PUNE (NEW
DELHI): As the Infosys turmoil started by a whistle-blower complaint
refuses to die anytime soon, employees are mostly worried about what impact
this could have on their incentive structures or promotions, in addition to a
general wariness about how the company’s focus on values is fading.
“I have been here for over a decade, and the difference began
being visible right after (ex-CEO) Vishal Sikka came in. The founders’ focus on
values was something that made Infosys a coveted place to work at. Now it is
just like any other IT company,” said a Pune-based employee who did not wish to
be named.
Another employee, based in Bengaluru, said the only thing
people were worried about were whether this will impact jobs in any way. “Our
fear is that this shouldn’t turn out to be another Satyam. That will certainly
impact jobs in steady slow market. The constant scrutiny on the company is not
a pleasant thing, plus there is little clarity about what is going on,” this
person said.
Last week, Infosys grabbed headlines after an anonymous
whistleblower group called 'Ethical Employees' alleged that the company’s
current management and CEO Salil Parekh was taking 'unethical' steps to spur
short-term revenue and profits.
In 2016-17, under the first non co-founder CEO Vishal Sikka,
whistleblowers has made allegations against the firm’s corporate governance
practices, leading to a very public war of words between co-founder NR Narayana
Murthy and Sikka.
While some see the new and old whistleblower complaints as the
inability of the old guard to hand over the baton to non co-founder CEOs,
others say the back to back corporate governance issues being played out in
public have diluted the internal focus on values, and impacted employee morale.
“You know, what matters most to an employee is their growth
within the company. Here, we have not had promotions in a long time, there are
hardly any raises, and when a big issue like this takes place, our managers
often use it as an excuse to stop promotions and raises,” said a
Chandigarh-based employee of Infosys who has been with the firm for over 15
years.
Most however, said they wouldn’t speculate on the nature of
the allegations. “You cannot just believe the CEO made such irregularities.
Nothing has been proven yet. We should just wait and watch,” said another
Bengaluru-based employee.
Some believe the complaint only pertains to the US market and
employees since the whistleblower group first sent it to the US Securities and
Exchange Commission and the US Labour Department.
The last time around, Sikka and Murthy’s battle ended in Sikka
having to quit, in spite of his credentials. He was earlier the chief
technology officer at technology giant SAP.
Parekh also came with an impeccable track record- he was one
of the five global deputy CEOs at Capgemini, and was a contender for the global
CEO spot at the French IT services company. While that did not happen, he
became the India CEO and then the executive chairman at the company before
joining Infosys.
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