What's new

Microsoft ‘ends’ operations in Pakistan after 25 years

Devadwal

Senior Test Player
Joined
Dec 15, 2020
Runs
27,751
Microsoft has announced it will halt all operations in Pakistan, citing increasing political instability and regulatory risks.

This marks a major blow to the tech ecosystem—leaving businesses, startups, and digital professionals navigating an uncertain future.

Former president Arif Alvi says decision 'troubling sign' for Pakistan


-------------------------

Microsoft ‘ends’ operations in Pakistan after 25 years

Tech software giant Microsoft has shut down all operations in Pakistan, according to media reports on Thursday.

The report comes just a day after Seattle Times reported that Microsoft had announced it was laying off as much as 4%, or roughly 9,100, of its employees in the largest round of job cuts since 2023.

The tech giant was planning to cut thousands of jobs, particularly in sales, according to a Bloomberg News report in June. Microsoft had also announced layoffs in May, which affected around 6,000 employees.

According to reports, Microsoft has never had a full presence in Pakistan — only liaison offices that served enterprise, government, education, and consumer customers.

Describing the decision as a “troubling sign” for Pakistan’s future, former president Arif Alvi said Microsoft chief Bill Gates once had plans to make a major investment in Pakistan.

However, “regime change upended those plans, and the promise of investment slipped away. By October 2022, Microsoft chose Vietnam for its expansion, a decision in which they had initially favored Pakistan. The opportunity was lost,” he wrote in a post on X.

“Pakistan now spirals in a whirlpool of uncertainty. There is increasing joblessness, our talent is migrating abroad, purchasing power has reduced, economic recovery in the ‘awami’ context feels like a distant and elusive dream,” former president added.

Meanwhile in a post on LinkedIn, Microsoft Pakistan’s former founding country manager Jawwad Rehman said, “This is more than a corporate exit.”

“It’s a sobering signal of the environment our country has created.. one where even global giants like Microsoft find it unsustainable to stay. It also reflects on what was done (or not done) with the strong foundation we left behind by the subsequent team and regional management of Microsoft.”

Habibullah Khan, founder and CEO of design studio Penumbra, said on X the decision came as no surprise.

Microsoft’s revenue from Pakistan would have been $50 million, which Khan estimated at .018% of Microsoft’s global revenue, coupled with the fact that they have been cutting costs and laying people off.

He explained that Microsoft “supplies from Turkey and invoices from Ireland” and “had dramatically reduced head count in Pakistan already, so their relationship with Pakistan was very tenuous”.

‘Microsoft reviewing future of its liaison office in Pakistan’

The global pivot from on-premise software (transactional deals) to Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) (recurring revenue) continues to reshape how technology firms structure their international operations. Microsoft is no exception.

Over the past few years the company has shifted licensing and commercial-contract management for Pakistan to its European hub in Ireland, while day-to-day service delivery here has been handled entirely by its certified local partners.

This was stated by the IT ministry in a statement issued later during the day.

“Against that backdrop, we understand Microsoft is now reviewing the future of its liaison office in Pakistan as part of a wider workforce-optimisation programme.

“This would reflect a long-signalled strategy, consolidating direct headcount and moving toward a partner-led, cloud-based delivery model, rather than a retreat from the Pakistani market,” it said.

The ministry said the government would continue to engage Microsoft’s regional and global leadership to “ensure that any structural changes strengthen, rather than diminish, Microsoft’s long term commitment to Pakistani customers, developers and channel partners”.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
You don't do business for charity or out of the goodness of your heart. You do business for profit. Microsoft or any other company will do what they deem profitable.

Anyways, won't you guys blame this as well on Modi, BJP, RSS, Hindutva?​
 
Microsoft: Bye
Uber: Gone
Careem: Out
HSBC: Toodles
Barclays & RBS: Vanished

This is what happened when there is no stability in the country and country run by Millitary instead a stable government.

Realse Imran Khan, Curb down the establishment role and held a fair elections without Establishment involvement .

More important act against non State actors , forget about Kashmir card and improve the relation with india Otherwise No IMF bailout, Chinese trapped investment saved Pakistan .
:kp
 
It's a country where the airforce uses pirated Windows to give presentation to world media. This was bound to happen.

This is a country which does Bhangra over dozens of military bases being obliterated by enemy and confers Failed Marshal honour to an Army General who lost the war.
 
Who cares about monetary aspects or technical knowledge. All we care is ummah.
 
