UK firms shift customer support to South Africa, Poland, Ukraine

ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM — United Kingdom companies are redrawing their customer support outsourcing map, increasingly routing work to South Africa, Poland and Ukraine as rising wage pressures, talent gaps and 24/7 service demands force a strategic move beyond traditional Asian hubs.
According to a report from Londonlovesbusiness, the shift reflects a broader recalibration in which destination quality, time-zone alignment and compliance readiness now outweigh raw cost savings as the primary drivers of outsourcing decisions.
The trend signals a maturing UK outsourcing strategy that is reshaping competition across the global business process outsourcing (BPO) market — and giving nearshore providers a clear opening against legacy giants in India and the Philippines.
Why South Africa and Poland are winning UK contracts
South Africa has emerged as a top nearshore choice for UK firms, anchored by strong English proficiency, neutral accents and cultural alignment with British audiences.
Operating in the UTC+2 time zone, the country offers dependable working-hour overlap, while its BPO sector has expanded rapidly to handle integrated, multi-channel customer interactions.
Labor and operational costs run 40% to 60% lower than in the UK, giving businesses room to cut expenses without sacrificing service quality.
Poland, meanwhile, has positioned itself as a premium European hub for UK companies handling complex support work like SaaS troubleshooting and system integrations.
“Polish customer service outsourcing vendors are all GDPR-compliant, allowing for safer data handling. All in all, this is a location for a premium quality of service at slightly lower rates and prices,” the report stated.
Poland’s GMT+1 time zone and EU membership simplify compliance, security and auditing for UK clients.
Ukraine’s resilience and the rise of emerging hubs
Ukraine remains a viable destination for UK firms despite the geopolitical disruption that relocated many of its professionals to Poland and Germany after 2022.
Leading Ukrainian vendors have responded by building stronger contingency planning, hybrid delivery models and internationally aligned compliance measures, often combining local (GMT+2) teams with EU-based resources for redundancy.
“While the available talent pool may be smaller, it remains highly skilled and dependable,” the report noted, framing Ukraine as a strong fit for technically proficient agents and agile, product-focused support teams.
India and the Philippines continue to offer the largest workforce capacity at the lowest costs, while Egypt and Morocco are emerging as multilingual hubs serving European and MENA markets in French, Arabic and English.
The diversification reflects a broader transformation of the global outsourcing industry, where UK and United States enterprises are increasingly building multi-region delivery footprints that blend nearshore time-zone alignment with offshore scale.
Providers that can deliver compliance-grade service, multilingual capability and operational resilience — not just headcount — are positioned to capture the next wave of contracts as Western firms move away from cost-first decision-making toward strategic, quality-driven outsourcing models.

Independent




