Archive for December, 2009

Japan I.T co OBIC’S pretax profit seen up 5% in April Dec period

December 28th, 2009

Japan information technology firm Obic Co. (TSE:4684) will likely log a group pretax profit of more than 14 billion yen (US$152.6 million) for the nine months through December, a five per cent increase over the year-earlier period thanks in large part to its system support services.
The business systems builder remains on track to post a record-high operating profit for the full fiscal year ending in March.

Overall sales for the three quarters likely slipped five per cent to roughly 34 billion yen. Because of the poor business climate, companies have not been purchasing new equipment and Obic’s sales of servers and other machinery have declined by hundreds of millions of yen.

But that same poor climate has bolstered Obic’s business of system support services because small and midsize companies need maintenance and operating support to stretch out the life of their existing equipment. As a result, sales in Obic’s system support services business are expected to reach nine billion yen for the April-December period, an increase of 300 million yen on the year.

Group operating profit is seen rising two per cent to 11.4 billion yen for the three quarters, helped by cost-cutting efforts, including a reduction in outsourcing expenses by bringing more software development in-house.

Source : http://www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/news/Stock%20News/2751405/

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India’s tech industry relieved as ‘Year of Satyam’ blows over

December 27th, 2009

As the year progressed, the top 20 firms managed to survive the slowdown since the middle of 2008 by tightening their belts and exploring new geographies, but small and medium vendors took the brunt, leading to mass layoffs and dwindling compensations.

But 2010, they hope, will bring the much-needed respite.

“It has been a year of shock and awe, as it began with the world looking like coming to an end. But as the months passed, the world changed and the market became more competitive,” said T.V. Mohandas Pai, director of IT bellwether Infosys.

“Hope and growth are coming back as we enter 2010,” Pai told IANS.

The tech industry shrugged off the Satyam fiasco as a one-off scam. The government intervened to pull it out of a financial quagmire and minimise its impact on exports and the Mahindras bailed out the Hyderabad-based firm by acquiring it.

But for the industry as a whole, the global recession and slowdown posed a challenge that saw vendors pulling all stops to stay afloat, even as downsizing at corporate houses overseas presented new avenues for outsourcing.

“Though the year gone by was challenging, it was also satisfying by many counts,” said Suresh Senapaty, chief financial officer of Wipro, among the top three IT exporters in the country.

“Given the overall economic climate in the background of the global financial crisis, we revisited our business model fundamentals and fine-tuned it to the changing customer needs,” Senapaty told IANS.

After a compounded export growth of over 30 percent since the dotcom bust in 2003-04, the software sector saw export growth plunging to 16.3 percent (to $46 billion) last fiscal as against 27 percent (to $40 billion) in 2007-08.

Source : http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/infotech/ites/Indias-tech-industry-relieved-as-Year-of-Satyam-blows-over/articleshow/5384130.cms

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Mongolia to set up IT outsourcing centre with India’s help

December 27th, 2009

Mongolia, the land of the legendary warrior Chenggis Khan, is all set to open its first major IT outsourcing centre with India’s help.

While the two countries are working together in a number of fields, information technology (IT) is one in which they have close collaborations, the country’s envoy said.

Mongolian Ambassador Voroshilov Enkhbold said in an interview to IANS: “We do have BPOs, but with India’s help we are going to set up a major IT outsourcing centre very soon. This is one of the many collaborations that Mongolia and India has in the IT sector.”

One of those collaborations, Enkhbold said, was the setting up of an India-Mongolia IT school there a few years back.

“About four-five years back an India-Mongolia IT school was established in Mongolia with the Indian government’s help. Initially the staff there was trained by Indian experts, but now we are on our own,” he said.

In order to build their own skills so that they can further develop the IT sector in their country, a growing number of Mongolian youngsters are making way to India — especially to Bangalore — to pursue higher studies in the field.

With close to 400 IT companies, Bangalore is often called the IT capital of India, harbouring a very cosmopolitan population.

“Mongolian students have long been coming to India to pursue higher studies. This year more than 500 students came here for that purpose. While some went to Pune and Delhi, many have gone to Bangalore to study information technology,” Enkhbold told IANS.

Mining is another sector in which the two countries are forging strong ties, with companies like Jindal Steel and MESCO Steel Limited setting up manufacturing units in the central Asian country.

