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		<title>Infrastructure Setup for Offshore Development Centres in India</title>
		<link>https://www.ivalueplus.com/infrastructure-setup-for-offshore-development-centres-in-india/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2026 06:30:30 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[A-Z Blogs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Offshore Development Centre]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dedicated development centre setup India]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[India offshore team setup in India]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[infrastructure office setup for ODC in India]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Infrastructure Setup for Offshore Development Centres in India]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IT infrastructure for offshore development centre]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ODC office infrastructure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[odc setup in india]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[offshore development centre]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[offshore development centre setup]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Learn what infrastructure an Offshore Development Centre in India actually needs -from IT and network setup to office, security, and admin readiness. A practical guide for ODC builders.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.ivalueplus.com/infrastructure-setup-for-offshore-development-centres-in-india/">Infrastructure Setup for Offshore Development Centres in India</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.ivalueplus.com">iValuePlus</a>.</p>
]]></description>
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					<div class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">Infrastructure Setup for Offshore Development Centres in India</div>				</div>
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					<h1 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">Infrastructure Setup for Offshore Development Centres in India: What You Need, How It Works, and How to Get It Right</h1>				</div>
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									<p>Most companies that decide to build an Offshore Development Centre in India focus intensely on one question: who are we going to hire?</p><p>That is the right question. It is also the wrong starting point.</p><p>Before your first engineer joins an ODC in India, a substantial amount of operational groundwork must be in place — not partially in place, not in progress, but complete and tested. The physical office must be fit for a production engineering environment. The network must be capable of supporting the specific workloads your team will run. Endpoint devices must be provisioned, configured, and enrolled in your endpoint management system. VPN connectivity to your headquarters systems must be tested. The server room or cloud connectivity infrastructure must be live. Access control must be operational. Compliance registrations must be complete.</p><p>If any of these are not ready on Day 1, your first engineers are not productive on Day 1. They are waiting. And the hiring pipeline you spent weeks building does not generate the output you planned.</p><p>This guide covers what infrastructure an ODC in India actually requires, how to sequence and execute the setup correctly, and what decisions made at the infrastructure stage determine operational performance for the next two to three years of growth.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">What Is an Offshore Development Centre, and Why Does Its Infrastructure Differ from a Standard Office?</h2>				</div>
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									<p>An Offshore Development Centre is a dedicated software development and engineering facility operated in India — typically for a foreign parent company — staffed by engineers, QA professionals, DevOps specialists, or product teams working as an integrated extension of the parent organization&#8217;s technology function.</p><p>Unlike a general-purpose branch office, an ODC places specific performance demands on its infrastructure:</p><p><strong>Network performance is non-negotiable</strong> <br />Engineers working on shared codebases, collaborative development tools (GitHub, GitLab, Jira, Confluence), CI/CD pipelines, and video collaboration platforms require sustained low-latency internet connectivity. A single ISP outage that takes down internet for four hours is not an inconvenience — it is four hours of zero engineering output across an entire team.</p><p><strong>Endpoint security must align with parent company IT policy<br /></strong>Code, product data, and customer data processed at the ODC carry the same compliance obligations as data processed at headquarters. Endpoints must be enrolled in mobile device management (MDM), encrypted, and configured to prevent unauthorized data exfiltration — not just running standard consumer antivirus.</p><p><strong>The server room or cloud connectivity infrastructure must be sized for development workloads<br /></strong>Build servers, test environments, staging systems, and any on-premises tooling require different planning than a general office — more power, more cooling, more network capacity, more redundancy.</p><p><strong>Access control and physical security must be production-grade<br /></strong>An ODC handles intellectual property. Access to server rooms, access to the office itself, and monitoring through CCTV surveillance are compliance requirements for any technology company with meaningful IP or data security obligations.</p><p>These requirements are not add-ons. They are baseline conditions for an ODC to function as the engineering environment it is designed to be. Standard commercial office setups rarely meet them out of the box.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">What is included in infrastructure setup for an Offshore Development Centre in India? </h2>				</div>