You don't do business for charity or out of the goodness of your heart. You do business for profit. Microsoft or any other company will do what they deem profitable.

Anyways, won't you guys blame this as well on Modi, BJP, RSS, Hindutva?​


Ok. It's BJP's fault, Modi and RSS are lunatics driving the subcontinent to the brink of anarchy.

Happy? Congrats you got the thread off to a great start.
 
Ok. It's BJP's fault, Modi and RSS are lunatics driving the subcontinent to the brink of anarchy.

Happy? Congrats you got the thread off to a great start.
I do believe that will be the honest opinion of many common Pakistanis who create conspiracy theories in every single matter.
 
Microsoft has announced it will halt all operations in Pakistan, citing increasing political instability and regulatory risks.

This marks a major blow to the tech ecosystem—leaving businesses, startups, and digital professionals navigating an uncertain future.

Former president Arif Alvi says decision 'troubling sign' for Pakistan


-------------------------

Microsoft ‘ends’ operations in Pakistan after 25 years

Tech software giant Microsoft has shut down all operations in Pakistan, according to media reports on Thursday.

The report comes just a day after Seattle Times reported that Microsoft had announced it was laying off as much as 4%, or roughly 9,100, of its employees in the largest round of job cuts since 2023.

The tech giant was planning to cut thousands of jobs, particularly in sales, according to a Bloomberg News report in June. Microsoft had also announced layoffs in May, which affected around 6,000 employees.

According to reports, Microsoft has never had a full presence in Pakistan — only liaison offices that served enterprise, government, education, and consumer customers.

Describing the decision as a “troubling sign” for Pakistan’s future, former president Arif Alvi said Microsoft chief Bill Gates once had plans to make a major investment in Pakistan.

However, “regime change upended those plans, and the promise of investment slipped away. By October 2022, Microsoft chose Vietnam for its expansion, a decision in which they had initially favored Pakistan. The opportunity was lost,” he wrote in a post on X.

“Pakistan now spirals in a whirlpool of uncertainty. There is increasing joblessness, our talent is migrating abroad, purchasing power has reduced, economic recovery in the ‘awami’ context feels like a distant and elusive dream,” former president added.

Meanwhile in a post on LinkedIn, Microsoft Pakistan’s former founding country manager Jawwad Rehman said, “This is more than a corporate exit.”

“It’s a sobering signal of the environment our country has created.. one where even global giants like Microsoft find it unsustainable to stay. It also reflects on what was done (or not done) with the strong foundation we left behind by the subsequent team and regional management of Microsoft.”

Habibullah Khan, founder and CEO of design studio Penumbra, said on X the decision came as no surprise.

Microsoft’s revenue from Pakistan would have been $50 million, which Khan estimated at .018% of Microsoft’s global revenue, coupled with the fact that they have been cutting costs and laying people off.

He explained that Microsoft “supplies from Turkey and invoices from Ireland” and “had dramatically reduced head count in Pakistan already, so their relationship with Pakistan was very tenuous”.

‘Microsoft reviewing future of its liaison office in Pakistan’

The global pivot from on-premise software (transactional deals) to Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) (recurring revenue) continues to reshape how technology firms structure their international operations. Microsoft is no exception.

Over the past few years the company has shifted licensing and commercial-contract management for Pakistan to its European hub in Ireland, while day-to-day service delivery here has been handled entirely by its certified local partners.

This was stated by the IT ministry in a statement issued later during the day.

“Against that backdrop, we understand Microsoft is now reviewing the future of its liaison office in Pakistan as part of a wider workforce-optimisation programme.

“This would reflect a long-signalled strategy, consolidating direct headcount and moving toward a partner-led, cloud-based delivery model, rather than a retreat from the Pakistani market,” it said.

The ministry said the government would continue to engage Microsoft’s regional and global leadership to “ensure that any structural changes strengthen, rather than diminish, Microsoft’s long term commitment to Pakistani customers, developers and channel partners”.


What the ???? Why in the world would Microsoft be in a country like Pakistan in the first place anyway....

