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Life Sciences

A Strategic Perspective onLife Sciences GCCs in India

May 2, 2026

02 — Why Companies Build GCCs

From Cost Strategy to Long-Term Investment

Global Capability Centers (GCCs) are specialized units — a sort of digital twin — established by multinational corporations (MNCs) to manage critical business functions such as IT, ER&D, HR, Finance, and more. Global companies are setting up GCCs as a strategic investment that depends on the organization’s growth stage, operational needs, and digital transformation goals.

A GCC is more than just a cost-cutting strategy — it’s a long-term investment in operational agility, efficiency, innovation, and global scalability.

2.1 Key Drivers and Trends

Cost Efficiency

MNCs could save 40–70% compared to onshore operations.

Talent Access

Access to a large, skilled talent pool, especially in STEM disciplines.

Market Proximity

Proximity to emerging markets and customers across Asia-Pacific.

Policy Support

Tax incentives, SEZ benefits, and national skilling programs.

Digital Scale

Ability to leverage digital transformation, AI, and R&D at scale.

GCC-as-a-Service

Rise of managed models for faster setup, plus GenAI and blockchain integration.

2.2 Global GCC Landscape & Destination India

The global GCC market has witnessed strong and sustained growth over the past decade. Globally, GCCs contributed over $350 billion to the economy in 2024, reinforcing their importance as enablers of business resilience and growth. India remains a global leader, contributing $64.6 billion in GCC revenue, with projections to surpass $100 billion by 2030.

GCC Operating Models: Control vs. Speed

ModelDescriptionBest ForTimeline
Captive GCCsDirect ownership and control; maximum integrationLarge global pharma with long-term India strategies9–18 months
Vendor-Managed CentersOutsourced to IT/consulting partners; limited IP ownershipCompanies seeking fastest time-to-operational6–9 months
Co-Sourced CentersShared responsibility between parent and partner firmMid-sized life sciences firms as a stepping stone to captive~12 months
COPOEntity legally owned by global company, operations managed by partner. Speed, compliance, and flexibility.Companies wanting control without full upfront investment12–24 months to captive

This ecosystem-driven approach allows large pharma companies to set up at scale while also enabling mid-sized and smaller firms to de-risk entry and ramp up quickly — ensuring India remains accessible from global giants to emerging innovators.

04 — Success Stories, Risks & Mitigation

Building Resilience While Scaling

While India’s Life Sciences GCCs have delivered standout successes, they continue to navigate talent, cultural, and regulatory challenges. India today hosts a vibrant mix of Life Sciences GCCs and GCC-like organizations, each contributing differently to the global pharma and biotech value chain.

4.1 GCCs — Captives / Global Pharma-Biopharma Centers

Global majors such as Novartis, GSK, Sanofi, Eli Lilly, AstraZeneca, BMS, and Pfizer have established fully owned centers across India. Novartis Hyderabad is one of the largest pharma GCCs in the world. GSK’s India GCC has begun housing critical global leadership roles — for example, the Global Head of Data Management — with full decision-making authority, marking a clear shift from when India-based positions were largely limited to support functions.

CompanyCityEst.SizeGrowth TrajectoryType of Work / FocusStrategic Role
NovartisHyderabad2000s+LargeSteady growth, expanded into AI & digitalAdvanced analytics, drug dev, clinical opsGlobal innovation hub, largest GCC
GSKBengaluru2021MediumConsistent hiring; R&D team nearly double tech teamR&D, digital transformation, AI-enabled clinical opsSupports global R&D integration & RWE
SanofiHyderabad2023MediumRapid expansion; doubling planned by 2026Data analytics, R&D support, shared servicesStrategic hub for global business services
Eli LillyBengaluru2024Small→MedHigh growth, clinical development focusClinical dev, biostats, regulatory, safetyAccelerates global drug development cycles
AstraZenecaChennai2023MediumScaling AI and digital healthDigital health platforms, AI trial designCollaborates with academia on AI-driven health
BMSHyd / Blr2020MediumExpanding digital health, enterprise ITClinical ops, digital health, enterprise ITOncology & cardiovascular program hub
PfizerMumbai / Chennai2000s+MediumGrowing clinical/safety presenceClinical trial mgmt, PV, regulatoryKey Asia hub for safety & clinical

4.2 GCC-like — Analytics, Consulting, SaaS & Tech-Enabled Ops

Complementing Life Sciences GCCs are GCC-like players such as IQVIA, ZS Associates, and Axtria, which operate at the intersection of analytics, SaaS, and consulting. They support pharma clients globally with clinical trial management, commercial analytics, AI/ML platforms, and digital product development, and in many cases India is their largest innovation and delivery hub.

