The Old Model: A Cost-Saving Play
For decades, the story of Global Capability Centres in India was straightforward. Multinational corporations set up 'captive' centres to handle functions like IT support, finance, payroll, and data entry. The primary driver was cost arbitrage; leveraging
India's large, English-speaking talent pool was significantly cheaper than performing the same tasks in New York, London, or Tokyo. These centres were execution-focused, designed for efficiency and scale. They were measured on how much money they saved the parent company, not how much value they created. The work was often described as 'back-office' or support, essential but not strategic, positioning these units as operational extensions rather than integral parts of the business.
The Great Transformation: From Support to Strategy
The shift from cost centre to innovation hub was gradual, then sudden. As Indian teams consistently delivered high-quality work, parent companies began testing them with more complex tasks. This coincided with a global push for digital transformation, forcing companies to innovate at a breakneck pace. The Indian talent pool had also matured, moving beyond basic IT skills to deep expertise in data science, artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing, and product engineering. As a result, GCCs in India started evolving from simply executing orders to solving complex problems and eventually owning entire business functions. The narrative flipped from saving costs to creating value and driving global strategy.
The New Reality: Innovation and Ownership
Today, India's GCCs are unrecognizable from their initial form. They are now strategic hubs where new products are designed, patents are filed, and enterprise-wide digital transformation is led. According to a recent Nasscom-Zinnov report, India now hosts over 2,100 GCCs employing more than 2.3 million professionals. Many of these centres are leading their global parent's charge in AI, with over 1,200 GCCs having embedded AI and machine learning capabilities. Instead of just maintaining software, teams in India are building it from the ground up, owning the entire product lifecycle from architecture to deployment. Global giants across banking, healthcare, and technology see their Indian centres as indispensable to their R&D and innovation pipelines.
Why India Is the Epicentre of this Shift
India's dominance in the GCC landscape is no accident. The country possesses a unique combination of factors that make it the ideal location for high-value work. Its massive pool of STEM graduates and a mature IT services ecosystem provide a talent density unmatched anywhere else in the world. This deep talent pool allows companies to scale specialised teams quickly. Furthermore, the vibrant startup culture in cities like Bengaluru and Hyderabad creates a dynamic environment of innovation and collaboration. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman recently highlighted this boom, noting that India is seeing the establishment of one new GCC every day, a sharp acceleration reflecting global confidence. Many new GCCs are now launching in India with product and innovation mandates from day one, bypassing the traditional support-function phase entirely.
The Road Ahead: Deeper Integration and Broader Impact
The evolution is far from over. The future of GCCs in India points towards even deeper integration with their global parent companies. Leaders based in India are increasingly taking on global roles and shaping worldwide enterprise strategy. The next wave of growth is also expected to move beyond metropolitan hubs, with Tier-II and Tier-III cities like Chandigarh, Visakhapatnam, and Mysuru emerging as the next generation of capability hubs. As AI becomes central to all business operations, Indian GCCs are set to become the 'nerve centres' that govern and deploy these critical technologies for their parent firms. This positions them not just as a part of the tech economy, but as a core pillar driving its future direction.