Lol
 
Liked and loved by three hindutvas already. Then they will complain that Pakistanis are blaming India before any Pakistani has even commented.
Not a single post about what the actual reason of big company leaving Pakistan instead as usual crying about hindutva . :kp
 
Not a single post about what the actual reason of big company leaving Pakistan instead as usual crying about hindutva . :kp
Seems to be this

"The statement suggests that political instability and economic uncertainty might be the reasons behind this exit. Unstable currency, high taxes, political problems, and complex trading methods cause big companies to step back. Microsoft faced the same thing; it was getting difficult for them to operate in Pakistan, as the government kept changing, and there was unrest in the country. "


Am really interested to know "complex trading methods".I guess its high levels of corruption
 
"The report comes just a day after Seattle Times reported that Microsoft had announced it was laying off as much as 4%, or roughly 9,100, of its employees in the largest round of job cuts since 2023."

"According to reports, Microsoft has never had a full presence in Pakistan — only liaison offices that served enterprise, government, education, and consumer customers."

"Microsoft’s revenue from Pakistan would have been $50 million, which Khan estimated at .018% of Microsoft’s global revenue, coupled with the fact that they have been cutting costs and laying people off."

“This would reflect a long-signalled strategy, consolidating direct headcount and moving toward a partner-led, cloud-based delivery model, rather than a retreat from the Pakistani market,”

Above four sentences explain the change of direction for Microsoft.

Usual suspects can crawl back. It's capitalism at work.
 
Microsoft: Bye
Uber: Gone
Careem: Out
HSBC: Toodles
Barclays & RBS: Vanished

This is what happened when there is no stability in the country and country run by Millitary instead a stable government.

Realse Imran Khan, Curb down the establishment role and held a fair elections without Establishment involvement .

More important act against non State actors , forget about Kashmir card and improve the relation with india Otherwise No IMF bailout, Chinese trapped investment saved Pakistan .
:kp
This is a very good post and sums up everything.
 
"The report comes just a day after Seattle Times reported that Microsoft had announced it was laying off as much as 4%, or roughly 9,100, of its employees in the largest round of job cuts since 2023."

"According to reports, Microsoft has never had a full presence in Pakistan — only liaison offices that served enterprise, government, education, and consumer customers."

"Microsoft’s revenue from Pakistan would have been $50 million, which Khan estimated at .018% of Microsoft’s global revenue, coupled with the fact that they have been cutting costs and laying people off."

“This would reflect a long-signalled strategy, consolidating direct headcount and moving toward a partner-led, cloud-based delivery model, rather than a retreat from the Pakistani market,”

Above four sentences explain the change of direction for Microsoft.

Usual suspects can crawl back. It's capitalism at work.

Every top corporation goes through restructuring, Indians should know this well when their slave labour is usually the first casualty as a big part of the cost cutting.
 
Every top corporation goes through restructuring, Indians should know this well when their slave labour is usually the first casualty as a big part of the cost cutting.
But microsoft is thriving in India
 
Pakistanis poster delusional has reached at another level . 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 :kp
Its all about optics in marketing. Imagine what kind of signal it will be " Microsoft winding down its business as is does not see much opportunities to improve and can't take losses any more ".For any developing country, objective has to grab the company investment inch by inch and make it good enough to lure others.its not about percentage of Microsoft , its all about the lost opportunities for pak.guys are getting emotional and not looking from marketing perspective.
 
Nobody cares, let’s end poverty in the country first. Pakistan has bigger problems.
It's a country where the airforce uses pirated Windows to give presentation to world media. This was bound to happen.

This is a country which does Bhangra over dozens of military bases being obliterated by enemy and confers Failed Marshal honour to an Army General who lost the war.
The same Airforce that grounded your planes? The same airforce that forced you to escalate because you can’t come within 300kms of the border?

Are you insecure?
 
Its all about optics in marketing. Imagine what kind of signal it will be " Microsoft winding down its business as is does not see much opportunities to improve and can't take losses any more ".For any developing country, objective has to grab the company investment inch by inch and make it good enough to lure others.its not about percentage of Microsoft , its all about the lost opportunities for pak.guys are getting emotional and not looking from marketing perspective.
I already name the company which already left from Pakistan , more will left in the future if situation doesn't improve .

No one want to invest in a country where no political stability. India is becoming the hub of tech , investment etc while Whatever ( Hardly any) is left in Pakistan is going Away.

:kp
 
1st time heard Microsoft existed in Pakistan.... Microsoft and other multinationals winding up their business from Pakistan. It indicates Lawyers and order has totally failed in Pakistan.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
1st time heard Microsoft existed in Pakistan.... Microsoft and other multinationals winding up their business from Pakistan. It indicates Lawyers and order has totally failed in Pakistan.

More likely Pakistan is moving towards Chinese tech as part of the new world order led by the global south where China will be the big hitters with support from Iran, Russia and the Gulf countries.