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									<p>Infrastructure setup for an ODC in India includes five layers: (1) physical office infrastructure — commercial space selection, workstation setup, ergonomic furniture, conference rooms, and pantry; (2) IT infrastructure — server/cloud configuration, structured cabling, endpoint provisioning, and peripherals; (3) network and connectivity — internet leased line, backup link, Wi-Fi, VPN, and firewall/UTM setup; (4) physical and data security — biometric access control, CCTV, server room security, MDM, and endpoint encryption; (5) operational infrastructure — facility management, admin support, power backup (UPS + DG), and regulatory compliance registration. All five layers must be coordinated simultaneously to avoid sequential delays.</p>								</div>
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					<h3 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">The Five Infrastructure Layers Every ODC in India Requires</h3>				</div>
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									<p><strong>Layer 1: Physical Office Infrastructure</strong></p><p>The physical environment of an ODC is not just workspace — it is the operational foundation on which every other infrastructure layer is built. Getting the physical setup wrong creates cascading problems for IT, network, and security infrastructure.</p><p><strong>Commercial space selection for an ODC</strong></p><p>ODC space requirements differ from general commercial office requirements in several critical ways:</p><ul><li><strong>Power load capacity:</strong> An engineering team&#8217;s IT equipment consumes significantly more power per workstation than a standard office. Server racks, high-performance workstations (common in development environments), UPS systems, and cooling infrastructure for the server room require an electrical load analysis before signing a lease. Many commercial buildings in India have insufficient load capacity for dense IT environments without expensive upgrades.</li><li><strong>Server room viability:</strong> The space must have — or be capable of having — a dedicated server room (or server alcove for smaller setups) with adequate ventilation, cooling, and secure access. Not every commercial floor plate accommodates this without major structural intervention.</li><li><strong>Structural cabling capacity:</strong> Raised floors or sufficient ceiling pathways for extensive LAN cabling are a practical consideration for larger ODCs. Buildings with limited cable management infrastructure create installation complexity and ongoing maintenance issues.</li><li><strong>Lease flexibility for growth:</strong> An ODC that starts at 20 seats and grows to 80 over two years needs either adjacency options (available expansion space on the same floor or building) or a lease structure that allows relocation without penalty. Locking into a space with no headroom is one of the most expensive infrastructure decisions a company can make.</li></ul><p><strong>Workstation and ergonomic fit-out</strong></p><p>Engineering teams spend 8–10 hours daily at their workstations. Ergonomic quality — chair specification, monitor height, keyboard and mouse setup, desk surface area — directly affects productivity and health outcomes over a multi-year engagement. This is not a cost-cutting area.</p><p>For a software development ODC, workstation fit-out typically includes:</p><ul><li>Sit-stand or height-adjustable desks (increasingly standard for engineering environments)</li><li>Multi-monitor arm mounts (most developers work with dual monitors; some roles require three)</li><li>Quality ergonomic chairs with lumbar support rated for extended use</li><li>Acoustic panels or partitions between workstation clusters to reduce noise in open-plan environments</li><li>Dedicated collaboration zones distinct from focus work areas</li></ul><p><strong>Conference and collaboration infrastructure</strong></p><p>ODC teams operate in a hybrid collaboration model — local team in India working synchronously with the parent company team in another timezone. Conference rooms must be equipped for high-quality video conferencing, not the basic webcam-and-laptop setup that is standard in serviced offices. This means:</p><ul><li>Ceiling or bar-mount microphones that capture room audio clearly</li><li>Wide-angle cameras capable of showing all room participants</li><li>Displays sized appropriately for the room (a 65-inch display in a 10-person conference room vs. a 32-inch monitor in a 4-person huddle room)</li><li>Acoustic treatment that prevents echo and ambient noise from degrading call quality</li></ul><p>These are not peripheral considerations. For a team whose primary collaboration channel is video, poor audio-visual infrastructure is a daily operational friction that compounds over months.</p><p><strong>Layer 2: IT Infrastructure</strong></p><p>IT infrastructure for an ODC must be specified before the physical fit-out begins — not after. This sequencing rule is violated constantly, and it is one of the primary causes of ODC launch delays.</p><p>The reason is dependency sequencing: structured LAN cabling must be planned alongside the partition layout. Server room location and power requirements must be confirmed before electrical load planning is finalized. Endpoint specifications must be decided before procurement begins, since high-specification developer laptops have lead times.</p><p><strong>Server room or server rack setup</strong></p><p>Whether the ODC maintains on-premises servers or operates entirely in the cloud, a dedicated server area is necessary. Even cloud-first environments need on-premises networking equipment — switches, firewalls, UPS units, and patch panels — that require a controlled environment.</p><p>For ODCs with on-premises build servers, test environments, or local storage:</p><ul><li>Rack-mounted server infrastructure sized for current load plus 50% growth headroom</li><li>Dedicated UPS with adequate runtime for graceful shutdown during power interruptions</li><li>In-row or room-level cooling adequate for the rack thermal load</li><li>Physical access control to the server room (biometric or keycard, separate from main office access)</li><li>Environmental monitoring — temperature and humidity alerts</li></ul><p>For cloud-based ODCs, the server room simplifies to a managed network rack, but the requirement for controlled environment, adequate power, and physical security remains.