Every Business Is a Digital Business
Mphasis
CEO Nitin Rakesh discusses the rapid growth of technology.
Nitin Rakesh took over as the CEO of
Bangalore-based IT company Mphasis earlier this year. He was earlier CEO and
president of Syntel, and president, CEO and managing director of Motilal Oswal
Asset Management Company, and chief executive of State Street Syntel Services,
a joint venture between Syntel and State Street Bank. In this conversation
with Knowledge@Wharton, Rakesh talks about the rapid growth of
technology. It must be “bionic, rather than a debate between automation and
human,” he says.
An edited transcript of the conversation
follows.
Knowledge@Wharton: Everyone
talks about how the world of technology is changing. In your role as the CEO of
Mphasis, how do you see that happening? What challenges does this create for
companies trying to grapple with digital transformation?
Rakesh: Let me give you
some perspective of why we are seeing what we are seeing, and what is leading
us to this point where disruption through technology, especially digital
technology, appears to be immensely scary right now.
This hasn’t happened overnight. It started 40 years ago with
what we now commonly know as Moore’s Law. One thing about technology is that
the human mind thinks in a linear fashion but technology advancement is
actually exponential. The reason is tied to what Gordon Moore said 40 years
ago.
A congruence of many independent technologies that were on their
own exponential paths — whether it’s semiconductors, cellphones or the ability
to write software — came together when the iPhone was ‘discovered.’ Look at
what is happening in genetics and genome mapping. Look at what is happening in
solar power and the exponentiality that is brought into these options. The
other thing about this exponential curve is that the capabilities rise
exponentially and the price declines exponentially, because they go hand in
hand. That has led to the congruence of all of these technologies around
robotics, genetics, the ability of chips and microprocessors and
nanotechnology.
Now we are on the cusp of what I call the next digital
revolution. People are calling it Industrial Revolution 4.0. I mean you can
call it what you want, but the reality of this is that every business today is
a digital business; some just don’t know it yet.
The reason I say that is when you zoom out and look at what has
happened in certain industries, the common thread that starts emerging is that
any industry that has a consumer element, the end consumer element is the first
to get disrupted, whether it was retail with Amazon or payments with PayPal and
Square. Or if you start looking at retail lending, Lending Tree is a good
example, as is SoFi.
The reason is that the center of the universe 20 years ago used
to revolve around what your core systems could support. Businesses would go
building around the core applications and the core systems. If you were an
insurance company you had an underwriting system, a claims system and a policy
admin system. That would determine how you ran your business. But over the last
10 years customers have started to drive — based on the rapid advancement in
consumer-facing technology — what kind of service they want, when they want it
and how they want it delivered. That has turned the whole model on its head.
You’re starting to see this rapid Amazonization of the world, which is
essentially a combination of all these things coming together.
Knowledge@Wharton: If
you take three industries — say financial services, insurance and real estate —
how has digital disruption impacted them? What are the biggest concerns that
you hear from companies in these industries?
Rakesh: Let’s take
financial services — retail financial services. Think of brokerage or wealth
management. It wasn’t uncommon for you to pay 2% commissions 20 years ago, and
you’re probably paying two or five basis points today. In that way the
brokerage platform is lucky. The way you dealt with your broker was you picked
up the phone and called him; the way you deal with a broker today is on an app
or on an online platform. And that exponentiality has actually emerged.
So while volumes have gone up multifold because of scalability
and the greater ability of people to access the market, prices have fallen
exponentially as well. This means if you do not have the ability to be in front
of your customer in any channel that they want to deal with you on, you’re
going to start losing market share.
The same thing is going to start happening to wealth management.
Yes, there is always going to be a human element, but 70% of the time a
financial advisor today deals with administrative issues, not really advising
customers. They’re probably doing it 30% of the time. In my view, that will
flip pretty quickly, because of technology, especially automation and robotics;
robo-advisors are a good example. This will actually give you that much more
ability on the way [you interact with] the customer. If you do not focus on
adding value, you will get commoditized and essentially lose market share.
Now look at another example of financial services — payments.
The way you dealt with payments [was] mostly physical and plastic. Now it’s
turned fairly heavily into digital wallets. The fastest-growing segment of the
payment industry is digital wallets, contact lists, no swipe needed…. In many
cases, it’s a tap on your phone.
