Last co-founder D’souza to quit
After spending nearly two and a half decades in the company he had co-founded with two others, Francisco D’souza, currently the vice-chairman at Cognizant, has decided to sign off. The Nasdaq-listed firm on Thursday announced his departure from the board effective from March 31.
D’souza was the last of the three Indian and Indian origin co-founders of Cognizant, which initially started as a captive unit of Dun & Bradstreet-back in 1994 through a joint venture with Satyam Computers. It became an independent company after being spun off from the parent two years later. The other founder, Kumar Mahadeva, who served as the CEO for the first five years, retired from the board in 2003.
Lakshmi Narayanan who succeeded him as the CEO before handing over the baton to D’souza who was in his late 30’s that time, one of the youngest professional to hold any global tech firm at that time. Narayanan, who continued in the board, resigned from the company in 2017. When D’souza assumed the role of CEO in 2007, Cognizant’s revenue stood at $2.1 billion, which grew to $14.8 billion in 2017.
“Frank has been an extraordinary leader. He deserves enormous recognition for his achievements at Cognizant. On a personal level, I am fortunate to have him as a trusted confidant and sounding board,” said Brian Humphries, CEO at Cognizant.
The Teaneck, New Jerseybased IT services firm also announced the appointment of Vinita Bali to its board as a new independent director, effective 24 February.