</p><p><strong>Structured LAN cabling and network infrastructure</strong></p><p>Wireless connectivity is sufficient for general office use. It is not sufficient as the sole connectivity medium for a software development environment. Engineers running large repository pulls, deploying to staging environments, or streaming high-quality video in collaboration sessions require wired network connectivity with consistent performance.</p><p>Structured cabling specification for an ODC should include:</p><ul><li>CAT6A or CAT6 cabling to each workstation point (CAT5e is not recommended for new installations)</li><li>Network switch placement that minimizes cable run lengths and allows efficient future expansion</li><li>Patch panel organization that makes moves and changes manageable without disrupting active network segments</li><li>Separate VLANs for workstations, server infrastructure, guest access, and IoT/management devices — network segmentation is a security requirement, not just good practice</li></ul><p><strong>Endpoint provisioning</strong></p><p>Endpoints — laptops, desktops, monitors, and peripherals — should be specified by the parent company&#8217;s IT team and procured before hire start dates are confirmed. Common mistakes:</p><ul><li>Procuring endpoints after engineers join, which means engineers wait days or weeks for equipment</li><li>Allowing engineers to use personal devices during the waiting period — a serious endpoint security gap</li><li>Specifying standard business-class hardware when the team is running memory-intensive or compute-intensive development workloads</li></ul><p>High-performance developer workstations in India cost significantly less than equivalent hardware in Western markets, making this an area where the ODC model delivers cost efficiency without compromising tooling quality.</p><p><strong>Layer 3: Network and Connectivity Infrastructure</strong></p><p>Network infrastructure is the highest-stakes, longest-lead-time component of ODC setup. It is also the component most often treated as something to handle &#8220;after the office is ready.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Internet leased line provisioning</strong></p><p>An internet leased line (ILL) — a dedicated, symmetric, uncontended connection from an ISP — is the standard connectivity choice for an ODC. Unlike consumer or business broadband, an ILL guarantees consistent upload and download speeds, which is essential for a team pushing code, accessing cloud environments, and running video collaboration.</p><p>Key considerations:</p><ul><li><strong>Lead time:</strong> ILL provisioning in India typically takes 15–30 working days after order confirmation. This is not negotiable — it is an ISP operational reality. Orders must be placed before or immediately after lease signing, not after fit-out is complete.</li><li><strong>Bandwidth sizing:</strong> 10–20 Mbps per concurrent user is a reasonable baseline for a software development environment. For teams with heavy cloud usage, video conferencing, or CI/CD pipelines, 30+ Mbps per user is more appropriate. Undersizing bandwidth is a productivity constraint that is expensive to fix quickly — ILL upgrades take time.</li><li><strong>Redundancy:</strong> A primary ILL plus a secondary broadband or separate ILL link on a different physical infrastructure path. Single-point connectivity is an unacceptable business continuity risk for a development centre.</li><li><strong>SLA:</strong> Enterprise-grade ILL contracts include uptime SLAs (typically 99.5%–99.9%), support response time commitments, and escalation paths. Consumer-grade broadband does not.</li></ul><p><strong>VPN configuration and secure connectivity</strong></p><p>An ODC&#8217;s engineers must connect to parent company systems — version control, project management tools, internal APIs, staging environments — through a secure, encrypted channel. VPN configuration connects the ODC to headquarters systems in a way that is both secure and performant.</p><p>Common VPN architectures for ODCs:</p><ul><li><strong>Site-to-site VPN:</strong> A persistent encrypted tunnel between the ODC&#8217;s firewall and the headquarters network. All traffic between sites travels through this tunnel. Best for teams with frequent access to on-premises parent company systems.</li><li><strong>Client VPN with split tunneling:</strong> Individual engineers connect to headquarters VPN for access to restricted resources while routing general internet traffic directly. Better for cloud-native environments where most tools are SaaS.</li><li><strong>Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA):</strong> Increasingly adopted for distributed engineering environments. Each access request is authenticated and authorized individually rather than relying on network perimeter trust. More secure than traditional VPN architectures for environments handling sensitive data.</li></ul><p>The choice of architecture should be made by the parent company&#8217;s IT security team — not the local setup vendor. The local infrastructure must be designed to support whichever architecture is chosen.</p><p><strong>Firewall and network security</strong></p><p>An enterprise firewall/UTM (Unified Threat Management) appliance provides application-level traffic inspection, intrusion detection, web content filtering, and network segmentation enforcement. This is standard equipment for any ODC handling client data, proprietary code, or regulated information.</p><p><strong>Layer 4: Physical and Data Security Infrastructure</strong></p><p>Security infrastructure for an ODC serves two distinct purposes that are often conflated: physical security (controlling who can access the facility and monitoring what happens inside) and data security (controlling what data can leave the facility and in what form).</p><p>Both are non-negotiable for a software development centre.</p><p><strong>Physical security</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Biometric access control:</strong> Fingerprint or facial recognition-based access at the main office entry and at the server room. Card-based systems are acceptable but biometric is more appropriate for environments handling sensitive IP. Access logs must be retained and reviewable.