Again, if you are not set up to deal with that, you are going to
start seeing disintermediation. Think of all of the providers that didn’t exist
but are now making billions of dollars in revenue. Where is that revenue coming
from? Clearly, you are starting to see the squeeze on that industry as well.
Now let’s talk about insurance. One of the great stories in
insurance actually doesn’t even start in that industry. It hasn’t even started
yet if you ask me. What Uber is doing to transportation is turn it into a
service, with potentially driverless cars in the next 10, maybe 12, years. I’m
not smart enough to predict how long it will be, but I am smart enough to tell
you that it will be sooner than you and I think.
When that happens, what happens to insurance? How do you price
risk? Today you price risk based on the individual’s driving history. How many
sharp turns he makes, how many sharp brakes he does, what is the average speed
he follows. What happens to all that when the driver in the driverless car is
software?
I think that disruption hasn’t even started yet. What has
started is the squeeze because of disintermediation and availability of
information. The first wave was the information explosion, data explosion. The
second wave hasn’t hit us yet, or the third wave. The impact of these
technologies over the next 10 years will be 10 times of the last 10 years.
Knowledge@Wharton: How
is the insurance industry dealing with this? And what is it doing to prepare?
Rakesh: There are two
things. You have to run your current business as is, because you have to keep
one eye on that while you prepare for the future. I don’t think everyone is
still fully prepared for the current business either because of the fact that
they are still so core systems focused, or centric, that they haven’t invested
enough in technology, or essentially the intelligence layer that sits between
their core systems and the customer.
There is a lot of focus right now on how you deal with data, and
how you apply data in a cognitive way. How do you personalize insurance for
each consumer? I think this is the right thing to do for the current big book
of business. I personally haven’t seen a lot of effort being made on
transportation; there’s a lot of skepticism on driverless cars at this point.
But I think it’s going to sneak up on us so fast that we’re probably not going
to have the time to respond and react.
The smarter companies are preparing for a future, looking at how
the business model will evolve. How do you price risk? I know one insurance
carrier that is on a road map to unbundle their underwriting and risk systems.
They currently use 90 plus parameters to price risk, and they have narrowed
down three to identify which will be the most important in the future; 90% of
the risk can be priced with these three. That means they will have to start at
the front, which is at the consumer level, and then go backwards.
So I think it’s a long road ahead in terms of preparedness. I
would like more CEOs to think about this as a real, imminent near-term threat
versus just thinking of it as a 12-15 year threat. Technology’s exponentiality
is hard to realize; it sneaks up on you.
Knowledge@Wharton: When
you think of the consequences of what you are describing for IT companies, how
will they need to change in order to address these needs?
Rakesh: You’ve reached one
of my favorite topics. And the reason I say that is every business is a digital
business. Some just don’t know it yet; they’ll all realize it sooner rather than
later. What that means for our industry is that we will have a lot more to play
in, because digital technology will become the core of every business.
If we have the ability and the capability to help large
enterprises embrace, adopt and transform themselves, then we become a very
important cog in that wheel. We have to be able to transform ourselves with new
technologies, invest in the capabilities, have a point of view that we can take
to our customers and help them transform. I genuinely believe that the future
of our industry is tied to how we help clients transform themselves.
Knowledge@Wharton: Turning
to Mphasis, your company is at an interesting point right now because it has a
new majority shareholder in Blackstone. There’s new leadership; you have
recently arrived. Where do you see opportunities to build value?
Rakesh: Mphasis is in a
unique position because we come from fairly pedigreed shareholding, which was
Hewlett Packard. We learned a lot working with HP for 10-plus years, built some
capability that was very unique to that era and that time. Then, over the last
five years, the company took further steps to invest in digital, or
consumer-facing, tech. This is the ability to apply cognitive and cloud
capabilities, and we are very well positioned there.
I think with Blackstone, the best realization that all of us are
having is that they are longer term than long term, which means they want to do
the right things, to invest in the right areas, and to move the company along
in a way that we can be a leading-edge, next generation IT services company.
That is the roadmap we are following right now.
Knowledge@Wharton: What
will your strategy be, specifically on something called X2C2. What does that
stand for?
Rakesh: The revolution is
in front of the consumer. The consumer-facing tech, powered by a very strong,
intelligent, cognitive layer, is driving pretty much every enterprise, every
industry. And then at the back end are core systems. What we are trying to do
is help our enterprise clients embrace this consumer-facing front end view of
the world. We are calling it a front-to-back transformation.
