No one so far has looked at it from Mr Murthy’s perspective; he is probably committing himself to a busier schedule and a knottier set of problems than he might have wanted at this stage, risking a reputation built over a lifetime, and perhaps also disrupting whatever career plans his son might have had. On the other hand, you could argue that Mr Murthy had no choice-he created today’s situation by pushing into leadership positions people who should not have been there, he did so for the wrong reasons (the company’s founders were playing a silly and irresponsible game of round-robin!), and he watched while the company lost touch with the market and also lost key human resources.
So can he make it work a second time? Comparisons with Steve Jobs are not relevant, except to the extent that both are/were inspirational leaders. Apple is built around unique products, and Jobs was their creator, while Infosys is a service organisation. Comparisons with Sachin Tendulkar, of the kind that Mr Murthy unfortunately made, are even worse-the cricketer’s batting average today is way short of what it used to be. But it is a net positive that there is no one in the company with Mr Murthy’s external stature, so he could perhaps win over customers more effectively than others can. It helps that he is nothing if not a relentless salesman who knows how to pitch to the audience of the moment, internal as well as external, and that is a good starting point for a fresh innings.
The big risk is that an old warhorse tries the same old business tricks that he knows, but they don’t work in a changed environment. And the fact is that the business situation today is radically different from the world full of opportunities that presented itself to Infosys in the second half of the 1990s, with unique cost and other advantages for an Indian firm. New US visa regulations are being debated that could put a huge spanner in the works of India’s software service exporters. Competition has got way more difficult, some of India’s cost advantages have been neutralised, the old business models will not work today, and Infosys simply does not have the halo it once enjoyed-so that both employees and customers now look at the company differently. The further problem is that the old-new chairman may be unwilling to rock the managerial boat, and to get tough with people who have been with him for half a lifetime. Finally, India’s tech companies, for all their vaunted reputations, have not always been great at service delivery.
The lesson this whole episode drives home is that, even if you can build a successful company, it is an altogether different challenge to prevent it from becoming a shooting star. How do you keep a company successful through different business cycles, changing market realities and successive generations of technology? The answers have to go beyond the personalities of a company’s founders.