</li><li><strong>CCTV surveillance:</strong> Full coverage of workstation areas, server room entrance, main entry and exit, and emergency exits. Footage retention of at least 30 days. Remote access to live feed for management review (with appropriate privacy notice to employees).</li><li><strong>Visitor management:</strong> A formal visitor registration process — not a paper sign-in sheet — with identity verification and host notification. Temporary access badges that are clearly distinguishable from employee access credentials.</li></ul><p><strong>Data security infrastructure</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Endpoint encryption:</strong> Full-disk encryption on all endpoints using BitLocker (Windows) or FileVault (macOS). Required before any production data or code is accessed on the endpoint.</li><li><strong>Mobile Device Management (MDM):</strong> Enrollment of all endpoints in an MDM platform (Microsoft Intune, Jamf, or equivalent) allows remote wipe in the event of loss or theft, policy enforcement, and software inventory management.</li><li><strong>Data Loss Prevention (DLP):</strong> For ODCs handling sensitive client data or regulated information, DLP tools monitor and block unauthorized transfer of sensitive data to external storage, personal email, or cloud storage.</li><li><strong>USB and peripheral control:</strong> Blocking unauthorized USB storage devices is a standard endpoint security control. This is typically enforced through MDM policy or endpoint security software.</li></ul><p><strong>Layer 5: Operational Infrastructure</strong></p><p>Physical, IT, network, and security infrastructure creates a workspace. Operational infrastructure makes it function as a business.</p><p><strong>Power backup — UPS and DG</strong></p><p>Power reliability varies across commercial buildings in India. Even in well-serviced micromarkets in major cities, brief power interruptions occur. For a development centre, an unplanned power cut that takes down servers and endpoints mid-development session is not just inconvenient — it can corrupt active work, interrupt CI/CD pipeline runs, and create data consistency issues in shared environments.</p><ul><li><strong>UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply):</strong> Provides instantaneous power bridging during utility power interruptions. Sizing must be based on actual IT load (server, networking equipment, and workstations), not estimated load. UPS batteries must be tested and replaced on schedule.</li><li><strong>Diesel Generator (DG):</strong> For longer power interruptions, a DG set provides sustained backup power. Most Grade A commercial buildings in India include shared DG backup, but the available load must be confirmed before signing the lease. Some buildings allocate DG load on a shared basis that may be insufficient during peak outage periods.</li></ul>								</div>
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					<h3 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">Facility management and admin support</h3>				</div>
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									<p>A functional ODC requires ongoing operational management that is separate from infrastructure setup:</p><ul><li>Daily housekeeping and common area maintenance</li><li>Pantry stocking and vendor management</li><li>Visitor management and reception</li><li>Asset management — tracking hardware inventory, maintenance schedules, warranty records</li><li>Vendor relationship management — ISP, equipment maintenance, security services</li></ul><p>For companies without an India operations team, engaging an office administration partner alongside the infrastructure setup partner ensures continuity from Day 1 of occupation. iValuePlus&#8217;s <a href="https://www.ivalueplus.com/office-administration/">office administration services</a> cover this operational layer as a continuation of the infrastructure setup engagement.</p><p><strong>Regulatory compliance</strong></p><p>An ODC operating in India must meet several compliance requirements that are often overlooked until they create operational problems:</p><ul><li><strong>Shops and Establishment Act registration:</strong> Required in most Indian states within 30 days of commencing operations. State-specific — the requirements in Karnataka (for a Bengaluru ODC) differ from those in Telangana (Hyderabad) or Haryana (Gurgaon).</li><li><strong>Professional tax registration:</strong> Employer obligation in most Indian states.</li><li><strong>GST registration:</strong> Required if the ODC is a registered Indian entity.</li><li><strong>Data localization requirements:</strong> For ODCs handling regulated data categories (financial data, health data, certain personal data), RBI and forthcoming DPDP (Digital Personal Data Protection) Act provisions may impose data localization obligations on how and where data is stored and processed.</li></ul><p>These compliance items are not infrastructure in the traditional sense, but their absence creates operational and legal risk that can halt operations — making them functionally part of the operational setup.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">ODC Infrastructure Setup vs. GCC Infrastructure Setup</h2>				</div>
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									<p>This is a question that comes up consistently for companies evaluating India expansion options. The answer matters because the infrastructure investment and complexity differ substantially.</p><table><thead><tr><td><p><strong>Infrastructure Dimension</strong></p></td><td><p><strong>ODC Setup</strong></p></td><td><p><strong>GCC Setup</strong></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td><p><strong>Team size at launch</strong></p></td><td><p>Typically 5–30 engineers</p></td><td><p>Typically 50–500+ across functions</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><strong>Office space</strong></p></td><td><p>1 floor, single location</p></td><td><p>Often multiple floors or buildings</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><strong>IT complexity</strong></p></td><td><p>Single server room or cloud-connected rack</p></td><td><p>Dedicated data room, multiple server racks, or private cloud</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><strong>Network redundancy</strong></p></td><td><p>Dual-ISP, site-to-site VPN</p></td><td><p>Dedicated MPLS or SD-WAN, multiple redundant links</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><strong>Security