I spend a lot of time in conversations with engineering and operations leaders who are weighing two paths: partner with York to build their outsourced development team, or go direct — typically with an experienced consultant who knows the India market and can guide entity setup and hiring on their behalf.
These are smart people making a genuine trade-off, and I respect that.
A trusted consultant with real on-the-ground experience is not nothing. But in almost every one of these conversations, I notice the same pattern: the build-direct model gets evaluated on the costs that are easy to quantify, while the harder-to-measure costs get systematically underweighted.
So I want to lay out what we see companies typically miss.
1. Time to productivity
Standing up a direct India entity — even with experienced guidance — takes meaningful time before you see real output. Entity setup, leadership hires, recruiting infrastructure, onboarding, and culture-building all stack on top of each other. With York, you have a productive, vetted team contributing within a few weeks. If your roadmap is moving quickly, that gap matters more than it looks on a project timeline.
2. Ramp risk at the individual level
Even with strong leadership in place, every hire still needs to be sourced, vetted, onboarded, and ramped on your specific stack. Any turnover resets that process entirely. Our model absorbs that risk. We have the bench, the management layer, and the processes in place to maintain continuity — so a single departure doesn’t create a gap in your delivery.
3. Fixed cost versus flexibility
Building direct is a longer-term fixed commitment — entity overhead, HR, payroll, compliance, and management all accrue whether your priorities are stable or shifting. Our model lets you start with a defined engagement and flex as your needs evolve. That optionality has real value, especially in the first twelve to eighteen months when so much is still in motion.
4. Where accountability actually sits
A consultant can provide strong guidance and real oversight — I don’t want to understate that. But the day-to-day accountability for delivery, retention, and quality ultimately sits within the team being built. With York, that accountability lives with a single partner. Delivery management and QA are built into the engagement, not bolted on later.
5. These paths aren’t mutually exclusive
This is the one I think surprises people most. We often work alongside companies that are actively building toward a longer-term direct model — using York to drive near-term execution while that infrastructure takes shape. You don’t have to trade velocity now for structure later. Both can happen in parallel.
I’m not writing this to talk anyone out of a decision they’ve already made. I’m writing it because I want to make sure that when companies are making this call, they’re comparing the actual trade-offs — not just the costs that are easy to put in a cell. If you’re working through this decision and want to talk through how the numbers actually look on both sides, I’m happy to get into it. That’s what I’m here for.






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