy are much centered around end-users. They involve frequent
communication among large consumers dispersed all around the world over the
Internet. They have become extremely popular among internet users. This brings the
interesting idea of bringing enterprise products i.e. services and consumer-savvy
applications from Web 2.0 together.
CAD:Computer-aided design (CAD) is the use of a wide range of computer-based tools
that assist engineers, architects and other design professionals in their design
activities. It is the main geometry authoring tool within the Product Lifecycle
Management process and involves both software and sometimes special-purpose
hardware. Current packages range from 2D vector based drafting systems to 3D
solid and surface modellers.
CAD is sometimes translated as "computer-assisted", "computer-aided drafting", or a
similar phrase. Related acronyms are CADD, which stands for "computer-aided
design and drafting", CAID for Computer-aided Industrial Design and CAAD, for
"computer-aided architectural design". All these terms are essentially synonymous,
but there are a few subtle differences in meaning and application.
CAD was originally the three letter acronym for "Computer Aided drafting" as in the
early days CAD was really a replacement for the traditional drafting board.
But now is the term is often interchanged with "Computer Aided Design" to reflect the
fact that modern CAD tools do much more than just drafting.
Current Computer-Aided Design software packages range from 2D vector-based
drafting systems to 3D solid and [[Freeform surface mo |surface]] modellers. Modern
CAD packages can also frequently allow rotations in three dimensions, allowing
viewing of a designed object from any desired angle, even from the inside looking
out. Some CAD software is capable of dynamic mathematic modeling, in which case
it may be marketed as CADD computer-aided design and drafting.
CAD is used in the design of tools and machinery and in the drafting and design of
all types of buildings, from small residential types (houses) to the largest commercial
and industrial structures (hospitals and factories).
CAD is mainly used for detailed engineering of 3D models and/or 2D drawings of
physical components, but it is also used throughout the engineering process from
conceptual design and layout of products, through strength and dynamic analysis of
assemblies to definition of manufacturing methods of components. It can also be
used to design objects.
CAD has become an especially important technology within the scope of computeraided technologies, with benefits such as lower product development costs and a
greatly shortened design cycle. CAD enables designers to lay out and develop work
on screen, print it out and save it for future editing, saving time on their drawings.
The people that work in this field are called: Designers, CAD Monkeys, Automotive
Design Engineers and Digital Innovation Engineers. Computer-aided design is also a
common work activity for the traditional engineering professions
Software technologies
A CAD model of a mouse originally software for Computer-Aided Design systems
was developed with computer languages such as Fortran, but with the advancement
of object-oriented programming methods this has radically changed. Typical modern
parametric feature based modeler and freeform surface systems are built around a
number of key C (programming language) modules with their own APIs. A CAD
system can be seen as built up from the interaction of a graphical user interface
(GUI) with NURBS geometry and/or boundary representation (B-rep) data via a
geometric modeling kernel. A geometry constraint engine may also be employed to
manage the associative relationships between geometry, such as wireframe
geometry in a sketch or components in an assembly.
Unexpected capabilities of these associative relationships have led to a new form of
prototyping called digital prototyping. In contrast to physical prototypes, which entail
manufacturing time and in the design
Hardware and OS technologies
Today, CAD systems exist for all the major platforms - CAD systems like QCad, NX
provide multiplatform support including Windows, Linux, UNIX and Mac OS X;
ArchiCAD and Vectorworks work on both Windows and Mac OS X, but not on Linux;
and, for example, AutoCAD works on Windows only. For more information on OS
compatibility, see Comparison of CAD editors for AEC, Comparison of CAD editors
for CAM and Comparison of CAD editors for CAE. Catia V5 is supported on Sparc
Solaris but not x86 Solaris, HPUX, and AIX, but not Linux. It has been announced
that Catia V6 will only be supported on one proprietary operating system.
Right now, no special hardware is required for most CAD software. However, some
CAD systems can do graphically and computationally expensive tasks, so good
graphics card, high speed (and possibly multiple) CPUs and large amounts of RAM
are recommended.
The human-machine interface is generally via a computer mouse but can also be via
a pen and digitizing graphics tablet. Manipulation of the view of the model on the
screen is also sometimes done with the use of a spacemouse/SpaceBall. Some
systems also support stereoscopic glasses for viewing the 3D model.
The Effects of CAD
or water with users sharing a common set of hardware and software and paying only
what they use.
What add more to the dominance of India in Information Technology Sector is the
government policies like the enactment of cyber laws to protect and safeguard the
interest of software companies in India.
In the latest in Indian IT Sector, a five-city security seminar hosted by Microsoft
Corporation India Pvt. Ltd is scheduled to take place around mid 2005. It will
concentrate on representatives from the IT professional, developer, government,
academic and the system integrator and ISV community. The basic motivation
behind it will be to help them to systematize and standardize a comprehensive
security framework that is essential for the protection of their IT investments.
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS:Environmental conservation and protection is an issue which has gained prominence
because of deteriorating environmental balance which is threatening the
sustainability of life and nature. Largely, business is also held responsible for such
situations as emissions from industries polluting the air, excessive chemical affluents
drained out in water making it poisonous and unfit for use, usage of bio nondegradable resources affecting the bio-chain adversely and exposure of employees
to hazardous radiations bring their life in danger. All these have been taken very
seriously by different stakeholders in the society including the government and
legislations and movements are creating pressure for an environment friendly
business. These have far reaching implications for business ranging from the kind of
business, the product being manufactured, how it is manufactured and how friendly it
is for mankind and nature.
ENERGY EFFICIENT PROCESS AND EQUIPMENTS:Companies are focusing on reducing the carbon footprints, energy utilization, water
consumption etc.
CONCLUSION:Information technology (IT) or information and communication technology (ICT) is a
broad subject which deals with technology and other aspects of managing and
processing information, especially in large organizations. Particularly, IT deals with
the use of electronic computers and computer software to convert, store, protect
process, transmit, and retrieve information. Over the past 20 years, its prevalence
has dramatically increased so that it is now a part of nearly every aspect of daily life.
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