In an industry in which the
youth of a Bill Gates or Steve Jobs gets highlighted and
hyped, people sometimes forget that there are many people
who have spent decades in the industry to build successful
global operations. Age is not a handicap, as S. Ramadorai,
chief executive officer of Tata Consultancy Services,
has shown. In the five years he has been at the helm of
Indias largest software company, he has proved that
creating the most valuable software company in the country
has nothing to do with being young. His pioneering status
in the industry he came in at a time when very
few in the country knew or appreciated what IT was all
about has helped him maintain TCSs lead in
Indias IT revolution.
Mr Ramadorai has experienced first-hand the turbulent
evolution and growth of the industry. It is this unique
advantage, coupled with his keen intellect, that gives
him the daring to dream big. To think of taking his Rs.3,000-crore-plus
company to the top of the global IT consulting business.
A dream that makes him bold enough to talk about big plans,
even as the industry globally goes through one of its
worst periods in recent years.
So what does he have on his mind as he steers TCS through
its well planned path to the top? To find out, K.
A. Anantharam and Christabelle Noronha spent
over an hour with him, despite the pressures on his
time, at his well-appointed residence. Excerpts from
the interview:
On the impact of the US economic slowdown on TCSs
operations
I do agree that a major part of our revenues come from
the US. But todays business scenario, in terms
of geographical distribution, will always be skewed
in favour of the US. The reason very clearly is the
huge market size and the amount of money that is spent
on technology and technology-based deployment in institutions
in that country.
But we have always had a proactive risk mitigation
strategy of spreading our portfolio across multiple
geographies. Today TCS has a geographical spread which,
in addition to the US, spans across Canada, the UK,
the Asia-Pacific region and the domestic market. We
are moving fast to occupy important openings in South
America, South Africa and the Middle East. We will continue
to focus on opportunity-based assignments, where we
will offer clients a basket of development, e-initiatives
and performance management services.
We have long-term sustainable contracts with our customers
in the US. These contracts are a combination of development,
maintenance, re-engineering, e-enabling, performance
management and quality services, which will ensure that
we work with them on an ongoing basis.
The strong bond we have built with our customers through
our dedicated relationship managers, is expected to
yield us substantial repeat business. So strong are
our bonds that with most of these long-standing customers,
we participate in technology roadmaps, technology advice
and quantify our value proposition by going beyond the
assignment we have been retained for. We may also leverage
our relationship with such customers to generate business
in areas where we need not have the core competency.
On the slowdown in the industry and the TCS plan
to combat this
True, the general slowdown will affect the industry.
But when values are not the same, the option customers
look for at such times is "how to get the best
mileage from the reduced budgets". One is very
clearly to work with organisations like us who have
the capacity to bring back work to India and
we have worked on this model with several customers.
The offshore experience most customers have had with
us, the high-quality infrastructure and the centres
which have been assessed at level 5 of SEI CMM, are
all positive indicators. We will leverage our reputation
to bring back more offshore work into India, which will
benefit the customer, in terms of value proposition
including the cost of getting the job done.
But if there is a major slowdown it affects everybody.
And, to that extent, TCS will be no exception. The key
is how you hedge against the economic slowdown, what
kind of exposure you have in the affected areas, for
instance in dotcoms, where somebody who has great exposure
will have a major problem. Fortunately for TCS, we do
not have a major exposure to dotcoms.
We are also working hard to increase our penetration
of the domestic market. We have always held that it
is our responsibility to bring back the technology and
experience gained outside and deploy it in the Indian
context. We are very visible in the domestic market
in terms of engagements, number of people deployed and
ability to handle very big and complex engagements.
We will obviously leverage our strengths in these areas
to get more out of the domestic markets.
On the massive recruitment plans TCS has in the face
of a slowdown
First, let me clarify something. When we say that we
are going to recruit 4,000 persons, it does not mean
that we are going to go out and do it today. This is
our plan for the year based on the business currently
contracted, business anticipated by our marketing team
and the attrition that generally occurs in this industry.
We will recruit these numbers from multiple channels
during the course of the year. Obviously, the numbers
can be revised on the basis of business and economic
conditions as we go along. No planning exercise is static,
where you just freeze it and then keep moving irrespective
of the economic conditions or what is happening in the
marketplace. All of us, as prudent businessmen, must
be sensitive to the happenings in the marketplace.
We generally recruit people through a campus-wide recruitment
process. We need a set of good people who, after passing
the stringent selection criteria set by TCS, can be
trained. We also recruit experienced professionals because
we need to build domain capabilities, project management
capabilities, industry-experience capabilities and certain
geography capabilities.
On change management
We are in an industry where technology very frequently
changes every 18 months. Fortunately, TCS, as on organisation,
has the capacity to absorb technology changes in terms
of training our people in these newer technologies.
So there is a well-ingrained process of managing change
in terms of technology management and how it is absorbed
in the institution itself.
The other aspect of change management is how we build
project management skills in todays context. Here
again, we have an institutionalised system of getting
people to quickly build capabilities in new domains
and with quality.
