What a GCC Actually Is
A Global Capability Centre is a company's own in-house engineering/operations centre in India, doing real product and platform work for the global business — not outsourced work for an external client. The difference from IT services is fundamental: at a GCC, you work directly on the company's own product, with the same tools, codebase, and roadmap visibility as engineers in the US or Europe office. At an IT services company, you typically work on a client's project under a service contract.
| Type | Examples | What You Work On |
|---|---|---|
| Tech-company GCCs | Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Atlassian India | Core product engineering — same as the parent company's "regular" SDE roles |
| Finance/Bank GCCs | JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Barclays | Trading platforms, risk systems, internal tooling — often surprisingly modern stacks |
| Retail/Consumer GCCs | Walmart Global Tech, Target, Lowe's India | E-commerce platforms, supply chain systems, data infra |
| Industrial/Enterprise GCCs | SAP Labs, Oracle, Cisco, Dell, Honeywell | Product engineering for the company's actual software/hardware products |
GCC vs Product Company vs IT Services: The Honest Comparison
| Factor | GCC | Indian Product Company | IT Services |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pay | High — often matches or beats product companies at senior levels | High, with more upside via ESOPs at growth stage | Lower base, fewer stock incentives |
| Stability | Generally stable; tied to parent company health globally | Variable — depends on funding/growth stage | Stable but with slower growth and lower ceilings |
| Work ownership | Real product ownership, but priorities often set by HQ abroad | High ownership, fast decision-making locally | Lowest — client-driven scope |
| Brand value for resume | Very high — recognizable global brand | High if the startup is well-known | Moderate |
| Global mobility | Often easier internal transfer to HQ/other geos | Limited unless company has global offices | Limited, mostly client-site deputations |
How to Get Into a GCC
1. Search by "GCC" or "Global Capability Centre," not just the brand name
Many GCC job postings live on separate career pages or LinkedIn entities distinct from the global parent's careers site. Search "[Company] India GCC" or check the company's dedicated India careers page.
2. Target finance and fintech GCCs if you want stability with strong pay
Bank and financial-services GCCs (JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley) tend to have rigorous but well-defined hiring processes and pay competitively even at SDE1 level — often comparable to FAANG India offices. Java, distributed systems, and strong DSA fundamentals are the common bar; see our Goldman Sachs interview guide and JP Morgan guide for specifics.
3. Don't assume a GCC role is "easier" than a product company role
Interview bars at established tech-company and bank GCCs are frequently identical to the parent company's global bar — same DSA difficulty, same system design depth, sometimes the same interview panel pool.
4. Look for GCCs that are scaling, not just large
The fastest growth (and fastest internal promotions) tends to happen at GCCs in active scale-up mode — recently set up or expanding teams — rather than mature, slow-growing centres. Company news about "India centre expansion" or new office openings is a useful signal.
5. Prepare for a hybrid interview style
Expect standard DSA + system design rounds similar to product companies, plus more domain-specific rounds (e.g., trading systems knowledge for finance GCCs, retail/supply chain context for consumer GCCs). Research the specific business domain, not just the tech stack.
