India IT behemoths revamp culture to attract young talent, battle start-ups

Image
Reuters MUMBAI
Last Updated : Jun 18 2015 | 5:22 PM IST

By Nivedita Bhattacharjee

MUMBAI (Reuters) - India's oldest and most distinguished IT firms are doing what would have been almost sacrilegious a few years ago - holding coding marathons to develop innovative fixes and deploying "commando" units to resolve clients' IT woes within hours.

Infosys , Wipro and other Indian IT giants, which rose to prominence during the outsourcing boom in the 1990s and 2000s, have struggled to keep pace with mushrooming start-ups. The rate of revenue growth has more than halved since 2011-12, partly due to the emerging competition.

Those young set-ups say they go beyond cookie-cutter solutions and argue that they do the job more quickly and for less. They also attract the creme de la creme of India's engineering graduates with their culture of bubble chairs, breakfast bars and table tennis at work, in a way that the corporate, straight-laced atmosphere of the country's IT trail blazers struggles to.

Client demands are similarly changing in India's $147 billion IT outsourcing industry. Major telecoms, retail and banking firms want more than an outsourced help desk, and now demand everything from help solving a server crash overnight to help building an app, industry veterans say.

"When people around you change, moving from a very process-defined model to a much more agile model, it is definitely making a dent in everyone's thinking," said Sanjiv Kovil, Wipro's chief technology officer.

To deal with this, Wipro, for example, has set up small "commando force" units that help get swift solutions by copying a startup environment where small teams move fast. India's third-largest IT services provider has also introduced gaming-like training sessions and so-called hackathons to solve both fake and real client problems.

"It is not the wild west - there is a method to the madness. We have kind of defined the boundaries, but within that we have allowed for a lot of flexibility," Kovil said.

Earlier this month Infosys - long known for its inflexible rules of employee decorum - did away with a formal dress code. The company had already relaxed rules that stopped workers from accessing social networking web sites at work.

At Tech Mahindra , associates and mid-level employees can win quizzes and contests to spend a day with the CEO and exchange ideas, a practice that industry veterans say was impossible to imagine even a few years back.

BEARING FRUIT

There are some early signs the more flexible approach is yielding dividends.

Tech Mahindra said it won a contract last month to build an electric vehicle charging system for the city of Ontario, Canada, because its flatter structure had allowed the manager responsible to decide alone and move fast with his bid.

To be sure, it is hard for large IT companies, with an army of thousands of employees, to change overnight. Yet, steps as small as implementing a casual dress code and allowing employees to use their own tech devices mark a major cultural shift in an industry that still relies heavily on manpower to win business.

"These changes are cool. I like that they have finally decided that we are adults," said one young Infosys executive who has spent seven years with the firm, declining to be named.

"But the real changes are different - for example, giving smaller teams more authority, that makes more of a difference. That is happening, but slowly."

For now, even small changes should at least help retain the sector's traditionally fickle talent.

"(Young graduates) have access to overseas travel, they are spending time with customer organisations abroad and they are looking at that culture. So they are questioning their organisations," said Asheesh Mehra a senior Infosys employee who quit earlier this month to start his own company, Antworks.

(Editing by Clara Ferreira Marques and Ryan Woo)

*Subscribe to Business Standard digital and get complimentary access to The New York Times

Smart Quarterly

₹900

3 Months

₹300/Month

SAVE 25%

Smart Essential

₹2,700

1 Year

₹225/Month

SAVE 46%
*Complimentary New York Times access for the 2nd year will be given after 12 months

Super Saver

₹3,900

2 Years

₹162/Month

Subscribe

Renews automatically, cancel anytime

Here’s what’s included in our digital subscription plans

Exclusive premium stories online

  • Over 30 premium stories daily, handpicked by our editors

Complimentary Access to The New York Times

  • News, Games, Cooking, Audio, Wirecutter & The Athletic

Business Standard Epaper

  • Digital replica of our daily newspaper — with options to read, save, and share

Curated Newsletters

  • Insights on markets, finance, politics, tech, and more delivered to your inbox

Market Analysis & Investment Insights

  • In-depth market analysis & insights with access to The Smart Investor

Archives

  • Repository of articles and publications dating back to 1997

Ad-free Reading

  • Uninterrupted reading experience with no advertisements

Seamless Access Across All Devices

  • Access Business Standard across devices — mobile, tablet, or PC, via web or app

More From This Section

First Published: Jun 18 2015 | 5:01 PM IST

Next Story