TCS CEO K Krithivasan Dismisses Claims of IT Industry Obsolescence by 2030
Company reports record contract value despite first annual revenue decline since 2004
L'essentiel
- TCS CEO K Krithivasan rejects the notion that India's IT sector will become obsolete, viewing AI as a catalyst for growth.
- Despite a 2.4% revenue decline in FY26, the company achieved a record $40.7 billion in total contract value.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
The Indian IT services industry has faced concerns regarding the impact of AI on traditional business models. TCS is a major player in this sector, providing global enterprise solutions.
TCS CEO K Krithivasan has now pushed back against the claims that India’s IT services industry will be obsolete by 2030. Krithivasan believes that the enterprises will actually need more support from the IT companies like TCS in the era of artificial intelligence. Speaking to The Economic Times in an interview, Krithivasan said: “We have been writing its obituary every 10 years but I think Indian IT services have proven to be very resilient. Not because of cost arbitrage, but because of the depth of skill sets.” He also stressed on that fact that as the AI adoption accelerates, the enterprises will struggle to keep pace, creating demand for IT services companies to bridge the gap between cutting-edge technology and real-world implementation.
TCS COO Aarthi Subramanian also sees AI as an opportunity. Subramanian added that advanced AI systems such as Claude Cowork and Claude Mythos are not existential threats but opportunities. “GenAI has unlocked a significant opportunity in legacy modernization, particularly for large, decades-old systems such as mainframes,” she told ET. AI, she argued, can reduce technical debt and drive productivity gains across IT operations.
As reported by ET, the comments made by TCS CEO comes as the Indian IT company reported its first annual revenue decline since going public in 2004, down 2.4% in FY26 amid a global slowdown in tech spending. Despite this, the company closed FY26 with its highest-ever total contract value (TCV) of $40.7 billion, including $12 billion in Q4 alone. Krithivasan noted that decision-making cycles are improving and clients are investing in AI transformation despite geopolitical uncertainties. Also, TCS hired 44,000 trainees in FY26 and made 25,000 offers for the next cycle, even after a 2% workforce reduction last year. The company also completed its largest acquisition in over a decade, buying US-based Salesforce consulting firm Coastal Cloud for $700 million.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
TCS will continue to increase investment in AI-related service offerings
Très probable · En quelques mois
Questions ouvertes
- What specific strategies will TCS employ to return to revenue growth?
- How will the integration of Coastal Cloud impact future margins?