Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) will be undergoing "a real structural transformation by changing its business mix," said N Chandrasekaran, executive vice-president and global head (sales and operations), adding that "it will take a few years to happen." |
For this TCS has identified five main growth areas "� products, BPO, infrastructure, engineering services and consulting. "We want to scale up each one of these," adds Chandrasekaran. |
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Today, more than 85-90 per cent of TCS's standalone revenue comes from core IT services (application development, maintenance, enterprise solutions implementation), which accounted for $1.7-1.8 billion of the turnover of $2.3 billion in 2004-05. |
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"Our goal is to bring this share of IT services down. In each of the other five areas mentioned we look to go to anywhere between 5-10 per cent of total turnover. Each of these will have to grow to $ 500-800 million. So we will be seeking to build a $ 3 billion plus business out of these five in the next few years." |
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"If these five segments can bring in 25-30 per cent of total revenue, then the share of core IT services revenue will decline to anywhere between 60-70 per cent," explains the global head of sales. |
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This is a rapid clip but TCS has already been announcing deals at a furious rate. Its India based BPO work is no more than $50 million. But recently it has announced a massive $800 million plus BPO deal with the Pearl Group of the UK. |
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It has followed this up with an announcement of acquisition of Comicrom, a Chilean BPO company which is likely to give it a Latin American revenue of $100 million next year (2006-07). |
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TCS has also moved into the field of products where current revenue, which includes licensing fees and solution implementation, is no more than 3-3.5 per cent of turnover. |
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But just over a fortnight ago TCS acquired Sydney-based Financial Network Services (FNS), a core banking solutions vendor. TCS has also identified markets which present opportunities in order to achieve the growth. |
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"We realised there were major customers in Latin America "� leading banking, telephone and oil companies. We want to be able to build a sizeable business in Latin America," said Chandrasekaran. |
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This is significant as TCS is ahead of the other leading Indian software companies in tapping the Latin American potential. In fact, Latin America, Japan and Europe play a critical role in derisking TCS's business, by further reducing reliance on the US which already accounts for a lower proportion of its turnover than is the case of other large Indian software companies. |
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REWORKED |
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TCS has identified five main growth areas "� products, BPO, infrastructure, engineering services and consulting 85-90 per cent of TCS's standalone revenue comes from core IT services, amounting to $1.7-1.8 bn in 2004-05 |
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