News

Infosys Trains One Lakh Employees On Design Thinking

In a bid to equip its employees on critical problem solving and handle the crisis situations in an efficient way, Infosys India’s second largest software services firm trained about one lakh employees on ‘design thinking. Design thinking refers to solving traditional tech problems using newer, different and innovative methods.

“We have just finished training about 1,00,000 of Infosys employees on design thinking. My sense is we are entering a time when everyone will be expected to innovate because increasingly the work that we do, that can be specified, that can be articulated, will be done by AI,” PTI report published in TOI quoted Infosys CEO and MD Vishal Sikka as saying. He made the comment while addressing the audience at Citi Global Technology Conference 2016.

The Bengaluru-based company, which has set an aspirational goal of achieving USD 20 billion revenue by 2020, is betting on new services like design thinking, solutions in artificial intelligence (AI) and intellectual property-led businesses to contribute at least 10 per cent of Infosys’ revenue by then.

Also Read: Infosys’ RBS Contract Loss May Hit 3,000 Employees

According to Infosys 2015-16 annual report, six of its board members, including chairman R Seshasayee, former Cornell University professor Jeffrey S Lehman and Biocon chief Kiran Mazumdar Shaw, have gone through “immersion sessions” where they were trained on design thinking and industry/market and technology trends.

Sikka said if IT companies can work with clients on areas that they find most strategic and innovate, “margins and profits follow from there”. “…there is no shortage of higher margin kinds of offerings in new areas,digital areas, digitization of existing physical artifacts and so forth,” he added.

Taking a dig at competitors without naming them, Sikka said “a lot of companies in our industry claim digital revenues and even implementation of salesforce.com or mobile websites and so forth is somehow digital revenue”.

“I don’t understand why it is digital. People often ask me how much of Infosys revenues are digital and I tell them 100 percent of it is digital because we write software for digital computer,” he said.

Leave a Response