India's TCS urging staff to use AI despite risk to revenue, CEO says


FILE PHOTO: A man walks past a logo of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) before a press conference announcing the company's quarterly results in Mumbai, India, January 11, 2024. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas//File Photo

MUMBAI, Feb ⁠25 (Reuters) - Tata Consultancy Services is urging employees to ⁠use artificial intelligence tools to deliver work faster and ‌cheaper, even if it eats into the company's revenue, the CEO of India's largest software-services provider said on Wednesday.

The comments come as investor concerns ​about AI disrupting the Indian IT sector's ⁠traditional, labour-heavy operating model ⁠have wiped off about $68.6 billion market value in February.

"We are telling ⁠associates ‌that if you find that you can do something faster, better, cheaper with AI, you should ⁠probably go and tell your customers, even if ​it cannibalises revenue," ‌CEO K Krithivasan said at the Nasscom Technology and ⁠Leadership Forum ​in Mumbai.

"We are not afraid this technology will take away our livelihood. We believe it is going to open up more, so ⁠you enjoy the benefits the more ​you do, and not by resisting the change," he said.

TCS' stance mirrors that of smaller rival Wipro, which expects rapid AI ⁠adoption to boost rather than shrink demand for software service providers. Wipro Chief Strategist and Technology Officer Hari Shetty told Reuters he expects AI to create more jobs than it ​displaces.

India's Nifty IT index fell 21% ⁠this month as of Tuesday's close, putting it on course for ​its worst monthly performance in nearly ‌23 years.

(Reporting by Haripriya Suresh in ​Mumbai; Additional reporting by Bharath Rajeswaran; Writing by Kashish Tandon; Editing by Dhanya Skariachan and Mrigank Dhaniwala)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Russia fines Google for distributing VPN services, TASS reports
Workday tumbles on dour revenue outlook amid AI threat
Microsoft Japan raided over suspected violation of anti-monopoly law, source says
AI robot monk unveiled in Japan
AI disruption prompts Australia's WiseTech to cut a third of global workforce
TM and U Mobile enter into 5G wholesale arrangement
More than half of teens use chatbots for schoolwork, survey finds
Discord pushes back global age verification rollout amid criticism, promises transparency
Meta testing stablecoin payments as digital currencies take off
AI triggering 'flashing warning signals', researcher says

Others Also Read