A country half the size of India but with less than three million people, Mongolia is also seeking collaborations in the tourism sector.

“Distance is one deterrent when we promote Mongolia in India. There are no direct flights, you have to go via Beijing or Seoul which takes eight hours. Then for half the year it is very cold there. The ideal time to visit Mongolia is between mid-May and mid-September,” the ambassador said.

“Despite all that we are trying to promote our country here and although I agree that our efforts have not been strong enough till now, it will be hereon; 2010 will the 55th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Mongolia and India and to mark that we are planning a host of cultural activities here which will showcase the rich diversity of our country,” Enkhbold said.

“Also, through the recently held Grand Chinggis Khaan Golf Cup tournament and other such tournaments in the future we are promoting our country here. Mongolia is a beautiful and, very importantly, a peaceful country. So we want people to come and experience the nomadic way of life, wildlife and beauty of our country.”

Enkhbold added that the Mongolian government is planning to invite Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to their country some time next year to further ties.

Source : http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/infotech/ites/Mongolia-to-set-up-IT-outsourcing-centre-with-Indias-help/articleshow/5384123.cms

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Indian BPOs lose ‘voice’ to Philippines

December 27th, 2009

For about a decade, it was an image that best captured India’s growing links with the global economy. The image of young men and women hunched over desks sporting headsets and speaking into microphones, answering customer queries on credit cards to insurance policies and collections to telemarketing, captured India’s call centre boom.

It defined India as the “world’s back office”, much like neighbouring China, which has been immortalised as the “world’s factory”. But that may be changing.

The Philippines is fast upstaging India’s back office supremacy, with BPO service providers and customers seeming to favour the Pacific Ocean nation as a better place for “voice-related” work, the mainstay of the global outsourcing business.

“India has lost tens of thousands of jobs to the Philippines. The calibre of English is better and companies don’t have to put up with the mess (that exists in India) there,” says Pramod Bhasin, president & CEO of Genpact, India’s largest BPO company.

The “mess” that Mr Bhasin refers to includes arranging transport for employees, security, power back-up in offices, basic infrastructure that companies can take for granted in the Philippines and adds to costs in India.
Unsurprisingly, that country has become a preferred destination, especially with the US companies, many of which are more comfortable with the English accent spoken there. US customers account for over 50% of the global outsourcing business.

Ananda Mukherji, MD & CEO of specialist BPO provider Firstsource Solutions, says costs are more or less similar in both countries. This means the accent proficiency in the Philippines tips the scales in its favour.

Many of the Philippines’ advantages are thanks to the US rule, which bequeathed the English language to that country with its distinct accent along with a robust telecom and broadband network laid out by the US defence forces.

“To begin with, just 1-2 out of every 10 are recruitable for American accent voice tasks (in India). And even after training they are not quite as good as you get in the Philippines,” adds Mr Bhasin.

Adds Prabhakar Bisen, head of the Philippines operations of WNS: “Apart from affinity to the US culture and English-speaking skills, the country’s time zone advantages make the Philippines a natural choice for providing 24×7 service to global companies, particularly those based in the US.”

WNS is one of many companies that has set up shop in the Philippines, attracted by its “high-quality voice skills” and its status as the third-largest English-speaking nation in the world with a 94% literacy rate. And, it is not the only one.Genpact, Wipro BPO, Intelenet, Aegis BPO and Firstsource are all ramping up their operations. Genpact has about 2,000 employees in the Philippines and expects to scale up operations by 40-50% in the next 12 months. Firstsource has about 500 staff in Manila, while WNS has increased staffing to 1,100 from 200 in the past 18 months, delivering a mix of voice and back-office services for telecom, consumer products, travel and financial services clients.

In the past 12 months, Wipro BPO has set up a 1,000-seat centre in the Philippines’ Cebu City, with staff there engaged in telecom, healthcare, energy & utilities-related tasks.

The Philippines has also become the destination of choice for global firms, which in the past were big on India.

Convergys, the $2.7-billion world’s largest call centre company that for years prided itself on the fact India had the largest concentration of employees outside its home base — US, now has more people in the Philippines than in India. Convergys has around 12,000 employees in India, but is set to cross 20,000 in the Philippines.

