Earl McDonald redefining Jamaica’s BPO landscape

KINGSTON, JAMAICA — Earl McDonald, co-founder and CEO of VLBPO, is building a locally owned Jamaica business process outsourcing (BPO) company in a sector dominated by foreign-owned BPO multinationals.
According to a press release, it grew from a work-from-home startup founded in 2019 to approaching 200 employees after recently securing an enterprise-level account, backed by a Development Bank of Jamaica technical grant, a UK Trade Partnership program, and international pitching at Mobile World Congress Barcelona and Tech Show London.
VLBPO builds locally-owned BPO alternative in a Jamaica market dominated by foreign multinationals
Jamaica’s BPO sector is a billion-dollar industry characterized by foreign-owned enterprise operators, entry-level employment, wage stagnation, and limited advancement pathways — structural conditions that VLBPO was built to counter through performance-based salary increases, full health benefits post-probation, and a commitment to employee development.
VLBPO’s initial model — remote and virtual administrative support functions for international clients — has expanded to accommodate a recent enterprise-level contract that nearly doubled headcount from approximately 100 to approaching 200, placing the company at the threshold of mid-market BPO operator status.
For Jamaica’s BPO workers, the structural significance of a locally-owned employer is not sentiment but economics: a Jamaican company that captures a larger share of the per-seat margin from international clients can redirect it into wages, benefits, and advancement rather than remitting it offshore as parent-company profit.
“I’m responsible for hundreds of persons across Jamaica,” said Earl McDonald, Co-founder and CEO, VLBPO.
DBJ grant, UK trade program, and international pitching build VLBPO’s competitive infrastructure
VLBPO’s development has been explicitly supported by public and bilateral institutions: a Development Bank of Jamaica technical assistance grant funded a modernized digital presence, and a UK Trade Partnership six-month program in 2024–2025 covered pitch development and market penetration methodology — an institutionally-supported growth path unusual for an early-stage locally-owned BPO.
International exposure has been a deliberate strategic investment: McDonald pitched VLBPO at Mobile World Conference Barcelona, Tech Show London, Business Show London, and Critical Communications World — with a Jamaican High Commission networking session in London facilitated by JAMPRO, Jamaica’s investment promotion agency.
McDonald’s stated objective is to position VLBPO in the Caribbean’s top five — and eventually top two — highest-performing BPOs, a target that places the company’s ambition in regional competitive rather than Jamaican domestic terms.
VLBPO’s trajectory demonstrates the institutional support architecture that a locally-owned BPO in a small economy needs to reach enterprise-client scale: DBJ capital, bilateral trade training, JAMPRO market access, and a CEO willing to pitch at trade shows where no local-owned company has historically had a seat.
“Creating a Jamaican BPO brand, creating jobs for persons across Jamaica — our aim is to ensure that you leave better than when you came,” McDonald said.
For outsourcing operators and market development observers tracking Caribbean BPO, VLBPO’s growth from 2019 startup to approaching-200-employee enterprise-client operator documents that locally-owned BPO in small-nation markets is viable with the right institutional scaffolding — and that the gap between multinational dominance and local ownership is closable one enterprise BPO account at a time.

Independent




