News

Indian IT firms see higher profit per employee this year

By SiliconIndia   |   Sunday, 08 November 2009, 21:46 Hrs   |    2 Comments
Print Email
Indian IT firms see higher profit per employee this year
Chennai: Ironically enough, despite the recession, most Indian IT companies have made more revenues and profits per employee this year than they did during the same time last year. Historically, each year had seen these companies raise headcount while revenues did not grow at a comparable pace. Companies were using more employees to produce the same unit of revenue. But the last 12 months seems to have been a period of reining in costs, managing foreign exchange volatility and cranking up utilization rates, reports the Hindu.

In many cases, among selected companies like TCS, Infosys and Wipro, revenue per employee and profits (before interest, depreciation and taxes) per employee seem to have risen. Notable among these are Cognizant and HCL Technologies.

Also, more than just one player sought to de-link IT services and BPO. A spokesman for Infosys, which saw revenue per employee falling while profits per employee rose slightly, said, "Considering the total number of employees may not be accurate, as it would include those from BPO/products, support staff and also those on the bench. Per capita revenues derived from effort man-months are accurate."

BPO and products businesses are different from IT business in terms of nature of work, skill sets required and employee costs. Thus, Infosys' revenue per employee for the September 2009 quarter was calculated at $6,752 compared to $7,310 in the same period of the previous year.

At Polaris, without considering BPO, revenue per employee rose to 8.82 lakh for half-year ended September 2009 versus 8.36 lakh the same time in the previous year. Profits per employee too rose from 1.22 lakh to 1.50 lakh. Srikanth, Executive Vice President and CFO, Polaris Software, said that the company managed this rise as "It has a 'built-in' hedge with roughly one-third of the business coming in from the U.S., Europe and APAC, making for a balanced revenue portfolio. We have four growth engines - customer accounts, product (intellect), new country expansion and the insurance business expansion. We grew in all four."

As for per capita growth in profit, he said that the company had focused sharply on internal efficiencies, optimal utilization of resources and rationalization of costs. "The products business has contributed to our healthy margins." Outcome-based pricing also seems to have helped companies.

HCL Technologies attributed its growth in per-employee figures to winning deals in the total outsourcing space. Anil Chanana, the CFO of HCL Technologies (HCL-T) said, "These deals are primarily outcome-based and do not require linear deployment of manpower. We also have a just-in-time hiring policy for skilled manpower." At the profit level during recession, HCL-T focused on savings in the 'general and administration' front while investing in sales and marketing. The support headcount has come down as a percentage of total headcount. Between the quarters ended September 2008 and September 2009, it had fallen from 9.21 percent to 8.95 percent.

Mindtree, which saw a decline in per-employee numbers, attributed it to changing onsite-offshore mix, among other reasons. Rostow Ravanan, CFO of Mindtree said, "When work moves offshore, it's an overall positive while revenue may be impacted in the short term. Also, the industry as a whole has been facing a pricing pressure from clients."

In a recent conversation with Business Line, Ashok Soota, Chairman of Mindtree had said that the company had not sent home any of its employees during the downturn. "We paid a price for it in terms of falling renationalisation rates, but we will reap the benefits when the turnaround happens."

When utilization, or employees being gainfully billed, is lower, the per-employee revenues and profits tend to fall. Cognizant Technology Solutions saw its annualized revenue and profit before interest and taxes per employee rise about 4.5 percent to $51,688 and two percent to $9,799 respectively, as during September 2009. It claims to possess the highest per capita revenue among its peers and attributes this to focusing on two geographies, namely the U.S. and Europe.

1   2  Next>
Write your comment now
 
Reader's comments(2)
1: I guess its due to no hike and cost cutting that the companies see more profit per bakra...
Posted by:Shuaib - 09 Nov, 2009
2: Well yeah but i think maybe employees are being taken for granted here. i mean - getting lal the work done by lesser number of employees - will result in higher attrition rate .
Posted by:hamida - 08 Nov, 2009
Beautiful and dress selection, please go to Dresses
Sign Up for DailyDose and Read the Day's Highlights
Email:
SiliconIndia About Us   |   Contact Us   |   Help   |   Community rules   |   Advertise with us   |   Sitemap
News:       Technology   |   Enterprise   |   Tech Products   |   Startups   |   Finance   |   Business   |   Career   |   Magazine  |   Dailydose   |   News archive  
Network:      Network   |   Profile   |   Messages   |   Find   |   Blogs   |   Events   |   Q&A   |   CXO Insights  
Career:      Jobs   |   Companies   |   Mentorship   |   Videos   |   Career blogs  |   Training Institute  |   Freshers
Online courses:   Web developer   |   Java developer   |   CCNA training   |   SEO   |   SAS   |   SQL server 2005   |   J2EE
Education:   MBA   |   MCA   |   Engineering   |   Overseas Education   |   Internship
Life:           Jokes   |   Bookstore   |   Relocate  |   Marketplace
Cities:         Startup   |   Real estate   |   Finance  
Send your and help us continue to improve SiliconIndia
© 2012 SiliconIndia all rights reserved