Breaking India News Today | In-Depth Reports & Analysis – IndiaNewsWeekBreaking India News Today | In-Depth Reports & Analysis – IndiaNewsWeek
  • Home
  • Nation
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • International
  • Technology
  • Auto News
Reading: India’s GCC Revolution: Redefining Global Enterprise Value through Strategic Partnerships
Share
Breaking India News Today | In-Depth Reports & Analysis – IndiaNewsWeekBreaking India News Today | In-Depth Reports & Analysis – IndiaNewsWeek
  • Home
  • Nation
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • International
  • Technology
  • Auto News
© 2024 All Rights Reserved | Powered by India News Week
Trending Now: Stay updated with the latest breaking news from India and around the world
Next-Gen GCCs: India’s moment to redefine global enterprise value through GCC-service provider partnership
Breaking India News Today | In-Depth Reports & Analysis – IndiaNewsWeek > Technology > India’s GCC Revolution: Redefining Global Enterprise Value through Strategic Partnerships
Technology

India’s GCC Revolution: Redefining Global Enterprise Value through Strategic Partnerships

Technology Desk By Technology Desk March 26, 2026 7 Min Read
Share
SHARE

India’s global capability centers (GCCs) – offshore hubs set up by multinational firms to run critical business functions – are entering a new phase of maturity. What began as a cost and talent arbitrage play has evolved into a multi-billion-dollar ecosystem driving innovation, digital engineering and enterprise transformation for global organizations. As GCCs take on higher-value mandates, the traditional service provider model is no longer enough — a new form of partnership is emerging, where providers help build, run and scale strategic capabilities rather than simply deliver projects.

The evolution is already visible in how leading GCCs are evolving and in how they engage with service providers. Our recent research with nasscom on GCC-service provider partnerships revealed that India’s GCC model is entering its most consequential phase. Today, they are stepping into what many leaders describe as global hubs acting as true transformation engines, running engineering, digital customer journeys, marketing operations and even product and P&L ownership from India.

The expectations from global headquarters (HQs) have shifted. Three demands now dominate: deeper strategic integration with the business; autonomous value creation – owning innovation pipelines and P&Ls, not just tasks; and continuous rapid innovation using technologies such as AI and GenAI. In short, GCCs are now expected to build strategic capability quickly, at scale, and at the right cost. Incremental fixes will not be enough. As one leader told us, standing still is no longer a neutral choice – it is a competitive risk.

Some mature GCCs have built those capabilities entirely in-house over time. For many others, the faster route is to rethink how the GCC and HQ work with India’s technology service providers. That is where the idea of the “next-gen GCC” comes in: an integrated set-up where HQs, GCCs and providers jointly design, run and scale the capabilities that matter most to the enterprise, rather than operating as separate silos or as simple buyer–vendor relationships.

In a next-gen GCC, providers act as extensions of the centre, not substitutes for it. They bring specialised talent, tools, and accelerators, while the GCC anchors the vision, strategy, and ownership. When done well, this model improves alignment with HQ priorities, broadens access to future-ready skills, strengthens governance, and accelerates modernisation without sacrificing control over culture or compliance. The guardrails are real: dependency, rigid processes, tech lock-in but they can be managed through thoughtful design and clear accountability.

So what does this model look like in practice? There is no single template, but four approaches are emerging. First, a provider helps build and run a centre and, once it is stable, either hands it over or keeps operating it. This is a useful option when companies need speed and low risk. Second a joint venture in which the company and provider actually co-own the centre and share investment, governance and accountability. Third, a talent-led model , where providers place small specialist teams in areas such as AI, data, or cybersecurity directly inside GCC squads to fill capability gaps. Fourth , providers and GCCs jointly drive major transformations, with provider’s fees linked to whether the business sees real results, not tasks completion.

Across all these approaches, the GCCs that perform best tend to work in similar ways. They begin by agreeing on a clear goal and a small set of shared measures of success. They make sure everyone knows who is responsible for what, and they organise teams so each group can take ownership of a complete piece of work rather than fragments of it. Their governance is simple and predictable: day-to-day teams that keep work moving, regular check-ins to solve issues early, and periodic senior-level reviews to ensure the work continues to deliver real business value. They also focus heavily on people and technology, building a reputation that attracts hard-to-find talent, integrating new staff in a way that creates a single team culture, and using automation, cloud, and data tools as foundations for faster innovation rather than afterthoughts.

