
India’s Global Capability Center (GCC) ecosystem is at an inflection point.
Despite scale, performance concentration remains low as most GCCs are built for capacity delivery, but staffed for capability ownership. This structural mismatch results in:
The Structural Paradox of GCCs: Scale Without Differentiation
Over the past decade, GCCs have evolved across three waves. The latest data point is stark: Staff costs now account for ~76% of GCC operating expenses. However, this is not a cost problem. It is a design problem disguised as a cost problem.
According to Boston Consulting Group (BCG), only ~8% of GCCs in India are top performers, while ~66–70% sit in the “average” band. Yet, at the same time, India hosts ~1,700+ GCCs (NASSCOM), expected to cross 2,000+ by FY28.
The conclusion is unavoidable: The ecosystem is scaling. Performance is not.
The Real Problem: Talent is not the constraint. Architecture is
Across multiple GCC builds, one pattern repeats: The “Typical GCC Curve”
This is not a hiring issue. This is a failure of structural clarity. Most GCCs are still built for:
But top-performing GCCs are built for:
Market Reality: The GCC Evolution Curve
The next phase of GCC evolution - GCC 3.0 requires a fundamental shift: We are currently seeing three parallel GCC models:
| Phase | Primary Objective | Talent Model | KPI Lens |
|---|---|---|---|
| GCC 1.0 | Cost arbitrage | Execution-heavy | Cost, SLAs |
| GCC 2.0 | Capability delivery | Skilled + functional leaders |
Productivity Delivery quality |
| GCC 3.0 |
Enterprise ownership (Global ownership + transformation) |
Strategic, product, AI-led |
Business impact (Revenue impact, innovation, IP creation) |
The Challenge
Most GCCs are designed like 1.0 but staffed like 3.0. That mismatch is what drives:
Cost Inflation Drivers
Underlying Issue
Cost is rising because value architecture is undefined. Without clear:
Even high-quality talent produces median outcomes.
The GCC Failure Cycle
A recurring pattern emerges across underperforming GCCs:
Year 1: Signaling
Year 2: Control
Year 3: Cost Escalation
Year 4: Value Gap
By this stage, structural inefficiencies are deeply embedded
What differentiates the top 8%
High performing GCCs break this cycle early. Key differentiators are
The Measurement Gap
A critical but under-discussed issue is misaligned evaluation frameworks.
Current State
Desired State
Strategic ownership
Implication
Even well-designed GCCs can appear “average” if measured through outdated lenses.