infrastructure</strong></p></td><td><p>Standard enterprise-grade controls</p></td><td><p>Often ISO 27001 or SOC2 compliant environment</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><strong>Compliance overhead</strong></p></td><td><p>Standard commercial lease + labor law</p></td><td><p>Corporate entity setup, transfer pricing, STPI/SEZ registration possible</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><strong>Setup timeline</strong></p></td><td><p>4–8 weeks from lease signing</p></td><td><p>3–6 months</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><strong>Setup investment</strong></p></td><td><p>₹15–40 lakhs (depending on city and fit-out)</p></td><td><p>₹1–5 crore+</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><strong>Best managed by</strong></p></td><td><p>Single infrastructure setup partner</p></td><td><p>Dedicated project team + specialized vendors</p></td></tr><tr><td><p><strong>iValuePlus service</strong></p></td><td><p>Infrastructure setup + ODC engagement</p></td><td><p>GCC setup services</p></td></tr></tbody></table><p>An ODC is a deliberate, lower-complexity entry point — a production-ready engineering environment that can be operational quickly and scaled toward a full GCC as the team grows and the operating model matures. iValuePlus&#8217;s <a href="https://www.ivalueplus.com/offshore-development-centre/">Offshore Development Centre model</a> is specifically designed as a Pre-GCC launchpad — a 5–10 person pilot pod that validates processes, performance, and cultural fit before committing to a larger infrastructure investment.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">How long does it take to set up an Offshore Development Centre in India? </h2>				</div>
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									<p>With a single managed infrastructure partner coordinating all workstreams in parallel, an ODC of 10–30 engineers can be operational in 5–8 weeks from lease signing. The critical path is internet leased line provisioning (15–30 working days) and IT infrastructure setup (2–3 weeks after cabling is complete). Without coordinated project management, sequential vendor execution extends this to 3–5 months. Pre-work — requirement analysis, city and space selection — should begin 4–6 weeks before lease signing to avoid delaying the infrastructure timeline.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">The ODC Infrastructure Setup Process: A Sequenced Workflow</h2>				</div>
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									<p>Understanding the correct execution sequence is as important as understanding what needs to be done. Most ODC launch delays trace back to incorrect sequencing — specifically, starting later-stage activities before earlier-stage dependencies are resolved.</p><p><strong>Stage 1: Requirement and Specification (Weeks –4 to –2, before lease signing)</strong></p><ul><li>Define team composition and 18-month growth projection</li><li>Specify IT infrastructure requirements with parent company IT team: endpoint spec, network architecture, VPN model, MDM platform, security policies</li><li>Confirm server room requirements (on-premises vs. cloud-connected)</li><li>Define security and compliance requirements</li><li>Produce infrastructure specification document</li></ul><p>This stage must complete before lease negotiation, because the infrastructure specification determines which spaces are viable and which are not.</p><p><strong>Stage 2: Space Scouting and Lease Negotiation (Weeks –3 to –1)</strong></p><ul><li>Shortlist commercial spaces that meet infrastructure requirements (power load, server room viability, cabling infrastructure)</li><li>Assess total cost of occupancy including fit-out investment required</li><li>Negotiate lease terms with infrastructure requirements in mind (fit-out approval, electrical upgrade rights, server room exclusivity)</li><li>Sign lease</li></ul><p><strong>Stage 3: Infrastructure Procurement and Order Placement (Week 1 of lease)</strong></p><ul><li>Place internet leased line order immediately on lease signing — this is the longest lead-time item</li><li>Place IT hardware procurement orders (servers, network equipment, endpoints, UPS)</li><li>Commission fit-out contractor and align workstation layout with structured cabling plan</li><li>Commission security infrastructure vendor</li></ul><p><strong>Stage 4: Physical Fit-Out and Cabling (Weeks 2–4)</strong></p><ul><li>Partition and layout build-out</li><li>False ceiling, lighting, and flooring</li><li>Structured LAN cabling installation (must be completed before active networking equipment can be installed)</li><li>Server room construction (rack installation, cooling, power distribution)</li><li>UPS installation and electrical load balancing</li></ul><p><strong>Stage 5: IT and Network Infrastructure Installation (Weeks 3–5, overlapping with fit-out)</strong></p><ul><li>Switch, patch panel, and network equipment installation (after cabling complete)</li><li>Firewall/UTM configuration and VPN setup</li><li>Server setup or cloud connectivity configuration</li><li>Internet leased line termination and connectivity testing (typically arrives end of Week 4 or beginning of Week 5)</li><li>Endpoint unboxing, imaging, and MDM enrollment</li></ul><p><strong>Stage 6: Security Infrastructure Installation (Weeks 4–5)</strong></p><ul><li>Biometric access control installation at entry points and server room</li><li>CCTV system installation and configuration</li><li>Remote monitoring access configuration</li></ul><p><strong>Stage 7: Operational Readiness and Testing (Week 6)</strong></p><ul><li>End-to-end connectivity testing: workstation → LAN → VPN → headquarters systems</li><li>Video conferencing room testing with headquarters team</li><li>UPS load testing</li><li>Backup internet failover testing</li><li>Access control and CCTV functional testing</li><li>Facility management vendor onboarding</li><li>Compliance registration filing (Shops and Establishment Act)</li></ul><p><strong>Stage 8: Handover and First-Team Occupation (Week 7–8)</strong></p><ul><li>IT documentation package: network diagrams, equipment inventory, vendor contacts, ISP account details, MDM enrollment credentials</li><li>Admin briefing for client&#8217;s internal team or ongoing admin partner</li><li>Snag resolution for any outstanding deficiencies</li><li>First engineers occupy the office</li></ul><p>This workflow assumes a single coordinating partner managing Stages 3–7 simultaneously across all workstreams. The sequential delay risk — each stage waiting for the previous one to complete — is the primary source of the 3–5 month timelines seen in self-managed ODC setups.</p>								</div>
