Delaporte slashed the top ranks of leadership from 25 people to
four. He stepped up acquisitions, with more on the way
In the five months
since he took over as chief executive officer of Wipro Ltd., Thierry
Delaporte has yet to visit the Indian outsourcer’s Bangalore headquarters
once. Instead, the 53-year-old has been on a virtual tour from his home in
Paris, meeting with managers, workers and customers around the globe.
He’s trying to
turn around the struggling business without letting the Covid-19 pandemic slow
him. Delaporte slashed the top ranks of leadership from 25 people to four. He
stepped up acquisitions, with more on the way. Mostly, he focused his attention
on customers, meeting with 130 over video conference and helping to land new
multi-year contracts with clients in the U.S. and Europe.
The company’s
stock has rallied about 70% since his appointment, most among India’s four
largest outsourcing firms during that period. It’s a rare victory for Wipro,
but one the veteran of France’s Capgemini SE is determined won’t be its last.
He hopes to get Wipro back on track after years of tumult and stagnating
financials.
“There’s a
particular momentum in the industry just now, and I want to drive that urgency
to put Wipro back where it belongs,” said Delaporte, speaking from Paris in his
first interview since assuming the CEO post. “I know I’m good at one thing -
getting things done.”
Wipro
needs more than enthusiasm. The firm, majority owned by billionaire Azim
Premji, has lagged its peers for years. In the fiscal year ended in March,
revenues rose 3.9% in constant currency terms, compared with 9.8% at Infosys
Ltd. and 7.1% at Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. -- even though both are far
larger. HCL Technologies Ltd., which displaced Wipro as the third-largest in
the industry two years ago, grew 17%.
Delaporte’s
predecessor, Abidali Neemuchwala, took over in 2016 with similar ambitions. He
departed after a turbulent four years and falling well short of a target to
build Wipro into a $15 billion company by 2020. (Its revenue for the year ended
in March was $8.1 billion.)
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