Advantages of Offshore Dedicated Teams Over Outsourced Software Development

the superiority of offshore dedicated teams over traditional outsourced software development. It delves into the advantages of leveraging dedicated teams located in offshore locations, emphasizing factors such as access to diverse talent, cost-efficiency, scalability, and the facilitation of global collaboration. The discussion highlights how this strategic approach not only addresses traditional constraints but also propels organizations into a future where innovation knows no boundaries.

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An organisation needs expert engineers to create software products and services from scratch and scale up. However, building a solid dedicated development team is not easy. Due to the high turnover rate of talent in the software industry, organisations question whether their employees have sufficient technical skills.

The lack of qualified candidates makes it difficult to fill job openings. Western markets face a severe shortage of tech talent, making it nearly impossible to hire local talent. This means they often spend a lot of unnecessary time and money sourcing a team of competent developers.

Even when an organisation hires the right developer, it doesn’t ensure he or she will stay with them forever. If its employee turnover remains high, the recruitment process will have to be restarted within weeks or months, resulting in setbacks that can stop software from reaching the market on time.

The offshore dedicated team model
Several decades ago, more than half of the western world faced a skill shortage. They found a solution to this talent crisis by outsourcing software development processes. Using outsourcing, organisations could assemble a team with the right partner quickly. The thinking went: ‘a third-party vendor is more cost-effective than hiring a local employee’.

However, outsourced engineers are not your direct employees but belong to a contracted company you hire to do the work for you. Because of this, getting more control over hiring and recruiting and being more hands-on with the product may be difficult.

By taking outsourcing a step further, offshoring solves those problems. A significant advantage of this method is that an offshore dedicated team of developers will work exclusively for you. Emerging tech nations, such as India, show great promise, but offshore dedicated teams’ advantages are not always obvious.

The benefits of an offshore dedicated team
High-quality talent is the key to building an offshore dedicated team. The West faces tremendous pressure to find the right individuals with the right skills at the right price.

Emerging nations often have education and training systems that produce the qualified talent pool to build an offshore dedicated team of developers.

It is more affordable to hire elite developers in countries like India or the Philippines than in the West because of the lower cost of living. It ensures quality while providing access to a wealth of talent at a low price.

Organisations can also upskill their workforce and ease the burden of compex administration by offshoring some or all of their operations — often with an offshoring partner on the ground in the delivery location. Adding engineers with advanced, hard-to-find technical skills to your existing team at home can help you scale your business.

When to consider building an offshore dedicated team
With the right partner, you can build your dream team and scale your engineering capabilities in months, if not weeks. Consider changing when talent pools are scarce, prices are high, and recruiting processes become too time consuming.

It’s best to look elsewhere if you have difficulty hiring local talent and don’t want to pay exorbitant prices in a fierce seller’s market. While outsourcing can be cost– effective, it isn’t sustainable in the long run and only serves as a temporary fix. Building an offshore dedicated team in an emerging tech nation is the smarter option.

Gaza residents who have lost family fear more destruction as ground assault looms By Reuters

GAZA (Reuters) -As Israel prepared on Sunday for a ground assault on the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, Palestinians who have lost numerous family members in air strikes were bracing for more destruction if Israel hits back on an unprecedented scale on its territory.

Um Mohammad Al-Laham sat next to her 4-year-old granddaughter Fulla Al-Laham, who lay in a Gaza hospital which like others is operating on low supplies of medicine and fuel.

She said an Israeli airstrike hit the family home, killing 14 people including Fulla’s parents, siblings and members of her extended family.

“All of a sudden and without warning, they bombed the house on top of the residents inside. No-one survived except my grandchild Fulla. May God cure her and give her strength,” said the grandmother, who has witnessed many wars between Hamas and the Israeli army over the years. She says this is the toughest.

“Fourteen people martyred, no-one was left except Fulla Saeed Al-Laham. She doesn’t talk, nothing, just lays in her bed and they give medicine.”

One other 4-year-old child in the family had also been left with almost no relatives, the grandmother said.

Israel has unleashed the heaviest air strikes ever on Gaza in retaliation for the biggest attack on the country one week ago by the Palestinian militant group Hamas since the 1973 Arab-Israeli war.

Israel has vowed to annihilate the militant group Hamas in retaliation for a rampage by its fighters in Israeli towns eight days ago in which its militants shot men, women and children and seized hostages in the worst attack on civilians in the country’s history.

Some 1,300 people were killed in the unexpected onslaught, which shook the country, with graphic mobile phone video footage and reports from medical and emergency services of atrocities in the overrun towns and kibbutzes.

Israel has responded with the most intense bombardment Gaza has ever seen, putting the small enclave, home to 2.3 million Palestinians, under siege and destroying much of its infrastructure.

Israel has told Palestinian to leave their homes and move south.

Hamas urged people not to leave, saying roads out were unsafe. It said dozens of people had been killed in strikes on cars and trucks carrying refugees on Friday, while medics, Hamas media and relatives say whole families have been killed in the air strikes. Reuters could not independently verify these claims.

Some residents said they would not leave, remembering the “Nakba,” or “catastrophe,” of 1948 when many Palestinians were forced from their homes during the war that accompanied Israel’s creation.

Israel has intensified its bombings across Gaza City and the north. Gaza authorities said more than 2,300 people have been killed, a quarter of them children, and nearly 10,000 wounded.

Rescue workers searched desperately for survivors of night-time air raids. One million people have reportedly left their homes.

The expected Israeli ground offensive combined with the air strikes themselves have raised fears of unprecedented suffering in the narrow, impoverished enclave.

Witnesses in Gaza City told Reuters the Israeli offensive had forced more people from their homes. Gaza’s largest Shifa hospital was overcrowded with people who had fled their houses.

“We are living the worst nightmare of our lives. Even here in the hospital we are not safe. An air strike hit in the area outside the hospital around dawn,” said a 35-year-old woman who declined to give her name.

Taking the road to southern Gaza, which is considered safer, has become more difficult as several people who had made the journey say Israel continues to bomb around it.

Ashraf Al-Qidra, spokesman of the Gaza health ministry, said 70% of the people in Gaza City and the north of the strip are deprived of health services after the Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA evacuated its headquarters and suspended its services.

East of Khan Younis in southern Gaza, where hundreds of northern residents have fled to, some locals cooked for displaced people, using firewood to prepare 1,500 meals of meat and rice donated by residents.

“We used to cook on cooking gas for the first two days but we are running out of gas, so we are cooking on firewood,” said Youssef Abu Assi, one resident helping out.