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The particular challenge of greatest long term interest was presented by the companys Products,
Platforms, and Solutions (PP&S) operations, seen by many at Infosys as being crucial to the firms long
term prosperity. Margins on the offshoring of support and routine development activitiesthe business
that had been the bread-and-butter of Infosys as it grewwere becoming narrower, squeezed both by
increasing competition and by rising personnel costs in countries like India. An important remedy to this
pressure was to develop software products that the company could sell to its customers as part of a larger
package, building an asset category that did go home every night. For KM to benefit these PP&S
activities, however, a substantially different focus would likely be required. Traditionally, KM at Infosys
had been inward focus, facilitating the exchange of code and experience between the companys
employees, currently numbering over 150,000. Where KM could be of greatest help to PP&S, would be
in looking outwarde.g., identifying market trends and desirable features, capturing customer
experiences, developing sales strategies, finding market niches. Could a system that was designed
principally for internal use later be modified for these purposes? Or would it make more sense to build a
new system from the ground up? And what might such as system look like?
1
Copyright 2015, Informing Science Institute. This case was prepared for the purpose of class discussion, and not
to illustrate the effective or ineffective handling of an administrative situation. Names and some information have
been disguised. Permission is granted to copy and distribute this case for non-commercial purposes, in both printed
and electronic formats.
Knowledge Management
Organizations have always kept records of their activities. These have served two important purposes: to
meet the requirements of external agencies (such as the tax collector) and to serve as reference for
subsequent activities. For the latter purpose, organizations have also depended heavily on the past
experience of their employees: an invaluable resource and one that was easy to access in a small
organization.
Starting in the 1950s and accelerating in the 1970s, three forces made it imperative that companies begin
thinking about these records of past activities in a more systematic way. The first trend was automation,
which meant that an increasing proportion of the records were being stored online. The second trend was
a fundamental change in the nature of organizations and the global economy. Enabled by growth in
information and communications technology (ICT), organizations could become larger, more global in
their activities, and more distributed in their presence. The third trend was the emergence of the
knowledge worker. Until the 20th century, the vast majority of work consisted of repetitive activities that
depended upon skills acquired through practice and observation, rather than through instruction. As
energy became universally available in the developed world (primarily through electrification) and
machines became more capable, the role of the human worker changed (e.g., tractors and harvesters
transformed farming, automated assembly lines dramatically reduced labor inputs into manufacturing,
computers fundamentally altered the nature of bookkeeping, and so forth). To add value, the worker
increasingly needed to add value through the flexible application of knowledge to different situations.
Knowledge intensive professions such as consulting, management, law, medicine, engineering, and
academia blossomed. Management researchers such as Peter Drucker referred to this group as knowledge
workers and predicted that they would quickly come to dominate the workforce.
In their book Ten Steps to Maturity in Knowledge Management (Oxford, U.K: Chandos, 2006), J. K.
Suresh and Kavi Mahesh identify two important developments as being instrumental in the emergence of
KM: (1) the recognition that knowledge had changed from being a public good (a commodity that, once
created, was freely available to all) to a positional good (a valuable asset that could be a source of
competitive advantage), and (2) the death of distance. They describe the evolution as follows (p. 7):
Over the last few decades, organizations have responded to these developments through various
mechanisms to create multiple channels for enabling and managing knowledge exchange. A
central feature of these efforts is the creation of an environment that stokes the imagination, the
creativity and the sense of belonging and purpose of the individual through an organizational
culture which acknowledges and promotes knowledge sharing practices as the primary enablers
for value creation. A strong emphasis on networking and communication among employees,
rigorous process adoption, progressive human resources (HR) practices, collaborative problem-
solving and the like has provided additional impetus for these efforts. These measures have come
together under the rubric of what is today termed knowledge management (KM).
Distribution of Knowledge
In considering the nature of knowledge management, it is useful to first consider where the type of
knowledge to be accessed might be located. As illustrated in Exhibit 1, we may look at this in terms of
two dimensions:
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For internal stored knowledge, the organization may be able to exert considerable control of how the
knowledge is stored (e.g., formatting, indexing) and who has access to it. For external knowledge, such
control is generally not available. Thus, the knowledge may consist of approaches that may be used for
ferreting out what is needed through search and the awareness of the types and quality of sources that may
be available.