Just as the western world kicked out Chinese tech companies for fear of spying, this is Pakistan doing the same thing with USA tech companies with their back door spyware potential. Pakistan is saying thanks for your cooperation to US companies, but we will politely decline any further investment.
 
I already name the company which already left from Pakistan , more will left in the future if situation doesn't improve .

No one want to invest in a country where no political stability. India is becoming the hub of tech , investment etc while Whatever ( Hardly any) is left in Pakistan is going Away.

:kp
This guy speaking some sense finally.

It’s all about optics in marketing. Imagine what kind of signal it will be " Microsoft winding down its business as is does not see much opportunities to improve and can't take losses any more ".For any developing country, objective has to grab the company investment inch by inch and make it good enough to lure others.its not about percentage of Microsoft , its all about the lost opportunities for pak.guys are getting emotional and not looking from marketing perspective.
Snide remarks about religion, then a balanced post. The many heads (and faces) of Shiva. Is this Hindu cosmological, philosophical symbolism🤔
 
More likely Pakistan is moving towards Chinese tech as part of the new world order led by the global south where China will be the big hitters with support from Iran, Russia and the Gulf countries.

Just as the western world kicked out Chinese tech companies for fear of spying, this is Pakistan doing the same thing with USA tech companies with their back door spyware potential. Pakistan is saying thanks for your cooperation to US companies, but we will politely decline any further investment.
This guys don't know anything about business, investment , technology etc. Maybe you should only Focus on Muslim Ummah. :kp
 
This guys don't know anything about business, investment , technology etc. Maybe you should only Focus on Muslim Ummah. :kp
I don't think you do!!

Microsoft is going through a restructure and as Pakistan is a very small market for Microsoft so they decided to remove the head count, all the work will be done via partners. With AI coming on leaps and bounds, thats the model Microsoft will eventually employ elsewhere too.

And why are Indians so concerned for Pakistan btw :LOL:
 
More likely Pakistan is moving towards Chinese tech as part of the new world order led by the global south where China will be the big hitters with support from Iran, Russia and the Gulf countries.

Just as the western world kicked out Chinese tech companies for fear of spying, this is Pakistan doing the same thing with USA tech companies with their back door spyware potential. Pakistan is saying thanks for your cooperation to US companies, but we will politely decline any further investment.

As per you China-Pakistan tech companies will beat all US giants tech companies... then China must have declared Pakistan as 4th larges economy in the world
 
This guys don't know anything about business, investment , technology etc. Maybe you should only Focus on Muslim Ummah. :kp

You are addressing a Brit firstly, I am merely commenting on this topic which was posted by an Indian. I can't help it if you post topics about Pakistan. It is not about Ummah, this is just a fever which has infected your brain cells the longer you obsess on these things.

Let me tell you, when it came to Chinese tech, we Brits did not care about investment or superior tech. We got rid of Huawei because we don't trust the Chinese. This will be the same for the Pakistanis re US tech. I realise you are probably from the Gujarati community where everything comes down to profit and loss, but we Brits have other considerations, and looks like Pakistan does too.
 
More likely Pakistan is moving towards Chinese tech as part of the new world order led by the global south where China will be the big hitters with support from Iran, Russia and the Gulf countries.

Just as the western world kicked out Chinese tech companies for fear of spying, this is Pakistan doing the same thing with USA tech companies with their back door spyware potential. Pakistan is saying thanks for your cooperation to US companies, but we will politely decline any further investment.

As per you China-Pakistan tech companies will beat all US giants tech companies... then China must have declared Pakistan as 4th largest economy
 
As per you China-Pakistan tech companies will beat all US giants tech companies... then China must have declared Pakistan as 4th largest economy

I didn't say China-Pakistan will beat all US giants tech companies. I said trade is shifting to the south and that will make the south more important, hence the BRICS initiative. China and Pakistan will do what is important for them, same way as we Brits do what is important for us regardless of how good any foreign nations tech is.
 
You are addressing a Brit firstly, I am merely commenting on this topic which was posted by an Indian. I can't help it if you post topics about Pakistan. It is not about Ummah, this is just a fever which has infected your brain cells the longer you obsess on these things.