StarTek, which provides customer services and technical support for customers like AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon, has also opted for the Philippines over India.

Industry players reckon that India could have lost around 100,000 call centre jobs to the Philippines, although with annual revenues of $11 billion, India is still the largest player in the BPO sector, more than double of the Philippines’ $5 billion.

Although the call centre industry initially grew in India, quality concerns and infrastructure constraints have forced companies to look at other countries, and the Philippines has stepped into the breach. The high employee turnover in India also does not help — the BPO sector in India operates with attrition levels of up to 25% compared with less than 20% in the Philippines.

The government in the Philippines has seized the opportunity — it offers tax incentives to companies for setting up call centres and has a $100-million budget to train people for back-office jobs.

Som Mittal, president of software and BPO industry body Nasscom, acknowledges that the Philippines has grown, but says India’s BPO sector has also moved on from offering pure voice-based services.

He says India remains a lead destination for “services support”, while the Philippines is more about voice work for US customers and as a disaster recovery site.

“Within call centre work, India is preferred for scale and problem-solving type of tasks like technology help desks,” says Mr Mittal.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/infotech/ites/Indian-BPOs-lose-voice-to-Philippines/articleshow/5379192.cms

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BPO sector weathers the slowdown storm

December 27th, 2009

2009 will be remembered as a year of great uncertainties and challenges for India’s back office industry.

Reeling under the impact of the global meltdown, business process outsourcing companies had to fire-fight their way by tweaking the fundamental way of doing business in the endeavour to counter thinner margins and volume reductions during the first part of the year.

Yet, industry pundits believe BPO companies have been able to mitigate the slowdown effect better compared to their software industry counterparts. This is because BPO spends are part of a company’s operational budgets which, unlike capital expenditure budgets, cannot be deferred for a long time. Relief did set in towards the second half of the year with deals, earlier on the backburner, starting to see light of day, driven by changing macro-economic dynamics.

Fewer transactions

Explains Mr Deepak Patel, CEO of Aditya Birla Minacs: “Due to recessionary pressures, work that was already outsourced was impacted by lower transaction volumes, but at the same time businesses expanded the scope of work that was outsourced. As such, the first half (of 2009) was impacted by lower transaction volumes and the second half saw expansion of scope.”

Mr Raj Patil – President, BPO and Chief Client Services Officer, Americas of Mphasis BPO, is of the view that in the last 3-4 months “there is a sense of speed and an urgency to move and take decisions.” In the first half of the year, when new deal wins were hard to come by, companies started deepening relationships with their existing clients, even if this meant giving in to pricing pressure and offering discounts.

Pricing pressure

Depending on each vendor’s specific situations, rates had to be dropped on ‘incremental costs’ basis.

“Clients would say, give us a pricing discount for say one year and share the pain with us. And this would be in lieu of a three-year deal being converted to a five-year one,” said Mr Susir Kumar, CEO of Intelenet Global Services.

In order to protect margins in the face of pricing pressures, vendors continued to look to service customers from low-cost destinations. Intelenet set up centres in low cost centres such as Puducherry and Dehradun. Mphasis BPO shored up operations in existing centers of Ahmedabad, Vadodara and Puducherry.

Several positives

There have been several positives for companies who have been able to stand their ground despite the economic turmoil of last year. In fact, the recession provided more opportunities in the BPO space as companies were keen to increase profitability by trimming their SG&A costs, according to Mr Abid Ali Neemuchwala, head- BPO, Tata Consultancy Services.

For the $6 billion TCS, BPO services contribute more than 11 per cent to overall revenues compared with five per cent a few quarters back, added Mr Neemuchwala.

Many client companies have gone through the painful process of downsizing in the last one year. Even though they are now seeing a pick-up in their businesses and hence require hiring additional staff, they are still uncertain about the longevity of this revival.

Such firms are taking the safer route: Engage an offshoring firm for functions such as finance & accounting, payroll and other back office work so that you need not control staffing. And this line of thinking is propelling many off-shoring shy sectors to open up.

“Historical outsourcing ‘laggards”— new industry entrants such as CPG (consumer packaged goods), retail, logistics and media and entertainment start on outsourcing journeys side-by-side with more experienced industries such as financial services, who ramped up their initiatives in response to the worst economic conditions in 60 years,” said Mr Anup Gupta, Chief Operating Officer of WNS Global Services.

