offshorer

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

From offshore +‎ -er.

Noun

[edit]

offshorer (plural offshorers)

  1. An organization that sends work abroad, hiring foreign labour as a substitute for local labour.
    • 2008, Karl E. Kurbel, The Making of Information Systems:
      Is the offshorer's management committed to send the development offshore? If the offshorer is a software company developing the system for a customer, the customer might object to offshoring.
  2. An organization that accepts offshored work from others.
    • 2012, William J. Rothwell, Carolyn K. Hohne, Stephen B. King, Human Performance Improvement, page 193:
      HPI practitioners can help identify the cultural norms and traditions and can provide training in the work processes that will be shared. We can study any breakdowns that occur between the organization and the offshorer, to determine their root causes and propose solutions to those issues. We can establish measures that can be used to evaluate the performance of the offshorer.