On the who to ask side, the distinction between external and internal sources maybe somewhat less
clear cut. Internal sources would normally be employees, while external sources could include
individuals/professionals with whom the firm has existing relationships, for example, many technology
companies, such as Microsoft, IBM, Oracle, and product companies, such as Verity, Novell had a
relationship for enabling Infosys solutions to customers over their own technologies or products. Other
external sources included consultants, researchers, suppliers, and customers.
Elements of KM System
There is no standard architecture for a knowledge management system. Rather than describing a specific
system, Exhibit 2 illustrates some of the typical components that might be encountered in a typical KM
architecture.
Repositories: These are collections of data. They might include databases specifically developed
for the KM system, general databases of information developed for other purposes (such as engineering
databases that include diagrams or code, searchable email databases, and scanned documents), and paper
filing systems.
Contact databases: Databases specifically intended to hold information about people. These
databases could be separated for internal and external contacts, or might be combined.
Portal: A server intended to supply unified access to all the resources of the KM system. Such a
portal would provide the user with access to these resources without needing to know the details of how
and where they are stored. Often, the portal will also provide access to external resources, such as
commercial databases and search on the Internet.
Metadata database: The heart of a typical KM, this database contains information about the types
of data stored in the various repositories and databases spread throughout the system as well as index
information intended to classify each piece of data. A project database, for example, might have metadata
tags describing the characteristics of each project (e.g., type of project, keywords, dates completed,
responsible department, and technologies employed). A contact database might include metadata
information on the type of contact, the specific skills of the individual, and so forth. Metadata for external
data sources might include URL information, translation information to format the query, tags describing
the type of information available and, frequently, some rating reflecting the quality of information that
can generally be expected when consulting the source.
One of the principal challenges of building a successful KM system is choosing an appropriate format for
metadata and ensuring that that internal information is acquired and cataloged. This process requires
considerable discipline and, if not performed rigorously, can lead to a system where useful knowledge
cannot be located. An international non-profit organization, the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI),
had attempted to establish broad voluntary standards for the design of metadata, as illustrated in Exhibit 3.
While a useful starting point, the generality required to achieve broad applicability meant that a
considerable amount of tailoring and extension was required to make them useful in a local context.
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The dynamic nature of the generation of new knowledge (as well as the rapid obsolescence of the old)
also meant that metadata and navigational schemes needed to undergo periodic change. As Dr. Suresh
pointed out, this could entail:
creating a much broader range of metadata than for example, the Dublin Core requires, or in
recategorizing and reclassifying taxonomies or ontologies to provide continued access to old and
new information bridging the terminological changes that affect the field.
Infosys Limited
Infosys Limited, headquartered in Bangalore, India, was a global company engaged in consulting,
technology, and outsourcing. Its revenues in 2012-2013 topped $7 billion. The companys global
footprint included 66 offices and 69 development centers in countries such as US, India, UK, China,
Australia, Mexico, France, and Germany, to name just some. When the company was founded in 1981, it
had seven employees and capitalization of $250 (in its founders pocket). As of September 30, 2012,
Infosys and its subsidiaries had over 150,000 employees. The overview from the companys website is
presented as Exhibit 4, a timeline presenting it history is provided in Exhibit 5.
1. Global demand for programming, web design, and back-office services was exploding during this
period, a time during which both the Internet boom and, especially, concerns about Y2K2 created
a situation where demand for programming far outstripped supply.
2. India was graduating many more software engineers than the U.S. and these individuals were paid
a small fraction of what it cost to hire a comparable programmer in the U.S.
3. Infosys had, from its early days, instilled a culture of customer delight within its organization
and had built an unparalleled reputation as a service provider and employer.
In the ten years that followed, global conditions and technology developments forced the company to
rethink its business model on a continuing basis. The wage differential for programmers between India
and the U.S. was narrowing, particularly when the costs associated with managing an offshore
relationship were considered. The demand for routine programming was less robust than it had been in
the 1990s. Finally, other countries were beginning to compete for routine business at lower wage rates.
While Infosys could address the last of these by opening sites in these other countries, the margins were
decidedly lower than they had been in the 1990s. All of these led to considerable pessimism regarding the
long term future of the business model. To quote a recent article from The Economist:
2
Y2K refers to concerns that much of the software written from the 1950s through the 1980s would stop working
when the year 2000 arrived, as many programmers had used 2 digit codes to represent the year, a space-saving
measure that could potentially spawn untold errors when the year switched from (19)99 to (20)00. To address this
concern, many companies either replaced their enterprise software or hired programmers to go through their existing
code line-by-line.
