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Discover LudwigThe word 'outsourcer' is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to refer to a company or individual that contracts with an outside vendor for goods or services that had previously been provided by an internal department or employees. For example, "The company hired an experienced outsourcer to provide IT support."
Dictionary
outsourcer
noun
One who outsources.
Exact(55)
Short-term gains to companies in off-shoring and outsourcing jobs, leaves us with failing public services; an outsourcer has to make a profit, resulting in lesser-quality services.
Yet that has not stopped his campaign from continuing to bombard voters with advertisements depicting Mitt Romney as a devious, tax-dodging outsourcer, hell bent on raising taxes on the struggling middle class, gutting popular government programmes and undermining women's rights.
"They don't understand that a call-centre can't just close down because of a national holiday," complained one outsourcer.
Since then, one "pure-play" outsourcer, LeapSource, has folded.
It was an early outsourcer of manufacturing, for instance.
Today Tata has 98 firms, including India's biggest IT outsourcer and second-biggest carmaker.
Similar(5)
When Shrewsbury council merged with Shropshire in 2009, it outsourced management of Emstrey.
The more likely it seems that they won't get a second term, the more eager they are to press on with their project to outsource, shrink and commercialise as much of the state as they can.
There was an effort to outsource manufacturing to poorer developed countries to keep costs down and to maintain higher profits.
Oh, and not "outsourcing our foreign policy to the UN".
Still, working with a corporation can be fine, too, if you've got a built in support system, as Courtney Higham does at her New York human resources outsourcing company.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com