NEW DELHI | 23 June 2026: Capitalizing on deepening bilateral economic ties, Indian workforce solutions and technology services company Quess Corp has announced the launch of a dedicated Indo-Japan Global Capability Center (GCC) corridor through its subsidiary, Quess International Services. The enterprise has formed a strategic tripartite alliance with Tokyo-based HRTech firm Institution for a Global Society (IGS) and Singapore-based strategic advisory firm Indo-Pacific Advisory (IPA).

The initiative explicitly targets a critical operational bottleneck: enabling large-scale Japanese enterprises to rapidly establish, scale, and govern captive capability hubs in India across high-growth domains, including artificial intelligence, advanced engineering, cybersecurity, and digital transformation. The launch aligns directly with significant bilateral economic engagement, specifically leveraging Japan’s commitment to invest 5 trillion yen into India by 2027, reinforced by a renewed 2025 bilateral mandate targeting 10 trillion yen in private capital over the next decade.

  • Quess Corp, headquartered in Bengaluru, is one of India’s largest private-sector employers and a leading provider of workforce management, technology services, and facility management solutions. Maintaining a global workforce of over 479,000 professionals across multiple countries, the enterprise specializes in workforce management and complex enterprise execution, providing the human and operational infrastructure required to scale large capability centers.
  • Based in Tokyo, IGS is an advanced EdTech and HRTech enterprise specializing in human capital data. The firm develops scientifically grounded capability assessment tools, utilizing its proprietary technology to measure non-cognitive abilities, behavioral traits, and technical competencies, thereby enabling highly accurate talent alignment across diverse corporate cultures.
  • Operating from Singapore, IPA is a specialized strategic advisory firm focused on facilitating cross-border collaborations, policy alignments, and complex market entry strategies across the Indo-Pacific region. The firm provides institutional guidance to governments, corporate boards, and financial institutions navigating high-value capability building within the India-Japan economic corridor.

The Operating Framework: De-Risking Market Entry

Historically, India’s GCC ecosystem has been heavily anchored by American and European multinationals. Japanese market entry has remained comparatively limited, constrained by regulatory navigation requirements, cultural operating differences, and a historically cautious approach toward offshore captive centers.

The Quess-IGS-IPA alliance functions as a cohesive execution engine designed to reduce these friction points. The tripartite operational mandate breaks down into distinct, specialized domains:

  • Quess Corp: Provides localized talent acquisition infrastructure, real estate provisioning, and GCC execution expertise necessary to build and manage large-scale technical teams.
  • Institution for a Global Society (IGS): Delivers deep Japanese corporate market access and deploys its proprietary AI-driven capability assessment technology (GROW360+) to support alignment between Indian technical talent and Japanese corporate culture.
  • Indo-Pacific Advisory (IPA): Engineers the foundational market-entry strategy, navigating Indian regulatory environments, facilitating government alignments, and helping structure cross-border corporate governance frameworks.

Addressing the operational friction this alliance seeks to resolve, Nihal Chauhan, Founder of IPA, noted:

For Japanese companies, India is now a partner for innovation rather than simply a destination for scale. The harder question has always been execution: how to navigate the regulatory environment, build the right local relationships, and structure an entry that endures. That is precisely what this alliance is built to address.

Nihal Chauhan, Founder, IPA

Solving the Macroeconomic Talent Deficit

The core catalyst driving this corridor extends far beyond traditional cost considerations; it is rooted in long-term demographic and talent realities. Japan’s enterprise sector is facing increasing pressure to secure advanced digital capabilities at scale. Industry studies indicate that a significant proportion of Japanese firms report unmet demand for cloud, AI, machine learning, and digital engineering talent.

This demand is colliding with a shrinking and aging workforce. Japanese government and industry projections indicate a shortfall of approximately 790,000 advanced IT professionals by 2030. Conversely, India’s demographic dividend, supported by one of the world’s largest young talent pools and a significant annual STEM graduate output, presents a complementary talent advantage for enterprises seeking long-term capability expansion.

