Business Standard

Europe, APAC deals to cut reliance on a single market, says Persistent

IT firm has seen maximum traction from European projects on the back of a deal with PARX

- ROMITAMAJU­MDAR

Pune-based IT firm Persistent Systems has seen its investment­s in non-American markets pay off in the September quarter, which the company says is part of its long-term strategy. Unlike other IT giants, however, digital growth has not impacted their deal sizes, the company said.

“The European market has been a long-term strategy. We started to diversify in Europe and APAC (Asia Pacific) two-three years ago. We have been creating a new team in Europe since a year. Our acquisitio­n in Australia last year has also started taking shape,” said Mritunjay Singh, president, services, and executive director, Persistent Systems.

He added that given their small base in these markets, a single major deal can make a huge difference to the numbers. Directiona­lly, he said, they expect more growth from Europe and APAC in the coming quarters.

For a company largely dependent on US-based service projects, it has seen maximum traction from European projects on the back of a large deal with Salesforce partner PARX. This deal has single-handedly tilted the scales for their enterprise, bringing in a large number of new clients, from an average 5.7 per cent revenue share in the previous six quarters to 8.5 per cent revenue (European) share in the September quarter.

IT giants such as TCS have repeatedly pointed out that the focus on digital services will alter the nature of deal sizes across the board, resulting in multiple smaller deals instead of large consolidat­ed deals. This has worked out in favour of mid-cap companies such as Persistent.

“In the enterprise segment, deal sizes are becoming smaller but from larger players. They are unbundling $100 million deals into smaller $2-3 million deals. The enterprise segment has grown a lot over the years. For us, who had deal sizes of $200,000-$300,000 (earlier), we are going up in deal size while others are coming down,” he said.

The higher focus on global revenues also materialis­es in the revenue contributi­on from their global delivery centers (GDC). From around 27 per cent a year ago, the revenue contributi­on of GDCs has inched up to 32 per cent, while Indian delivery centers’ contributi­on has come down by a similar margin.

“We realised that the kind of work we were doing couldn’t be done out of India alone. We needed to capture local talent. We have also added a lot of products. There is engineerin­g talent in India while expertise in building a product and ecosystem had to be acquired outside,” said Singh.

A number of large deals from IBM as well as central government projects are likely to be realised in the coming quarters, which will add to the company’s performanc­e.

“In India we are trying to enter the government business and taking the IP (intellectu­al property)- centric route here. Yes, diversific­ation has been there. We have two large multi-million contracts and our pipeline is fairly healthy. The government sales cycle is 12-18 months long. It takes some time to realise and we expect a few of them to close in the second half of the year,” Singh said. Persistent has provided digitisati­on solutions to track legislativ­e proceeding­s for Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh Vidhan Sabhas.

 ??  ?? Persistent is looking at large deals from IBM and the central government in the coming quarters
Persistent is looking at large deals from IBM and the central government in the coming quarters

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