The curriculum development, to address the new requirements
that these changes bring about, comes to us through
a number of ways. First is through our client base.
As they make changes and introduce new products and
services, we build change capabilities through a continuous
dialogue with them. It is here that long-term client
relationships matter most.
The second is our interaction programme with academic
institutions in the US, Europe and India in a research
dimension. The third is our integration with technology
companies. Then, our own research through our independent
think-tank within the company and our research centre
in Pune contribute to the process. Add to this our connections
with research agencies like the Gartner Group.
It is a combination of all these factors that determines
our set of priorities with respect to investments, training,
continuing education, asset building, marketing, and
research and development.
So change is not something that worries us, because
thats the industry in which we live, thats
the way we practice. We can very quickly adopt new ways
of building software. We can quickly integrate new technology
into existing applications. Thats our business.
On people-retention policies
I think retention comes under two categories, first
the monetary form, which includes salary, perks, benefits,
equity options, etc, and the second, which is the non-monetary
means of keeping people in the organisation.
Let me first address the non-monetary option. In this
profession it has been proven beyond doubt, and it has
been seen within our organisation as well, that motivation
comes from teams and how you can work together. The
level of excitement that is created in terms of engagements,
in terms of learning together and in terms of what the
organisation invests in your professional career and
development plays a vital role in the motivation process.
At TCS, we give a lot of importance to improving the
professional capabilities of individuals through training,
continuing education, projects by geographies, advanced
HR practices, leadership training, and non-monetary
recognition. We give a lot of importance to the human
resource side of the organisation and see a very clear
relation between the level of motivation and level of
attrition in teams and groups when such things are done
very well. It is always a challenge to do this across
the organisation.
We do it in many ways. We try to do it through outside
consultants, try to meet as many people as possible,
we connect with our team members in all geographies,
when we travel we connect with their families. This
factor plays a very important role.
Coming to the monetary side, your salary and perks
must be in line with the industry. We continuously benchmark
our remuneration policies with the help of an outside
consultant. Furthermore, recently we have introduced
the concept of variable compensation, which is very
clearly linked to performance on multiple dimensions.
So, the better you perform the more money you can make.
When you look at this model you will find that this
is better than what one would have got through equity
participation.
That is what we call the EVA model or EVA method of
compensation. We are trying to continuously work on
this and deploy it across the organisation. Thats
the challenge. Today, we have extended the coverage
up to certain levels. We have set ourselves the target
of 2002 by when the process will be completed. This
will then give us the organisation-wide capability to
work on providing our employees multiple career paths
across technical dimensions, management dimensions and
research dimensions, so that they can participate in
what interests them the most.
Our efforts to constantly communicate with our people
even beyond the workplace {see Waves
2001}, our world class infrastructure and its
ambience, and the facilities, including recreational
facilities, play a major role in our retention policies.
At the end of the day attrition comes in multiple forms:
people who migrate abroad for higher studies, people
who migrate abroad for family reasons, and people who
are forced to leave the organisation because they cannot
withstand the pressures TCS expects them to. We cannot
control these.
Then there is always the last category of people who
would leave to go to competition. This is what we are
trying to minimise and effectively address. I think
we have fairly succeeded in our attempts but
a very small number might still get away.
On institutionalising the pursuit for excellence
There is already a strong commitment to quality across
the organisation. Our development centre at Shollinganallur
(near Chennai) was the first to get the SEI-CMM Level
5 nomination in a record eight months. {see item on
Shollinganallur
development centre}. This has become a benchmark for
the industry.
Today we have 13 centres at
CMM level 5, which means we have replicated the process
multiple times from the Shollinganallur assessment. The
best practices of what they did at Shollinganallur to
get to the CMM level 5 were replicated and carried forward
to other parts of the organisation with the corporate
quality organisation as the vehicle to take them across.
The ownership has to percolate across the individual
businesses or parts of the organisation. Its a
collective team effort essentially because it
is bottom-up and top-down so that every single employee
has to gather the matrix in his workplace, incorporate
the matrix, work on the matrix to increase performance
on a continuous basis.
Across 13 locations we have covered 8,000-9,000 of
our employees. The remaining 6,000 or so of our employees
are outside the country. So we have practically covered
most of the organisation by the SEI CMM level 5. A few
locations are left in Delhi, Pune, and so on, and we
have set a time frame by which we will complete the
process.
On what's next on the quality front
The bigger challenge,
once you have been assessed at SEI CMM level 5, is to
ensure that you keep working on the matrix because you
will have to do a reassessment every year.
We are also faced with the question, where
do we go beyond Level 5? Because even though there is
no mention by the SEI institute in Pittsburgh, TCS has
the capability to define excellence beyond Level 5.
At a research level, we are looking at integrating the
Six Sigma and the CMM initiatives together.
Six Sigma efforts are already underway and we are getting
our employees certified as certified quality analysts
(CQA). From May this year, we would get our people capability
maturity model rated. Its a combination of all
these that will push or greatly drive the organisation.