Masahiro Fukuhara, Founder and CEO of IGS, highlighted this macroeconomic alignment:

As we enter the era of AI agents, Japanese companies find themselves at a crossroads, a shortage of the advanced talent needed to execute corporate strategy, compounded by a shrinking and aging workforce. India, with its strong STEM orientation and deep pool of professionals in cybersecurity and physical AI, is a natural strategic complement.

Masahiro Fukuhara, Founder & CEO, IGS

Industry Insights

The deployment of this dedicated capability pathway signals several important shifts in how East Asian capital is approaching the Indian talent and innovation ecosystem:

  1. Expanding Beyond Manufacturing-Led Collaboration: While Japan-India economic ties have historically centered around manufacturing, infrastructure, automotive, and industrial investments, the Quess corridor reflects a growing emphasis on digital capability creation. The targeted capability hubs are expected to focus on advanced technology domains such as AI, cybersecurity, cloud engineering, and enterprise transformation, reflecting the evolving priorities of Japanese enterprises.
  2. Growing Preference for Capability Ownership: By facilitating the creation of proprietary GCCs rather than relying exclusively on third-party service providers, the alliance enables Japanese enterprises to build, retain, and govern critical capabilities internally while maintaining stronger oversight of intellectual property, data, and strategic operations.
  3. The Full Lifecycle Support Model: The framework is not merely a recruitment or staffing initiative. It provides Japanese enterprises with end-to-end support, from market entry and regulatory guidance to talent acquisition, capability building, operational scaling, and long-term governance.
  4. Emergence of a Japan-Specific GCC Playbook: Unlike North American and European enterprises that have spent decades refining their India GCC strategies, many Japanese corporations remain at an earlier stage of GCC adoption. Structured corridors such as the Quess-IGS-IPA alliance help reduce entry barriers by combining talent access, governance support, cultural alignment, and regulatory guidance into a unified operating framework. This has the potential to accelerate GCC adoption among Japanese enterprises that have historically preferred localized operating models.

Validating the scale of the Indian value proposition, Lohit Bhatia, Executive Director & Group CEO of Quess Corp, summarized the alliance’s objective:

India has cemented its position as the world’s foremost destination for GCC growth, backed by an unmatched talent ecosystem. For Japanese enterprises accelerating their transformation agendas, India offers far more than cost efficiency; it is a gateway to high-quality technology talent at scale.

Lohit Bhatia, Executive Director & Group CEO, Quess Corp

Way Forward

The launch of the Indo-Japan GCC corridor reflects a broader evolution in the economic relationship between India and Japan. Historically anchored in manufacturing, automotive, infrastructure, and industrial investment, the partnership is increasingly expanding into digital capability creation, advanced engineering, AI, and enterprise transformation.

More importantly, the initiative addresses a growing reality facing global enterprises: access to specialized talent is becoming a strategic constraint. As organizations compete for digital, AI, cybersecurity, and engineering capabilities, structured talent and capability corridors may emerge as a critical mechanism for accelerating global expansion while reducing operational and cultural friction.

For the GCC industry, this development signals the potential emergence of a new wave of Japanese-owned capability centers in India. If successful, the model could provide a repeatable blueprint for enabling Japanese enterprises to transition from traditional outsourcing relationships to enterprise-controlled capability ownership, further strengthening India’s position as a global destination for strategic talent, innovation, and digital transformation.

Curated by SSF Global

Tracking the shifts shaping GCCs, enterprise ecosystems, and the future of global business.

Share on      

SSF Global is a Global Community for Enterprise Function Leaders and serves as a research & advisory platform focused on Global Business Services (GBS), Global Capability Centres (GCCs), and the evolution of enterprise innovation in India and beyond. We track, publish, and partner in narratives that shape how capability centres transform into hubs of trust, intelligence, and sustainable growth. We also evaluate, assess and benchmark the GCCs for their performance, maturity and other parameters using our proprietary tools built from the knowledge gained from direct interaction with our members (GCCs & GBS).