The Rise of India's GCC Powerhouse
Global Capability Centers, or GCCs, are offshore units set up by multinational companies to handle a range of business operations. For years, India has been a favoured destination for these centres, thanks to its vast talent pool and cost advantages.
Today, India is the world's largest and most diverse retail GCC hub, with 180 centres employing over 272,000 professionals. This ecosystem is 34% larger than the next five competing markets—Poland, the Philippines, Mexico, Germany, and Egypt—combined, establishing India as the only location capable of supporting enterprise-wide retail operations at scale.
The Great AI Leap
The most significant recent development within these retail GCCs is the aggressive adoption of Artificial Intelligence. According to a recent report from TeamLease Digital, AI workforce penetration has surged from just 2.1% in 2022 to an estimated 4.8% in 2025. Projections show this figure is expected to hit 7.2% in 2026, more than tripling in just four years. This leap indicates that India is no longer just a place for executing tasks; it is where AI-led retail strategy is being built and owned. These centres are leveraging AI for everything from predicting consumer behaviour and personalising customer experiences to optimising supply chains and managing inventory.
The New Face of Retail Jobs
The AI boom is creating a demand for a new breed of professionals. Skills related to Large Language Model (LLM) engineering, Generative AI Operations (GenAIOps), and Machine Learning Operations (MLOps) are seeing demand grow by over 100% year-on-year. In contrast, traditional, process-oriented roles that rely on spreadsheet-based planning and manual testing are in steep decline. This shift is creating highly paid opportunities; AI and machine learning specialists with three to six years of experience can command salaries that are twice the market median. For senior professionals with over 15 years of experience who possess both AI and domain expertise, compensation can exceed ₹1.2 crore.
A Looming Talent Crisis
Despite the rapid growth, a major challenge looms: a severe shortage of experienced AI talent. Across all 180 retail GCCs, there are only 320 professionals with more than eight years of AI experience—an average of less than two senior experts per centre. This scarcity of leadership is becoming a significant bottleneck, potentially constraining the next phase of growth. To fill the gap, companies are increasingly hiring from outside the retail sector. An astonishing 90.2% of professionals hired in the last year came from industries like IT services, product companies, and business consulting, intensifying the war for talent.
Bengaluru: The Epicentre of the AI Revolution
This transformation is heavily concentrated in a few key locations. Bengaluru has firmly established itself as India's primary AI hub, accounting for 54% of the country's entire retail GCC AI talent pool. The city's deep ecosystem of tech talent and innovation makes it the anchor for advanced global AI projects. Following Bengaluru are Delhi-NCR and Hyderabad, which are also significant hubs for GCC operations. Hyderabad, in particular, is emerging as the leading secondary hub for AI talent, with Pune positioning itself as a complementary centre focused on engineering.














