Business Standard

Infosys regains its footing

Three years after he took charge, Salil Parekh brings the company back to a position where it is bagging large deals

- SHIVANI SHINDE

It has been a little over three years since Salil Parekh, CEO of Infosys, unveiled his strategic review and came out with a strategy that had four core focus areas: Agile Digital Business, Energise the core, Reskilling and Localisati­on. Take any of the parameters, since Parekh took over, all have improved and brought the company back to a position where it is bagging large deals.

In the fourth quarter of FY18, when he rolled out his strategy, the digital business was 26.8 per cent of revenue. For the full year, digital’s contributi­on was 25.5 per cent of revenue. At the end of the Q4 of FY21, digital was 51.5 per cent. Similarly, when he said he would focus on energising the core, the company was back at winning some of the largest deals that the industry saw in FY21. Infosys won a $3.2billion deal from the German automaker Daimler AG and a reported $1.5 billion deal from Us-based Vanguard.

The large deal momentum, too, has gained pace. For FY18 Infosys signed a total contract value (TCV) of $3 billion; at the end of FY21, the company’s TCV has touched

$14 billion. Of this, 66 per cent were net new, which will be a significan­t growth driver going ahead.

The company, which was giving growth guidance of 6-8 per cent for FY19, has guided for a revenue growth of 12-14 per cent in constant currency for FY22.

Parekh was unavailabl­e for comment, having cancelled a scheduled interview with this paper to focus on the well-being of his employees during this Covid-19 crisis. But when recently asked about his take on the past three years, he said: “We think we had an extremely successful three-year journey, some of the elements are how we really reshaped and became a digital services company. Today, digital is more than 50 per cent of our business. The large deals are at $14 billion, but there is also a tremendous amount of work we have done in reskilling our employees, in looking at automation, and a variety of steps within the company, the way we transforme­d to a live enterprise, are a complete change in the way Infosys is working with clients and with employees today. We feel quite comfortabl­e in the path we have taken and how we are looking ahead in partnering with our clients on their digital transforma­tion journeys.”

An analyst from a domestic brokerage firm said, requesting anonymity, “The key to Infosys coming back on track is the way Parekh had articulate­d the journey and how he remained focused on it. Infosys was back on its growth track in

FY20; it outgrew all its

peers. Also, the deal wins it reported for FY20 at $9 billion were significan­tly higher than in FY19. They wanted to fire up the largedeal win engine, which they did. They changed the go-to-market strategy, which was piggybacke­d on digital, automation, AI. All this helped them get the market share.” Analysts across the segment agree that Parekh’s presence and focus on recharging the company has worked. Peter Bendor-samuel, CEO of Everest Group, said, “His performanc­e has exceeded expectatio­ns across any reasonable set of metrics and has returned the confidence and swagger to what was before his tenure a low-morale organisati­on. As Infosys moves forward, Salil needs to keep the focus on moving into the digital transforma­tion and modernisat­ion markets and continue to broaden the number of department­s and stakeholde­rs it serves for its clients. He must continue to work behind the scenes to keep the organisati­on focused on client issues and away from internal disputes.” Bendor-samuel was referring to the whistleblo­wer complaints and difference­s with founder-promoters that eventually led to the departure of Vishal Sikka, Infosys’ first non-promoter CEO.

Having created momentum for growth, Parekh wants to build on it. At a media briefing after the Q4 results, he said, “On a fiveyear horizon, one of the biggest opportunit­ies is the cloud opportunit­y… Another area I would really focus on is data and analytics. It is something that is becoming more critical, and how that is being developed with our clients in mind is an integral part of what we are doing in our digital transforma­tion work with our clients. So, that will become large.”

One of the big pushes for cloud has been the launch of Cobalt, which aims to give enterprise clients a seamless experience in their journey to public or private cloud. This was also one of the significan­t offerings from Infosys based on organic investment­s. Before this, Infosys has been acquiring niche players that gives it capability in the cloud and digital space.

Of course, there are challenges. The immediate one Parekh needs to tackle headon is attrition. Though the company says that the 13 per cent attrition in the Q4 FY21 is something it can deal with, the demand cycle makes it imperative that Infosys reduce this. Peers like TCS have managed to keep it at a low of 7.2 per cent; so has Wipro and HCL Technologi­es.

‘The key to Infosys coming back on track is the way Parekh (below) had articulate­d the journey and how he remained focused on it’

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