
The nearshore outsourcing results and cost savings most US companies report are concrete: roughly 25% to 50% lower fully-loaded labor cost, faster response times, and steadier teams that stop churning. Companies working with RAM BPO report 25-30% savings versus hiring equivalent staff locally in the US, paired with same-time-zone coverage and bilingual support that protects customer experience.
Last updated: 2026-06-17
What “results” actually mean before you sign anything
You are not buying a slide deck. You are buying outcomes you can measure in a P&L and a CSAT dashboard. So before you weigh any vendor, decide which numbers matter to your business.
Three results carry the most weight for a 5-to-50-person company. Cost per seat. Speed to a working team. Whether that team stays long enough to get good at your work.
Each one moves a different lever. Cost hits margin. Speed decides how fast you stop being the bottleneck. Retention drives quality, because a rep who has handled your accounts for a year answers faster and escalates less. Most buyers fixate on cost and ignore retention, then wonder why “cheap” got expensive.
If you are still deciding whether to outsource at all, start with the pillar guide on building a dedicated remote team in Colombia and come back here for the proof.

How much can you really save?
Here is the honest math. A US customer service rep earns a median of $42,830 a year, per the US Bureau of Labor Statistics 2024 data. Add payroll taxes, benefits, software, and management time, and your fully-loaded cost runs well past $55,000.
Nearshore changes the base rate. Latin American call center labor runs $12 to $18 an hour against $25 to $45 onshore, a 40% to 60% reduction documented by Call Force Global. That gap is the raw input. Your real savings land lower once you account for a managed-model fee, which is why a fully-managed provider quotes net numbers, not headline rates.
Companies working with RAM BPO report 25-30% savings versus hiring equivalent staff locally in the US. That figure is net of RAM’s managed fee, so it reflects what actually shows up on your books.
| Cost factor | US in-house hire | Nearshore managed team |
|---|---|---|
| Base labor (annual) | $42,830 median (BLS) | $25,000 to $35,000 range |
| Payroll tax + benefits | You pay it | Provider absorbs it |
| Recruiting + HR overhead | You own it | Provider owns it |
| Office + equipment | You provide | Provider provides |
| Net savings vs local | Baseline | 25% to 30% (RAM client-reported) |
The takeaway: judge savings on fully-loaded, net-of-fee cost. A $14 nearshore rate that hands you HR, payroll, and office space usually beats a $20 freelancer who hands you a second job.
What results companies see after outsourcing customer support
Cost is the entry point. Customer experience is where the deal proves itself or falls apart.
The market has shifted on this. The 2024 Deloitte Global Outsourcing Survey found that 80% of executives plan to maintain or increase third-party outsourcing investment, and skilled talent now sits alongside cost as a top reason. Buyers stopped treating outsourcing as a discount and started treating it as a capacity strategy.
Same-time-zone coverage is the mechanic that protects CX. When your team works US Eastern hours, a customer who emails at 2pm gets an answer at 2pm, not overnight. RAM BPO sits in Medellin on Colombia Time, aligned with Eastern, so there is no async lag eating your response times.
Bilingual capability matters more than most owners expect. If part of your customer base speaks Spanish, an English/Spanish team resolves those tickets in one touch instead of routing them. That cuts handle time and lifts first-contact resolution at the same moment.

Is nearshore outsourcing worth it for an SMB?
For most SMBs in this band, yes, and the deciding factor is rarely price alone.
Run a quick test on your own situation. Are you turning down work because you cannot staff it? Are you personally doing admin or support tasks that someone else could own? Is local hiring quoting you six weeks and $55,000? If two of those are true, the model pays for itself fast.
Speed is the underrated win. RAM BPO’s onboarding process gets a team operational in 7-10 business days, against the six to twelve weeks a US hire typically takes from posting to productive. That difference is a quarter of recovered capacity in your first year.
Where nearshore is not the answer: roles requiring physical presence, deep proprietary tooling that cannot be shared remotely, or work where you genuinely cannot define the process. If you cannot write down the task, no team can run it, onshore or off.
What ROI and outcomes RAM BPO delivers
ROI on a managed team comes from four places: lower cost, faster ramp, stable headcount and a vendor you do not have to replace. RAM’s operating record speaks to each.
On stability, according to RAM BPO’s internal data, agent attrition runs under 3%. The industry standard sits between 40% and 60%, which means most providers retrain constantly while your knowledge walks out the door. Low attrition is not a vanity metric. It is the reason a rep who started in January is genuinely better in June.
On the relationship itself, per RAM BPO’s operating record, the company has maintained 100% client retention since launch. No client has churned. Read that as a track record to date rather than a guarantee, but it tells you something real about whether the model holds up after the honeymoon.
Stack the four together and the picture is straightforward. You spend less, you start sooner, your team stays and your vendor does too. To see how this fits the broader recruiting and team-building approach, browse the hiring teams resource hub.

