Local jobs ashland ohio
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Manchester, Tennessee fits the profile of the type of town RSI targets for new locations – available talent, near large universities, with a low cost of living and good education systems. Similar small towns experience a “brain drain” when the young professional adults with new degrees are not able to settle “at home” but rather must move away to find jobs. Jack Allen, an IT executive moved to Austin, Texas to ride the dot-com bubble but ended up back in his home town of Perry, Georgia after the bubble burst. He now commutes an hour each way to his new position in McDonough, Georgia. “I want to raise my kids in a small town. Life is quieter and safer here.”
With the post-9/11 era of urban flight, bringing the white collar jobs to small town America is a growing trend. Professionals in rural areas are as well-educated as their urban colleagues and are not as burdened with high housing costs and other cost of living items. Bringing the jobs to them that would otherwise be sent to India, Malaysia, or Pakistan benefits everyone in terms of cost savings and better customer service.
If you have called a company’s customer service call center or a computer manufacturer’s tech support department lately, you probably have had the “joy” of experiencing outsourcing for yourself. The inefficiency of non-native English speakers as tech support personnel is astounding; however, corporate management across the US feel the money saved in salaries by sending jobs to southeast Asia outweighs the nose-dive in customer satisfaction ratings. Forrester Research predicts that by 2015 at least 3.3 million white-collar jobs ($136 billion in wage earnings) will be outsourced outside the US.