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Heckett, a Florida-based firm that advises companies on outsourcingpredicts that the migration
of services to India and to other offshore locations such as China and Brazil will slow down after
2014 and stop entirely by 2022.
The main reason for this startling prediction is that most of the easily offshorable jobs have
already gone. Pralay Das, an equity analyst in Mumbai, estimates that American and European
banks and financial-services firms have already off-shored about 80% of what they can
reasonably send to India and other offshore locations.
A second reason is that a lot of the jobs that might have been offshored by Western firms in the
coming years have already been wiped out by productivity improvements. New jobs in Western
economies tend to be of a more demanding, higher-level kind and are less likely to be sent
abroad.
All this has sent the Indian IT and BPO [business process outsourcing] into a funk KPMG, a
global consulting firm, even announced The Death of Outsourcing in a research paper last year.
(Indias outsourcing business, 2013)
While the situation was far from desperate at Infosys, there was a general recognition within the company
that if it was to continue its solid growth trajectory, it would need to emphasize activities at the higher end
of the value chain. Towards this goal, the company developed a substantial IT consulting practice. It also
began to move into the area of Products, Platforms, and Solutions (PP&S).
From a technical standpoint, these products and platforms were constructed using a skill-set similar to that
applied to client projects for many years. From a business standpoint, however, they differed in two very
important ways:
1. On the positive side, unlike their developers and consultants, the PP&S assets did not always
wear shoes. As such, they offered margins that were far higher than could be obtained for
services contracted on a per-hour or per-job basis.
2. On the less positive side, whereas a customer project guaranteed a revenue stream and had a
clear deliverable, designing a successful application was considerably more risky. It required
detailed knowledge of the potential marketplace, experience dealing with customers, and a clear
sense of the of global IT trends.
For the second of these, leveraging the companys existing knowledge and building a broader base of
marketplace knowledge seemed like a natural goal for the companys KM organization. The question
became one of whether the existing portal-based KM system was the right tool for the job, or could it be
altered to serve that purpose.
KM at Infosys
As an organization engaged in the consulting, technology, and outsourcing business space, Infosys had
recognized very early on that it needed to invest in organization-wide knowledge management (KM)
assets and practices. While Infosys was growing at a rapid pace as IT outsourcing across the world grew,
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it pioneered its global delivery model (GDM). Under this model, Infosys project team members were
distributed at client sites as well at offshore Infosys software development centers worldwide. This
distribution, along with a rapidly changing technology landscape, posed a challenge for Infosys in terms
of maintaining currency of knowledge and skills among its employee base. In response to this, Infosys set
up a formal knowledge management group, under its Education & Research Department. This group was
charged with creating various assets and processes with the following objectives: 1) increasing the re-use
of knowledge, 2) facilitating higher functional effectiveness to enable competitive advantage, 3) using
knowledge to improve quality continuously, 4) leveraging knowledge assets to capture high-end business
consulting engagements, and 5) enhancing the brand similar to how universities leverage knowledge-
intensive research activities to do the same (Latha, Suresh, & Mahesh, 2010).
KShop
Technology
Methodology
Application Domain
Project Management
Culture
Others
Soft Skills
In addition to using the taxonomy, K-Shop supported search using keywords. Sample screen shots are
presented in Exhibit 9 (A-E).
A standard template was used for submitting units of content, referred to as Body of Knowledge (BOK),
which included meta tags in addition to the contribution itself. BOK was only added after it had been
reviewed and vetted for accuracy, IP ownership, contributions, and compliance with Infosys standards.
To encourage BOK contributions, individuals contributing were awarded Knowledge Currency Units
(KCUs) that were based on some function of BOK ratings by users, time in repository, and access count.
The KCUs could be cashed for rewards at Infosys gift shops.
Other Tools
The complete KM system offered a variety of other tools. These included the following:
Konnect: A professional networking platform to connect with people, discover expertize, and
share knowledge. This is similar to LinkedIn (not quite, more similar to twitter and facebook with
features such as microblogging, artifact and expert search, community and interest group pages,
discussion forums, question answering systems and the like), but internal to Infosys.
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Infyblogs: This is a blogging tool for Infosys employees, which allowed them to share their
thoughts and experiences with others.
Team Wiki: Project team members could use this tool to collaborate, share, and edit project
knowledge with team members (see Exhibit 9E).
KMail: Email system that allowed Infosys employees to post queries and get answers from
experts as zip file attachments (see Exhibit 10).
