Posts Tagged ‘Infosys’

Infy eyes shop floor for products push; agriculture is next

March 27th, 2012

A strategic shift is under way at Infosys, India’s second largest software exporter. The $7-billion firm, globally renowned for its IT services, is opening a whole new channel of doing business with its latest software product platforms, taking the first steps towards achieving what Infosys 3.0 set out to do – securing a third of its revenues from products. At present, Infosys derives only 5% revenues from products.

The new platform for emerging markets, TradeEdge, is probably where the rubber meets the road for Infosys. In India’s maze of kirana stores where computers are yet to break in, getting real-time analytics on goods sold could be a daunting experience. TradeEdge, which Infosys co-developed with an unidentified American FMCG giant to link up small stores and manage the distribution channel with call centres, is now used in seven emerging economies, including India. The software product is expected to be Infosys’s biggest calling card in the product space after the success of its banking software Finacle, launched more than a decade ago.

Infosys executive co-chairman Kris Gopalakrishnan told FE that product revenues will soon play a major role at Infosys. “There is no doubt that it is a big part of the future,” he said in a recent interaction.

In just a year, the firm has won 23 customers for new product platforms including e-commerce applications, digital marketing, talent management and sourcing. It recently launched a mobile wallet for phone transactions (Airtel Money) and is also looking to adapt Flypp, its mobile phone app store to the television app space.

Sanjay Purohit, senior vice-president and global head for products, platforms and solutions (PPS), Infosys, said: “Over 3-5 years, you will see more momentum coming out of this every quarter. We have just started thinking through what we should do in the agriculture space; that’s one focus area over time.”

The platforms clocked a contract value of $300 million during the December quarter. However, Purohit reckons the next 18-24 months will still be the foundation years as the PPS business gains momentum and credibility. “The market will then start understanding what we are trying to do,” he said.

The 12 new platforms and a suite of products will add to the company’s flagship banking product, Finacle, which earned $237 million revenues in the last three quarters. Finacle, a web-based core banking system launched in 2000, is currently operating in 150 banks across 75 countries. Infosys claims a marketshare of over 70% for Finacle in India where the product first created a base for itself before expanding its footprint into Asia Pacific and the company’s biggest markets such as the US and Europe.

Sanjeev Hota, senior IT analyst with brokerage firm Sharekhan says: “For Infosys, other than Finacle which is at a mature stage, other non-linear cloud-based products and platforms that they are working on will take sometime to actually transform into a major revenue source.” Hota points out that it is difficult to give a time frame, but expects to see a shift in revenue mix over the next 4 to 5 years. “It is the only way the company can differentiate itself.”

The revenue from the product and platform business is typically spread over a longer term and margins are often higher than services. The margins in licensing out products and platforms can be as high as 40-50% and it is much better than the company’s current margins of 30-32%,” says Hota.

For a company known to be cautious on acquisitions, Purohit says it is “looking like furious” for potential buyouts. “In the end, we don’t build everything. In many areas, there are some intelligent pieces of property you can either partner with someone or acquire if its a good fit,” he says.

It isn’t just Infosys which has been making strides into the products space for the past year or so. For instance, the country’s largest software services exporter TCS last year rolled out an end-to-end cloud computing product for small and medium business which it sees as a potential $1-billion opportunity in the next five years.

Source:http://www.financialexpress.com/news/infy-eyes-shop-floor-for-products-push;-agriculture-is-next/928471/0

IT shares like TCS, Infosys up on weaker rupee

March 22nd, 2012

Shares in export-driven software services companies rose on Wednesday on hopes a weaker rupee would improve their profitability.

The rupee touched a two-week low on Wednesday weighed by heavy demand for dollars from oil importers, while negative shares raised foreign fund outflow concerns.. At 1:29 p.m, the rupee was at 50.61/62.

Indian IT services companies draw more than 50 per cent of their revenue from the United States.

Most of the IT companies have given revenue projection based on the rupee level of 51.25-51.50 against the dollar, said Kavita Vempalli, IT analyst, Nirmal Bang.

“This (the rupee’s movement) indicates that the IT companies are heading towards their target,” she said.

Robust earnings from Oracle, the world’s No. 3 software maker, also boosted sentiment, traders said. Oracle’s software sales rose 7 per cent from a year earlier to $2.4 billion in the third quarter.

Tata Consultancy Services gained 3.4 per cent and Infosys 1.26 per cent.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/stocks/stocks-in-news/it-shares-like-tcs-infosys-up-on-weaker-rupee/articleshow/12353714.cms

Infosys starts training effort for software engineers in Detroit area

March 21st, 2012

Infosys, the information-technology services outsourcing giant, officially kicked off a new training program Monday for entry-level software engineers in Detroit, the first of its kind in the U.S.

The 18-week boot camp at Wayne County Community College’s University Center in Harper Woods is designed to help tackle the nationwide shortage of software engineers by training people who have no IT or engineering skills as well as those whose skills are outdated. The free program started last week with 100 students, who each passed a skills test in order to qualify.

Infosys hopes to replicate the Detroit program in other parts of the country. Ashok Vemuri, head of Infosys’ operations in the U.S. and a director of the company, said the company was attracted to Detroit because of its large supply of skilled workers who had been laid off during the auto industry downturn.

“So far so good,” said Tjade Souder, a 49-year-old Oak Park resident who used to work as a dealer at the Greektown Casino-Hotel in downtown Detroit until he lost his job a month ago. “I’m learning a lot. I’ve always been interested in technology.”

A job fair will be held at the end of the boot camp. In addition to Infosys, other local employers, including some of the IT giant’s customers, will be looking to hire the students who successfully complete the program, said Vemuri.

Infosys, which is based in Bangalore, India, has 300 open positions nationwide. The company has an office in Southfield and employs 150 workers in Michigan. In the last 12 months, the tech giant has hired 1,200 people in the U.S., the source of 60% of its revenues.

Infosys flew in instructors from different parts of the world to teach the boot camp, which normally lasts 24 weeks in India. The company is providing training for a few of WCCC’s faculty members, so they can teach the course in the near future.

Vemuri said Infosys’ training program stands out from others because it teaches people how to apply engineering skills in a work environment. Infosys has close ties to key players in the tech industry, which helps it anticipate changes in technology.

Source:http://www.freep.com/article/20120320/BUSINESS06/203200379/Infosys-starts-training-effort-for-software-engineers-in-Detroit-area

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