Let me tell you, when it came to Chinese tech, we Brits did not care about investment or superior tech. We got rid of Huawei because we don't trust the Chinese. This will be the same for the Pakistanis re US tech. I realise you are probably from the Gujarati community where everything comes down to profit and loss, but we Brits have other considerations, and looks like Pakistan does too.
He is from Rajasthan and he is our camel boy. He is talking about business, investment, and technology like he is building the next Silicon Valley in the desert, all while glued to the same place and surrounded by the very people he claims to hate. :kp :inti
 
He is from Rajasthan and he is our camel boy. He is talking about business, investment, and technology like he is building the next Silicon Valley in the desert, all while glued to the same place and surrounded by the very people he claims to hate. :kp :inti

BIMARU sanghi. :inti
 
Every top corporation goes through restructuring, Indians should know this well when their slave labour is usually the first casualty as a big part of the cost cutting.

On the contrary they are going offshore to India.
Layoffs are happening here in states.
It will happen in India but in future for now its in service sector and entry level.
 
2016-2022 Pakistan had started doing well in IT consultancy exports with good momentum but the Establishment has taken Pakistani IT talent to again go the freelance route by their absolute dull Internet shut downs, I had mentioned this in other thread as well an year ago.
 
"The report comes just a day after Seattle Times reported that Microsoft had announced it was laying off as much as 4%, or roughly 9,100, of its employees in the largest round of job cuts since 2023."

"According to reports, Microsoft has never had a full presence in Pakistan — only liaison offices that served enterprise, government, education, and consumer customers."

"Microsoft’s revenue from Pakistan would have been $50 million, which Khan estimated at .018% of Microsoft’s global revenue, coupled with the fact that they have been cutting costs and laying people off."

“This would reflect a long-signalled strategy, consolidating direct headcount and moving toward a partner-led, cloud-based delivery model, rather than a retreat from the Pakistani market,”

Above four sentences explain the change of direction for Microsoft.

Usual suspects can crawl back. It's capitalism at work.
It shouldn’t be happening in offshore because its damn cheap to have offices and talent in South Asia, this happening in Pakistan, they definitely need to take a deep look inside why this happened considering South East Asia , Latam , Eastern Europe are doing well.
 
Lol the usuals third world dwellers. Show them visa of any foreign nation and they will come running and leave their rising shining incredible India in a beat. They make $8 billion a year through scamming the world, big international investments come their way by looting old aged foreigners. baatein kara lo. Pakistan has its share of problems, and Pakistanis don't live in delusional world
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Lol the usuals third world dwellers who even after having so called international investments have half a billion toiletless population and majority live in worse of the conditions. Show them visa of any foreign nation and they will come running wagging their tails and leave their rising shining incredible India in a beat. They make $8 billion a year through scamming the world, big international investments come their way by looting old aged foreigners. D*ng of a third world cesspool, Sanghio say baatein kara lo. Pakistan has its share of problems, and Pakistanis don't live in delusional lala land like these Sanghis of a third world poverty hunger infested Bharat
Thread is about why Microsoft leave Pakistan but delusional posters spreading fake propaganda against India.

No wonder Pakistan becomes a failed and unstable State

:kp
 
Thread is about why Microsoft leave Pakistan but delusional posters spreading fake propaganda against India.

No wonder Pakistan becomes a failed and unstable State

:kp

Fake and unstable seems to be India, we were constantly being told by Sanghis, Indian media, Bollywood and Arnab Gushwame PP posters like yourself that India is soo paawarfool.....kneeled within 4 days while begging for mercy.

Microsoft barely had any presence in Pakistan, but still it lasted longer than Rafaels in India
:afridi
 
Fake and unstable seems to be India, we were constantly being told by Sanghis, Indian media, Bollywood and Arnab Gushwame PP posters like yourself that India is soo paawarfool.....kneeled within 4 days while begging for mercy.

Microsoft barely had any presence in Pakistan, but still it lasted longer than Rafaels in India
:afridi
Yes I know the reality unlike you who living in delusional World .lol

Who begged for Ceasefire asked you deputy PM .

:kp
 
Pakistan denies Microsoft closing operations, calls reports 'misleading'

The Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication has dismissed recent reports by Indian media claiming that Microsoft has closed its operations in Pakistan, calling them false, misleading, and part of a recurring pattern of anti-Pakistan propaganda.

In a statement issued on Saturday, the ministry clarified that Microsoft never had a permanent office in Pakistan. Instead, the global tech giant has been operating a liaison office in the country, while its licensing and commercial operations for Pakistan have long been managed from Ireland, in line with the company's global policy.

