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IBM, TCS strengthen ties

TCS said on Thursday that it has extended a partnership with IBM, another sign of momentum for India's technology industry.

Published on: Jun 25, 2004 07:34 PM IST
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Tata Consultancy Services said on Thursday that it has extended a partnership with IBM, another sign of momentum for India's technology industry.

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TCS, which bills itself as India's oldest and largest information technology services company, has had a relationship with IBM in which the companies sell each other's products, TCS spokesman Victor Chayet said. The new agreement focuses on technologies including portals and so-called "on-demand computing," and involves TCS training more employees in IBM technology. Exact terms of the agreement were not disclosed.

Although TCS and IBM compete in the realm of IT services contracts, the partnership centers on IBM software and hardware products, Chayet said. "It's 'coopetition,'" he said. "Sometimes you're competing with IBM for business, sometimes you're partnering."

TCS has similar partnerships with other companies, such as Hewlett-Packard, Sun Microsystems and Oracle, Chayet said.

The company's extended partnership with IBM in effect signals the emerging strength of TCS and other Indian technology services companies. TCS boasted revenue of about $1.3 billion for the year ended March 31, up from about $1.1 billion the year before. It has some 30,000 employees worldwide. The 35-year-old company, part of a broader Indian business conglomerate, recently filed for an initial public stock offering in India.

More than 90 per cent of revenues at India-based vendors came from customers outside India, Gartner said. TCS and other India tech companies such as Infosys Technologies and Wipro Technologies depend partly on lower labor costs in India to win over customers in the United States.

US-based tech companies also have expanded their operations in lower-wage countries such as India and China. IBM, for example, has thousands of workers in India and is acquiring a 6,000-person Indian company that offers transaction processing and telemarketing services.

The "offshore" or "global delivery" model has come under fire from critics who worry that US tech jobs are being replaced and that US tech leadership is in jeopardy in the long run.

On the other hand, defenders of sending work offshore say it ultimately helps the US economy and US workers.

 
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