Hindustan Times (Patiala)

‘IT sector shouldn’t be just an outsourcin­g industry’

- Varun Sood feedback@livemint.com

BENGALURU: Faqir Chand Kohli joined Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd (TCS) in September 1969 as general manager, from Tata Electric Company. He became ‘director in charge’ or chief executive officer in October 1974. From 1974 until June 1996, he scripted and laid the foundation of TCS. Now, 94, Kohli still turns up at work at 11 in the morning at TCS’s Air India building office in Mumbai. Edited excerpts of Mint’s interview with Kohli earlier this year:

How did you join TCS?

I was born in Peshawar. Before Partition, I studied for five years in Government College, Lahore. I did B.A. Honours in Physics and Maths. Then I did a B.Sc Honours in Physics. I got the Government of India (undivided India) scholarshi­p in 1946 to go abroad. Then for five years, I was abroad, training in electrical engineerin­g. I spent a year working with General Electric. Later, I went for my Masters to MIT. After MIT, I joined Tata Power. From 1951 to 1969, for 18 years I was with Tata Electric Company.

Before Partition, we had a very prosperous business in Peshawar. Overnight, we became paupers and we moved and settled in Lucknow. When I came back, saw my family sleeping on the floor. So I said that I’m not going back to MIT to pursue my doctorate and I joined Tata Electric Company.

What were the early years like at TCS?

TCS was started by P M Agarwala. He asked me in 1968 when I had started using computers for Tata Electric Company, to come over, and together, we started building the company.

In the first two years, all the work we did was clearing the backlog of nationalis­ed banks. There were only nationaliz­ed banks at that time. After that, there was no work because Mrs Gandhi’s government did not believe in computers. Subsequent government­s too, did not understand computers.

What is your current involvemen­t with TCS?

I have no involvemen­t with TCS except that they have given me a secretary, this room (at Air India building). I used to have a room in Bombay House (Tata Corporate Office). But now, I have been doing work in the education area. I left TCS in end-1999 when I completed 75 years. Since then, I’ve been working in the education field. I started the adult literacy programme. But the sad part is after the government took over—what progress they have made, they have not kept us informed.

TCS completes 50 years this year. Are you satisfied with the progress made by the company?

It has become the No. 1 company. If it had not done enough, how did it become No. 1?

Any suggestion­s for the current leaders of Indian IT firms?

I can only say that the industry should not be only an outsourcin­g industry. It should be addressing software requiremen­ts of the entire country and not just the software consultant­s in the United States.

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