New Delhi | March 11, 2026: Senior leaders from India’s Global Capability Centre (GCC) ecosystem, consulting firms, and enterprise leadership gathered in Delhi NCR for an exclusive industry RoundTable convened by SSF Global, to deliberate on the next phase of GCC expansion in India and the emerging potential of North India and Tier-2 cities.
The leadership dialogue, titled “The Next GCC Growth Frontier – How North India & Tier-2 Cities Can Power the 2026 Investment Wave,” brought together practitioners and industry experts to examine how evolving policy signals, talent ecosystems, and enterprise strategies could reshape the geography of India’s GCC landscape.
Rethinking GCC Geography
India currently hosts one of the world’s largest GCC ecosystems, with most capability centres concentrated in established hubs such as Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Pune.
However, participants noted that the next decade of GCC growth may increasingly involve geographic diversification, driven by factors such as talent saturation in major hubs, rising costs, and enterprise interest in distributed operating models. Cities such as Jaipur, Chandigarh, Lucknow, Mohali, and Ahmedabad were highlighted as emerging locations that could potentially support future GCC investments if ecosystem development continues.
Industry leaders observed that while several northern states have introduced policies to attract technology investments, awareness among global enterprises remains limited, and stronger promotion of these initiatives will be necessary to influence global location strategies.
Policy and Ecosystem Readiness
Another key theme during the discussion was the role of policy frameworks and ecosystem development in enabling distributed GCC growth. Leaders pointed out that while some states, including Rajasthan, have introduced incentive programs aimed at attracting technology investments and capability centres, the global visibility of these policies remains relatively low.
Industry leaders also emphasized the importance of building supporting ecosystems around GCC operations, including technology partners, consulting firms, startups, and academic institutions.
Such ecosystems have historically played a critical role in the success of southern GCC hubs, and similar collaborative environments will be required in emerging cities to attract large-scale enterprise investments.

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