First functions
Function selection should balance control, talent availability, transition risk and leadership bandwidth.
Insight
Notes on setup
Concise views on the decisions behind an India capability centre.
Explainer
A GCC is a strategic asset, not a back office.
The setup model should protect control, IP, compliance and management visibility while allowing the centre to scale.
Function selection should balance control, talent availability, transition risk and leadership bandwidth.
Transfer pricing, GST, service agreements and cost allocation should reflect the operating reality.
State policy, real estate, talent depth, infrastructure and continuity planning need one combined review.
GCC setup in India
A Global Capability Centre is a wholly owned offshore or nearshore unit that performs important business functions while remaining integrated with the parent organisation.
Unlike traditional outsourcing, the model gives the company direct control over people, processes, systems, data and intellectual property.
Technology, finance, analytics, R&D, engineering, cybersecurity and operations.
Employees, delivery routines and operating standards remain aligned with the parent company.
Governance, reporting, IP protection and data handling are managed inside the organisation.
Modern GCCs often support product work, digital transformation and enterprise innovation.
Business case
Access to skilled teams across AI, cloud, cybersecurity, data, finance and engineering.
Lower operating and infrastructure costs, with reduced reliance on vendor margins.
Greater ownership of proprietary systems, data, knowledge and delivery standards.
Distributed operations, follow-the-sun support and improved business continuity.
Setup requirements
The setup process usually brings together strategy, legal, tax, regulatory, talent and operating decisions.
Define the objectives of the centre, the functions to be transitioned, the preferred model and the governance framework with KPIs, reporting lines and accountability.
Plan the legal entity, FDI compliance, central bank reporting, PAN, TAN, GST, MOA/AOA, transfer pricing framework and tax governance before operations begin.
Plan leadership hiring, employee value proposition, local employment compliance, payroll obligations, provident fund, gratuity, insurance, POSH and learning programs.
Assess Tier-1 and emerging Tier-2 locations for talent, cost, attrition, real estate, policy support, secure IT infrastructure, cloud architecture, cybersecurity and continuity.
Address DPDP Act or GDPR considerations, data protection controls, access governance, cybersecurity and risk management systems relevant to the centre's functions.
Indicative timeline
| Phase | Indicative duration | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Strategy and feasibility | 4-8 weeks | Business case, functions, model, cost and location assumptions. |
| Legal setup and compliance | 6-12 weeks | Entity, registrations, FDI, tax and transfer pricing foundations. |
| Infrastructure setup | 4-8 weeks | Workspace, IT, cloud, security and operating foundation. |
| Leadership hiring | 6-12 weeks | GCC head, finance, HR and key functional leadership. |
| Initial launch | 3-6 months | First teams, policies, reporting, compliance rhythm and delivery routines. |
| Scale-up | 6-24 months | Function expansion, maturity review, governance strengthening and optimisation. |
Risks to anticipate
Strategic shift
The strongest GCCs are not measured only by savings. They are assessed by execution speed, innovation output, contribution to global strategy and the quality of control they give the parent company.
Discuss your GCC planWe can prepare a note on your India GCC options.