Agrees Mr Kumar of Intelenet: “If companies were earlier outsourcing 20 per cent then, they have increased it to 30 or 35 per cent,” he feels.

Back office divestures

Another discernable trend last year was the pronounced waning of the era of captive back office centres of multinational companies due to the inability to control operational costs.

“Many clients revisited their captive shared service centre strategy with the recognition that third party service providers can deliver the same or better levels of service at lower costs with less administrative hassles,” said Mr Gupta of WNS.

This was also necessitated as many financial institutions were under pressure from their boards and investors to raise funds by selling off non-core assets in order to tide against the liquidity crunch.

Some of the recent captive divestures include UBS’ captive to Cognizant Technology Services, Monitor Group’s to Integreon, AIG’s to MphasiS, and Schneider Logistics and Amex’s captives to EXL Services. These deals were bundled with a long tenure services contracts from the parent company thereby ensuring revenue visibility for the back office company.

On the other hand, companies such as Caliber Point (a subsidiary of Hexaware Technologies) and Integreon are also looking to work as subcontractors for those captives who do not intend to sell put in the near future. While many captives seem to be sceptical for the time being, only time will tell whether this model would be better than a complete divesture.

Source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2009/12/26/stories/2009122651890300.htm

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Kiran Karnik: The firefighter on call

December 27th, 2009

Calm, collected and credible. Kiran Karnik is the extinguisher of crisis the tech industry turns to.

This happened in late January, 2009. It was one of those hundreds of conference calls that the besieged top team of Satyam Computers was having with customers extremely nervous about the breakout of a mega scandal. In most of the calls, the customers would either be very concerned or irate; sometimes both. It was surprising, then, to see one customer become rather chummy. “Kiran, how are you doing? You remember we met during the Nasscom meet at Mumbai? I am going to be travelling to India soon and so let us catch up. And yes, we’ll stay with Satyam, but we hope the quality of delivery doesn’t come down,” he said.

AS Murty, Satyam’s interim CEO during those troubled days, was on that call. “Such was Kiran’s persona as the representative of the IT industry that most customers were ready to believe the assurances that we were giving at that time. They would have not believed anyone else at Satyam at that time,” says Murty, who is now the company’s chief technology officer under the control of the Mahindras.

The race for rescuing the world usually goes to the shrewd or the swift but in this instance, the grace and quiet resolve of Karnik won the day for Satyam. And Karnik is the first to point out that it wasn’t just him alone. “All the other people appointed by the government: Deepak Parekh, Tarun Das, Achuthan, Manoharan and Mainak were equally instrumental. Since the other five had a full-time assignment, I co-ordinated the whole thing,” says Karnik. That said, no one else had the relationship that Karnik had with large global companies like Applied Materials, Bombardier and Nissan. “He has been the face of the Indian IT industry and a very credible name for CXOs of these foreign companies,” says Tarun Das, former director general of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) who was also a member of Satyam’s government-appointed board.

After Ramalinga Raju wrote his mea culpa letter, there was little to prevent the company from imploding. Very few companies survive the double whammy of fake accounts and a body-blow to reputation. Enron collapsed after such facts came to light and so did Worldcom. On January 7, when Raju’s letter became public and the share price became a fourth of what it was the previous day, almost everybody believed that Satyam’s days were numbered. People who have been involved in the Satyam rescue assignment admit that no less a person than Prime Minister Manmohan Singh himself realised the grave danger to Indian IT industry’s image and to 40,000-odd people that were working in that company. If such a large number of people were to lose their jobs in the thick of recessionary winter, the human and political costs could be catastrophic. The government reacted very swiftly after being nearly comatose for three days.

Karnik can’t really remember when the rear-guard action started. “I think it was on Sunday morning, January 11th when I received a call from the government,” he says. The caller whom Kiran doesn’t want to name had a simple assignment for Karnik: be a part of the new government-appointed board.
“When do you want me to go there,” said Kiran.

“In the evening. Will that be a problem?” asked the caller.

“But give me some time to set a few things in order in my house and book my tickets,” said Kiran.

By late afternoon, tickets had been arranged and Karnik was on the evening flight.

