Anthony Godley Launches BPO News, a Dedicated Channel for the Outsourcing Industry
Anthony Godley, the British entrepreneur behind the outsourcing firm Logix BPO, is launching a media channel devoted entirely to the business-process outsourcing industry. The venture, called BPO News, aims to give a large but thinly covered sector a dedicated source of news and analysis.
Godley described the project in straightforward terms. He is producing “content around another project that I have, which is BPONews.com, which is a media channel for the BP, for the BPO space,” he said.
A new outlet for an overlooked industry
Outsourcing is among the world’s largest service industries, employing millions of people and handling work for companies that consumers deal with every day. Yet for an industry of that size, the coverage devoted to it is sparse and uneven. Godley’s argument for BPO News is that the sector deserves a credible, dedicated channel rather than the occasional mainstream mention or the promotional material that firms publish about themselves. The sector’s developments tend to surface in scattered press releases and the occasional business headline, never in one place that a reader can follow over time.
He is keeping the venture’s specifics deliberately general for now. Beyond establishing that BPO News is a media channel for the outsourcing space, Godley has not detailed how it will operate or what its full coverage slate will look like, and the early framing is about the idea, not the machinery. What he has set out is the intent: a place where the industry’s developments, performance, and debates can be followed in one informed source.
Built on a long stretch in the industry
The project’s credibility stems from Godley’s own record. He founded Logix in 2021 and built it into a British-owned, Philippines-based operation based in Cebu, operating out of a facility sized for more than a thousand people. He had lived and worked in the Philippines for years before that, across Cebu and Manila, and has spent more than a decade in the broader field. In June 2025, he stepped back from the chief executive role at Logix, becoming chairman and promoting Chris Mackintosh to lead daily operations, a move that freed him to spend time on projects like this one.
That background matters for a media venture in a specialized field. Industry coverage tends to founder when the people producing it do not understand the business they are writing about. Godley’s pitch, implicitly, is that a channel founded by someone who has actually built and run an outsourcing company can cover the sector with a credibility that outside observers struggle to match. It also gives the venture a point of view rooted in operations, not commentary. The difference shows up in practice: a channel that can explain how an outsourcing contract actually works, not one that merely reports a deal was signed.
What comes next
For the moment, BPO News is best understood as a launch and a statement of intent rather than a finished product. Godley has signaled that more will follow, and the early emphasis is on the vision: a serious, dedicated home for outsourcing news. The details of how the channel is structured and what it will publish is something he is rolling out gradually, not announcing all at once.
The venture also fits a wider pattern in how Godley is presenting himself this year. Having stepped back from running Logix day to day, he has been broadening his profile beyond a single company, taking on advisory and investment work and now a media project, all of it gathered under his own name at anthonygodley.com. BPO News extends that reach into a new arena, casting him not only as an operator and investor but as a founder building a platform for the industry he knows best.
A dedicated outsourcing channel is not guaranteed success. Trade media in specialized sectors live with a constant tension between depth and reach, and between credibility and the commercial pressures that pay for it. Still, the gap Godley has identified is real: a major global industry with no serious newsroom of its own. For now, the project is more promise than publication, worth watching less for what has been announced than for what it signals, an experienced operator deciding that his own industry deserves to be covered properly.
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This story was originally published June 15, 2026 at 5:42 PM.