AgenciesThe opportunity spans far beyond technology roles, though artificial intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity continue to figure prominently on the list, according to industry experts.
Demand is accelerating for workers across healthcare, engineering, logistics, manufacturing, construction and hospitality as companies worldwide struggle to fill talent gaps. At the same time, growing workforce mobility and the rapid expansion of global capability centres (GCCs) are making cross-border recruitment easier and more scalable.
To tap into this trend, firms are looking at expanding in regions such as Southeast Asia, West Asia, the US and Europe, betting that international business will not only diversify revenue streams but also deliver stronger margins through higher-value workforce solutions.
Executives say the push is also being driven by existing clients seeking multi-country hiring support as well as companies expanding into new markets. BFSI, technology, infrastructure, healthcare and logistics, energy, construction and hospitality remain the main demand drivers, according to TeamLease Digital, Quess, Randstad and Adecco.
“The mix is almost 50:50 on mandates coming in from our global existing clients and local in-market companies, particularly in the BFSI, technology, healthcare and engineering domains,” said Neeti Sharma, CEO, TeamLease Digital. “Many of our enterprise customers have talent requirements in other geographies. Secondly, with remote and global mobility on the rise, it becomes easier to match talent needs.”
TeamLease currently operates in Singapore and the UAE, but is tracking markets such as Japan, Australia and New Zealand, South Korea, the UK and the US closely, where GCC-style capability centre build-outs are accelerating.
Demand-led International Expansion
According to Yeshab Giri, chief commercial officer, operational talent solutions, at talent company Randstad India, about 90% of the global labour gap is being driven by around 20 countries. The US and the UK are expected to account for about 40% of the demand by 2030, alongside steadily growing demand corridors such as Eastern Europe, Russia, Japan, South Korea and Germany. “India has become a core delivery hub for global employers,” said Giri.
At Randstad, sectors driving global talent demand include healthcare, assembly lines, shop floor roles, logistics and retail, food processing, construction and hospitality. Additionally, IT and digital engineering, BFSI and manufacturing are also generating robust demand. “The clear shift is from volume general staffing toward high-skill professional and digital roles,” said Giri.
For Quess, the international business accounts for about 20% of the profits. West Asia contributes about 40% of the international business, followed by Singapore (30%), with the remainder coming from other markets.




