Philippines is trying hard to give a tough competition to its other Asian counterparts in the global BPO market. The country is on its way to offer training to the BPO workers as per the recent news suggest. Trade unions in the country have also joined the race. The workers organizations and the trade unions have become the latest training partners for the business process outsourcing workers within the country.
The Federation of Free Workers (FFW) and the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) are the two newly appointed training partners. The partnerships of TESDA with the Filipino BPO associations are not new now. The business process outsourcing association is led by the Business Processing Association of Philippines (BPAP) with the aim to build the Pinoy manpower for the (more…)
Archive for September, 2009
Training For The Bpo Workers
Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009Outbound Call Center Services For A Business
Saturday, September 12th, 2009Outbound call center telemarketing is one of the single most useful ways of marketing product or services that exists today. A lot of companies come with a headache of finding out ways to get their products and services well marketed. Telemarketing is one such service that has developed to be a great option as offered by a customer care unit.
All you require is a true outbound call centre. Most companies find managing and recruiting of professionals to be more than one full time duty. Many a times, training of the staff proves to be all the more challenging. When you need advanced services, you have to ensure those call center agents to maintain all skills, training and the experience to get their job done as efficiently as possible.
Telemarketing forms to be an essential service catered under the outbound call center services. It enables services and products to (more…)
Provided a Natural Constituency
Thursday, September 3rd, 2009For this reason, small firms provided a natural constituency in support of antitrust legislation. But they were not alone. The rise of railroads and large manufacturing firms was simultaneous with a period of agricultural depression. In a period of low farm prices, the pattern of rail rates, which had to be paid to move farm products to market, seemed discriminatory to many in agriculture. Industrial prices were protected by tariffs that limited foreign competition. They remained high in relation to farm prices. When depression hit manufacturing, large firms combined to form cartels, an option not open to farmers. (more…)





