What Indian IT companies Infosys, Wipro, TCS, HCL are not doing right
The top IT services companies have been around for a few decades
but, for all practical purposes, they came into being around Y2K, when
the world took notice of the Indian technological prowess. Since that
historic turning point, the industry has zoomed from under $2 billion in
2000 to $70 billion in 2012. While that growth trajectory continues,
albeit at slower rates, there is something amiss.
Bellwethers Infosys and Wipro face fresh challenges, Tata Consultancy
Services (TCS) has marched ahead and HCL, which looked like an also-ran
prior to 2008, has risen like a phoenix. The gap between TCS and No. 2
Infosys has widened from $1 billion three years ago to more than $3
billion today. Infosys slipped to the No. 3 slot in the pecking order,
with Cognizant overtaking Wipro in 2011 and Infosys exactly a year
later, in the June quarter.
If Y2K was the sector's baby steps that hurled IT companies into a
hyper-growth orbit, now they are finding it difficult to cope with
uncertain market conditions. There are divergent commentaries: Infosys
5% growth, TCS set to beat Nasscom guidance of 11-14% growth for the
year, Cognizant and HCL clocking double-digit growth. HCL, Cognizant and
TCS have won more new business in the last 10 quarters than rivals. And
the mid-tier, the likes of Hexaware and KPIT Cummins, are growing much
like the large-tier did a decade ago.
This is in contrast to the pre-2010 period when the large companies -
excess of $4-billion revenue today - grew at an average of 22-24% a
year. That period saw the industry zoom on the back of labour-intensive
tasks, such as applications development and maintenance and remote
infrastructure management. It was the low-hanging fruit that Indian IT
went for and what looked like hi-tech then is commodity business today.
Today, global technology buyers - from Fortune 500 firms spanning GE,
Bank of America and Nissan to mid-tier firms across the world - are
looking at new applications faster than most people change mobile
phones. Typical IT cycles have shrunk from 5-7 years to six months. For
example, UK-based retailer Tesco had a single buying system globally, on
mainframes - in the last couple of years, it has dismantled that and
built country-specific systems, say, for buying from Poland and China.
There's turbulence in the market.
Companies like HCL Technologies credit this disruption for their growth:
contracts came up for renewal and they have grabbed the opportunity
with both hands. Global outsourcing tracker Information Services Group
says 686 outsourcing IT deals with a value of at least $25 million or
more are due to expire in 2012 alone. Most of them are being
renegotiated at lower rates, putting pressure on margins - unattractive
for some (like Infosys) but attractive for others (like HCL).
According to research firm Gartner, global IT spend grew by 15.26%
between 2005 and 2008 and at a lower 13% between 2008 and 2012. With
global spends ebbing, companies have been eating into each other's
market share for gains.
The performance of TCS, HCL and Cognizant looks better when compared to
Infosys and Wipro. But this is more due to short-term gains, such as
winning business on contract renewals. Overall, the $70-billion industry
will have to overcome this period of inertia if it has to return to
stellar growth. Even those that gained in the slowdown - like HCL and
Cognizant - need to look at new growth engines.
Indian IT has traditionally had high exposure to verticals that are
stressed today - banking, retail and telecom - rather than those that
are less stressed - manufacturing, auto and healthcare. For instance,
post-2008 has seen spends on banking systems stagnate or decline,
particularly in areas of capital markets and investment banking.
The way customers are buying technology is changing: for instance,
travel, hospitality, banks and retail chains are looking at a
combination of mobile, cloud and big-data analytics services.
Banks need new software applications every six to nine months, retailers
want to buy systems that can sync with both online and offline worlds,
helping customers buy on mobile, tablets and physical stores with equal
ease. Indian IT is confused on what to bet on.
This decision becomes tougher in a challenged market environment, where
IT spending is tight and given the scale at which companies are -
neither too small to change path quickly nor too big to take on IBMs and
Accentures. IBM can throw in a few billion dollars just to give proof
of concept in, say, smart, networked cities and showcase it to buyers
from Mumbai to Manhattan. Infosys, Wipro and TCS can't afford that
investment. Neither can those that have ostensibly gained in recent
years - HCL and Cognizant.
The first $6 billion to $10 billion was an easy run rate to clock. Now
they need the savviness much like the software they help global
companies run on, to identify areas they want to chase and create new
markets for themselves to grow.
Source : TOI
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