Nandan Nilekani, who returns to Infosys as non-executive chairman, has a task on hand: To lay the foundation for transformation so that a founder doesn't have to keep coming back
Nandan Nilekani will have to decide if he wants to make the details of an independent probe public, as demanded by Murthy
Image: Selvaprakash Lakshmanan for Forbes India
One thing that co-founder Nandan Nilekani’s comeback to Infosys achieved, just by virtue of his return, within days of the sudden resignation of Vishal Sikka as CEO and managing director, is that it curtailed the uncertainty surrounding the company.
Investors immediately gave Nilekani’s return a thumbs up. Infosys shares rose by over 3 percent on the Bombay Stock Exchange on August 28, the first day of trading since the Bengaluru IT company named Nilekani non-executive chairman late evening on August 24.
The Friday that followed was closed for trading in India because of Ganesh Chaturthi, but through August 24 and 25, shares rose on the New York Stock Exchange as well, where Infosys is listed. By August 28, Infosys American depositary shares rose by as much as 4.25 percent over the closing price on August 23, the day before Nilekani’s return was announced.
While the initial cheer has mellowed, Nilekani’s return helped shore up the value of investor wealth —including his own 0.93 percent stake in Infosys; his immediate family holds another 1.36 percent, according to a recent stock exchange filing.
Shares had tanked by nearly 10 percent on August 18 after Sikka quit, blaming founder NR Narayana Murthy for personal attacks after a long drawn-out fight over how the company was run by Sikka and the then board led by Ashok Leyland veteran R Seshasayee as chairman.
Nilekani, 62, returns to stabilise the company after Infosys’s first, and only, experiment with professional management failed just three years after the founders voluntarily walked away from holding any position at the company, aiming to remain just shareholders. Together they own 12.75 percent of the 36-year-old company, which they intend to reduce further by participating in the share buyback that Infosys has recently announced.
Immediate Challenge
Nilekani’s immediate challenge will be two-fold, says Siddharth (Sid) Pai, a technology consultant who has worked in the IT industry in various capacities for a long time. The first is to ensure there are no operational hiccups, so that clients continue to get the quality work they paid for, and the second is making sure that competition does not take advantage of the situation, especially with clients who are vulnerable due to renewals, renegotiations or performance problems.
Ray Wang, founder at IT advisory Constellation Research, says, “The first challenge is to temper expectations. His role at the moment is that of peacemaker and also of a transformation artist. The promoters want transparency, but also influence, while the [other] shareholders want transformation and growth. These elements bring Nilekani forward and provide the stability required on the most important role—finding the new CEO.”
Pai adds: Nilekani’s medium-term challenge will be to find an effective CEO, “who I believe needs to come from the outside, is not an alumnus with old loyalties or rivalries, is India based, and is US, Europe and Asia markets savvy”. The long-term challenge will be to see the company safely in the hands of the new CEO and dealing with the external challenges that affect every IT company in the industry.
(This story appears in the 29 September, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)