Zuzana Piptova-Vrabchev was born in Bratislava, Slovakia, where she graduated the Bulgarian high school. She came to this country under the Erasmus programme and she did some of her SEE surveys with the Sofia University. Zuzana has been living in Bulgaria for 6 years now and at the moment she is manager of one of the three largest Slovak companies here, each one working in a different sphere. Why do Slovak companies opt for Bulgaria in terms of outsourcing? Here is what Zuzana says:
“Luckily, the Bulgarian market or at least certain business spheres are monitored by an international audience. That is why the country tops the rankings of the most interesting ones in the sector of outsourcing. For instance, the latest Gartner report from February says that Bulgaria is one of the places which are stable, as far as policy and economics are concerned. The British outsourcing association said end-2015 that Bulgaria was the best outsourcing destination for the year. The sphere still sees its alignment. The EU expansion of 2004 caused the pulling of such companies from West Europe to Slovakia and the Czech Republic and after the 2007 accession of Romania and Bulgaria the search process of a more interesting business environment has continued in this direction. Bulgaria disposes of really well-prepared multi-lingual HR resources. BASSCOM says that the IT sphere is among the most quickly growing sectors here and the Bulgarian Outsourcing Organization claims that outsourcing today contributes with nearly 4 percent to the GDP of this country."
Which Slovak projects could serve as an example for the Bulgarian institutions?
Administrators and first level technical support, experts in economy, project managers, IT architects and engineers – these are the most wanted men and women by Slovak companies now. President Andrey Kiska attended the opening of the Sofia Tech Park end-2015 with some 40-member delegation of Slovak entrepreneurs, scientific and educational circles’ representatives. That was the initial important step towards new Slovak investments into Bulgaria’s potential.
English version: Zhivko Stanchev
People with motor and visual disabilities in Bulgaria face numerous difficulties in moving around and in their daily lives. But apart from purely physical obstacles, there are also obstacles at the level of access to information and administrative..
"I vote whenever I can and I'm in a place where there is a way to do it," the world-famous Bulgarian violinist and concertmaster of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam Vesko Panteleev-Eshkenazy proudly tells Radio Bulgaria . And today, without..
A few days ago, a space where art, science and magic lend a hand has been opened in Bulgaria's Burgas on the Black Sea coast. Guests of the new Museum of the Impossible are transported to parallel worlds to learn more about the universe. An anti-gravity..
+359 2 9336 661