From the Edge to the Core: India’s Global Capability Center’s Takeover
TL;DR: Why Global Capability Centers in India Are Redefining Enterprise Growth
India’s GCCs have moved from cost centers to core innovation hubs. With 1,700+ centers driving AI, R&D, and digital transformation, they now deliver enterprise-scale impact, speed, and resilience. AMS partners with global firms to design future-ready GCC strategies—from rapid builds in Tier II cities to hybrid talent models—positioning India at the center of global talent transformation.
For decades, the narrative surrounding offshore centers has been dominated by cost arbitrage. However, in 2025, this narrative underwent a fundamental overhaul, with India spearheading the transformation.
Global Capability Centers in India are no longer back-end support units. They’re central command hubs, delivering innovation, agility, and resilience at an enterprise scale. They are embedded, indispensable, and enterprise-owned. If global businesses are entering a new chapter, India’s GCCs are scripting it.
India is currently home to over 1,700 GCCs, employing 1.9 million professionals across diverse functions such as product development, engineering, AI, cloud, and customer experience. This footprint is projected to expand significantly, reaching over 2,400 GCCs and 2.8 million professionals by 2030. Many global R&D leaders, including those in life sciences, automotive, and enterprise tech, have established dedicated GCC operations in India. The unmatched pace and scale of this growth underscores its undeniable implications for global business.
This is a business revolution no one can afford to ignore.
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The Rise of Enterprise-Grade GCCs
The operating charter of GCCs has fundamentally shifted. More and more India-based GCCs are taking full control of all product portfolios. This shows a bigger change in how global businesses work.
This evolution is structural, not just cosmetic. A significant 32% of transformation-led GCCs have developed platform-led delivery models (Zinnov), staffed by specialized roles like Quantum Architects, AI Ethics Officers, and Data Product Managers, positions that were virtually non-existent five years ago. The distinction between HQ and GCC has been blurred, with ownership, IP creation, and accountability now distributed and shared. This signifies a move beyond mere outsourcing to enterprise orchestration.
AMS observes this transformation across its clients, who are no longer focused on scaling support but on how to embed product leadership, protect intellectual property, and engineer impactful outcomes directly from India.
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Innovation at Scale is the New Advantage
While India continues to offer cost efficiencies, the boardroom focus has shifted from "how cheap" to "how fast" and "how bold." India’s GCCs are meeting this demand for velocity through:
- AI-native talent and centers designed for experimentation.
- Ecosystems that enable rapid scaling.
Top-performing GCCs in India demonstrate impressive capabilities:
- They operate AI Centers of Excellence (CoEs) that deliver 25–35% faster time-to-value.
- Approximately 90% of their AI initiatives (from over 185 AI/ML CoEs) have been launched within the last 18 months.
- They manage full-cycle innovation across data, cloud, cybersecurity, and Generative AI (GenAI).
- They execute projects in weeks that typically take quarters elsewhere.
The rise of GCCs in this segment is also reshaping India’s regional talent landscape. While the six major metro cities like Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Delhi-NCR, Pune, Chennai, and Mumbai, continue to account for over 90% of emerging GCCs and talent, a new wave of expansion is underway. Non-metro cities like Vizag, Ahmedabad, Bhubaneswar, Trivandrum, and Coimbatore are gaining ground, offering access to specialized talent pools and a highly skilled, diverse workforce. Bengaluru and Hyderabad still lead the pack, hosting more than 50% of these centers, but the edge is widening, and Tier II cities are no longer on the sidelines.
At AMS, we see clients increasingly building AI and digital pods in emerging locations, where retention is higher and operational costs are 20–25% lower.
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Hybrid sourcing is redefining how work gets done
The era of “either/or” is over. Leading enterprises are adopting hybrid models, combining in-house GCC leadership with strategic partner execution. This "best-sourcing" approach allows organizations to maintain control over critical innovation initiatives while strategically outsourcing commoditized workflows.
While the value of GCCs was traditionally measured in savings, in 2025, it's measured in speed and scalability. GCCs in India are enabling global firms to:
- Launch new digital products in ~40% less time
- Achieve 2x faster experimentation-to-deployment cycles
- Maintain 30–40% lower attrition in digital roles vs Western HQ teams
AMS's approach to managed recruitment services, project-based RPO, and build-operate-transfer models works well with this changing GCC structure. This results in global talent ecosystems that are built for resilience, not just efficiency.
