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TCS Overhauls Leadership, Creates 5 New Business Units Amid AI Disruption

TCS announced the creation of five new business groups, each with their own new leaders. It also appointed new leadership to the media vertical.

TCS Overhauls Leadership, Creates 5 New Business Units Amid AI Disruption
TCS also beat quarterly revenue estimates for the April-June period.
  • TCS announced a top-level leadership reshuffle amid AI disruptions in IT sector
  • Banking and financial services Americas unit split into US West and US East teams
  • Five new business groups formed including ServiceNow and US West Coast units
New Delhi:

Tata Consultancy Services announced a top-level leadership reshuffle and formed five new business units focused on growth in the US West Coast market and its ServiceNow practice as AI threatens to disrupt the $315 billion Indian IT sector.

The announcements were made through a series of memos from CEO K Krithivasan and COO Aarthi Subramanian on Sunday, seen by Reuters

The banking and financial services Americas unit will be split in two with company veterans Rakesh Kumar and Mohan Veeturi heading the US West and US East banking units respectively. Current US banking head Susheel Vasudevan will move to a strategic role reporting to the CEO, according to one of the memos. 

Banking is the Tata Group company's largest vertical, accounting for a third of overall revenue while North America accounts for nearly half. Manmeet Chhabra, who currently heads the Canada banking unit, will take over as the country head for Canada.

TCS also announced the creation of five new business groups: the ServiceNow practice, travel and transport clients, energy and utility clients, US West Coast, and global autonomous businesses, each with their own new leaders. It also appointed new leadership to the cybersecurity, UK and Europe lifesciences and communication and media verticals. 

The moves come in a period when AI is seen as a disruption risk to India's $315 billion IT services industry, through reducing demand for engineering teams, ​shortening project timelines and squeezing prices as clients seek a share of productivity gains.

Last week, the IT services exporter beat quarterly revenue estimates for the April-June period, helped ​by higher spending by banking clients and weakness in the rupee.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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