Posts

Showing posts with the label Infosys News

CEO Salil Parekh to earn a fourth of what Vishal Sikka signed up at Infosys

Image
Infosys gave a low key welcome to Parekh, unlike the aggressive marketing exercise it undertook to welcome Sikka Salil Parekh will earn an annual salary of Rs 162. 5 million ($ 2.55 million) as the CEO of Infosys, which is a quarter of what Infosys had signed up with his high profile predecessor Vishal Sikka, who quit the firm after three years in turmoil. The compensation also reflects the reality at Infosys and its chairman Nandan Nilekani who would like the low profile senior executive to execute a vision of focused delivery for customers than over promise and under delivery that would be in contrast with the company's culture. Parekh, the soft-spoken executive who was poached from global rival Capgemini, will get an annual fixed salary of Rs 65 million and variable pay of Rs 97.5 million that would be compensated based on achieving metrics set by the company. Infosys has also offered stock options worth Rs 97.5 million that would be vested over two years, the ...

Personal attacks continue: Full text of Vishal Sikka's resignation letter

Image
" The distractions that we have seen, the constant drumbeat of the same issues over and over again, while ignoring and undermining the good work that has been done, take the excitement and passion out Vishal Sikka  has resigned as managing director and chief executive of Infosys with immediate effect. U B Pravin Rao has been appointed as interim-managing director and chief executive, India's no. 2 software services exporter said in a statement. Sikka has now been appointed as executive vice-chairman. Here’s the full text of Vishal Sikka's resignation letter. Over the last few days, since our earlier call, I’ve met Sesh several times, talked to you individually at length, and spent time thinking things thru with Vandana. During this time, one of our employees, Sandeep Karamongikar, died in his sleep, likely of a massive heart attack. He was working on the chatbot frontend in Nia. Also over the weekend, in possibly the greatest demonstration of AI capabilit...

Infosys founders raise a stink on governance, question Vishal Sikka's pay

Image
Board told about Sikka's pay hike, generous severance packages, disclosures Founders of   Infosys   have flagged concerns over transparency and corporate governance at second-largest software exporter in the country. They have questioned the compensation package of Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Vishal Sikka and the severance package to its former chief compliance officer David Kennedy. The founders, led by N R Narayana Murthy, have asked how the company would achieve the $20-billion target by 2020, as set by Sikka, in an uncertain global environment, said sources. Last month, Murthy, Nandan Nilekani and Kris Gopalakrishnan raised their concerns with the board. The current projections are contrary to how Murthy built the company, with his mantra of “under promise over delivery”. Murthy and the five founders had stepped down as promoter-shareholders to ensure that their influence over the company reduced after they moved away from executive roles. Since taking over a...

Automation, digitisation bigger disruptors than Trump: Vishal Sikka

Image
Sikka cautions that most of the work done Infosys can already be done with AI systems Latest News   : Infosys chief executive Vishal Sikka (pictured) has cautioned that the tidal wave of automation and technology-fuelled transformation could make the traditional information technology services obsolete. And, asked employees to shift their behaviour to adopt to shifts in technology. “The mountains ahead are tall ones. There is no other way but to get there and go... if we don’t, we will be made obsolete by the tidal wave of automation and technology-fuelled transformation that is almost upon us,” Sikka, the first non-founder chief executive, wrote in a New Year letter to employees. Sikka, whose letter had the subject: ‘Answers are blowing in the wind,’ cautioned that most of the work done by firms such as   Infosys   can already be done with artificial intelligence (AI) systems. “Our path forward is very clear – we need to harness the dual forces of automation ...