Business Standard

Sikka caught in the clash of cultures

- SURAJEET DASGUPTA

For Vishal Sikka, this is not the first time he has fought a bitter but losing battle. At SAP, from where here signed and came to Info sys, he was a victim of a power struggle between its German employees and US executives, of whom Sikka was a key member. According to Business Insider, Sikka was expecting to be pushed up as the co-CEO of the German company. He had the backing of SAP founder Has so Plattner, who wanted the company to become more innovative and aggressive. But the SAP board, which had many European members, had other ideas. It decided on having one CEO in Bill McDermott. And SAP’ sloss was Infosys’ s gain. Son of a railway officer, Sikka graduated as a computer engineer from Baroda’s MS University and received a doctorate in artificial intelligen­ce from Stanford University. With stints at Xerox, followed by various entreprene­urial ventures, Sikka’s rise was meteoric in SAP, which he joined in 2002, becoming an executive board member and one of the top executives of the informatio­n technology world. Sikka took over the reins of Infosys in 2014 when it was going through challengin­g times; there was a management exodus as well as high attrition, slow revenue growth and missed profit targets, and too many experiment­s at the top. Founder NR Narayan Murthy had to come back as executive vice-chairman and his strategy was to cut costs and bring in a new CEO. That choice was Sikka. But the honeymoon did not last long. It soon became clear that Sikka’ s style of functionin­g was different—whether it was in large severance packages and big increments to senior executives or aggressive ly pursuing acquisitio­ns to buy market share. This led him to a confrontat­ion with Info sys’ founders, primarily M ur thy. Watchers say it was a cultural divide—an aggressive Punjabi with an American style of functionin­g versus old-school prudence about pay, acquisitio­ns, and corporate governance. Sikka’ s main failure was in not being able to integrate the older employees with his new team. He announced Info sys would achieve an ambitious $20 billion revenue by 2020. But the company’ s founders, accustomed to under-promising andover delivering, asked how this would be achieved in a churning business scenario. Cultural difference­s again came to the fore when Murthy questioned the decision of Infosys to offer a ~17.38-crore severance package to the then CFO Rajiv Bansal. Two investigat­ions by Infosys showed no impropriet­y was committed by the board.

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