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									<p data-start="394" data-end="669">Most ODC delays happen because infrastructure, IT, security, and operations are managed separately.<br data-start="493" data-end="496" />iValuePlus delivers coordinated end-to-end ODC infrastructure setup — helping companies launch development teams faster, securely, and with complete operational readiness.</p><p data-start="671" data-end="732"><a href="https://www.ivalueplus.com/contact-us/">Talk to our team</a> about your India ODC setup requirements.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">Infrastructure Checklist for an Offshore Development Centre in India</h2>				</div>
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									<p>Use this checklist to assess whether an ODC infrastructure plan is complete before execution begins.</p><p><strong>Physical Office:</strong></p><ul><li>Commercial space assessed for power load capacity (not just floor area)</li><li>Server room viability confirmed (ventilation, cooling, access control)</li><li>Workstation layout designed for team composition and growth headroom</li><li>Ergonomic furniture specified for engineering team use</li><li>Conference rooms designed with AV infrastructure for video collaboration</li></ul><p><strong>IT Infrastructure:</strong></p><ul><li>Endpoint specification defined by parent company IT team</li><li>Server room or cloud-connected rack requirements confirmed</li><li>Structured cabling specification aligned with network and layout plan</li><li>IT hardware procurement orders placed before fit-out begins</li><li>MDM platform selected and enrollment process defined</li></ul><p><strong>Network and Connectivity:</strong></p><ul><li>Internet leased line ordered on Day 1 of lease</li><li>Backup internet connectivity ordered (separate ISP or infrastructure path)</li><li>Bandwidth sized for team&#8217;s development workload, not general office use</li><li>VPN architecture selected and configured</li><li>Network segmentation (VLANs) designed for workstations, servers, guest, and IoT</li></ul><p><strong>Security:</strong></p><ul><li>Biometric access control specified for main entry and server room</li><li>CCTV coverage plan includes all workstation areas, entry/exit, server room</li><li>Endpoint encryption policy defined and enforcement mechanism confirmed</li><li>MDM enrollment mandatory before any device accesses company systems</li><li>DLP requirements assessed based on data sensitivity</li></ul><p><strong>Operational:</strong></p><ul><li>UPS sized for actual IT load (tested, not estimated)</li><li>DG backup availability confirmed with building management (load allocation)</li><li>Facility management vendor identified before occupation date</li><li>Shops and Establishment Act registration timeline confirmed</li><li>Admin support in place for Day 1 occupation</li></ul>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">Security and Compliance Considerations for ODC Infrastructure in India</h2>				</div>
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									<p>Security is not a phase of ODC infrastructure setup. It is a design requirement that applies to every other layer.</p><p><strong>Data security by design</strong></p><p>An ODC that handles source code, client data, or regulated personal information must treat data security as an infrastructure requirement from the specification stage. The specific controls depend on what data the ODC processes, but baseline requirements include:</p><ul><li>Full-disk encryption on all endpoints (pre-deployment, not post-deployment)</li><li>Network segmentation that isolates development workloads from general office traffic</li><li>VPN or ZTNA for all access to parent company systems</li><li>USB device control to prevent unauthorized data transfer</li><li>Data retention and deletion policies aligned with parent company data governance</li></ul><p><strong>India&#8217;s Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act</strong></p><p>India&#8217;s DPDP Act, which is progressively coming into force, imposes obligations on data fiduciaries (entities that determine the purpose and means of data processing) operating in India. For ODCs processing personal data of Indian citizens as part of their software development work — including test data, user data in staging environments, or HR data — compliance obligations under the DPDP Act need to be understood and designed into data handling practices from the outset.</p><p>This is not a reason to delay ODC setup. It is a reason to ensure that the infrastructure setup partner has awareness of the regulatory environment and can advise on data handling requirements as part of the setup process.</p><p><strong>ISO 27001 alignment for larger ODCs</strong></p><p>For ODCs that will seek formal security certification — either because a parent company requires it or because the ODC serves clients with information security requirements — designing the infrastructure to align with ISO 27001 controls from the beginning is significantly less expensive than retrofitting compliance controls after the fact. Key alignment areas include: access control policy (supporting biometric access and access log retention), network security (supporting firewall, VPN, and network segmentation controls), and asset management (supporting endpoint inventory and lifecycle management).</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">Common Mistakes in ODC Infrastructure Setup That Delay Launch and Degrade Performance</h2>				</div>
