In July 2025, ABeam Consulting strengthened its existing strategic partnership with BearingPoint (Amsterdam, the Netherlands) and renewed its global consulting service delivery structure. As part of this initiative, in collaboration with its alliance partner, Indian information technology solution company Optimum Solutions, ABeam Consulting independently established Global Capability Centers (Global Capability Center, hereinafter referred to as GCCs) *1.
Approximately 1,800 GCC sites have already been established across India, accounting for the majority of GCCs worldwide. According to estimates by the Japan External Trade Organization, the number is expected to reach 2,550 by 2030, with a market size of USD 110 billion *2. By region, around 30 percent are concentrated in Bangalore, known as the “Silicon Valley of India.” In addition, Hyderabad, where major technology companies such as Microsoft, Amazon, and Google have established GCCs; Pune, which is seeing an increase in research and development centers of Western companies; and Chennai, an academic city where the automotive and information technology industries coexist, are also experiencing remarkable growth in GCCs. The locations selected by ABeam Consulting for its centers are Hyderabad and Chennai, where Optimum Solutions has its bases.
Chennai, located in southeastern India, is home to the Indian Institute of Technology Madras, one of the top institutions among the Indian Institutes of Technology, as well as many universities that produce outstanding information technology talent. These educational institutions possess strong research and development capabilities and are active in international exchange and collaboration with companies, making Chennai an attractive city for global companies focusing on India. Compared with already overheated cities such as Bangalore, Chennai also offers cost advantages, remaining potential for discovering talented individuals, and a stable regional economy with relatively low employee turnover.
India has benefited from long-term political stability under its current administration of more than ten years, and its emphasis on economic measures has borne fruit. The country continues to maintain a high growth rate. At the same time, compared with many developed countries, prices remain stable, and costs directly related to business activities—such as labor and rent—are kept low. Above all, the greatest attraction is its overwhelming working-age population. In particular, India stands out among countries for the abundance of highly capable information technology professionals who speak English.
Against this favorable backdrop, India has developed functions as offshore development centers for information technology companies and as business process outsourcing operations handling call centers and back-office work. Even today, many Japanese companies still associate India primarily with business process outsourcing centers. However, the GCCs now attracting attention cannot be understood in the same context as traditional business process outsourcing.
The clear difference lies in the fact that GCCs handle business-critical functions such as business transformation, engineering, research and development, and digital strategy. This fundamentally differs from business process outsourcing, which focuses on delegating standardized tasks with the primary objectives of cost reduction and operational efficiency by leveraging low labor costs. It is essential to understand that GCCs can serve as “co-creation partners” that drive corporate innovation and digital transformation by harnessing India’s abundant pool of highly skilled information technology talent.
Another reason why global expectations for India’s GCCs are intensifying is their overwhelming strength in the area of “artificial intelligence utilization,” now positioned as one of the most critical management agendas for virtually all companies. Talent that can be described as “artificial intelligence native”—such as individuals who have majored in artificial intelligence at university or have experience working with artificial intelligence at global companies—is the subject of fierce competition worldwide.
As a result, it is difficult for individual companies to secure such talent on their own, and developing it from scratch would take too long. By collaborating with GCCs that already possess such talent, companies can more rapidly implement initiatives leveraging artificial intelligence and build resilience to respond to change, while also creating new value for themselves. An additional advantage is that an environment has been established in which these resources can be utilized remotely, regardless of physical distance.