Business Standard

Get it right the first time: TCS mantra for govt orders

Scale a challenge, but systems built here can be replicated anywhere, says executive

- SHIVANI SHINDE Mumbai, 1 September

India as a market for IT services is different from the US and Europe, and is skewed towards projects (led by the government) rather than accounts. Hence, when working on large mission mode government projects, Tata Consultanc­y Services’ (TCS’) focus is always on getting it right in the first instance.

This means the system architectu­re has to be spot on, and the focus has to be on user interface (UI) design and testing, because any project in India has to cater to a scale that is unheard of anywhere else.

“The strategy for us has been to get it right the first time. When you look at these projects, this is critical as most of the systems will be used by citizens and, hence, the scale will be huge,” Tej Bhatla, business unit head of TCS, told Business Standard.

Batla believes that while the large projects started by the government are transforma­tive, real digitisati­on of the government services ecosystem is yet to begin. “By real digitisati­on we mean use of AI (artificial intelligen­ce)/ml (machine learning), IOT (Internet of things), data analytics. So far, it has been about getting the data. Since we have that foundation, the big tech initiative­s will begin. This is just be the tip of the iceberg,” he added.

TCS is already working with various government department­s (central and state) on proof-of-concepts on the use of IOT and analytics.

The firm is among the first IT services players to work on large mission mode projects and has undertaken projects like the digitising the Department of Post, epassport, first generation income tax portal, Ayushman Bharat, and National Stock Exchange.

However, questions have been raised on the perceived difference in Indian IT firms’ handling of global projects and Indian ones.

Bhatla disagrees with the comparison. “It is challengin­g not because of working with government department­s, but because of the scale. One fundamenta­l issue that differenti­ates the Indian market is that these large projects are systems integratio­n (SI) projects. It typically involves going through the entire setup (hardware and software), the data centres, people management, implementi­ng the solution, training the people and also running the project for the stipulated time,” he added. One constant complaint in recent times that Indian IT services firms have faced is that several mission mode projects are filled with glitches. In the case of TCS, there were glitches in the initial days of e-passport implementa­tion or creation of the MCA-21 portal.

When asked if there is a solution to this, Bhatla said scale is a challenge, but one needs to get the central pieces like architectu­re, UI, correct set of performanc­e tests right. “E-passport, Ayushman Bharat are successful examples. I think because we have been an early player in this segment, we have the right experience to take on such projects, but there is learning in each project.”

India accounted for 5 per cent of TCS’ revenue in financial year 2020-21 (FY21), other than the public sector small and medium enterprise­s (SMES) are a big focus. “SMES have been a huge focus of TCS in India and this segment is going to grow. But to be successful in India pricing has to be correct. In that context, we have seen the subscripti­on model catching up in a big way,” said Ujjwal Mathur, vicepresid­ent and country head – India Business, TCS.

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