Discussion Forum: This is a collaborative tool that allows Infosys employees to discuss various
topics of interest.
Search+: A search solution for customized searches using keywords. Matching documents from
a variety of sources such as K-Shop, Konnect, Kmail, and Discussion Forum, and, equally
importantly, from the vast arrays of enterprise systems (HR data bases, project data bases, quality
data bases), file systems in intranet sites, the home page of SPARSH, the Infosys intranet and the
like were retrieved by this tool.
At the project team level, a team member was designated as KM Prime. This person, in addition to
conducting the normal team activities, was also responsible for implementing KM practices at the team
level. The process began with the development of a KM Plan, which provided specific goals and metrics
(such as increasing productivity, reducing defects injected, reducing ramp up time, and reducing the cost
of quality). Once agreed upon, the KM Plan was uploaded to IPM+, the project repository system at
Infosys. The KM Prime then became responsible for educating the team about the KM Plan, tracking and
reporting milestones, and finally for creating a BOK at the conclusion of the project for submission to K-
Shop. In addition, KM Prime could coordinate the development of a Team Wiki and other knowledge
assets such as the Induction Kit for the team. KM Prime also assisted new team members to come up to
speed.
A KM Audit was conducted to measure K-Index, an aggregate measure to quantify the state of KM
practice in a project. The K-Index incorporated various dimensions of KM practice in a project such as
KM enabling and planning, KM infrastructure, KM culture, and knowledge sharing activities at the
project level (Latha et al.). K-Index ranged from 0-100, and a score of 70 or higher was considered good.
Infosys organized Knowledge Cafes, a periodic event, where various project teams shared their KM
practices with other Infosys employees.
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In many situations, an Infosys employees desktop was connected only to a clients network and not to
the Infosys network. In these situations, a separate dedicated terminal could be the only link for Infosys
employees to the Infosys network. Further, the terminal itself might have restricted access to Infosys
resources. Other clients might permit Infosys employees in an ODC to access Infosys knowledge
resources through a terminal server from their desktop, a much less restrictive arrangement.
In restrictive situations where Infosys employees required access to knowledge resources situated in
Infosys network, they needed to seek special permission from the client, to do so. Typically, the team
request was received by KM Prime, who then sent it to Project Manager /Account Manager / Account
Security Anchor. After vetting the request, the Project Anchor would then seek the clients permission.
Depending on the client, access to KM solutions from ODC could be specified at various levels: no
access, read-only summary access, read-only access, or read/write access. The process of getting access to
Infosys knowledge resources could be direct access (no approval from client required), with the
permission of Project Anchor (client approval not needed), with the concurrence of KM Anchor, and
followed by the permission of the client, and no access at all in some cases.
Adding to the complexity related to knowledge sharing, project team members could be located at
multiple ODCs of the client, which could be situated at geographically distributed locations.
One of the most important ways in which product development differed from providing contracted IT
services was the degree to which it was highly unstructured and dynamic. To support existing products,
historical information on product development as well as versions needed to be maintained. Queries
might that arrive years later that required answers with respect to why certain design choices were made,
and how these decisions impacted future enhancements to a product. Quite often, such choices were
dictated by the client. Understanding the forces that drove an applications evolution could prove central
to managing the complexity of software as it grew in scope over time.
New product development was different in many ways. Proprietary frameworks and tools were often
employed to minimize repetitive tasks, such as by using standard interfaces to reduce development costs.
Subject matter experts (SMEs) on new products were few and had limited ability to predict how product
features might impact demand for the product. Quite often, the individuals initially chosen for SME roles
had to transition from these roles (within or outside Infosys), without leaving enough proprietary
knowledge in the KM systems at Infosys. Due to the specialized nature of product knowledge, new
recruits in the product team required a higher level of knowledge support, which the existing KM systems
were unable to provide, thus mandating multiple queries to the SMEs. This situation was compounded by
the fact that new product projects often consisted of many new recruits, particularly in their early stages.
These many queries, in turn, overloaded the SMEs, who often found they were spending significant
unproductive time answering the same question many times over, posed by different people.
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In case of product development, market intelligence was also very critical. Knowledge of market trends
including nuances in various markets, customer preferences, and competitions was needed to design a
product that can be viable in the market place. This even proved to be true for a stable product such as
Finacle that has a defined market. For new products, the situation was even more extreme, with product
managers trying to figure out the exact problem or market need to address through their product offerings.
With time to develop and market cycles needing to be as short as possible in order to take advantage of
market opportunities, agility in design and development was critical.