The path to this future looks different depending on where you start. Greenfield GCCs can design boldly from day one: set clear mandates, build unified teams, make early build–buy–partner choices and pick partners based as much on culture as on capability. Brownfield centres need a reset rather than a tweak to revisit the vision with HQ, decide what to retain, rebuild. or partner for simplify fragmented vendor landscapes and move towards “fewer, deeper, broader” partnerships.

India’s GCC story has already reshaped the global services industry, but the next three to five years will decide who leads the next chapter. Scale and talent are now table stakes. The edge will lie with enterprises that embed service providers as true partners, co-own outcomes and use next-gen GCCs as engines of innovation and resilience. For India, this is a once-in-a-generation chance to move from back office to global design studio for the modern enterprise.

The message for business leaders is simple: partner deep, move fast, and shape the next era of global enterprise from India.

The author is Sumit Sarawgi, Partner and India Head, Oliver Wyman.

Disclaimer: The views expressed are solely of the author and ETCIO does not necessarily subscribe to it. ETCIO shall not be responsible for any damage caused to any person/organization directly or indirectly.

    <!–
  • Updated On Mar 26, 2026 at 08:51 AM IST
  • –>
  • Published On Mar 26, 2026 at 08:51 AM IST
  • <!–
  • 4 min read
  • –>

Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals.

Subscribe to Newsletter to get latest insights & analysis in your inbox.

<!–
–>
TAGGED:EducationTechnology
Share This Article
Twitter Copy Link
Previous Article Dhurandhar 2 worldwide collection: Ranveer Singh's film beats 6 films in UK including Animal, PK Dhurandhar 2 Surpasses Six Films in UK Box Office, Including Animal
Next Article Anduril’s Real War Is With Itself Anduril Faces Internal Struggles Amidst Its Quest for Defense Innovation
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

Kaynes Tech shares tumble over 19% after Q4 miss, JPMorgan downgrades

Kaynes Tech Shares Plunge 19% Post-Q4 Disappointment, JPMorgan Issues Downgrade

May 14, 2026
NEET-UG leak: Question paper was handwritten, scanned and circulated; students paid lakhs, CBI probe finds

CBI Uncovers Handwritten NEET-UG Paper Leak; Students Paid Lakhs for Access

May 14, 2026
Rupee hits record low of ₹95.80, IT stocks bleed as markets open higher on global tailwinds

Rupee Plummets to ₹95.80 as IT Stocks Suffer Despite Strong Global Market Opening

May 14, 2026
Bonds seen little changed as oil, US yields remain elevated

Bonds Steady as Elevated Oil Prices and US Yields Persist

May 14, 2026
New Delhi, May 09 (ANI): Kerala legislative assembly LoP V D Satheesan with Kerala Congress President Sunny Joseph, Kerala AICC in-charge Deepa Dasmunsi, party General Secretary K C Venugopal and Congress senior leader Ramesh Chennithala leave from the party President Mallikarjun Kharge

Congress to Reveal Kerala CM Choice Today: Satheesan or Venugopal? Announcement After 1 PM

May 14, 2026
Why MP’s rising tiger toll is more than a ‘core’ issue

MP’s Soaring Tiger Deaths Highlight Urgent Conservation Crisis Beyond Core Issues

May 14, 2026

You Might Also Like

Botto, the Millionaire AI Artist, Is Getting a Personality
Technology

Meet Botto: The Millionaire AI Artist with a Unique Personality

6 Min Read
Hohem iSteady M7 Gimbal Review
Technology

Unleashing Creativity: A Comprehensive Review of the Hohem iSteady M7 Gimbal

3 Min Read
Bleach Enthusiast, Antisemitic Conspiracist Among Stars of Anti-Vaxxer Event To Be Held at Trump Hotel
Technology

Controversial Figures Headline Anti-Vaxxer Gathering at Trump Hotel

4 Min Read
The Trump Cryptonaissance Is Here
Technology

The Rise of Trump’s Crypto Renaissance: A New Era Begins

4 Min Read

About IndiaNewsWeek

IndiaNewsWeek is your trusted source for breaking news, in-depth analysis, and comprehensive coverage of India and the world. We deliver accurate, timely reporting across politics, economy, sports, entertainment, and technology.

contact@indianewsweek.com

Quick Links

  • Nation
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • International
  • Sports
  • Entertainment

More Sections

  • Technology
  • Auto News
  • Education
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

Stay Connected

Follow us on social media for the latest updates and breaking news.

Facebook
X (Twitter)
YouTube
Follow US
© 2026 IndiaNewsWeek. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?