SHARE
Facebook X Pinterest WhatsApp

Indian IT Firm Opens U.S. Consulting Arm

Written By
thumbnail
Colin C. Haley
Colin C. Haley
Apr 9, 2004

Amid an offshoring backlash, Indian software giant Infosys Technologies said it would open a business consulting practice in the United States.

Infosys Consulting expects to hire approximately 75 people within the
next
year and 500 people within the next three years.

Stephen Pratt, a Deloitte & Touche veteran, will serve as CEO and work out
of the unit’s Fremont, Calif., headquarters. Additional offices are
slated
to open in Boston, Dallas and Orange County, Calif.

Pratt’s managing directors have held senior positions at Deloitte &
Touche,
Cap Gemini Ernst & Young and EDS. And it’s against large consulting
outfits
like this that Infosys Consulting will compete.

Chelsea Hardaway, an Infosys spokeswoman, said the firm will focus on
making its clients more competitive by focusing on “operational strategy and technology enabled transformations.”

But that doesn’t necessarily mean shipping work to Infosys Technologies in India. Some may, but that’s not the goal, Hardaway said.

InfoSys’ foray into consulting comes after IBM bought Indian call center operator Daksh e-services, a deal that could help Big Blue’s market position as a provider of outsourced IT services.

The purchase price of Daksh is estimated at between $150 million and
$200 million. The deal will extend the company’s position in the region, where it is leveraging a local presence in the business outsourcing arena.

At the same time, there is also growing debate about the impact of the trend of U.S. companies sending programming work to India, China, Russia and other countries where the cost of skilled labor is cheaper.

A recent research report said that six years from now, one quarter of traditional U.S. IT jobs will be done offshore.

A few days later, a technology industry group released a study that
concluded that offshoring of U.S. technology jobs will actually increase the number of American information tech jobs over the next decade.

Recommended for you...

Does Meta Have a Death Wish?
Rob Enderle
Apr 14, 2022
U.S. Needs to Protect Tech Leadership: Qualcomm
Rob Enderle
Apr 8, 2022
HP Buys Poly and Moves to Dominate Desktop Communications
Rob Enderle
Mar 31, 2022
Ossia’s Wireless Power: The Most Revolutionary Technology You’ve Never Heard Of
Rob Enderle
Mar 25, 2022
Internet News Logo

InternetNews is a source of industry news and intelligence for IT professionals from all branches of the technology world. InternetNews focuses on helping professionals grow their knowledge base and authority in their field with the top news and trends in Software, IT Management, Networking & Communications, and Small Business.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.