CompanyCitiesEst.SizeGrowth TrajectoryFocusStrategic Role
IQVIABlr, Chennai, Gurugram2007+LargeLarge, diversified LS presenceClinical trial mgmt, PV, RWE, regulatoryLargest global delivery hub; end-to-end LS support
ZS AssociatesPune, Blr, Delhi2004+MediumStrong growth in LS analyticsCommercial analytics, market access, AI marketingGlobal analytics backbone for top pharma
AxtriaGurugram, Noida, Blr2010s+MediumRapid scale-up, SaaS-driven innovationAI/ML analytics, SaaS platformsProduct engineering & digital innovation hub

4.3 Challenges & Mitigation Strategies

ChallengeMitigation Strategy
Talent & Attrition — high attrition due to competition from IT firms, startups, and other GCCsStrengthen employer branding (e.g., Novartis positioning India as a strategic innovation hub); invest in structured career development (e.g., Sanofi’s leadership tracks in Hyderabad); enhance employee engagement through wellness and DEI initiatives.
Communication / Cultural Gaps — differences in communication styles affecting collaboration with global teamsImplement cultural agility training (e.g., GSK’s India GCC runs cross-cultural leadership workshops); rotate leadership roles across geographies (e.g., AstraZeneca’s global leadership rotations); embed mentoring programs connecting India teams with global HQ.
Regulatory & Compliance Complexity — dual compliance with Indian and international regulations slows operationsEngage proactively with regulators; invest in regulatory and compliance technologies and automation platforms; embed compliance-by-design frameworks early in project cycles.
Scaling Company Culture — maintaining a unified culture across global and India operationsStrengthen culture through regular leadership communication (e.g., ZS’s global townhalls); mentorship and peer coaching (e.g., Novartis); shared-value initiatives such as volunteering, community outreach, and sustainability programs.
05 — Global Competition

How India Fares Amid Emerging Global Hubs

India faces competition from hubs like Poland, Singapore, and Costa Rica, which offer attractive tax regimes and niche talent. Life Sciences GCCs in India are coping by building Centers of Excellence in data science, product innovation, and AI-based R&D.

  • Poland has developed into a strong clinical operations and shared services hub for European pharma, particularly attractive for its EU regulatory alignment and multilingual workforce, but its talent pool is smaller.
  • Singapore positions itself as an Asia-Pacific regional HQ and innovation hub, focusing on biotech R&D, regulatory affairs, and medtech manufacturing — yet high costs limit scale.
  • Costa Rica has emerged as a niche hub for shared services and quality/regulatory functions, drawing U.S. pharma investment due to geographic proximity and bilingual talent, but it lacks the scale and scientific depth of India.

“Poland offers regulatory proximity, Singapore delivers innovation branding, Costa Rica provides nearshore convenience — but only India offers scale + science + digital at once.”

FactorIndiaPolandSingaporeCosta Rica
Cost AdvantageHigh (30–40% lower than West)ModerateHigh costModerate
Talent DepthVery deep — biostats, PV, RWE, AI/MLStrong multilingual clinical ops & shared servicesSpecialized in biotech, medtech, regulatoryBilingual shared services & regulatory
Functional BreadthEnd-to-end: Clinical, R&D, Regulatory, Digital, Shared ServicesClinical ops, regulatory, shared servicesRegional HQ, R&D, regulatory affairsShared services, regulatory/quality
Strategic RoleInnovation, product ownership, global platformsEU compliance, regional supportInnovation branding, APAC leadershipMainly tactical regulatory support
ScaleLargest globally (100+ LS GCCs)Mid-scale (dozens of GCCs)Smaller scale due to costsSmall-to-mid scale
06 — Strategic Outlook

Cementing Global Leadership

India’s ascent as a global hub for Life Sciences GCCs reflects the convergence of strong talent depth, digital expertise, and an enabling ecosystem of partners, government, and industry bodies. Over the past decade, global majors such as Sanofi, Novartis, GSK, AstraZeneca, and ZS Associates have evolved their India centers from back-office support to strategic hubs for innovation, clinical development, and digital transformation.

