Sunday, December 13, 2009

Infosys to make China biggest development centre outside India

LOOKING EAST.



Mr Kris Gopalakrishnan

K. Giriprakash

Swetha Kannan

Bangalore, Dec. 11

In a far-reaching move, IT bellwether Infosys Technologies has decided to make China its biggest development centre outside India.

“China will be our biggest development centre outside India while the US will be the largest market in terms of revenues and India will remain the largest in terms of physical presence,” the Infosys Technologies Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director, Mr Kris Gopalakrishnan, told Business Line.

For the quarter ended September 30, 2009, 9.7 per cent of Infosys' revenue was generated from the rest of the world which includes all regions except North America, Europe and India. North America contributed to 65.9 per cent, Europe 23.2 per cent, and India 1.2 per cent. Infosys does not give country-wise break up of revenues.

As Infosys takes a big leap forward into the next decade, it wants to deepen its geographical presence, said Mr Gopalakrishnan. One of the major reasons for developing the China centre was because of the huge potential it sees there and also the quality of talent pool available there.

Currently, Infosys has two development centres in China: Shanghai and Hangzhou, with a total of 1,258 people working there. The centre delivers BPO and IT services to clients in the US, Europe and Asia. Mr Gopalakrishnan said that the company is also working closely with the Chinese Government to tap and subsequently nurture the IT talent pool there.

“Our China Development Centre has grown in the last one year... We have been expanding our delivery capability in horizontal services such as enterprise solutions, independent validation services, and product engineering as well as investing in contextualising our banking solution product, Finacle, for the Chinese market,” he said.

He added, Infosys will also continue to invest and expand in markets other than China such as Poland and other European countries and Mexico, the Philippines and Brazil, because of the advantage they offer in terms of round-the-clock support to local language support.

Global consultancy firm, KPMG's Executive Director and Head of IT advisory, Mr Kumar Parakala, told Business Linethat Infosys' move showed its visionary strategy for its company. "By 2020, it is expected that China will have the largest English-speaking population in the whole world. Hence, China will have the talent pool needed to support the IT sector," he said.

He said more and more IT multinationals are using the global delivery model for their businesses with presence in all the right places including China. "Therefore, Indian MNCs can get significantly disadvantaged if they do not have a presence in China," he pointed out. He said if Indian companies start setting up their centres in China, firms in China will do the same leading to both the countries leveraging each other's strengths.

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