Photo Credit by Prachi Misra
“The winds of change are blowing through the customer service industry, and much of the turbulence is coming from Eastern Europe,” says Prachi Misra, a procurement and customer service outsourcing advisor to Fortune 500 companies. Her words coincide at a time where analysts predict a major change in how global businesses handle customer care.
In recent years, private equity firms have quietly initiated a pivot in customer service operations. Their portfolio companies, seeking to trim costs while maintaining quality, have turned their gaze eastward.
The result? A burgeoning network of customer capability centers stretching across Eastern Europe, from Poland to Romania and beyond.
The Eastern Promise
The numbers tell a better story than mere rumors. According to recent industry reports, the customer capability center outsourcing market in Europe is projected to grow by €2.79 billion from 2020 to 2025, with a compound annual growth rate of 3.13%.
“It’s a perfect storm of factors,” Misra explains. “These countries have a highly educated workforce, competitive labor costs, and strategic timezones. It’s a concept that’s hard to ignore. The countries themselves welcome this, as it’s bringing much-needed jobs and economic development to otherwise stagnated areas.“
For these companies, the region’s appeal is multifaceted. Many Eastern European countries boast a young, multilingual population with strong technical skills. This talent pool, combined with labor costs that can be 20-40% lower than in Western Europe, presents an attractive package for companies looking to optimize their operations.
The Private Equity Play
Private equity firms, always looking for ways to boost efficiency and profitability in their portfolio companies, have been quick to capitalize on this. Using their financial muscle and operational reach, they’ve rapidly expanded into customer capability centers across the region.
“These centers are becoming development hubs, adopting the latest technologies like AI and machine learning,” Misra insists.
This pivot in operational strategy has had significant effects on countries and companies alike. A recent study found that companies outsourcing their customer capability centers to Eastern Europe reported average cost savings of 25-30%, while maintaining or even improving customer satisfaction scores.
The Road Ahead
Despite these hurdles, the trend does not seem to be ending soon. Industry forecasts suggest that by 2030, Eastern Europe could account for up to 25% of all outsourced customer capability centers in the region, a staggering amount in manpower and economic liquidity.
Misra sees this as just the beginning. “We’re entering an era where providing high end customer service is no longer an after-market concept and more a strategic asset. Eastern Europe is the perfect staging ground for this change.“
With private equity firms always pushing for operational efficiencies in their portfolio companies, customer capability centers in the region are likely to never be the same. The move eastward may well be remembered as a defining trend of the 2020s, reshaping the very geography of the global service economy.