How to Build a Business Case for a Managed GCC in India: The CFO-Ready Framework for Startups and Mid-Size Companies

Building a Managed GCC in India but need CFO or board sign-off? Use this step-by-step framework to build an airtight business case โ€” with ROI formula, cost model, risk section, and a worked example.

Business Case for a Managed GCC in India

The decision to build a Managed GCC in India rarely fails because of a bad idea. It fails because of a weak business case.

The founder is convinced. The COO is convinced. The VP of Engineering has been pushing for it for six months. But the CFO wants numbers โ€” real numbers, not a vendor pitch deck โ€” and the board wants to see the risk analysis before they approve the capital.

This is exactly where most GCC conversations stall. The people who understand the operational value of a GCC are not always the people who speak the language of IRR, payback period, and total cost of ownership. And the people who control the capital โ€” CFOs, finance committees, boards โ€” are not always close enough to the operational pain to feel the urgency.

This post bridges that gap. It is a step-by-step framework for building a business case for a Managed GCC in India that is rigorous enough to satisfy a CFO, clear enough to present to a board, and grounded enough in real numbers to survive scrutiny.

By the end, you will have a complete template you can adapt for your own organisation โ€” covering the cost model, the ROI calculation, the risk assessment, and the implementation roadmap.


Who This Framework Is For

This framework is written for the person who is championing the GCC internally โ€” typically a founder, COO, VP of Engineering, or VP of Operations โ€” and needs to get financial sign-off from someone who is more cautious about the investment.

It is specifically designed for startups and mid-size companies that currently outsource some or all of their offshore work and are evaluating whether a Managed GCC is the right next step. If you are pre-outsourcing or considering India for the first time, the framework still applies โ€” but some of the baseline assumptions will need to be adjusted.

The single most important principle in building this business case: your CFO does not need to be convinced that India is good or that GCCs work in general. They need to be convinced that this investment makes financial sense for this company at this stage. Keep every number and every argument specific to your situation.

Step 1: Define the Problem You Are Solving (Not the Solution You Are Proposing)

The most common mistake in GCC business cases is leading with the solution โ€” ‘we want to set up a GCC in India’ โ€” rather than the problem. A CFO who has not been living the operational pain will not respond to a solution-first pitch. They will respond to a clearly articulated, financially quantified problem.

Start by documenting your current situation across three dimensions:

1a. Current Outsourcing Cost (The Visible Spend)

Compile your last 12 months of outsourcing invoices. Break them down by vendor, function, and headcount equivalent. Calculate your all-in monthly spend and your cost per FTE equivalent. This is your baseline.

ItemYour Numbers
Total outsourcing spend (last 12 mo)$_________
Number of vendor FTE equivalents___ FTEs
Average cost per outsourced FTE/mo$_________
Number of outsourcing vendors___ vendors
Primary functions outsourcedList here

1b. Hidden Cost Quantification (The Real Spend)

Outsourcing costs appear lower than they are because the hidden costs never appear on a vendor invoice. Document these honestly โ€” even rough estimates are better than omitting them, because they make the business case more credible, not less.

Hidden Cost CategoryHow to EstimateYour Monthly Estimate
Internal management overheadHours/month your team spends managing vendor ร— fully loaded hourly rate$_________
Rework and quality rectificationEst. 15โ€“25% of outsourcing spend on low-quality output$_________
Knowledge loss from staff rotation3โ€“4 weeks of lost productivity ร— FTE cost per rotation ร— annual rotation count รท 12$_________
Vendor margin embedded in invoicesEst. 40โ€“60% of invoice total$_________
Opportunity cost of misalignmentConservative: 1 delayed sprint/month ร— eng. cost$_________

Add your visible spend to your hidden cost estimates. The total is your true current monthly cost of outsourcing. In most cases, this is 40 to 80 percent higher than the invoice total.

1c. Strategic Risk Documentation

Beyond the financial cost, document the strategic risks your current outsourcing model creates. These are qualitative but they matter to a board audience:

  • IP and data security: code, customer data, and business processes reside on vendor infrastructure outside your governance
  • Concentration risk: dependency on one or two vendors creates single points of failure if a vendor relationship deteriorates
  • Talent risk: key individuals in your outsourced team are employed by the vendor and can be reassigned at any time
  • Scalability ceiling: your ability to grow the outsourced team is constrained by vendor capacity and contract terms, not your own hiring decisions
  • Compliance exposure: as your regulatory obligations grow (SOC 2, GDPR, HIPAA), a third-party vendor model creates increasing audit complexity

Step 2: Build the GCC Cost Model

Once you have quantified the problem, you need a credible cost model for the proposed Managed GCC. The model must cover three phases: setup, steady-state operations, and the growth scenario.

