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Aiming Big
HCL has been bagging big ticket contracts one after another. Recent being the Rs 393 crore deal with NIC. Whats more, it is consciously restructuring its business to be able to better execute these large, complex deals
Priya Kekre
Thursday, May 21, 2009
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Just when the effects of the slowdown were sinking in and companies were losing hope of bagging some big ticket deals, HCL has surfaced strongly and proved everyone wrong. After a commendable hat trick of large value dealsReaders Digest, Xerox and Nokiaall in the range of $200-350 mn, HCL is now poised for similar large and long-gestation deals on the home turf.

HCL ISD, a subsidiary of HCL Technologies, recently bagged a whopping Rs 393 crore contract from National Insurance Company (NIC) in a deal keenly contested by top Indian IT companies as well as multinationals. One of the largest domestic deals bagged by HCL in FY 09 and more significantly one of the largest IT deals in the insurance sector, HCL believes, this will be a turning point for the company in terms of its positioning in the PSU and government sector. At the moment, HCL is already in the process of implementing three Rs 100 crore plus projects, all in the financial services space.

The contract with NIC is a seven-year partnership that involves implementing a slew of software applications and maintaining them, besides supporting the insurers IT infrastructure. It is an end-to-end IT services engagement where we would be starting with a complete BPR for NIC and then going over to rolling out the entire IT transformational project. This would include rolling out nineteen different applications, building a datacenter and hosting it, rolling out the hardware set-up at the branch offices, and operating and managing the entire set-up for about seven years, says Kiran Bhagwanani, senior vice president, HCL.

HCL will implement a core insurance solution similar to the one banks currently use for the insurance provider. Apart from the solution, it will also implement nineteen other applications for verticals like customer relationship management, human resources, and business analytics. NIC was looking for a strategic IT company that could partner them for seven years, roll out the applications as well as operate them, says Bhagwanani, terming it a transformational project for all the insurers business processes.

The total rollout will involve an eighteen month implementation cycle. Over the first nine months, the datacenter, DR-site, core applications and fifty branches will go live, and over the next nine months, these applications will be rolled out to the remaining 1,000 branches. After the overall infrastructure and application rollout, HCL will provide operations management services for the next five years.

On studying the scope of the contract, it comes across as a very comprehensive engagement where HCL will have to get down to ground zero and completely build NICs IT set-up from scratch. The legacy IT infrastructure at NIC was very basic and rudimentary. Until recently, the company used a distributed application environment which resided in its zonal offices. The company had a traditional hierarchical structure where the regions roll up to zones, and the zonal offices to the head office.

Over a span of seven years, HCL plans to first set up a datacenter for NIC and connect and rollout applications across 1,034 branches, and then help about 10,000 users in migrating on to the new application suite that will be deployed.

According to Bhagwanani, the complex piece is not just in rolling out this large IT architecture and design, but also training the end users. There is going to be a serious need for a mindset change among the end users as they will have to get used to working on completely automated systems. With the new application stack, users will be working on a centralized application, where all the customers will be able to access their accounts from any location. So, we will have to attack the mindset and impart training apart from rolling out what is otherwise a standard IT project, says Bhagwanani.

Business-aligned IT
HCL for the past one year has been focusing on the concept of business aligned IT, where it has been in discussions with customers to try and educate them on the need to align IT with business imperatives and make technology-related decisions keeping in mind the business domain, technology and operations. We used this strategy very effectively in the case of NIC, says Bhagwanani.

HCL, which has already been working with some of the largest insurance companies in the world, was not short of domain knowledge and experience and could easily pick and choose the best practices for implementation at NIC. However, on the technology front, the complexities were high as there were nineteen different applications involving the datacenter, servers, storage, networks, security, etc. Keeping in mind the vast roll-out and the complexities involved, HCL has partnered with the best of breed in each of these areas. For HRMS and data base, HCL partnered with Oracle; for anlytics, it is working with SAS; for networks it has partnered with Cisco and so on.

We have built a very formidable technology stack that meets every requirement of NIC, and over a seven-year period will meet each of their IT and business objectives. On the operations front, we have also utilized our years of experience in the infrastructure management services space and will leverage on it for the seven year roll-out project, informs Bhagwanani.

The Restructuring
HCL has been a very strong infrastructure roll-out player in the domestic market. Now, it has plans to diversify and build additional capabilities to stay ahead of the competition and be able to better execute such large complex contracts. Keeping this in view, it has carved its existing business as a separate SBU, focusing on networking and security, and has come up with two more SBUs for strategic sourcing and SI, and application services and vertical domain expertise. We are trying to identify skill sets for these new SBUs and are building on our capabilities further. Today, as companies are getting better at remote infrastructure managed services, we decided to develop an edge with the RIM plus model which focuses on infrastructure portfolio optimization from a consulting standpoint, says Bhagwanani.

Over the next few months, HCL will invest actively in its SBUs and rope in experienced solution architects and technical specialists into each SBU that has to successfully restructure its business for the Indian market. It is also planning to invest in building program management capabilities to be able to handle more contracts in the league of NIC.

Priya Kekre
priyak@cybermedia.co.in

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