Business Standard

Cognizant CEO performanc­e pay slips 20%

- GIREESH BABU Chennai, 21 April

Cognizant Technology Solutions chief executive Francisco D’Souza saw his performanc­e bonus dip 20 per cent in 2016 as the software exporter slipped on targets and faced investors’ ire over its business model.

The US-headquarte­red firm with a large offshore base grew its revenue 8.6 per cent to $13.49 billion in 2016, lower than its projection of 10-14 per cent.

D'Souza saw his cash payout reduce to $450,332 from the targeted $564,655 for the year, according to regu- latory filings on Friday.

However, his base pay increased three per cent to $664,300 for 2016. Sixty three per cent of his annual compensati­on is linked to performanc­e.

Besides slowing business, Cognizant saw activist investor Elliott Management asking for change in business model, asking for firm to repay investors’ cash, and seeking change in board compositio­n to address future challenges. In January, the company complied with the plea.

Senior executives of Cognizant got lesser variable pay due to weak performanc­e against its own target. In 2015, D'Souza got 140 per cent of his variable pay due to 21 per cent growth in revenue.

In 2016, Cognizant performed posted 8.6 per cent growth in revenues, better than Tata Consultanc­y Services (6.2 per cent) and Infosys (7.4 per cent).

D'Souza joins Vishal Sikka, chief executive of Infosys, in taking home smaller package due to shift in business conditions. Sikka’s annual compensati­on dropped 40 per cent on poor business performanc­e, even as he struggled to push for large deals.

Sikka took home $6.7 million in FY17, against the contracted $11 million, as he slipped on his target of double-digit growth. Sikka has a fixed pay of $3 million, the remaining being variable, based on performanc­e targets. He earned a compensati­on of $7.08 million in the previous financial year.

Cognizant in its disclosure to the US regulator, said it is introducin­g a new incentive plan that would offer employees and directors stocks instead of cash, so that their performanc­e is linked to overall organisati­on growth.

US-headquarte­red firm with a large offshore base grew its revenue 8.6% to $13.49 bn in 2016, lower than its projection of 10-14%

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