2a. One-Time Setup Costs

Setup costs for a Managed GCC vary with team size and city choice. The ranges below are representative for a 10 to 20 person initial GCC in Hyderabad or Pune:

Setup Cost ComponentTypical Range (USD)Your Estimate
Legal entity or managed entity setup$8,000 โ€“ $15,000$_________
Office fit-out and infrastructure$15,000 โ€“ $35,000$_________
Initial recruitment fees$12,000 โ€“ $25,000$_________
HR, payroll, and compliance setup$3,000 โ€“ $7,000$_________
IT infrastructure and security$8,000 โ€“ $20,000$_________
Total One-Time Setup Cost$46,000 โ€“ $102,000$_________

2b. Monthly Steady-State Operating Costs

Use this structure to model your ongoing monthly GCC cost once the team is fully operational:

Monthly Cost ComponentBasisYour Estimate
Direct salaries (all-in CTC)Market rate ร— headcount for your city and functions$_________
Statutory benefits and contributionsApprox. 25โ€“30% on top of salary$_________
Managed GCC partner feeFlat monthly fee โ€” typically $3,000โ€“$8,000$_________
Office rent and facilitiesGrade A space at city rate ร— sq footage$_________
IT, software, and securityPer-head allocation โ€” typically $100โ€“$200/head/mo$_________
HR, legal, and compliance (ongoing)Typically $1,500โ€“$3,000/month at 10โ€“25 FTEs$_________
Total Monthly Operating Cost $_________

2c. Cost Per FTE Comparison

Reduce both models to a per-FTE monthly cost. This is often the single most persuasive number in the business case, because it makes the comparison undeniable:

MetricOutsourcing (True Cost)Managed GCC
Visible monthly cost per FTE$_______$_______
Hidden costs per FTE (estimated)$_______$_______
True monthly cost per FTE$_______$_______
Annual true cost per FTE$_______$_______
Cost difference per FTE per yearโ€”$_______ saving

Step 3: Calculate the ROI and Payback Period

With the cost model built, you can now calculate the three numbers that matter most to a CFO: annual saving, payback period, and 3-year ROI.

The GCC ROI Formula

Annual Saving = (True Monthly Outsourcing Cost โˆ’ Monthly GCC Cost) ร— 12  Payback Period = Total Setup Cost รท Monthly Saving  3-Year Net Benefit = (Annual Saving ร— 3) โˆ’ Total Setup Cost

Worked Example: 15-Person Engineering and Operations GCC in Hyderabad

To make this concrete, here is a fully worked example for a mid-size company transitioning 15 FTEs from outsourcing to a Managed GCC in Hyderabad.

InputValue
Team size15 FTEs
Functions8 software engineers, 4 QA, 3 operations
CityHyderabad
Current true outsourcing cost/month$61,650 (per Vol 1 analysis)
Managed GCC monthly cost$28,700
Monthly saving$32,950
Total one-time setup cost$72,000
Payback period2.2 months
Annual net saving (from month 3)$395,400
3-Year net benefit$1,114,200
3-Year ROI1,547%

A payback period of 2.2 months and a 3-year ROI above 1,500 percent is not unusual for companies making this transition. The reason the ROI looks extraordinary is simple: the true cost of outsourcing is dramatically understated on most company balance sheets.


Step 4: Address the Risks Head-On

A business case that ignores risk will not survive CFO scrutiny. The most credible approach is to raise the key risks yourself โ€” and provide a specific mitigation for each. This signals that the proposal has been stress-tested rather than just advocated.

RiskProbabilityFinancial ImpactMitigation
Talent acquisition takes longer than plannedMedium4โ€“8 week delay to productivityPartner with a GCC provider with active talent pipelines. Build 4-week buffer into the financial model.
Higher-than-expected early attritionLow-MediumRecruitment cost: $3,000โ€“6,000 per replacementCompetitive compensation benchmarked to city market data. 6-month retention bonuses for key hires.
Setup costs overrun by 20%Low$9,000โ€“$20,000 additional one-time costFixed-fee managed setup with contractual caps. Contingency reserve in approved budget.
Quality ramp-up slower than modelledMedium6โ€“8 weeks at 70% productivityShadow period: new GCC team works alongside outsourcing team before full handover.
India regulatory or tax changeLowModest compliance adjustment costManaged GCC partner handles compliance monitoring. Entity structure designed for flexibility.

Step 5: Build the Implementation Roadmap

A CFO approving capital wants to know not just what the money buys, but when the return begins. Provide a clear, milestone-based roadmap.

PhaseWeeksKey MilestonesCost Incurred
Foundation1โ€“4Legal/entity setup. Role profiles finalised. Talent sourcing begins.Setup: 40% of one-time cost
Hiring5โ€“10Interviews, offers, acceptances. First 5โ€“8 hires confirmed.Setup: 60% of one-time cost
Onboarding11โ€“14Team starts. Shadow outsourced team. IT and access provisioned.First full monthly operating cost
Transition15โ€“20GCC team takes ownership of first functions. Outsourcing scope reduces.GCC cost + reduced outsourcing
Full Operation21+GCC fully operational. Outsourcing ended or reduced to narrow scope.GCC cost only. Saving fully realised.

Step 6: Frame the Recommendation Correctly for Your Audience

The financial model is the spine of the business case. But how you frame the recommendation for different audiences determines whether it gets approved.