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									<p><strong>Starting IT specification too late</strong></p><p>The single most common ODC launch delay is beginning IT infrastructure specification after the lease is signed. IT requirements determine which spaces are viable. Starting specification after space selection locks the team into whatever infrastructure the chosen space can support — which may not be what the ODC actually needs.</p><p><strong>Undersizing bandwidth</strong></p><p>Bandwidth that is adequate for 20 engineers today is inadequate for 40 engineers in six months. Upgrading an internet leased line takes time and causes service disruption. Sizing for 18-month projected headcount is consistently more cost-effective than repeated upgrades.</p><p><strong>Single-ISP connectivity</strong></p><p>A single internet connection — regardless of how good the SLA is — is a single point of failure for a development centre. ISP outages happen. Physical infrastructure failures happen. A second connection on a separate physical path is standard practice for any environment where downtime has a direct cost in engineering output.</p><p><strong>Treating security as post-setup</strong></p><p>Endpoint encryption, MDM enrollment, and VPN configuration cannot be deployed retroactively without disruption. They must be part of the endpoint build process — the image applied to every device before it is assigned to an engineer. Retrofitting security controls on endpoints that engineers are actively using causes work disruption and frequently results in incomplete compliance.</p><p><strong>No scalability planning</strong></p><p>An ODC that grows from 15 to 50 engineers in 18 months will need more network capacity, more power, more server room space, and more workstations. If the initial setup consumes 100% of available electrical load, adding workstations requires expensive electrical upgrades. If the server rack is full, adding infrastructure requires lease negotiation or relocation. Building headroom into the initial setup — typically 20–30% across electrical, network, and physical capacity — costs marginally more upfront and saves substantially more in growth friction.</p><p><strong>Fragmenting vendor responsibility</strong></p><p>When the fit-out contractor, the IT vendor, the ISP, and the security vendor all have separate contracts with the client and no coordination mechanism between them, their workstreams conflict. Cabling routes get blocked. Server room dimensions conflict with the partition layout. IT equipment arrives before the network cabling is complete. A single coordinating partner who manages all vendors under one accountability structure eliminates this failure mode.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">How iValuePlus Delivers ODC Infrastructure Setup in India</h2>				</div>
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									<p>iValuePlus provides end-to-end <a href="https://www.ivalueplus.com/infrastructure-setup/">office infrastructure setup services</a> designed specifically for the complexity of setting up a technology development environment in India — not generic commercial office fit-out.</p><p>The engagement model covers all five infrastructure layers described in this article, coordinated under a single point of accountability:</p><ul><li><strong>Requirement analysis:</strong> A structured discovery that covers team composition, IT specifications, parent company IT policy requirements, security and compliance needs, city preferences, and budget — producing the specification document that drives every downstream decision.</li><li><strong>Office scouting and lease support:</strong> Commercial space evaluation against technical infrastructure requirements — not just size and cost. Lease negotiation support with Indian property law context and operational risk awareness.</li><li><strong>Infrastructure management:</strong> Coordination of physical fit-out, IT infrastructure procurement and installation, structured cabling, internet connectivity provisioning, power backup installation, and access control and CCTV setup — executed as a coordinated scope with a single project timeline.</li><li><strong>IT infrastructure integration:</strong> iValuePlus&#8217;s <a href="https://www.ivalueplus.com/it-infrastructure/">IT infrastructure services</a> extend the setup engagement into server configuration, endpoint provisioning, VPN and network security setup, and MDM enrollment — delivering a production-ready engineering environment rather than just a furnished office.</li><li><strong>Operational handover:</strong> IT documentation, vendor register, facility management briefing, and compliance registration support ensure the ODC is fully operational at handover — not technically complete but administratively unfinished.</li></ul><p>For companies using the ODC as a Pre-GCC launchpad, iValuePlus&#8217;s <a href="https://www.ivalueplus.com/offshore-development-centre/">Offshore Development Centre engagement model</a> combines infrastructure setup with the HR, hiring, payroll, and delivery management support that a growing offshore team requires. The path from a 10-person ODC to a structured <a href="https://www.ivalueplus.com/global-capability-centre/">Global Capability Centre</a> is built into the engagement model — with infrastructure scaled progressively as the team grows.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">What is the cost of infrastructure setup for an Offshore Development Centre in India? </h2>				</div>
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									<p>Infrastructure setup costs for an ODC in India vary significantly by team size, city, fit-out standard, and IT complexity. As a general benchmark: a 15–25 workstation ODC with full IT infrastructure, network, security, and power backup in a Tier 1 Indian city (Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Pune, NCR) typically costs ₹18–40 lakhs (approximately USD 22,000–48,000) in one-time setup investment, excluding ongoing monthly operational costs. Plug-and-play or managed workspace configurations cost less upfront but offer limited customization. Build-to-suit setups with custom security or compliance requirements cost more. Ongoing monthly operational costs — facility management, IT support, admin — are typically ₹2–5 lakhs per month for a team of 20–30.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">Scalability Planning: Designing ODC Infrastructure for Growth</h2>				</div>