The existing KM assets and processes at Infosys tended to be internally-focused (see Exhibit 1) and
emphasized stored history. For example, K-Shop often failed to return relevant content when queries were
made related to opportunities or emerging technologies. When it did, the content that was returned was
often not sufficiently current or granular enough for use. Further searching K-Shop could be time
consuming. The market intelligence information available in KM assets was very limited and, being
accumulated from historical experience, was frequently dated.
The needs of product development would be far better served by an externally focused, forward looking
KM approach. There was a need not only to refresh the market intelligence and product knowledge
continuously in an agile manner, they also needed to retain specialized product historical knowledge that
would become critical as the products later matured. Thus, the existing approach needed to be
transformed, but not abandoned.
Possible Approaches
The options for KM design and use in the PP&S context were complex. In creating new products and
applications, cookie-cutter approaches based upon past successes were unlikely to succeedindeed they
could stifle innovation. Instead the KM system would need to:
In the broadest sense, Suresh recognized that such a KM would need to focus on acquiring knowledge
located outside the company as opposed to emphasizing the efficient management of internal
technologies, practices, and experiences.
The KM issue, as it applied to PP&S, could not be separated from the related personnel issues. The
traditional services offered by Infosys catered to engineers and often represented activities that could be
highly specifieda prerequisite for cost effective outsourcing. Given an outsourcing perspective, it was
natural that these employees would be motivated (and evaluated) on efficiency criteria. That gave them
considerable incentive to employ KM when it seemed likely to yield efficient solutions.
The employees working in PP&S were engaged in the very type of activities that could not be outsourced.
That required a different mindsetthe kind of individual who might prefer to re-invent the wheel,
particularly if he or she had a creative insight that it could be built better. Getting these individuals to use
a KM as a first stop would not only be difficult, it might even prove to be counter-productive if highly
innovative products were to be conceived.
It might also be possible to train existing high potential employees to transition from services to PP&S.
The KM could either play a positive or negative role in this context. On the positive side, the right set of
featuresproviding targeted access to the types of external knowledge that helped to identify product
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niches and features that would be valuedcould help these individuals change their perspective. On the
other side, a KM system that behaved like the system that they had previously used might convey the
message that only minor incremental changes in behavior and thinking were necessary to be effective in
PP&S. That was definitely not a message that Suresh wanted to convey.
All of these concerns hinged upon being able to identify the types of knowledge that needed to be
captured and organized for PP&S purposes. Infosys had been very effective in leveraging past knowledge
to become one of the worlds leaders in IT service delivery. What new knowledge would need to be
captured in order to move up the value chain?
References
Indias outsourcing business: On the Turn. (2013. 19 January). The Economist, p. 14.
Latha, A., Suresh, J.K., & Mahesh, K. (2010). KM in Projects: Methodology and Experience. In T. K.
Srikantaiah, M. E. Koenig, & S. Al-Hawamdeh, (Eds.), Convergence of project management and
knowledge management (pp. 145-173). Scarecrow Press. ISBN: 9780810876972
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3
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4
Source: Prepared by case writers
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Source: http://dublincore.org/specifications/
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What We Do
Infosys Limited (NYSE: INFY) was started in 1981 by seven people with US$ 250. Today, we are a global
leader in consulting, technology and outsourcing with revenues of US$ 7.231 billion (LTM Q3 FY13).
Many of the worlds most successful organizations rely on Infosys to deliver measurable business value.
Infosys provides business consulting, technology, engineering and outsourcing services to help clients in
over 30 countries build tomorrows enterprise.
Our award-winning Infosys Labs and its breakthrough intellectual property can be leveraged as a co-
creation engine to accelerate innovation across the enterprise.
Infosys pioneered the Global Delivery Model (GDM), based on the principle of taking work to the location
where the best talent is available, where it makes the best economic sense, with the least amount of
acceptable risk. Continued leadership around GDM enables Infosys to drive extraordinary efficiencies and
free up clients resources for strategic transformation or innovation initiatives.
Infosys has a global footprint with 67 offices and 69 development centers in US, India, China, Australia,
Japan, Middle East, UK, Germany, France, Switzerland, Netherlands, Poland, Canada and many other
countries. Infosys and its subsidiaries have 155,629 employees as on Dec 31, 2012.
Infosys takes pride in building strategic long-term client relationships. 97.5% of our revenues come from
existing customers (Q3 FY 13).
Infosys gives back to the community through the Infosys Foundation that funds learning and education.
