Wipro and Infosys - AI and the Indian services sector This article is sponsored by:
Differing fortunes in their quarterly numbers, but AI focus brings commonality to Infosys and Wipro.
Differing fortunes in their quarterly numbers, but AI focus brings commonality to Infosys and Wipro.
The outsourcing industry is in a state of flux, initially brought about by digital transformation activity during the pandemic and accelerated by the advent of generative AI.
The big Indian services houses are focusing on the potential of generative AI for internal use and external revenue growth.
The head of HCLTech’s healthiest sales region explains the risk to the IT function of business departments rushing to use AI without permission.
A solid Q2, but Accenture is not immune to the vagaries of the current macro-economic realities...
Organizations are still looking to accelerate their digital transformation benefits, but with the turbulent macro-economic environment, cost take-out is increasingly on the agenda.
Accenture saw its full year revenues increase by 22% and said that companies are looking for ‘compressed transformation’ strategies.
Infosys CEO Salil Parekh strikes a confident note about the firm's prospects in the face of global economic uncertainty.
Accenture's being cautious about predicting the macro-economic climate for the coming months, but spend on transformation is holding up.
Brexit and COVID-19 are clearly proving to be a boon to some of the largest suppliers to the British Government, with most sectors experiencing growth.
The UK government talks up a Small Government message, but do its procurement actions back that up in practice?
Revenue growth, new customers and an evolving sales approach - Seth Ravin on a successful Q2.
Government IT debacle shocker! Sadly, not really, but have we become brutalized into accepting failure as a key component of digital service delivery in government?