Then we have our own TBEM
model. All along we have focussed on the CMM model since
that is what our customers wanted. But the TBEM quality
model is just as powerful.
The biggest challenge has been to integrate the TBEM
and SEI-CMM initiatives. We are integrating the two
by building strong internal systems and by completely
digitising or e-enabling TCS. The manual intervention
as TCS connects with its people, customers and its suppliers
has to be seamless. This is a major initiative that
is driving our vision for the next 18 to 24 months.
In terms of the TBEM, last year we were at 421 points.
We want to get to 600 points and above in the next application
or the next cycle of the application next year, under
the TBEM. That is when our internal system will be well-ingrained.
Unless there is a well-integrated digitised, e-enabled
internal system and connections, you can't just consolidate
the matrix in which the TBEM works. While we have thought
through the whole architecture, we are looking at the
security aspects since we dont want any loss of
information, whatever be the type of information. We
have a very strong security group working out of our
Hyderabad-based Advanced Technology Centre.
On setting standards in the industry
We are slowly beginning to
get involved in some of the standard-setting fora. We
participate in the IEEE standards body. We have been recently
invited to be a founding member of the Internet Security
Alliance (ISA) and are the only Indian entity to be invited
on this forum. So we will be defining standards.
We have also been pushing our R&D to get more involved
than they have been in the past in these areas because
we believe this gives us a position and visibility in
the market, which gives us a totally different dimension
about the way people look at us.
On products from the TCS stable
We are very clear that we will not be in the shrink-wrapped
product game. If you are headquartered in India, you
cannot satisfy a product for the US market because it
is purely a marketing and branding game.
But we have some very strong products for the vertical
markets such as banking, finance and telecommunications.
Our retail-banking product for the domestic industry,
called ISBS, has the highest market share in the country.
We command 60-65 per cent of the branch banking software
package market in the country. This package was very
clearly positioned to be a domestic market product.
The other domestic market product was EX, a single-user,
small business tool, where again we have a sizeable
market share.
The other products we are focusing on are an outcome
of our domain capabilities. These are a custody product,
a treasury product, a wholesale banking product called
Quartz all of which are today beginning to take
leadership positions in India and outside. Investments
are phenomenal in the larger products game. You cannot
build these products in a year or two. It can take up
to four to five years to build these products, before
they reach the marketplace.
Additionally, the development tools developed at our
R&D centre in Pune will be sold in the open market
at an appropriate time. It is all part of a planned
strategy.
On the companys IPO plans
We dont talk about what has gone by. There is
no point in wondering if we should have gone public
last year when the markets were on a high. It does not
help anyone. We need to talk about TCSs future
with regard to the requirements of various stakeholders
involved. We need to ask ourselves the question, does
it address the needs of our employees? Does it generate
a currency for inorganic growth of the organisation
through acquisitions? Does it give us the ability to
give options to some of our critical customers? So all
these may necessitate a requirement of creating a currency
for the growth beyond the normal alternative growth.
So if we look at a listing, an IPO, from this perspective,
we must take care of employees, of their future growth
and the stakeholders needs. As to the timing of
an IPO, I would not like to comment on the subject at
this point.
On how he keeps himself abreast of technology
I keep myself abreast of technology in many ways. I
read a lot. Besides, I travel a lot and am hence close
to the markets in which we operate. I maintain close
connections with academic institutions, research institutions
and technology companies. I am also very close to all
our customers and learn a lot from them.
The best way to get a hold on technology is to start
using it, and I use all the possible new technologies
as and when they become available, to personally get
used to them. I participate in product reviews and bid
processes that give me an insight into technology.
On the TCS-HDFC promoted call centre
The whole value chain in an organisation to provide
value to customers starts from business strategy to
IT strategy to system deployment to back office processing.
We have a whole range of long-term customers who would
like to outsource their customer service activities.
So when we look at this value chain the question we
deliberate is whether we do the back office processing
within TCS or go out.
We realised that we should not do it within
TCS because of the type of skills needed. The type of
people required to do the back office processing are
different from the mainstream system building, systems
support, IT strategy and business strategy that we are
currently in.
We looked at the best way we could provide
value to our customers across the entire value chain.
That is when we decided to go in for a joint venture
with HDFC for a call centre operation. The joint venture
represents two very powerful brands which address a
base that both believe is likely to grow exponentially.
The demand is very large.
Organisations outside India which outsource
their IT deployment to a country like India would also
expect to offload their back-office processing, call
centre processing and infrastructure due to the same
problems of non-availability of people at the right
price in their own countries.
That is why we decided to venture into
this area. The other reason we went in for a joint venture
with HDFC is the scalability issue. Call centres are
an operation growing to a 5,000-people organisation
over a three-year period of time. This needs to be done
out of multiple locations, and multiple cities with
the highest levels of technology.
Having such an offering for our customers
helps us in many ways. Existing customers of TCS or
HDFC, may do call processing with us. Secondly, new
customers from the call centre could well feed into
the TCS consulting system in the process. We are looking
at business generation in addition to satisfying demand
by occupying the space in the entire spectrum of the
value chain.

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