iYogi in the news
Get the latest

iYogi: IT support that takes pride in its roots
By Amy Kazmin in New Delhi
1 January 28 2010
Sara Benton, a homemaker and saleswoman in Peoria, Illinois, was distressed. Her personal computer – loaded with her children’s photos and sensitive bank details – was infected by virulent viruses.
Each time she tried to use the internet, the viruses redirected her to pornographic websites, unleashing pop-ups with shocking images.3
“I couldn’t even turn my computer on for fear my kids would be standing there,” Ms Benton says. “It was horrible. I spent hours and hours trying to fix it, but I couldn’t get it to stop.”
Finally, Mr Benton contacted a young Indian company, iYogi, that helps PC users in the US and Europe deal with a full range of computer challenges, including viruses, security, installing software, and connecting peripheral equipment such as digital cameras, MP3 players, and printers.
Over the next few hours, Syed Sharique Ali, a 23-year-old iYogi networking expert, and another technician – who had remotely accessed the stricken computer in Peoria from iYogi’s sleek headquarters in Gurgaon, India – removed 14 viruses and installed new antivirus software on Ms Benton’s machine.
“They were fabulous,” she recalls. “I’ve worked with other help desks in the US and they don’t even care if they help you. But they kept being pleasant, and they kept trying to help me. It kind of blew my mind that they were in India. A couple of times, I wanted to say to them, ‘I can’t believe you are so far away’.”
The company, which started commercial operations in 2007 and now has 100,000 annual subscribers, is a brave innovator in outsourcing – an unabashedly Indian company, offering personal services directly to western retail customers.
“We firmly believe it’s the next generation of outsourcing from India,” said Vishal Dhar, iYogi’s co-founder, and president of marketing. “It’s an approach built on customer ownership and retention.”
India’s massive outsourcing industry earns about $60bn a year, running call centres for western businesses, supplying software and IT services and handling other back office processes.
Growth has been driven primarily by large western companies cutting costs by shifting whole activities offshore.
But corporate bosses normally instruct Indian call centre workers talking to overseas customers to hide the fact that they are in India, by using “western” names, accent modification training, and acculturation classes.
Some IT powerhouses do not ask the same of their highly skilled computer engineers, but this is because these companies mostly supply IT and other back-office support to big companies, rather than interacting with retail consumers.
In that sense, iYogi is blazing a trail. With its witty slogan: “Great Tech Support, Good karma,” and photos of its young, hip-looking Indian technicians featuring prominently on its website, iYogi makes no effort to hide its roots.
And it has found that distressed US computer users are willing to look far afield for the support they badly need but cannot find – or afford – at home.
It is not the only Indian company offering personal services directly to customers in the west. Bangalore-based TutorVista, founded in 2005, uses about 1,200 people to provide unlimited private tutoring to about 20,000 students in the US and elsewhere for $100 a month. Pearson, the company that owns the FT, acquired a 17 per cent stake in June.
Two other outfits, Bangalore-based GetFriday and US-based AskSunday, which has a large call centre in Hyderabad, offer personal assistant and concierge services to harried professionals.
But iYogi has tapped into the huge pool of frustrated computer users and appears to be the biggest and fastest-growing outsourcing company reaching out directly to consumers in the west.
With 100,000 subscribers to its plan for unlimited technical support for $140 a year and many more “single incident” calls each month, iYogi has more than 1,200 English-speaking technicians.
It expects to double that in the next six months to keep pace with a subscriber base growing a blistering 35 per cent quarter on quarter.
Uday Challu, chief executive, says iYogi, which has raised $27m in start-up and growth capital from SAP Ventures, Canaan Partners, SVB India Capital Partners, and Draper Fisher Jurvetson, will report turnover of about $20m for the year to the end of March, and is projecting revenues of more than $70m next year.
So far, iYogi has found particular success among those over 50, who account for 75 per cent of its subscriber base.
But with 320m PCs in use in the US – and retail technical support there estimated to be worth $15bn-$23bn a year, iYogi believes it has merely begun to tap the potential.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don”t cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by e-mail or post to the web.

iYogi does an Indian rope trick, outsources outsourcing...
What did the outsourcing company do next? Well, it did some outsourcing of its own. Based in Gurgaon ... Aug - 3 -2012

Asia's 25 hottest people in business

IYogi set to cross $100 million in revenue by next fiscal
The firm plans to scale up staff to 7,000 and expand operations to at least 12 new countries in the next 18 months
May -25 -2010
Infinite Computer Solutions (India) along with iYogi, Inc (iYogi)
have jointly announced an agreement for iYogi to expand its on-demand global tech support with a service delivery centre in Bengaluru...
April -20 -2010
iYogi, provider of comprehensive remote technical support,
iYogi taps Verizon to connect 2000 techs to 100,000 customers

iYogi joins hands with Verizon Business

iYogi: IT support that takes pride in its roots
Sara Benton, a homemaker and saleswoman in Peoria, Illinois, was distressed. Her personal computer - loaded with...Jan -28 -2010
Indian founded iYogi raises $15 Million
iYogi, Gurgaon-based provider of online technical support services, has raised $15 million in series C funding...Jan -08 -2010
iYogi: Remote Support Specialist Raises $15 Million
iYogi doubles funding
iYogi Breathes In $15M Series C For Remote Computer Support
Remote Tech Support Company iYogi Gets A $15 Million Boost From DFJ, Others

IYogi raises $15 mn from US-based VC firm, three others
It has at least 100,000 annual subscribers and expects to end fiscal 2010 with revenue of $21 million... Jan -06 -2010
iYogi lands $15M to take remote technical support to the next level
iYogi gets $15 million to expand PC help
Remote Tech Support Company iYogi Gets A $15 Million Boost From DFJ, Others
iYogi Secures $15 Million in Funding Led by Draper Fisher Jurvetson to Fuel Surging Market Share in Rapidly Growing Consumer Tech Support Market
iYogi, the fastest growing on-demand consumer tech services company, announced today it has raised $15 million... Jan -06 -2010
iYogi Raises $15M; DFJ Is New Investor
The personal offshoring firm has raised a series C round, which has also seen participation from existing investors... Jan -06 -2010
Wal-Mart's Web Site Offering Remote Tech-Support Services
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT), which launched new technical support services in its stores last month... Nov -18 -2009
A look at Windows 7 after its first week
Windows 7: a strong case to migrate
Which Windows 7: Full or Upgrade?
If you have Windows XP or Windows Vista on your computer, you can buy the upgrade edition of Windows 7. Oct -28 -2009
Seven things to know about Windows 7
upgrade concerns top Windows 7 worries
User Poll Shows That 43 Percent Will Need Extra Technical Support as They Move to New OS Oct -21-2009
36% of Windows users plan to upgrade to Windows 7 on existing PCs, says iYogi
Windows 7 Might Be Coming Up Sevens
Tech Support Firm Expects Bump in Business From Win 7
Happy to be of help
Now is not the best time for bold moves, but don't tell that to Uday Challu
Sep-17-2009
iYogi: Caught speeding!
These are testing times for us," says Uday Challu, Founder & CEO, iYogi.
May-28-2009