“Microsoft has not closed any office in Pakistan. The Indian media's claim is baseless. The shift related to the liaison office is part of the company's global ‘Workforce Optimization Program,’” the statement read.

The ministry emphasized that the company’s engagement with Pakistan remains intact and ongoing, with no change in its level of commitment. “We are in constant contact with Microsoft and other international tech companies. There is no indication that the company is pulling out of Pakistan or scaling down its operations,” the ministry added.

On July 4, it was reported that tech giant Microsoft has officially ended its operations in Pakistan after maintaining a presence in the country for more than 25 years. The decision was said to be part of the company's broader global restructuring and workforce optimization strategy.

In a statement to TechCrunch, a Microsoft spokesperson confirmed that the company is shifting its operational model in Pakistan. Moving forward, Microsoft will serve Pakistani customers through resellers and nearby regional offices.

“Our customer agreements and service will not be affected by this change,” the spokesperson said. “We follow this model successfully in a number of other countries around the world. Our customers remain our top priority and can expect the same high level of service going forward."

According to reports, the closure affects five Microsoft employees in Pakistan. The company had no engineering resources in the country, unlike India and other countries, and its local team primarily handled the sales of products like Azure and Office.

Microsoft recently announced a 4% reduction in its global workforce — approximately 9,000 jobs — as part of its ongoing restructuring efforts.

The ministry noted that Microsoft had already shifted the licensing and commercial contract management for Pakistan to its European hub in Ireland over the past few years. Day-to-day services were being managed by certified local partners.

“We continue to engage with Microsoft’s regional and global leadership to ensure that these changes strengthen, rather than weaken, the company’s long-term commitment to Pakistani customers, developers, and channel partners,” the ministry said.

The company’s departure comes at a time when the Pakistani government has announced plans to offer IT certifications from companies like Google and Microsoft to half a million youth — a goal that now appears complicated by Microsoft’s withdrawal.

In contrast, Google continues to invest in Pakistan’s digital future, having pledged $10.5 million to the public education sector last year. The company is also exploring plans to manufacture half a million Chromebooks in Pakistan by 2026.

Source: Samaa
 
Pakistan denies Microsoft closing operations, calls reports 'misleading'

The Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication has dismissed recent reports by Indian media claiming that Microsoft has closed its operations in Pakistan, calling them false, misleading, and part of a recurring pattern of anti-Pakistan propaganda.

In a statement issued on Saturday, the ministry clarified that Microsoft never had a permanent office in Pakistan. Instead, the global tech giant has been operating a liaison office in the country, while its licensing and commercial operations for Pakistan have long been managed from Ireland, in line with the company's global policy.

“Microsoft has not closed any office in Pakistan. The Indian media's claim is baseless. The shift related to the liaison office is part of the company's global ‘Workforce Optimization Program,’” the statement read.

The ministry emphasized that the company’s engagement with Pakistan remains intact and ongoing, with no change in its level of commitment. “We are in constant contact with Microsoft and other international tech companies. There is no indication that the company is pulling out of Pakistan or scaling down its operations,” the ministry added.

On July 4, it was reported that tech giant Microsoft has officially ended its operations in Pakistan after maintaining a presence in the country for more than 25 years. The decision was said to be part of the company's broader global restructuring and workforce optimization strategy.

In a statement to TechCrunch, a Microsoft spokesperson confirmed that the company is shifting its operational model in Pakistan. Moving forward, Microsoft will serve Pakistani customers through resellers and nearby regional offices.

“Our customer agreements and service will not be affected by this change,” the spokesperson said. “We follow this model successfully in a number of other countries around the world. Our customers remain our top priority and can expect the same high level of service going forward."

According to reports, the closure affects five Microsoft employees in Pakistan. The company had no engineering resources in the country, unlike India and other countries, and its local team primarily handled the sales of products like Azure and Office.

Microsoft recently announced a 4% reduction in its global workforce — approximately 9,000 jobs — as part of its ongoing restructuring efforts.

The ministry noted that Microsoft had already shifted the licensing and commercial contract management for Pakistan to its European hub in Ireland over the past few years. Day-to-day services were being managed by certified local partners.

“We continue to engage with Microsoft’s regional and global leadership to ensure that these changes strengthen, rather than weaken, the company’s long-term commitment to Pakistani customers, developers, and channel partners,” the ministry said.

The company’s departure comes at a time when the Pakistani government has announced plans to offer IT certifications from companies like Google and Microsoft to half a million youth — a goal that now appears complicated by Microsoft’s withdrawal.

