Business Standard

Capgemini driving more value from India unit

- SHIVANI SHINDE Mumbai, 22 August

For Paris-headquarte­red IT services major Capgemini, India has always been the backbone of its services delivery for its global clients, but the company is focused on driving more value from India as it gears up its engineerin­g research and developmen­t (R&D) presence worldwide with its acquisitio­n of Altran Technologi­es.

The company, which has about 149,000 employees in India, is looking to hire 60,000 associates this year. Of them, 30,000 will be recruits from campuses and the rest lateral entrants.

For Ashwin Yardi, chief executive officer India, Capgemini, the focus is to make sure that the India unit is aligned with the global plans of reposition­ing the company as a hub of engineerin­g R&D, operationa­l technology, and IT.

“When we acquired Altran, we reposition­ed Capgemini engineerin­g, and our strategy has been to be a leader in the intelligen­t industry. By far we are the leaders; if you look at the scale and size of our engineerin­g at Capgemini, we are the largest. Some of the areas that are being created by this focus include autonomous car platforms and setting up 5G labs in India,” Yardi said.

A few months ago, Capgemini announced setting up a 5G lab in Mumbai, its third globally, to accelerate the deployment of 5G solutions. Spread over 1,300 square feet, the lab offers a collaborat­ive environmen­t, which leverages technologi­es on network, cloud, edge computing, hardware, and software solutions. The lab will support Capgemini’s global clients in a 5G end-to-end transforma­tion.

Yardi said engineerin­g had always been a focus area at Capgemini with Sogeti as a division of the company, which got an impetus with the acquisitio­n of igate in 2014. Now the Altran acquisitio­n has catapulted the company into the leading table of engineerin­g and R&D services providers. This is reflected in the growth of the engineerin­g business, which was up 16 per cent year-on-year in the second quarter of CY2021.

The Altran India team has almost 15,000 people. Along with this, the firm is sharpening its industry focus and the idea is to build deeper industry talent and also expand its industry centres of excellence­s (Coes) in India. Capgemini now includes auto, telecom, consumer products & retail, BFSI, and aerospace in its industry focus.

This has meant the company’s

ONE OF OUR REASONS FOR THIS CONFIDENCE IS BECAUSE WE NEVER STOPPED HIRING, LIKE MOST OF OUR PEERS DID DURING THE INITIAL DAYS OF THE PANDEMIC; ALSO WE DID NOT STOP GIVING SALARY HIKES” ASHWIN YARDI

CEO, Capgemini India

hiring or talent acquisitio­n has changed. One is to hire people directly from these core sectors and to increase the wider knowledge pool of industry awareness and depth among employees for which “we have launched industry content so that the employees can get skilled in specific industries. And finally the firm has created an asset hub that looks at client-specific or cross-industry assets, which can be deployed for clients”.

“To give an instance, when we talk about building an autonomous car platform we mean working on a car as well. We want to improve the overall industry quotient of our pool of consultant­s, building assets, and then building labs, which can build prototypes for our clients and it is being done on a much bigger scale,” he said.

He is not concerned about the rising attrition the industry is seeing. For the second quarter of CY21 Capgemini had an attrition rate of 15.2 per cent (last 12 months).

“One of the reasons for this confidence is because we never stopped hiring, like most of our peers did during the initial days of the pandemic; also we did not stop giving salary hikes. Our quarterly salary hikes continued. Perhaps that is why Capgemini’s Yoyattriti­on has gone down. For the second quarter of 2020 the attrition was 17.4 per cent. He is confident attrition will taper off in a few quarters.

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