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The Democratization of GCCs
GCCs are no longer the exclusive play of Fortune 500s. Mid-market players, scaling tech companies, and private-equity-backed disruptors are all setting up shop in India.
Why? Because barriers are falling.
What used to take 18–24 months now takes less than 6. From plug-and-play hubs in Tier II cities to remote-first GCC operating models, the GCC playbook is being rewritten and democratized.
GCCs are now being embraced by:
- Mid-sized firms ($400M–$1B revenue)
- PE-backed SaaS and fintech companies
- High-growth healthcare and engineering innovators
Plug-and-play “GCC-as-a-Service" models have emerged, with time-to-launch dropping significantly and operational break-even possible in year 2, rather than year 5. AMS actively assists these firms in operationalizing fast-launch GCCs with tailored hiring strategies, particularly in regulated sectors like healthcare and BFSI.
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Talent depth, leadership maturity, and domain strength
India’s advantage extends beyond headcount; it lies in its leadership readiness. GCCs in India now:
- Employ over 120,000 AI professionals.
- Host 185+ AI/ML CoEs.
- Manage cross-functional teams with specialized roles like quantum architects, cybersecurity leads, and platform owners.
Leadership is increasingly migrating to India, with global leadership roles based in the country growing at a 40% CAGR over the past five years, reflecting the growing confidence global firms place in India-based teams. Each Indian city is also developing specific domain strengths:
- Bengaluru leads in digital banking, cybersecurity, and AI.
- Hyderabad is emerging as a hub for cloud platforms and pharmaceutical R&D.
- Pune excels in industrial IoT and automotive engineering.
- Mumbai remains the center of financial services innovation.
- Chennai anchors enterprise SaaS operations.
- Tier II cities like Coimbatore, Vizag, and Indore offer high-retention engineering talent and operational efficiency.
AMS maps these capabilities across regions, helping clients find future-ready talent hubs aligned with their innovation maturity.
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India GCCs are cultural and strategic multipliers
A lesser-known but crucial shift in 2025 is that enterprises now view GCCs as insurance policies. In response to political volatility, rising wage costs, and supply chain unpredictability in the West, resilience has become a board-level priority. GCCs, especially in India, are emerging as business continuity engines, offering geographic risk diversification, a flexible talent bench, and the ability to rapidly establish new digital functions on demand.
Leading GCCs are not only tech-first but also ethics-first.
- A TeamLease Digital report (April 2025) highlights that female workforce representation in GCCs rose from 31.4% in 2020 to 38.3% in 2024.
- ESG-led GCC models (carbon-neutral, zero-waste campuses) are rapidly becoming standard.
- Most GCCs in 2025 will be designed as dual-contingency centers for business continuity.
These aren’t just compliance boxes. They’re brand differentiators. Especially for global firms seeking to align operations with values.
The average GCC in India now employs 1,130 professionals, a 24% jump since FY2019. These are no longer just support functions; they are multi-functional digital engines driving a $64.6 billion sector, with $36.4 billion in Engineering R&D revenue alone.
AMS ensures that cultural transformation isn’t a by-product, but a design principle in every center we help build.
What this means for talent leaders
Let’s be clear: if your talent strategy doesn’t include GCCs, you are merely surviving, not scaling. The landscape has shifted. The velocity has changed. And the expectations have never been higher.
AMS views Global Capability Centers in India as the blueprint for global talent transformation, enabling companies to move from transactional to transformational by designing purpose-built, future-facing, and people-centric GCC strategies. Whether building a first center or scaling a mature hub, now is the time to act, not react.
The future has a center, and it’s global
2025 will be remembered as the year Global Capability Centers in India redefined what it means to be global. Not just supporting innovation, but commanding it.
For enterprises seeking innovation at scale, talent without borders, and resilient operations, Global Capability Centers in India offer the clearest path forward. AMS is committed to leading this journey with confidence, clarity, and bold action. India is no longer merely supporting the enterprise; it is leading it.
Let’s build your GCC strategy around that truth.