In contrast, Google continues to invest in Pakistan’s digital future, having pledged $10.5 million to the public education sector last year. The company is also exploring plans to manufacture half a million Chromebooks in Pakistan by 2026.

Source: Samaa
They are contradicting themselves here, many tech companies had plans to setup offices in Pakistan and enhance operations there before Establishment came in.
 
Every thread is now just a troll fest. Man even time pass quality is going down the drain.

Am I really the only non troll left?
lol , yes but sometimes there are good discussions in TP, and you can definitely always leave a non-trolling post and posters would respond.

@ads101 comments everywhere without trolling or taking anything to heart but putting his point across.
 
You have to feel for the aspiring Engineers who want to work for Microsoft in Pakistan. 🙏
 
On the contrary they are going offshore to India.
Layoffs are happening here in states.
It will happen in India but in future for now its in service sector and entry level.

Maybe those business are not unionised
 
Most IT and tech is not unionised, which is the reason for higher salaries.
I have no idea why some people in tech believe this myth, it's a myth sold by pro-corporate types to get people to not unionize.
 
I have no idea why some people in tech believe this myth, it's a myth sold by pro-corporate types to get people to not unionize.
It’s propaganda yes, but it’s one of the reasons.

The only high paying unionised job is Pilot in States.

Fast moving jobs cannot be unionised.
 
It’s propaganda yes, but it’s one of the reasons.

The only high paying unionised job is Pilot in States.

Fast moving jobs cannot be unionised.
Do you mean those jobs cannot be unionized because of the propaganda, or because of some inherent reasons?

If latter, it's not that the high paying jobs cannot be unionized, it's that there have been huge concerted efforts by large corporations to stop unionization. One of the lies sold is exactly what you were saying. I have never heard any concrete arguments why SWEs, for example, could not unionize. High paying job is not really a concrete argument, that's making an argument with a built in assumption with no proof that assumption is valid.
 
Do you mean those jobs cannot be unionized because of the propaganda, or because of some inherent reasons?

If latter, it's not that the high paying jobs cannot be unionized, it's that there have been huge concerted efforts by large corporations to stop unionization. One of the lies sold is exactly what you were saying. I have never heard any concrete arguments why SWEs, for example, could not unionize. High paying job is not really a concrete argument, that's making an argument with a built in assumption with no proof that assumption is valid.
Any Job can be unionised but it comes at a cost, the cost of moving fast, unionising airlines came at a cost of innovation, its one of the worst run and least consumer friendly industries.

Let’s put it this way, META SWE unionise but not Bytedance then they will wipe the floor with Meta.

Meta had to act fast when Tiktok almost killed it, unions don’t encourage competition.

Software is easily the most disrupt able field, where the companies have to be on top.

Do you think Chat GPT would had happened with Unions ??
 
Lol the usuals third world dwellers. Show them visa of any foreign nation and they will come running and leave their rising shining incredible India in a beat. They make $8 billion a year through scamming the world, big international investments come their way by looting old aged foreigners. baatein kara lo. Pakistan has its share of problems, and Pakistanis don't live in delusional world
At least they have beautiful accents 🤣
 
You have to feel for the aspiring Engineers who want to work for Microsoft in Pakistan. 🙏
Large tech companies outsource their operations to third world countries for profit not because there is spectacular talent in those countries. Take india as an example, the talent is in abundance and companies have to pay 1/10th of what they pay employees in 1st world and the turn over doesn’t really matter much. Finding good talent on the other hand isn’t always easy and most good engineers don’t stay to work out of third world india.
 
Large tech companies outsource their operations to third world countries for profit not because there is spectacular talent in those countries. Take india as an example, the talent is in abundance and companies have to pay 1/10th of what they pay employees in 1st world and the turn over doesn’t really matter much. Finding good talent on the other hand isn’t always easy and most good engineers don’t stay to work out of third world india.
The 1/10th cost figure might be debatable but cost advantage is what drives outsourcing and also any business. What’s the point here?

For any large tech company, liaison offices doesbt offer much scope. They always prefer their own capability centers. It is in-fact a sad state of affairs for aspiring tech people in Pakistan if Microsoft is only operating through 3rd parties.

Indian state governments offer almost free lands for tech companies to set up their bases and provide infrastructure as much as opening new airports in the region. This is the sole reason why Bangalore and Hyderabad were able to become IT hubs in India. IT alone offers 5.5m jobs in India by 2023 and est. to reach 8m by 2028.

