Mexico could be an unparalleled global destination for technology workers, something that Austin-based IT solutions entrepreneur Anurag Kumar believes would change the country’s economic future.
“There’s a lot of talent sitting next door,” Kumar, the CEO of iTexico, told Más Wired. “There’s a huge opportunity for Mexico to bring good paying jobs, infrastructure. I think the return is going to be very high if the government of Mexico can invest in more IT, tech training.”
Kumar should know. His company, iTexico, was recently awarded the 2014 National Entrepreneurship Award (Premio Nacional del Emprendedor) for making a “positive impact” on the Mexican economy. In just a few years Kumar has grown his company to nearly 100 employees, most of who work out of iTexico’s Guadalajara, Mexico office.
Focusing on building mobile apps and providing tech staff, iTexico does a variety of tech work for various companies. But what differentiates iTexico from other companies Kumar has founded is its focus on Mexican tech talent, which he says is a talent pool with many more advantages than other foreign IT options.
Kumar effortlessly lists the benefits of doing business with Mexican workers:
- They are bilingual.
- They are familiar with US culture and business processes.
- They are a portal to the rest of Latin America, where many companies are looking to expand.
- They are educated and talented.
- There’s lower attrition than with U.S. or other foreign workers.
- They can travel to the U.S. more easily for business.
- They are part of a system created via NAFTA that allows for legal and intellectual property protections.
- Their government is supportive of the IT industry.
Kumar is adamant that Mexico has so much potential to be an IT powerhouse; already, according to a white paper he co-authored on the subject, the country is fourth in the world for providing IT services. Compared to working with teams in other countries, Mexican IT workers are more culturally competent, can travel more easily and the country’s entrepreneurial ecosystem is exploding, Kumar said.
Finally, because of NAFTA and the current immigration system, there’s no need to deal with the rigorous process of obtaining visas for Mexican IT workers, he said.
What Mexico, and the U.S. as a consumer of its IT services, could really benefit from would be a large corporation building offices there to spur the creation of a big tech worker pipeline.
“It’s good for the U.S., and it’s good for Mexico,” Kumar said of creating this tech workforce in Mexico. “We are just one example of the success of collaboration between the U.S. and Mexico.”
To learn more about iTexico or read more of the company’s white papers, visit their website here.
Image via Facebook