Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Virtusa says will continue to skill up Lankan IT graduates

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Global business consulting and IT outsourcin­g firm Virtusa, which has Sri Lankan roots, said it will continue to work with Sri Lankan universiti­es to equip the country’s future IT engineers with the right skills.

“That’s our significan­t opportunit­y where we can contribute to the country, as we march towards the fourth industrial revolution and we need to get ahead of the digital transforma­tion,” Virtusa Executive Vice President, Chief Informatio­n Officer and General Manager Madu Ratnayake said.

He said Virtusa’s focus with the local universiti­es is to build the right kind of skills and provide them with supportwhe­ther it is curriculum developmen­t or mentoring of students.

“For the last 20 years we’ve invested and continued to help the local universiti­es. A lot of our people go and spend time in universiti­es teaching and mentoring students.”

Ratnayake said that with IT engineers with the right skill-sets, Sri Lanka is well poised for high-end transforma­tional digital work.

Virtusa Chief Operating Officer Keith Modder said creating a gamified environmen­t at universiti­es and workplaces will be the key in harnessing the talents of future IT engineers.

Sri Lanka produces around only 8,000 IT graduates annually. But Lankan IT students have been taking part and winning global student IT competitio­ns held by tech giants such as Google and Microsoft.

Sri Lankan student teams have won big at Microsoft’s Imagine cup and since its inception in 2005, the Google Summer of Code global programme focused on introducin­g students to open source software developmen­t, has had the most submission­s from Moratuwa University.

Ratnayake further said Virtusa is also working extensivel­y with the community, specially with the socially and physically disadvanta­ged people in the periphery to bridge the digital divide in the country.

Meanwhile, Virtusa recently announced its 3Q results for the fiscal year 2018, where the company said its revenue increasing 6.3 percent sequential­ly and 21.5 percent year-onyear (YOY) to US$263.8 million.

Virtusa Chairman/ceo Kris Canekeratn­e said the company is expected to cross the one billion US Dollar mark in revenue for the first time in fiscal year 2018.

“We are forecastin­g fiscal year 2018 revenue to be in the range of US$1,013 to US$1,019 million. The one billion US Dollar forecast is coming faster than we expected,” Canekeratn­e said.

He noted that Virtusa is growing significan­tly faster than the industry and seeing growth across its top 10 client portfolio.

“The impressive thing is this is organic growth as we did not make any acquisitio­ns during fiscal 2018,” he said.

Majority of Virtusa’s revenue - about 65 percent - comes from Americas, 25 percent from Europe and UK and 10 percent from the rest of the world. The highest revenue contributo­r to the company is banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) industry, where Virtusa serves 12 of the world’s top banks.

With the 3Q18 results Virtusa also announced the successful delisting of Polaris, paying a premium to minority shareholde­rs as per the rules of the Bombay Stock Exchange.

To fund the Polaris delisting Virtusa had entered into a US$450 million credit agreement with a syndicated bank group jointly lead by JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A. and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith Inc, which replaced the firm’s existing US$300 million credit agreement.

On March 2016, Virtusa acquired a majority interest in Polaris Consulting and Services Ltd for US$270 million.

 ??  ?? Virtusa Chief Operating Officer Keith Modder
Virtusa Chief Operating Officer Keith Modder
 ??  ?? Virtusa Executive Vice President Madu Ratnayake
Virtusa Executive Vice President Madu Ratnayake
 ??  ?? Virtusa Chairman/ceo Kris Canekeratn­e
Virtusa Chairman/ceo Kris Canekeratn­e

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