Yet, sustaining this momentum requires proactive policy support, ecosystem strengthening, and strategic foresight. India faces challenges such as high attrition in niche roles, policy uncertainty around data privacy, and competition from emerging hubs in Eastern Europe and Asia.

Recommendations

1
Strengthen Talent Pipelines and Leadership Development

Build structured partnerships between GCCs, universities (IITs, NIPER, AIIMS), and skilling councils to align curricula with emerging needs such as biostatistics, RWE, AI in clinical trials, and digital pharmacovigilance. Invest in India-based leadership development programs to create a stronger pipeline of senior leaders capable of owning global product mandates.

2
Enhance Policy Consistency and Regulatory Certainty

Harmonize state-level incentives into a more predictable national framework. Implement clear data privacy, cross-border data transfer, and compliance guardrails that enable life sciences firms to confidently scale sensitive operations in India.

3
Diversify Beyond Tier-1 Cities

Accelerate the development of Tier-2 life sciences clusters (e.g., Pune, Kochi, Ahmedabad, Chandigarh) with targeted infrastructure, incubators, and connectivity. This will relieve cost/talent pressure in Bengaluru and Hyderabad while enhancing resilience and creating balanced growth.

4
Position India as a Global Innovation Partner

Move the narrative from “cost efficiency” to “innovation leadership” by documenting and promoting success stories of global impact (AI-led clinical data sciences, digital therapeutics, pharmacovigilance automation). Encourage GCCs to co-create IP, patents, and regulated digital products out of India, elevating their global strategic role.

“India is already the world’s leading destination for Life Sciences GCCs. By addressing structural risks and seizing the opportunity to brand itself as a strategic, innovation-driven partner, India can cement its position as the backbone of global pharma and biotech transformation in the decade ahead.”

For many organizations, the question is no longer whether to build global capabilities, but how quickly and effectively they can do so.

About Indeca GlobalHub
Indeca GlobalHub Inc.

Indeca GlobalHub Inc. is a US-based advisory and execution partner focused on helping companies design, build, and scale Global Capability Centers (GCCs) in India. This whitepaper reflects the collective research, insights, and on-the-ground experience of the Indeca GlobalHub team — practitioners who work daily at the intersection of global life sciences strategy and India execution.

The firm works with mid-sized and growth-stage organizations to enable scalable, efficient, and future-ready global operating models — from entity incorporation and compliance through talent ramp-up, infrastructure setup, and long-term operational maturity. Indeca GlobalHub brings a unique perspective: U.S.-based strategic oversight combined with deep India execution capability.

HQ: 1 Corporate Place South, Suite #120, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA  ·  India Hub: Gurugram, Haryana  ·  www.indecaglobal.com  ·  LinkedIn  ·  sales@indecaglobal.com

Ready to build your GCC in India?

Schedule a no-obligation GCC Readiness Assessment with the Indeca GlobalHub team.

References

  1. NASSCOM Strategic Review 2025, Executive Summary.
  2. Inductus, Annual Report 2024 — A GCC Compendium.
  3. Healthark, Rise of Healthcare & Life Sciences GCCs in India, 2023.
  4. ANSR, State of Healthcare & Life Sciences GCCs in India, 2023.
  5. SRKay Consulting, Establishing a GCC in India Report.
  6. Inductus GCC Policies, 2024.
  7. NASSCOM Insights, GCC Trends and India’s Digital Economy.
  8. Industry reports and company disclosures: Novartis, GSK, Sanofi, AstraZeneca, Lilly, Pfizer, BMS.
  9. Everest Group, Global GCC Landscape Reports.
  10. Interviews and secondary research compiled from Economic Times, Business Standard, Mint.

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