For a CFO: Lead With the Numbers

CFOs respond to cost per FTE, payback period, and 3-year NPV. Present the true cost of your current outsourcing model first โ€” most CFOs do not know how high the real number is โ€” and then show the GCC comparison. Let the numbers do the work. Conclude with the payback period and the risk-adjusted 3-year benefit.

For a Board: Lead With Strategic Risk

Board members are more concerned with strategic risk and competitive positioning than month-to-month cost comparisons. Frame the business case around three strategic imperatives: protecting IP and data, eliminating vendor dependency risk, and building a scalable offshore operation that compounds in value rather than competes against vendor renewal cycles.

For a CEO or Founder: Lead With the Velocity Argument

Founders respond to speed and compounding advantage. The most powerful framing for a founder audience is the team ownership argument: a GCC team that you own, build, and develop will be two to three times more effective than a same-size outsourced team within 18 months, because institutional knowledge, cultural alignment, and career continuity all compound on your side rather than the vendor’s.


Step 7: The One-Page Executive Summary

However detailed your full business case, you need a one-page executive summary that a decision-maker can read in three minutes and share with others. Structure it as follows:

SectionContent
The Problem (2โ€“3 lines)Current outsourcing model costs $X/month (true cost). Key risks: [list 2โ€“3]. Growth ceiling reached at [current headcount].
The Proposal (2โ€“3 lines)Build a 15-person Managed GCC in [city] for [functions]. Partner: ManagedGCC.com. Timeline: operational in 20 weeks.
The Numbers (4โ€“5 lines)Setup cost: $X. Monthly saving vs. current model: $X. Payback: X months. 3-year net benefit: $X. 3-year ROI: X%.
The Risks (2โ€“3 lines)Top 3 risks and mitigations as listed in full document. All risks are manageable within the approved budget.
The Ask (1โ€“2 lines)Approval of $X setup budget. Authority to begin legal and hiring process in Q[X] [Year].

Common Questions CFOs Ask โ€” and How to Answer Them

What happens if this does not work out? What is the exit cost?

This is the most common CFO question and the one most GCC advocates are least prepared for. Answer it directly: under a Managed GCC model, exit is structured. Notice periods are contractually defined (typically 30 to 90 days for India employment contracts). The managed entity structure means you do not own Indian real estate or have long-term lease obligations unless you choose to. The exit cost is primarily severance โ€” which can be modelled and capped in advance. It is meaningfully lower than the sunk cost of 12 more months of the current outsourcing arrangement.

How does this compare to just hiring more people locally?

For technology and operations roles, a fully loaded India GCC FTE costs 30 to 50 percent of an equivalent role in the US, UK, or Australia โ€” after accounting for all GCC operating costs. Hiring locally at scale to replace offshore capacity is financially untenable for most mid-size companies and most startups below Series C.

Why a Managed GCC and not just an EOR or a different outsourcing vendor?

EOR is the right model for 1 to 8 people. Above that threshold โ€” particularly when the work is strategic and ongoing โ€” the EOR fee structure (15 to 25 percent of salary) becomes more expensive than a flat Managed GCC fee, and the EOR model does not provide the same cultural ownership or IP governance. A new outsourcing vendor solves none of the structural problems: margin markup, shared attention, rotation risk, and misaligned incentives are inherent to the outsourcing model, not specific to any vendor.

What gives you confidence in the financial projections?

The projections are built from three sources: your own invoice data (visible outsourcing cost), documented industry benchmarks for hidden outsourcing costs, and market-rate salary data for your target city and functions. The model is intentionally conservative โ€” setup costs are modelled at the high end of the range, and the productivity ramp-up period adds 8 weeks of reduced output before full GCC performance is assumed. You can stress-test any assumption and the business case remains positive.


Conclusion: The Business Case Is Easier Than You Think

The most surprising thing most GCC advocates discover when they build this business case properly is that it is not a close call. The financial argument for a Managed GCC โ€” once the true cost of outsourcing is accurately modelled โ€” is overwhelming. The payback period is typically measured in weeks, not years. The 3-year return is not incremental โ€” it is transformational.

The reason more companies have not made the move is not that the numbers are unclear. It is that nobody has taken the time to build the case rigorously enough to put it in front of the right decision-maker in the right language.

This framework gives you everything you need to do exactly that. Use it, adapt the numbers to your specific situation, and present it to your CFO or board with confidence. The data will do the rest.


Want ManagedGCC.com to help you build the actual numbers for your specific situation? We offer a free Business Case Workshop โ€” a 60-minute session where we build your personalised GCC cost model, ROI calculation, and payback analysis using your real outsourcing spend data. No obligation, no vendor pitch.

About the author

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Naresh D
Technical Architect and Lead Developer at  |  + posts

IT Consultant | Software Architect | Full-Stack Developer

Passionate, lifelong learner with 10+ years of experience in software development, solution architecture, and IT consulting. Skilled in .NET, Azure, DevOps, and enterprise solutions.

๐Ÿ’ผ Expertise in IT staff augmentation, digital transformation, and managing offshore teams.
๐Ÿš€ Hands-on with Agile, CI/CD, cloud technologies, and software architecture.
๐Ÿค Always open to collaborationโ€”connect for IT consulting, software development, or technical guidance.

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