The two pillars of that transformation are hyper cloud and hyper
personalization. Hyper cloud is because every large new initiative has to be
cloud native. And hyper personalization is because the consumer is in the
middle.
The two things that power this change are cloud and cognitive.
X2C2 stands for anything to cloud, powered by cognitive, because those are the
two pillars of this entire front-to-back transformation strategy that we
believe very strongly our enterprise clients need today.
Knowledge@Wharton: What
are some of the biggest risks that keep you up at night in implementing this
strategy? And can those be mitigated?
Rakesh: There are two broad
risks that I worry about. The first one is tied to what I earlier said. Our
fortunes are tied to our customer’s fortunes. And I just worry that maybe not a
lot of our clients have embraced this digital disruptive threat at the scale
that they need to.
If their businesses start getting disrupted that has a pretty
significant impact on our businesses, too, especially in retail financial
services, retail insurance, which is a large part of what we do today. So that
is the reason I am so vocal about bringing this to the fore.
The second risk is this is a pivot for us as well. While we are
well positioned compared to our peers, we still have to balance the core IT
services, the traditional IT, with the digital IT. The biggest pivot we need to
make is with our people. How do you make sure that you are able to provide that
opportunity in the platform, bring that talent along, and embrace new
technology in a way that it becomes complementary, it becomes bionic, rather
than a debate between automation and human [work]?
That is the journey we are on. It’s not an ordinary journey; it
will take us three to five years.
Knowledge@Wharton: How
do you position Mphasis in this space?
Rakesh: I think of us as
the specialist player that understands your industry well because we are
focused on a few segments of the market. We are not trying to be everything to
everybody. We’ve chosen those industries and those sweet spots based on our
capabilities and our investments.
I talk about things like wealth management, I’ve talked about
retail banking, consumer banking, insurance … those are good examples of where
we have depth. We are complementing that depth with this cloud and cognitive
capability. And we are not in the market to build a product or to say we have
the best automation platform. What we are bringing to you — we are actually
shameless about leaning on all of the work that is out there in open source —
is the ability to orchestrate and apply that to your business….
Knowledge@Wharton: Before
Mphasis you were at Syntel for many years. What is the difference between being
the CEO of Mphasis and your leadership journey at Syntel? What leadership
skills did you need to develop in order to become the CEO of Mphasis?
Rakesh: I have a slightly
classical view of leadership. I differentiate leadership from managerial
skills. I think leadership is something that transcends time; management skills
actually have to evolve to keep up with time. And the reason I say that is that
leadership is all about finding a vision, aligning people to that vision. In
the end you have to lead people. And finally put an execution plan around that
which then can be managed.
I think leadership skills haven’t changed since time immemorial.
The skills are pretty consistent, with one big difference, and that difference
is that the time skills have shrunk rapidly. What used to be a 20-year view of
strategy now needs to be agile, just like the whole world around you,
especially with technology.
Technology is causing the timescale to shrink even faster.
Globalization has caused it to shrink faster as well. So I think that’s my
overall view on leadership. My personal leadership style is I believe
leadership is a contact sport. You have to be in front of every stakeholder,
whether it is your employees, your customers, your shareholders, your partners.
So I am very much a contact sport believer when it comes to
leadership style. I also like to believe that management by vision is something
that actually works very well for me rather than managing by objectives alone.
I mean, I like to surround myself with people who can actually then work
towards those objectives.
I’ve had a great run at Syntel. I grew through the ranks. I
learned a lot working with a wonderful set of people, a wonderful set of
founders. The challenge at Mphasis is a little different. The challenge is we
are emerging from the shadow of a large IT company. We now need to find our own
identity, we need to create and establish our own identity, we need to turn our
subconscious competence into a conscious strategy and a position in the market.
Knowledge@Wharton: One
last question, how do you define success?
Rakesh: We’ve set ourselves
certain goals. Those goals have to be met because at the end of the day, in my
fiduciary role, I have to maximize shareholder return. So that is one parameter
of success.
The bigger parameter is that every stakeholder that we are
working with should actually be able to experience this growth, and I call it
inclusive growth. We’ve set ourselves what I call the four dimensions of growth
as our targets — consistent growth, differentiated growth, profitable growth,
and inclusive growth. That is the way I look at how we can succeed over the
next few years
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