|
-S Ramadorai, MD & CEO, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS)
In a career spanning three decades at TCS, Subramaniam
Ramadorai has lived the life of the Indian IT industry. He has been instrumental
in every aspect of TCS' growth-be it the numerous quality initiatives, the
offshoring model, the measurement models for people and processes, the signing
up of big ticket clients, or then forging alliances with global technology
majors and institutions, and, most importantly, making it the first Indian IT
company to cross the $1 bn and subsequently the $2 bn threshold. Following
another year of superlative growth after getting listed in the Indian bourses,
2005 was a year of aggressive M&A activity. In an exclusive tête-à-tête
with Rajneesh De of Dataquest, Ramadorai delineates the guiding principles
behind the acquisitions and TCS' increasing domestic foray, and refutes
allegations of being unfriendly towards financial analysts.
 |
After consistently shunning M&A for many years, in
2005 TCS was active in acquiring companies across the world. Especially on the
BPO front, the Comicron and Pearl BPO acquisitions heralded TCS' re-entry into
this domain. What were the guiding principles driving this acquisition spree,
especially on the BPO front?
The acquisitions of both Comicron in Chile and Pearl Group's BPO division
in UK were in line with TCS' strategy of being in platform-based verticalized
transactional BPOs. While Comicron augmented our presence in the global pensions
vertical, Pearl BPO offered opportunities for significant growth in life
assurance. Overall, this translates into strong TCS expertise in Finance &
Analytics in the BFSI domain from the BPO side, especially taking into account
our decision to stay away from the low margin voice-based BPO business.
With verticalization being the overall mantra, the jigsaw
was completed by our acquisition of Sydney-based FNS and setting up of C-Edge
Technologies in association with SBI. FNS and C-Edge complement the overall BFSI
vertical presence by bringing in the IT services component-they help us in
selling and deploying core banking solutions globally.
The acquisitions, therefore, meant that TCS has now
expertise in the BFSI vertical on both IT services as well as BPO delivery
platform. Do you find a wide gulf in marketing these different platforms, one
that would require a separate branding for the BPO arm?
We do not require separate branding for the BPO business. In fact, we follow
a common marketing pitch for IT services, infrastructure services, as well as
BPO though we do have different cross-functional teams for delivery. The models
of delivery might be different for each, but a common marketing approach helps
ensure more stable longer relationships with bigger clients and, hence,
significant deal sizes. Only client relationships of such significant magnitude
would keep us on track with our stated goal of reaching $10 bn by 2010.
Are you talking about significantly large deals like
the one signed recently with ABN AMRO. What is the significance of such deals
for TCS and the Indian IT players in general?
The ABN AMRO deal was a landmark engagement not only for us but for the
entire Indian IT industry. Not just in terms of size-the $400-mn five-year
application support contract to TCS and Infosys represents the largest
outsourcing deal bagged by the IT industry so far-but also in terms of
quality. It is expected to give a significant strategic push to unbundling of
mega outsourcing contracts to multiple vendors as opposed to the hitherto
single-vendor norm. Coming from a Dutch company, this deal has opened the doors
for large contracts in Europe for Indian offshore vendors. And, most
importantly, a deal of this size and scale has brought Indian vendors into
direct competition with the MNC vendors.
For TCS, the milestone engagement is a complete and
irrevocable validation of our global delivery strategy. In addition to the
significant annual revenues it will generate, this is the first multi-national
global engagement that allows us to utilize our Global Delivery Model (GDM) in
its entirety. In addition, in our development centers in India over 500
consultants are working on this engagement from our global delivery centers in
Brazil and Hungary. Once the deal has been inked, it is now important to monitor
how we are performing; how TCS is investing continuously to build its global
delivery model and best-in-class execution abilities to remain in the eyes of
the customer.
While the ABN AMRO engagement signifies TCS' global
reach, how are you looking at the domestic market that too is now witnessing
large IT infrastructure outsourcing projects? Why is it that most of the large
domestic engagements are being bagged by MNCs like HP, IBM and Accenture?
