If backward time travel is also somehow possible, maybe firms in the future will choose to outsource some of their operations to the past, locating their manufacturing and other services in lower-wage time periods.
Tag: outsourcing
Virtual Assistants
My new Virtual Assistant is Tina with Get Friday. Last week I assigned Tina her first task – find me a temporary office worker who can come to my office and clean, sort, and file nearly 2 years worth of back mail including all my bank and credit card statements. It’s too early to judge the overall success of Tina and Get Friday, but this first task result shows great promise. For $25 I avoided all the hassle of dealing with phone tag and I found a new (potential) source of office help. Fantastic.
a get friday testimonial
Sunday
Sunday gives busy people the resources of a 24/7 personal assistant, available via telephone and Internet, at a fraction of the cost of other options.
The Outsourced Life
I decided I needed to outsource my worry. For the last few weeks I’ve been tearing my hair out because a business deal is taking far too long to close. I asked Honey if she would be interested in tearing her hair out in my stead. Just for a few minutes a day. She thought it was a wonderful idea. “I will worry about this every day,” she wrote. “Do not worry.”
i would totally pay for someone to do all the nonsense for various bureaucracies.
outsourced santa

IBM and Africa
IBM Jams looking for ideas to use IT to bootstrap the african economy. and they put real money behind it. i suspect IBM will soon be an essentially an emerging markets company with their move to such large scale outsourcing. no wonder they fund things like this.
2007-05-28:
the terrain of the technology game in Africa has changed. As personal computers have continued their spread, there has been more use of software and there is now a market for such services – cash registers, payroll systems, inventory control and so forth – the guts of modern business infrastructure. The major change has been the ascendancy of networks – the internet, with its great popularizer, the web, and, of late, mobile telephony. This has lead to more interest in collaboration as distribution and coordination costs have been dramatically reduced. Also the costs of starting up internet-related business have vastly decreased and we have experience dealing with Moore’s law in the network-enabled datacenter. You can even lease internet infrastructure if need be.
The Masai example however should give an idea of the challenges. Structurally, many businesses are undercapitalized and on the surface, disorganized. There are lots of good ideas, and indeed there is much entrepreneurship but when you come into the continent and partner up, you should know that your partners may not have the single-minded focus that you have. They are juggling constraints you can’t imagine and have adapted their strategies and behavior. Also keep in mind that sustaining investment will be like keeping up a good conversation – if you don’t pay attention to your interlocutors, they, and Africa itself, will remain opaque. Nigeria is a case in point, its brand of capitalism is a cauldron of creative destruction. But if you can master it, well… they don’t call it black gold for nothing.
insightful and fun to read analysis