What he encountered in Hyderabad was not something he had ever tackled. “You can never prepare for such an assignment,” says Karnik speaking with the benefit of hindsight. And he had handled some very tough assignments. Karnik had spent the past seven years heading Nasscom, the IT Industry’s premier lobby organisation. In 2004, he had mounted a very intelligent campaign to negate the anti-outsourcing wave unleashed by the Democratic presidential hopeful John Kerry. Kiran is a very decent, genial and reasonable man. His affable demeanour and rational thinking swung it for Indian IT. It was exactly this combination of qualities that Satyam needed after its fall from grace.

Once the three members of the official crack team — Parekh, Karnik and Achuthan — went in, they realised that Satyam was like a battle field. “You could not be sure of anything,” says Karnik. Since Raju had confessed to cooking the books there was total confusion over how many genuine employees and even customers the company had. And then came one of the most testing moments. “Salaries were due on 15th and we had no money. If we hadn’t made the payments, people would have left us and if that happened customers would have pulled the plug,” says Karnik.

Fortunately, the Deepak Parekh factor worked and Satyam was able to get a loan of Rs. 600 crore to tide over the cash crunch. Once salaries were paid out, the employees became a little more comfortable. But many customers did not want the uncertainty. Coke pulled out. Cigna went away. Telstra said bye. One of the potential bidders for Satyam and a rival later admitted: “We thought “what’s the point of buying this company!” All the customers will desert it en masse.” And they would have. Except that Karnik and the senior management decided to do two things. One, they spoke repeatedly to every single customer and two, they had a daily call for about 100 managers of Satyam to monitor progress and also to solve any dicey problems they were up against.

Over the following month, every customer was encouraged to call and talk to Karnik and the top management. This was critical as any significant drop in revenues would have been the end of the line for the company. “It didn’t matter when the call was—11 p.m., 1 a.m., 3 a.m. or 5 a.m., Kiran was available to be on the call. We just had to tell him,” says Murty. For each of those calls, Karnik got the management to give him a comprehensive snap-shot of the customer indicating the level of business, profitability measures, and resources employed to service the customer. Armed with the knowledge, Karnik would be there trying to answer all their questions.

“Once I interacted with the company staff, I saw some statistics and after first few conversations with Key customers I knew that Satyam’s delivery had actually improved after the crisis. This was really helpful because I could then promise most clients that our quality would not drop,” says Karnik. But not every client was convinced. “There were some companies that said their brand could not afford to be seen with a company that had been hit by a serious fraud. We had no choice; we let them go. But we ensured that the transition was smooth,” says Karnik. This in some ways worked like a money-back guarantee. “Customers thought that if we were assuring hassle-free transition, then it was quite possible that we could live up to our promise of unwavering quality,” says Hari T., chief marketing and people officer, Satyam. It also put an end to senior people walking out of Satyam with key accounts; something that had started happening increasingly in late January and early February.

Much of February and March was spent arresting customer attrition. Every Saturday night, all the other directors would fly into Hyderabad from different parts of the country. “We used to book this private room at ITC Kakatiya and discuss all the issues threadbare. This allowed us to have a very quick board meeting on Sunday morning,” says Karnik. By Sunday evening except Karnik, most directors would have flown back to where they were working. And Karnik would continue with his routine.

Once the revenues stabilised, Karnik faced his next challenge. There were rumours that no company would want to buy Satyam, what with its dodgy accounts and sullied reputation. “It was the day of the auction and all of us were sitting when some local journalists remarked that it was too bad that no buyer would be turning up but the bright side of things was that tea and snacks were good,” says Karnik. The board had the last laugh though.

By April 14, Tech Mahindra had acquired control of Satyam. And Karnik’s job for all practical purposes was over. Anand Mahindra, vice-chairman and managing director, Mahindra & Mahindra, says that he was keen on Karnik staying back but Karnik wanted to move on. “Kiran is an excellent professional and a man of enormous integrity. He knew that once you complete a difficult assignment, you must bookend it,” says Mahindra.

By June second week, Kiran had left. Unfortunately there were no farewell parties. “Actually we wanted to get all the board members together but their schedules did not permit. It is a pending item in Satyam’s to-do list,” says Hari. Karnik, too, has pending matters of his own to tackle. “So much paperwork has piled because I had not been able to tend to it over the last six months. I am busy trying to finish them off,” he says. They say doing the mundane stuff can sometimes be therapeutic. Karnik surely wouldn’t want to live in an “interesting time” too soon.

