---
title: How DPDP Act 2026 Is Changing Data Entry Outsourcing in India
tags:  #bpo #outsourcing #data entry #dpdp  
author: [Allianze BPO](https://docswell.com/user/allianze_bpo_1)
site: [Docswell](https://www.docswell.com/)
thumbnail: https://bcdn.docswell.com/page/47ZLYM23J3.jpg?width=480
description: Discover how the DPDP Act 2026 is reshaping data entry outsourcing in India, driving stronger data privacy, compliance, security, and client trust
published: July 02, 26
canonical: https://docswell.com/s/allianze_bpo_1/ZR88RJ-2026-07-02-174611
---
# Page. 1

![Page Image](https://bcdn.docswell.com/page/47ZLYM23J3.jpg)

How DPDP Act 2026 Is Changing Data
Entry Outsourcing in India
India handles data for companies across the US, UK, Europe, and beyond. That
volume comes with responsibility. As more customer data flows through
outsourcing channels, governments are stepping in. India&#039;s DPDP Act 2026 is one
such step. It puts real rules around how personal data gets collected, stored, and
processed.
DPDP compliant data entry outsourcing services in India is changing the prospect
what businesses are looking for in a vendor for data outsourcing services. Noncompliance now carries some financial penalties and damages client relationships,
which no company can afford.


# Page. 2

![Page Image](https://bcdn.docswell.com/page/YJ6WDNVZJV.jpg)

What Is the DPDP Act 2026?
The Digital Personal Data Protection Act covers businesses that process personal digital
data in India. The rules are simple
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Obtaining proper consent
Keeping data secure
Staying accountable
Reporting breaches promptly
However, what matters most for outsourcing is if you are working for a third-party vendor, it
remains responsible for what happens to that data. Vendors now have to follow strict data
privacy outsourcing practices. Global clients expect DPDP compliance services as a basic
condition before they sign any contract.
Why DPDP Compliance Is Becoming
Essential for Outsourcing Companies
With time, DPDP compliance is becoming more essential for outsourcing companies. These
include -
1. Increased Client Expectations
Clients from the US and Europe ask some specific questions before they finalise data
outsourcing services. They want the latest compliance certificates, written privacy policies,
and details on the person who is on the vendor&#039;s team and who can access their data.
2. Higher Risk of Data Breaches
A breach does not just bring penalties under the DPDP Act. It ends client relationships.
Word spreads. Recovering trust after a security failure takes years, if it happens at all. This
is why serious outsourcing companies now invest in secure offshore data processing
services.


# Page. 3

![Page Image](https://bcdn.docswell.com/page/GJ5M35D9J4.jpg)

How the DPDP Act Is Changing Data
Entry Outsourcing in India
DPDP Act is significantly changing the concept of data entry outsourcing in India.
1. Stronger Security Infrastructure
Basic security setups are no longer enough. Clients now expect vendors to have
multilayered cybersecurity, encrypted data transfers, and cloud environments in which file
access is restricted by role.
Before handing over any data, clients want a clear answer to one question: who can see
this, and how it is protected.
2. More Compliance Documentation
Vendors now need to deal with a proper Data Processing Agreement before the actual work
starts. That means defining how accurate data is properly stored, how long it is kept, and
who is responsible if something goes wrong.
Clients are asking for audit trails and written retention policies to demonstrate to their
regulators that the vendor is accountable, not just capable.
3. GDPR and DPDP Alignment
Indian vendors working with European clients have been dealing with GDPR for years.
Since DPDP covers much of the same ground, companies that already follow GDPR do not
have to rebuild their compliance processes from scratch.
It means they carry both GDPR and DPDP compliance, switching or changing any method.
They adjust what needs adjusting and move forward. For global clients, this means sending
work to India does not create a compliance conflict on either side.
Which Industries are Most Impacted by
DPDP Compliance
Some sectors carry more risk than others when data is mishandled:

Healthcare: Patient records are among the most sensitive data types. Any breach
here causes serious harm.


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![Page Image](https://bcdn.docswell.com/page/9E29ZN857R.jpg)

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Finance: KYC documents and banking records need locked-down handling at every
stage.
eCommerce: Customer databases and payment data require strict access limits.
HR and Legal: Employee files and legal documents cannot move through
unsecured systems.
As per India data protection law 2023, supported by the DPDP Rules, it governs both online
and offline data that is digitised. So, before finalising, businesses ensure that the agency
can handle the data.
What Businesses Should Look for
in a DPDP-Compliant Outsourcing
Partner
Before signing with any vendor, check for these:
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ISO 27001 certification
Encrypted data infrastructure
Role-based access controls
NDAs signed by all staff
Teams trained in DPDP compliance services
Documented audit-ready processes
Secure data backup and recovery
Conclusion
The DPDP Act 2026 has raised the bar for data entry outsourcing India. Clients now judge
vendors on compliance and security just as much as price and turnaround time. Companies
that take data privacy outsourcing seriously will keep clients longer and attract better
business. Those who ignore it will get left behind.