The domestic market looks exciting today especially on the IT infrastructure
outsourcing front, and we are actively exploring opportunities there. The CMC
acquisition has provided us with a strong foothold in the domestic market and we
believe that Tata Infotech coming into the TCS fold has further bolstered this.
Tata Infotech had a strong domestic SI presence, especially in the defense and
telecom sectors, and this could perfectly supplement the capabilities of both
TCS and CMC.
Even Indian enterprises are looking at the scale of
offerings the vendor provides and its size and that perhaps explains why MNCs
are winning many of these deals. With the TCS/CMC/Tata Infotech combine in force
now, we too expect to score with Indian clients on both scale and size. A recent
example could be the landmark Tata Teleservices (TTSL) deal estimated at over Rs
1,000 crore and spread over five years. Under this contract, TCS has been given
the responsibility of managing the IT infrastructure of both TTSL and Tata
Teleservices Maharashtra.
The merger of Tata Telecom into TCS gives you stronger
foothold into the domestic market. Does this also signal the first step in the
consolidation of all the infotech companies in the Tata group under the TCS
umbrella?
The merger of Tata Infotech into TCS was meant to provide us with an
expanded customer base and deeper penetration in key geographies. It had also
prevented situations like when both companies were bidding against each other in
bagging the same projects. While Tata Infotech complements our strengths, the
other three companies operate in completely different areas. Tata Technologies
possesses expertise in auto engineering, Tata Elxsi in visual infotainment while
Tata Interactive is strong in e-learning. Each of them are running profitable
businesses and we do not foresee any of them merging with TCS in the near
future.
How is TCS ramping up in terms of manpower during
2005-06? How would you react to the common perception that only manpower
increase can enable topline growth for services companies?
The gross addition of manpower at TCS in the current fiscal could be pegged
at 18,000. With allowance for attrition, the net addition to manpower in 2005-06
would be around 13,500. This does not, however, include personnel of overseas
companies we acquired during the year-Pearl BPO had 950 employees, Comicron
1,257 while FNS brought 220 employees. This would mean that TCS would have
manpower strength close to 50,000.
While the perception that topline growth is directly
proportional to manpower addition is true to some extent, it can never be
accepted as an axiom. Managing the addition of 13,500 people into the fold is a
mammoth HR challenge that very few can handle. And topline growth would
ultimately depend on how you manage your businesses and client relationships and
not just on having a huge manpower.
How did the different verticals contribute to TCS'
topline growth in the current fiscal?
The BFSI sector accounted for around 41% of TCS' turnover followed by
manufacturing and telecom that accounted for 18% and 10% of our revenues in the
current fiscal. The retail sector contributed to around 5-6% and so did life
sciences, energy and utility. The government sector accounted for around 2% of
our turnover. Going forward, while BFSI would continue to be our biggest revenue
driver, the new areas of business focus include life sciences, utility and
energy. In the e-Governance space, we are focused on multiple initiatives,
including front office and back office applications both in India and abroad.
It is now more than a year that TCS has been listed on
the stock exchanges. But still you do not seem to be a darling of the bourses
like your competitors, with the investor and analyst community. Do you feel that
TCS needs to sweeten its communication with the investor community?
We at TCS would like to reiterate that we do not believe in giving q-by-q
guidance as we feel that our performance over the years speaks for itself with
both investors and the analyst community. We would like to ensure our investors
long term returns on their investments and not just hanker after getting
'good' news every quarter. Even if some analysts feel that this means our
business model is ridden with unpredictability of revenues, the ethics of
corporate governance embedded in TCS does not permit us to provide quarterly
guidance.
What about plans of getting listed in bourses abroad?
We would eventually like to get listed in the US but it would not be
possible for me to give a time frame to it at this moment. We are not facing any
significant financial challenges currently, and are certainly not desperate for
cash. Any motivation for a secondary listing for us would therefore be
strategic, rather than financial. Other than US, we might look at a secondary
listing in Europe, either on the Deutsche Bourse, or the London Stock Exchange.
Rajneesh De
rajneeshd@cybermedia.co.in
Page(s) 1
|