Source: http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/lifestyle/kiran-karnik-the-firefightercall_432605.html

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IT has made a strong comeback

December 26th, 2009

When NR Narayana Murthy, chief mentor of Infosys Technologies (India’s second largest IT exporter) decided to name his new venture fund as Catamaran, Bangalore’s tech community instantly surmised that there could not have been a better name for the IT pioneer’s new business idea. In a year in which IT companies faced the wrong end of the stick, ravaged by the global meltdown, tech firms would be the first to admit that all they needed was a catamaran to sail across choppy waters.

Murthy’s new venture, however, could not overshadow the more cataclysmic events of the year. The Satyam scam was arguably the darkest episode in Indian corporate history, the deepening of the global economic crisis slowed the $60 billion.

Indian software industry considerably. Obama was categorical about his preference for Buffalo over Bangalore and to make matters worse, other countries like China, Philippines and Brazil continued to write their codes well, challenging India’s superiority on the tech terrain.

Indian IT services industry had grown by 30% annually for nearly a decade, by offering more economical outsourced services to clients abroad by writing software code and handling mortgage process operations. But the story suddenly started to look less fascinating after the industry grew by only 10% last year.

All through the year the media had only one question to ask the IT fraternity: “When will recovery start to kick in?”

None could predict it for a long time, with any degree of certainty. For the first two quarters of the fiscal, IT chieftains said they were not sure of the extent of time it would take for the business to turn around. There was severe pressure on pricing, tenure of the contracts shrunk, customers took a long time to finalise their budgets and client walk-ins had become a rarity.

It was only in the third quarter that companies like Infosys, Wipro and TCS started talking about ‘early signs of recovery’. Concerns were giving way to confidence. Blue chip Indian IT firms like Infosys, Wipro, TCS and MindTree started getting better visibility into annual budgets of top clients and greater number of deals (sweet ones at that) started to flow in, despite the anti-outsourcing mood in the US. Many big IT spenders like Telstra, ABN-Amro, British Telecom, AT&T, Dell, McGraw Hill and Northern Trust Bank had deferred the budget allocations, but during the third quarter those worries had begun to wear out  a plastic grin on the face of many of the IT executives. Infosys CFO V Balakrishnan was the first to proclaim that there is a marked improvement in the business environment. He pointed out that there has been a change in fortunes with the US economy starting to show some positive signs.

Much to everyone’s surprise, it was the banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) segment that bounced back the fastest. BFSI was the hardest hit during the downturn and no one really expected it to spring back to life within a year. About 40% of the revenues of top Indian IT firms come from this segment.

Outsourcing analyst S Sabyasachi came up with the statement that the spate of good earnings numbers from US companies (specially in the financial sector) has helped improved market sentiments. And it was not just the top-tier firms that started walking gingerly to the bank. The mid-sized IT firms also started to put up smileys outside cabin doors as the order pipeline filled up. Companies like MindTree, Patni, Sonata Software and Subex, among others, announced results of positive significance. As MindTree’s CFO, Rostow Ravanan, explained, smaller firms have been able to cut costs more easily and take innovative approaches. It’s easy to re-orient people to newer activities in smaller firms.

Emerging markets have also become a pool of big opportunities in the meanwhile. Latin America, Europe, Japan, West Asia and Australia have become bigger IT destinations during times of recession. For most IT firms, revenues from these emerging markets have doubled in the past one year.

In a chat with FE on Wednesday while reflecting on the year, Wipro’s joint CEO Suresh Vaswani admitted that 2009 was an unusual and eventful year. “Fluctuating currencies and volatile oil prices were two big challenges,” he said.

“But overall, the IT industry has proven to be resilient.” According to him, it is during such times of crisis that clients look for innovative solutions. In uncertain times, clients are open to game changing solutions as they continue to look at transformation of their businesses, both in terms of demand generation and cost transformation. The economic crisis has taught the industry means to improvise on productivity and utilisation, and also alter hiring patterns to suit business demands, he said.

Maybe, just maybe, the industry has found his catamaran.

Source : http://www.financialexpress.com/news/Column–IT-has-made-a-strong-comeback/559171/

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