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									<p>The infrastructure decisions made at ODC launch constrain or enable growth for the next two to three years. Scalability planning is not a secondary consideration — it is part of the initial infrastructure specification.</p><p><strong>Network capacity</strong></p><p>Design the network for 18-month projected headcount. This means:</p><ul><li>Switch port capacity for the projected number of endpoints (not current endpoints)</li><li>Bandwidth sized for the projected concurrent users (not current users)</li><li>VPN capacity that handles the projected number of simultaneous sessions</li><li>VLAN architecture that accommodates additional team segments without redesign</li></ul><p><strong>Electrical capacity</strong></p><p>Identify the maximum electrical load the space supports and design the initial setup to use no more than 70–75% of that capacity. This provides headroom for additional workstations, servers, and UPS expansion without requiring load enhancement works (which require building management engagement and take time).</p><p><strong>Physical workstation capacity</strong></p><p>The optimal approach for most ODCs is a 15–20% workstation buffer — more workstations installed than current team size, with network points active at every position. When new engineers join, they have day-one workstations rather than waiting for procurement and installation.</p><p><strong>Server room headroom</strong></p><p>A server room designed for 2 racks that is 80% full on Day 1 is a constraint on infrastructure growth. Initial design should include at least one full rack of empty space for future expansion.</p><p><strong>Lease structure</strong></p><p>Adjacency rights — the right of first refusal on adjacent office space — should be negotiated into the lease if the building has available adjacent units. This gives the ODC the option to expand within the same building and floor without relocation.</p>								</div>
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					<h2 class="elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default">FAQ</h2>				</div>
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									<p><strong>How do I set up infrastructure for an Offshore Development Centre in India?</strong> <br />Begin with a structured requirements exercise that covers team composition, IT specifications, security requirements, and city preferences. Engage an infrastructure setup partner who can manage all workstreams — physical, IT, network, security, and operational — in parallel. Place the internet leased line order on Day 1 of the lease. Complete IT specification before selecting office space. Target a 6–8 week setup timeline from lease signing to operational handover.</p><p><strong>What IT infrastructure does an ODC in India need?</strong> <br />At minimum: structured LAN cabling to every workstation, enterprise switches and a managed patch panel, a firewall/UTM, primary and backup internet connectivity, VPN connectivity to headquarters, endpoints provisioned and enrolled in MDM, a server room or cloud-connected rack for networking equipment, and UPS protection for all IT infrastructure. For ODCs with on-premises workloads: rack-mounted servers sized for development loads, dedicated cooling, and physical access control to the server room.</p><p><strong>How is ODC infrastructure setup different from GCC infrastructure setup?</strong> <br />An ODC is smaller, faster to set up, and lower-complexity than a GCC. An ODC typically serves 5–50 engineers on a single floor; a GCC serves hundreds across multiple floors or buildings and often pursues formal security certifications. ODC setup takes 4–8 weeks; GCC setup takes 3–6 months. The infrastructure investment differs by an order of magnitude. Many companies use an ODC as a Pre-GCC stage — validating team performance before committing to full GCC infrastructure investment.</p><p><strong>What security infrastructure is required for an ODC in India?</strong> <br />Physical security: biometric access control at office entry and server room, CCTV surveillance of workstation areas and entry/exit points. Data security: full-disk endpoint encryption, MDM enrollment on all devices, USB device control, VPN or ZTNA for all access to company systems, and network segmentation. For ODCs handling regulated data: DLP tools and alignment with applicable compliance frameworks (ISO 27001, SOC 2, DPDP Act).</p><p><strong>How long does ODC infrastructure setup in India take?</strong> <br />With a coordinated managed setup partner, 5–8 weeks from lease signing to operational handover for a 10–30 person ODC. The longest lead-time item is internet leased line provisioning: 15–30 working days from order. Pre-work (requirement specification, space scouting) should begin 4–6 weeks before lease signing. Self-managed multi-vendor setups typically take 3–5 months.</p><p><strong>What are the biggest mistakes in ODC setup in India?</strong> <br />The five most common: (1) starting IT specification after lease signing rather than before, (2) ordering internet connectivity after fit-out is complete, (3) single-ISP connectivity with no backup link, (4) no scalability headroom in network, power, or physical capacity, and (5) fragmenting vendor responsibility across uncoordinated parties with no single accountable owner.</p><p><strong>Can a foreign company set up ODC infrastructure in India without a local presence?</strong> <br />Yes, with the right managed infrastructure partner. A company with no existing India presence can engage a partner like iValuePlus to execute the full infrastructure setup — from requirement analysis and space scouting through IT installation and operational handover — without requiring internal India operations capability. The partner acts as the local execution layer until the company&#8217;s own India operations team is in place.</p><p><strong>What ongoing operational support does an ODC need after setup?</strong> <br />Ongoing support requirements include: facility management (housekeeping, vendor management, asset maintenance), IT support (helpdesk, endpoint management, network monitoring), HR and payroll support for the India team, and admin coordination. These can be provided by the same partner that executed the setup or by a specialist facility management firm — the key is ensuring continuity of vendor relationships and institutional knowledge built during the setup phase.</p>								</div>
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