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hi there, I've been asked to research outsourcing some of our C# winform development work. The aim is to employ a dedicated Indian team of around 5 developers reporting to myself.

A google search provides a plethora of different companies, none of which I have ever heard of before. I'm a little skeptical about this plan at the moment but remain open minded. I was hoping some of you guys had some general advice about how to approach this. Or even better recommendations for companies to contact based upon your experiences?

Many thanks

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closed as not programming related by Preet Sangha, Jason, Mitch Wheat, OrbMan, SilentGhost Sep 21 at 11:40

6 Answers

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Our company has used TCS, HCL, and dozens of other domestic contract companies. I'd agree with JohnFX on the confusion of requirements and late admittance of problems, but all of these companies have been very quick to correct these types of issues. Good luck!

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If you are looking to "get married" to a group of coder, then you can't avoid some testing. Devise a small project (something which should take not more than a week). A project which will need constant communication with the team (may be give them an incomplete spec). A nd see which of the groups works the best for you.
Or take the recommendation of a professional you know and trust.

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I highly recommend having a virtual machine as a deliverable.

Many of my clients that I have came from some extremely negative outsourcing experiences, and I have found that letting an outsourced team make the production server work is not a good idea.

Also, require server build and other configuration options be required as part of the deliverable.

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I've used Rent-A-Coder about 45 times, and been very happy about 95% of the time.

If you write your specs well, offer a sensible amount, you can get some really, really good coders. If the project isn't as per your specs, you don't pay a cent.

There is an arbitration panel, and they're usually biased towards you, the buyer.

Google it. It's been great for me.

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Make sure you get frequent interim deliverables and check them closely. I've heard many stories about off-shoring jobs to India that go awry because the contractor wouldn't admit they didn't understand the requirements or that they are having problems.

Many of my peer managers have told me they suspect that it is may be a cultural thing where people try to save face by not asking too many questions and delaying admitting problems on the project until it is unavoidable (and too late).

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Yes this is very important. I've worked with a few offshore projects and the they all had problems in this area. – Preet Sangha Sep 21 at 3:20
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This is absolutely spot on. There seems to be a big cultural thing to never admit you don't understand something. You need to make clear up-front that it is a major problem if the contractors indicate that they understand, but actually do not. – Ash Sep 21 at 3:56
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TCS is pretty well regarded. Our company has had pretty good success using them, but we don't use them for application development, just QA regression testing.

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In India, TCS has a reputation for preferring cheap developers to quality developers. Every year, a stream of mistreated and underpaid experienced professionals leave the company, to be replaced by fresh graduates. If you're trying to get some development work done, I would avoid TCS. – Alterlife Sep 21 at 4:05
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Just to make sure I'm not misunderstood: I am a developer working in India. I consider myself of average skill. I have never worked for TCS, and I never would consider it... 5 years ago, when I graduated college, I might have considered it. The same goes for the other 'big' insourcing company: Infosys. – Alterlife Sep 21 at 4:09

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