How nearshore affects customer experience and response times
Response time is mostly a function of when your team is awake. Offshore models in Asia or Eastern Europe create a gap because their workday and yours barely overlap. Nearshore closes it.
The proximity advantage is measurable. Industry research on nearshore versus offshore delivery has documented turnaround improvements of up to 30% when the team shares your working hours and culture, largely because fewer handoffs and clarifications get lost overnight. The Deloitte survey reflects the same logic in why talent access has climbed the priority list.
Three practical CX gains tend to show up first. Faster first replies, because someone is online during your peak. Fewer escalations, because a stable bilingual team learns your edge cases. Cleaner handoffs, because the team thinks in your time zone and your customers’ language.
What kinds of US businesses benefit most
Not every company gets the same return. The model fits some profiles tightly.
The strongest fit is an SMB between 5 and 50 employees that is growing faster than it can hire. Logistics and 3PL companies see outsized gains, because back-office bottlenecks there directly throttle cash flow and client retention. Hispanic and Latino-owned US businesses serving mixed-language customers benefit twice, from nearshore cost and from native bilingual support.
Companies with predictable, repeatable work, support queues, order entry, scheduling, data work, convert best because the process is teachable. If you can document it, a dedicated team can own it within a couple of weeks. For the full framework on which roles to outsource first, see the guide to building a remote team in Colombia.

Frequently Asked Questions
How much can a US company save with nearshore outsourcing?
Most US companies save between 25% and 50% on fully-loaded labor cost, depending on the role and the model. Raw nearshore labor rates run 40% to 60% below US rates, per Call Force Global, but net savings land lower once a managed fee is included. Companies working with RAM BPO report 25-30% savings versus hiring equivalent staff locally in the US.
What results do companies see after outsourcing customer support?
Companies typically see faster response times, higher first-contact resolution, and lower cost per ticket. Same-time-zone coverage means replies happen during US business hours, not overnight. Bilingual teams resolve Spanish-language tickets in one touch. The 2024 Deloitte survey notes 80% of executives plan to hold or grow outsourcing investment, citing both talent and cost.
Is nearshore outsourcing worth it for an SMB?
For most SMBs of 5 to 50 employees, yes. If you are turning down work, doing tasks others could own, or facing six-week local hiring timelines, the model pays back quickly. RAM BPO’s onboarding process gets a team operational in 7-10 business days, so you recover capacity in your first quarter rather than next year.
What ROI or outcomes does RAM BPO deliver for clients?
RAM delivers ROI through cost, speed and stability. Companies working with RAM BPO report 25-30% savings versus hiring equivalent staff locally in the US. According to RAM BPO’s internal data, agent attrition runs under 3%, far below the 40% to 60% industry norm. Per RAM BPO’s operating record, the company has maintained 100% client retention since launch.
How does nearshore outsourcing affect customer experience and response times?
It tightens both. A team on US Eastern hours answers during your peak instead of overnight, which trims first-reply times. Stable bilingual reps cut escalations because they learn your edge cases. Research on nearshore delivery has documented turnaround gains of up to 30% versus offshore, mostly from fewer overnight handoffs and clarifications.
What kinds of US businesses benefit most from a Colombian team?
Growing SMBs that hire slower than they scale see the biggest return. Logistics and 3PL firms benefit heavily, since back-office delays choke cash flow. Hispanic and Latino-owned US businesses with mixed-language customers gain on both cost and native bilingual support. Any company with documentable, repeatable work converts fastest because the process transfers cleanly.
Key Takeaways
- Net cost savings for US companies typically land between 25% and 50% of fully-loaded labor cost, and RAM BPO clients report 25-30% net of the managed fee.
- Speed is a real result, not a soft one: RAM BPO’s onboarding process gets a team operational in 7-10 business days versus six to twelve weeks locally.
- Retention drives quality. According to RAM BPO’s internal data, agent attrition runs under 3%, against a 40% to 60% industry norm.
- Same-time-zone, bilingual coverage protects CX, improving response times and first-contact resolution rather than trading quality for price.
- The best-fit profile is a growing 5-to-50-employee SMB with documentable, repeatable work, especially in logistics and mixed-language customer bases.
If you want to see these numbers against your own headcount and roles, RAM BPO can map a realistic savings and ramp estimate for your specific work. Start with the hiring teams resources or reach out to talk through what a dedicated nearshore team would look like for you.