Forbes Asia — October 2017

(Rick Simeone) #1
12 | FORBES ASIA OCTOBER 2017

T


he accelerating shift to cloud-
based IT, greater adoption of
automation and the Trump
administration’s stance on im-
migration have combined to
make the future of IT outsourcing provid-
ers in India uncertain. Companies such
as Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys and
Wipro are attempting to rapidly enhance
their high-level business-consulting rep-
ertoire, build AI-based tech solutions and
add thousands of local recruits in Ameri-
ca, their biggest market. This is an unprec-
edented cultural shift as well, for all these
companies.
At their U.S.-headquartered but large-
ly India-based competitor, Cognizant Tech-
nology Solutions, CEO Francisco D’Souza,
49, is pushing the Nasdaq-listed Teaneck,
New Jersey, company headlong into change,
including the $2.7 billion acquisition of
TriZetto Corp., made two years ago. That
has helped Cognizant’s health care unit im-
pact 160 million Americans, D’Souza says
in an interview. The overarching plan is to

become a strong intellectual-property busi-
ness advisor and tech provider rolled into
one. And for that, he expects to accelerate
the pace of acquisitions at Cognizant, he
tells Forbes India. Edited excerpts:

Q: This year you entered your second
decade as CEO of Cognizant. What
strikes you about the current phase of
change in technology?
D’Souza: The overriding thought that
comes to mind is just how much inno-
vation we’ve seen. About 24 years ago,
when we started Cognizant, technolo-
gy was largely a back-office function. It’s
gone from there to becoming the very
basis of competitive advantage for many
of the businesses we serve; and because
of this evolution, the best days are still
ahead of us. If you think of the great digi-
tal buildout that’s happening, I think Cog-
nizant, and the [tech] industry in general,
is still in the early innings. The next years
will see digital technology being deployed
more broadly in all industries and in

many more companies. And digital isn’t
just one thing, it’s many different technol-
ogies—social, cloud, mobile, analytics,
block chain, AI, IoT and so on.

What has changed more recently,
and how are you preparing to remain
a relevant vendor to your clients?
Until a few years ago, there was a sense
among our clients that digital technolo-
gies would be fundamental to their future.
But the patterns of how, why and where
were less clear. So we saw a lot of small pi-
lots, testing and iterating. In the last cou-
ple of years, we’ve seen that change—the
patterns are becoming clear, digital tech-
nologies are becoming more mainstream,
and we see clients adopting it at scale.
To do digital at scale, our clients are
having to change their business, opera-
tions and technology models simultane-
ously. That is at the core of today’s change.
One of the most foundational changes
that we’ve made at Cognizant over the last
two years is to realign our delivery capa-

FORBES ASIA
COGNIZANT

BEYOND THE


I.T. ADVERSITY


Cognizant’s U.S.-anchored chief sees bluer skies
amid the cloud for India’s troubled tech sector.

BY HARICHANDAN ARAKALI
Free download pdf