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Petersburg center to create 500
jobs
Virginia Business
December 2005
It’s official: StarTek Inc. loves Virginia. After
opening call centers in Lynchburg and Henry County last
year, the Denver-based provider of business outsourcing
services plans to open a third customer-care operation
in Petersburg in January. The center will bring 500 new
jobs to Petersburg. The city has been grappling with
a 7.1 percent jobless rate, twice the state average.
“We felt that Petersburg was a perfect fit for us,” says Amy Claire
Wild, vice president of marketing for StarTek. She notes that the company looks
for a service area with a population of about 100,000 people, a skilled work
force, a community college that can provide recruitment services and job training,
and a higher-than-normal unemployment rate that ensures jobs are filled quickly. “The
city definitely has a good labor pool that is anxious to get back to work.”
Initially, the call center will provide 24/7 inbound customer support exclusively
for a new telecommunications client. The majority of new jobs will be customer-care
representatives who will be paid $7 to $8 per hour but have no benefits. Wild
says, however, that the company might begin offering benefits next year. Supervisory
and human resources roles will offer salaries in the high $20,000 to low $30,000
range along with a benefits package. With the opening of the center, in the old
J. Crew call center, StarTek will employ more than 1,500 Virginians.
Virginia competed with Texas and Washington State for the project. Wild says
that one reason for StarTek’s buildup in Virginia is the state’s
economic development program. “We work with a lot of states, but I’d
have to say that Virginia’s is the best in the business,” she says.
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