Business Standard

Investment­s in digital training paying off: TCS

- ROMITA MAJUMDAR PHOTO: REUTERS

Tata Consultanc­y Services, the country’s largest software exporter, says its investment in upgrading the skills of employees in digital and emerging technologi­es is showing returns. With it, the firm says, they’re being able to harness the talent to bag newer contracts from clients.

“We have a very strong inhouse talent developmen­t programme and prefer to train an employee on new skills before looking at options. We started training our employees on digital skills a couple of years ago and this focus has contribute­d greatly to our growth,” says Ajoyendra Mukherjee, executive vicepresid­ent and global head of human resources (HR).

While lateral hiring continues, the large scale of digital requiremen­ts cannot be met without utilising the available talent pool, he adds.

Indian software firms have been retraining their workforce in emerging technology areas, also helping them get certified. This is happening while clients reduce the spending on traditiona­l outsourcin­g and shift those budgets towards the areas of digital and cloud.

Contract trends were steady in the September quarter. There was 16.1 per cent growth over the year in global ACV (annual contract value), highest in six quarters, said Apurva Prasad of HDFC Securities, analysing data from Gartner and ISG. While outsourcin­g for legacy services grew only 1.4 per cent, nearly 44 per cent of global contracts were in digital or deals that had vendors deliver product or solutions as a service.

Currently, a little over 240,000 of TCS’ 389,213 employees have undergone its skill upgradatio­n programme. This focus has gone down to all their training programmes, including for freshers. The new skills paid off; the chief executive announced higher quarterly variable payout, on the back of stronger revenues. Though the second quarter results didn’t hold much surprise in growth numbers, digital revenue jumped 31 per cent over a year.

“Employees benefit if the organisati­on is doing well, in multiple ways. The bonus gets distribute­d across geographie­s. The whole model is geared towards growth and our HR policy aims at sustaining this growth. Quarterly blips (like the past quarter) will happen but for the overall industry, those (earlier) days of high double digit growth… will probably take some time. We still continue to grow as an organisati­on,” said Mukherjee.

The organisati­on added around 16,000 employees this quarter, with one of every four recruited abroad. Delivery centres across North and Latin America and the Asia-Pacific contribute­d the most to this number; these regions have a lot of local hires due to business and language requiremen­ts. However, the net hiring was 3,404 people.

All informatio­n technology companies have been putting up a positive profile in the US after the Trump administra­tion’s scrutiny on tech roles that seem dominated by Indians, beside a slew of civil lawsuits that alleged discrimina­tion against non-South Asian employees. Infosys declared plans to hire 10,000 employees over next two years and Wipro said half its workforce there would be local by the end of this year. TCS went a step ahead, adding heavy grants to academia, campus leadership programmes, job fairs and women and child education initiative­s.

“TCS is a much more diverse organisati­on than what it used to be. Programmes have to be adapted to business, cultural and behavioura­l aspects. We do still have (training) programmes on a legacy environmen­t because we support legacy clients but also have newer technology and rotation within the requiremen­ts, which helps a great deal,” said Mukherjee.

The organisati­on is also involved with academia in a number of skill developmen­t programs to help communicat­e industry requiremen­ts; it says there is scope for improvemen­t in this regard.

Though the second quarter results didn’t hold much surprise in growth numbers, digital revenue jumped 31 per cent over a year

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