Kyndryl starts operation in India with twice the market share

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Kyndryl, a spinoff of IBM Corp.’s special focused into managed infrastructure business, positioned as a strong footing in India with double the market share compared to its closest rival in the country. Kyndryl has about 90,000 employees, a significant percentage of them are in India.

Kyndryl, which lists on the New York Stock Exchange Thursday, will begin its publicly traded life with $19 billion in annual revenue and an addressable market opportunity of $510 billion by 2024.

“We were a sizable part of IBM in India as global technology services, and we are starting with almost twice the market share of the next player (in India),” said Kyndryl’s India President Lingraju Sawkar. “Traditionally we were looking at the market from an IBM technology lens but now we see the opportunity to partner with application system integrators and startups.”

The company will focus on high value areas such as security, cloud, disaster recovery capabilities and data protection, which it says would help it derive higher margins and increased turnover. We are a $19 billion growing startup and I’ve had a great career in IBM and I want to make sure that at Kyndryl India I’m able to provide great career opportunities,” Sawkar said.

The company is managing into six global practices, including cloud; core enterprise and zCloud; applications, data and artificial intelligence (AI); digital workplace; security and resiliency; and network and edge solutions.

“India is a very significant talent and innovation base for Kyndryl. Apart from India being a significant market opportunity for which we are market leaders, there’s a significant amount of research and innovation base that happens for keeping globally from India, servicing clients across (the world),” said Sawkar.

“Whatever industrial transformation happened in the last 100 years, the next 10 years is just too little to get them done and that’s the pace at which clients want to move. The second area is within that space itself on accelerated automation,” said Sawkar. “I see the whole mix of these capabilities and the technology play as well as market visibility being the main growth driver for revenue and margin.”

Kyndryl will inherit the IBM’s India business, including customers such as Bharti Airtel, Maruti Suzuki, Honda Cars and State Bank of India (SBI), besides its recent win of Bangalore International Airport Ltd.

Kyndryl has an integrated global practice for customers, combining managed services, advisory services, and implementation where it competes with other global IT service providers like Accenture, TCS, Infosys, Wipro among many others.

Even for the Indian SME market opportunity, Kyndryl is extending partnerships with the startup ecosystem and niche application players, helping them go-to-market, he said. “We would partner with organizations who can give them that capability and bring it across in a manner that is effective.”

Cloud migration, data grid and security are among the strong tailwinds that Kyndryl hopes to leverage in its competition for new business against peers. “The exciting opportunity that we can provide to a talent is multiple technologies, industries, client complexities and platforms. And the peer group of master inventors, distinguished engineers, technologists, and for all of that India is one of our biggest pieces of technology,” said Sawkar.

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