Business Standard

LOW-KEY START TO SALIL PAREKH’S INNINGS AT INFOSYS

- RAGHU KRISHNAN

The contrast was evident at Infosys, the informatio­n technology (IT) giant. Salil Parekh (pictured), who has kept a low profile in his three- decade career, began his innings on a similar note at Infosys as its second non-founder chief executive officer (CEO).

Human resource head Richard Lobo and Deepak Padaki, head of mergers & acquistion, welcomed him with a few others on the Infosys campus. He was joined later by chief financial officer M D Ranganath for a group photograph. The images were uploaded on the company’s Facebook page and Twitter handle.

Parekh in a video address to employees expressed delight on leading the iconic company. Infosys itself was otherwise silent on the developmen­t on Tuesday.

This was very unlike the marketing exercise it undertook in June 2014, when cofounder N R Narayana Murthy introduced Vishal Sikka at a crowded press conference as the next CEO. The entire board of directors, including chairman K V Kamath, were present to herald Sikka as a person who could transform Infosys. The new CEO had talked of the need for innovation to move forward.

On formally taking over that August, he met media editors in a roundtable meet and gave interviews to global publicatio­ns. Three years down, the Infosys experiment with Sikka failed. After a tumultuous

year when he faced the wrath of Murthy over non-disclosure and a public spat, Sikka quit in August last year. So did R Seshasayee, then chairman. And, another co-founder, Nandan Nilekani, returned to the helm as chairman.

Soon after taking over, Nilekani said he wanted Infosys to be a ‘boring company’, away from the public glare that put pressure on its executives. Last month, when Infosys named Parekh, former Capgemini executive, as its CEO, there was little informatio­n about him in the public domain.

With this, Nilekani also indicated that Infosys was aiming to back to its roots, focusing on delivery than on big claims. It also underscore­d the mantra and culture of “under-promise, over-deliver,” which Murthy and Nilekani have a reputation for building over three decades.

Sikka, who was based in California’s Silicon Valley, had devised his own software-plus services strategy and set an ambitious target of $20 billion annual revenue with margins of 30 per cent by 2020. Three years on, with the halfway mark achieved, he admitted defeat. This also brought a dent in Infosys’ reputation, which had consistent­ly exceeded the expectatio­ns it set in its forecasts. Culture was a moot point that Nilekani also emphasised in his New Year message to employees. He said Parekh brings expertise and leadership skills that are complement­ary to “ours as an organisati­on”.

“Keep learning, keep innovating, and do this all on the bedrock of our culture. Our fundamenta­l values, commitment to integrity and placing our employees first, will not change and, if anything, will get stronger in the New Year,” wrote Nilekani last Friday in his year-ahead message to staffers. Nilekani also pointed to transforma­tion in the market, where software-plus services and algorithms ruled.

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