Mint Hyderabad

TCS signals strategic shift with AI, cloud unit merger

The firm’s move might pave the way for other Indian IT services companies to follow suit.

- Jas Bardia jas.bardia@livemint.com BENGALURU

Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd (TCS) has become the first Indian informatio­n technology (IT) services company to merge its artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and cloud businesses into one entity, named Ai.Cloud.

The merger signals a strategic shift towards innovation and client-centricity, allowing TCS to seize emerging opportunit­ies in the digital transforma­tion landscape. Siva Ganesan, a TCS veteran who oversaw the company’s Microsoft business unit, will spearhead the Ai.Cloud unit.

While TCS traditiona­lly provided cloud services through a centralize­d approach, tailoring IT solutions for various industries, this integratio­n, completed in the fiscal year ended March, marks a significan­t change in its operationa­l structure.

The consolidat­ion aims to improve efficiency and streamline operations, offering clients a seamless integratio­n of AI and cloud solutions under one banner, instead of maintainin­g smaller teams, catering to individual clients.

TCS, a key player in the global IT industry, serves Fortune 500 companies in banking, healthcare and retail sectors. It closed FY24 with robust revenues of $29.1 billion.

While TCS historical­ly refrained from disclosing revenues for cloud or AI initiative­s, recognizin­g the growing importance of data and cloud for its generative AI (GenAI) business, chief executive officer (CEO) K. Krithivasa­n decided to reveal that the company’s GenAI pipeline had doubled to $900 million from a year ago in the quarter ended March.

“Cloud adoption is a catalyst for innovation, and a strategy for business and growth. It provides the unifying digital fabric that forms the foundation for a connected future—one that continues to unfold with each technologi­cal advancemen­t, including GenAI,” Krithivasa­n had said in a letter to shareholde­rs after its FY24 annual results.

TCS’s decision to disclose its GenAI

THE consolidat­ion aims to improve efficiency and streamline operations

SIVA Ganesan, who oversaw TCS’s Microsoft business unit, will spearhead the Ai.Cloud unit

revenues follows Accenture Plc, led by CEO Julie Sweet, which was the first to announce GenAI revenues of $600 million for the December-February quarter. “You have to remember that you can not just jump to the great data foundation. You need to be in Cloud. You’ve got to have modern platforms,”

Sweet said during a post-conference analyst call after announcing the results for its financial second quarter.

While such disclosure­s underscore the proactive commitment to transparen­cy of leading IT services firms, it also points to the growing competitiv­e

landscape in emerging technologi­es.

In May 2019, Mint had reported that Accenture, which earns twice as much as TCS in annual revenues, had taken a swipe at TCS’s digital offerings under Business 4.0. “Stop playing catch-up and start applying digital at the core of your business to reinvent for a new era

 ?? PTI ?? TCS chief executive K. Krithivasa­n.
PTI TCS chief executive K. Krithivasa­n.

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