How we do it
Infosys helps companies derive the measurable business value that they have always been looking for
from business and IT investments.
Transform
We can transform the fundamental shape of your business P&L. Regardless of which team you engage
with, we have a best-practice process for delivering value. We call it IMPACT to ensure a clear line of
sight from process change to bottom-line impact, ensuring that you receive the business value you were
promised.
Optimize
Beyond transformation and innovation, it boils down to execution - delivering on time, on budget and "on
value". We can optimize your core operations to drive best-in-class efficiency and help fund the
transformation and innovation.
Innovate
We can inject a level of product and service innovation into your business to create new revenue
opportunities through collaboration and co-creation. We keep abreast of the latest technology and how it
applies to your business issues. What you get from us is best-of-breed solutions. The foundation of our
5
Source: Infosys website
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innovation capability is our core lab network Infosys Labs and the new thinking that our team of over
600 researchers brings to the table.
Who we are
Our Vision, Mission and Values
Vision
"We will be a globally respected corporation."
Mission
"Strategic Partnerships for Building Tomorrows Enterprise."
Values
We believe that the softest pillow is a clear conscience. The values that drive us underscore our
commitment to:
CLIFE
Leadership by Example: To set standards in our business and transactions and be an exemplar for the
industry and ourselves
Integrity and Transparency: To be ethical, sincere and open in all our transactions
Fairness: To be objective and transaction-oriented, and thereby earn trust and respect
Excellence: To strive relentlessly, constantly improve ourselves, our teams, our services and products to
become the best
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Milestones
2012
2011
2010
2009
Infosys opens its first development center in Brazil and second Latin American development center in
Monterrey, Mexico
Infosys selected as a member of The Global Dow
Employee strength grows to over 100,000
2008
2007
6
Source: Infosys website
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2006
Infosys celebrates 25 years. Revenues cross US$ 2 billion. Employees grow to 50,000+
N. R. Narayana Murthy retires from the services of the company on turning 60. The Board of Directors
appoints him as an Additional Director. He continues as Chairman and Chief Mentor of Infosys
2005
Records the largest international equity offering of US$ 1 billion from India
Selected to the Global MAKE Hall of Fame
2004
2003
2002
2001
Touches revenues of US$ 400 million. Opens offices in UAE and Argentina, and a development center in
Japan
N. R. Narayana Murthy is rated among Time Magazine/CNN's 25 most influential businessmen in the
world
Infosys is rated as the Best Employer by Business World/Hewitt
2000
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1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
Opens first European office in the UK and global development centers at Toronto and Mangalore. Sets up
e-Business practice
1994
Moves corporate headquarters to Electronic City, Bangalore. Opens a development center at Fremont
1993
1987
1983
1981
Infosys is established by N. R. Narayana Murthy and six engineers in Pune, India, with an initial capital of
US$ 250
Signs up its first client, Data Basics Corporation, in New York
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SpeedSolve
Collaborative, chat-based customer support product from Infosys and AT&T to reduce your call transfer
rates, call handle time, and call volumes.
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Infosys AssistEdge
The first integrated cross channel product for contacts centers to transform customer service experience.
Infosys BigDataEdge
Infosys BigDataEdge is the best data platform that helps empower technology and business teams to
develop industry-specific insights and act on them very quickly.
Infosys BrandEdge
Simplifies digital marketing across the organization through the first comprehensive Cloud-based Platform
Infosys CommerceEdge
Drives multi-channel commerce by enhancing consumer experience, driving traffic and increasing order
value
Infosys SocialEdge
Monetizes digital demand by harnessing the power of social media to deepen consumer & employee
engagement
Infosys ProcureEdge
Helps enterprises realize rapid and sustainable savings across their source-to-pay lifecycle
Infosys TalentEdge
Enables enterprises to deepen employee engagement and simplify the entire Hire-to-Retire lifecycle of
HR function
Infosys TradeEdge
Enables global companies to accelerate long-term growth and profitability in emerging markets
Infosys WalletEdge
Enables a financial ecosystem of consumers, merchants, telecoms, banks, government, and enterprises,
to process payments
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9
Source: Screenshot provided to case writers by Infosys
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D. KM Kit page
26 Infosys
JITE: DISCUSSION CASES Volume 4, Case Number 2, 2015
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CHARI & GILL
A. K-mail search
11
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28 Infosys
JITE: DISCUSSION CASES Volume 4, Case Number 2, 2015
Infosys 29