Indian IT companies such as TCS, Infosys, Wipro and Tech Mahindra are leveraging the Booming AI market in partnership with AI integration, the luxury workforce and HyperScalers.
A deep dive into the FY25 Annual Report from industry giants (TCS, Infosys, Wipro, Tech Mahindra) shows that in the global AI race, Indian tech Titans are not competing to invent basic AI.
The transition from a typical digital conversion to a specific AI focus is captured in the very title of the annual report. TCS builds its strategy within a “permanently adaptive company” based on the “AI-First approach.”
Infosys is heading down a more direct path with the theme of “Ai Your Enterprise,” but Wipro focuses on its role as an enabler, “helping clients build AI-powered future-enabled businesses.”
Tech Mahindra will be taking part in this chorus with “AI Rived Right.”
IT companies focus on investing in human capital and increasing their workforce.
TCS reports that 10 million employees have “acquired AI/ML and Genai high-level skills, while Infosys states that more than 270,000 employees are now “AI-Aware.”
A similar trend has been observed in Wipro and Tech Mahindra.
“The emergence of AI with all the possibilities and possibilities creates another arc of uncertainty. As businesses consider applying AI to all aspects of their business, some long-standing challenges become essential and self-evident for businesses.”
The need to modernize legacy systems, create data architectures, ensure that AI consumes all the data across the board, he says, cannot be postponed anymore, and urges businesses to promote fuel innovation and scale with AI Foundry and AI Factory.
“Think of AI as a gifted child genius born and raised in a library. It has access to all the knowledge of the world. It absorbs everything: information, facts, fiction, truth, intrusiveness, every pattern of human behavior.
Industry estimates show that the global AI market is surged, reaching an estimated USD 1.3 trillion over the next decade.
IT companies have not built their own large-scale language models (LLMS) to compete with Openai and Google. Instead, they have deepened their partnerships with Hyperschools (Microsoft, Google, AWS) and Chipmakers (NVIDIA) to access the latest models and infrastructure.
Companies are creating dedicated spaces for joint infringement, TCS has founded AI Centers of Excellence and AI Labs, and Infosys has built AI Foundry, allowing clients to experiment with AI in a controlled environment.
Their bets are captured by those who can cleverly wire every corner of the enterprise, when AI becomes a utility, not the one who creates it.
India's largest IT services company TCS believes that artificial intelligence (AI) is not just a technology cycle, but a “civilized change” that brings positive benefits to all industries.
N Chandrasekaran, chairman of Tata Sons, who also chairs the TCS board, said the US$30 billion IT services company will create a “big pool” of AI agents and provide solutions in the future with the “human AI” model.
Wipro has announced a reorganization within the Global Business Line (GBL) to better fit the changing needs of its clients and better tailor the opportunities for AI, cloud computing and digital conversion.
“This evolution of our business line allows us to sharpen our focus towards our clients' needs with consulting-driven, AI-powered solutions. This reorganization makes it suitable for our clients.