I don't understand how people of Pakistan can be so silent when their government does so little to improve youth employment. They are not even capable to provide conducive environment for IT firms, yet people here open 4-5 threads on Anti-India narrative every day. If this reflects the general Pakistani approach, then there will be no improvement in future
 
Large tech companies outsource their operations to third world countries for profit not because there is spectacular talent in those countries. Take india as an example, the talent is in abundance and companies have to pay 1/10th of what they pay employees in 1st world and the turn over doesn’t really matter much. Finding good talent on the other hand isn’t always easy and most good engineers don’t stay to work out of third world india.
Also the reason why manufacturing was outsourced to China in 80s, only after 2010 they got as good as West in manufacturing.

Talent nurturing compounds, dismissing it comes at every country’s own peril, Pakistanis mocked Indian IT in 1990s, it’s the only reason why India has foreign reserves and corporate mindset now.

Indian software engineers are getting better at a rapid pace now, which wasn’t the case up until 2005.
 
Also the reason why manufacturing was outsourced to China in 80s, only after 2010 they got as good as West in manufacturing.

Talent nurturing compounds, dismissing it comes at every country’s own peril, Pakistanis mocked Indian IT in 1990s, it’s the only reason why India has foreign reserves and corporate mindset now.

Indian software engineers are getting better at a rapid pace now, which wasn’t the case up until 2005.
India has done remarkably to prop up their IT industry. Innovation or no innovation, the fact that major tech companies are building their hub in Indian cities is a big deal. Tech was a field known for overweight introverted uncle bob types in
America and the advent of intrnet and the www era created plentiful opportunies for many indians to learn the skills and and find opportunities in the US tech industry. Pakistan during this time was busy fighinting WOT and other useless stupid wars. Science and Technology was never a priority and the exposure was very minimal compared to India. It wasn't until the late 2000s that the importance of technology was realized and more people started sending their kids to engineering schools. Catching up to India was out of question and by the time 2020s rolled in, tech indsutry was already on a downward spiral with oversatureation of engineers in both countries. The AI boom is kind of like the www but no one really knows where the opportunity is. Most students end up taking Data Science courses hoping to break into the AI world but AI jobs are not very streamlined and big tech companies are shedding their resources and investing more in AI at the detriment of fresh graduates.
 
Wonder why 4th best economy nationals take so much interest in a so called rogue nation’s economy in celebration, spending literal hours of sifting through news about it?

Slow day at Apple assembly factory or long line at the only urinal for the next 10 km, and so just passing time?
 
India has done remarkably to prop up their IT industry. Innovation or no innovation, the fact that major tech companies are building their hub in Indian cities is a big deal. Tech was a field known for overweight introverted uncle bob types in
America and the advent of intrnet and the www era created plentiful opportunies for many indians to learn the skills and and find opportunities in the US tech industry. Pakistan during this time was busy fighinting WOT and other useless stupid wars. Science and Technology was never a priority and the exposure was very minimal compared to India. It wasn't until the late 2000s that the importance of technology was realized and more people started sending their kids to engineering schools. Catching up to India was out of question and by the time 2020s rolled in, tech indsutry was already on a downward spiral with oversatureation of engineers in both countries. The AI boom is kind of like the www but no one really knows where the opportunity is. Most students end up taking Data Science courses hoping to break into the AI world but AI jobs are not very streamlined and big tech companies are shedding their resources and investing more in AI at the detriment of fresh graduates.
It will take time, that’s why as i said before I did think Pakistan was on the right track from 2016-2022, I’m a consultant and many were hiring Pakistani firms for part of projects. 2023-2024 were disasters due to consistent issue, Business continuity Plans became a big issue for Pakistani firms during this time, which has never been an issue in India since 2000s.

Jobs are saturated, across the world ,white collar jobs are an issue right now , my own field in States has seen drop in salaries since 2023.

I wouldn’t say there is light at end of tunnel, but i agree AI does seem like www, and it will take time to get used to how it works.
I had to skill up a lot in last 1 year and it still doesn’t seem enough for next 5 years.

Pakistani freelancers were as good as Indians upuntil 2020.. the problem comes with organized corporation which Pakistanis seem to massively dislike, and the government there has taken every shortcut for a problem that needs urgent tackling.
 
Apparantly its not just Micr0soft that has packed up and left ... according to this video clip many MNC's have left in the last 3 years

 
Back
Top