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The Bengaluru-based firm has been in the eye of a storm over the past few months, with the two sides clashing over allegations such as corporate governance lapses and irregularities in Infosys’ INR 12,804.45-million Panaya acquisition. “Since Vishal left and Nandan came on board, we have had a massive outreach. We have talked to all the stakeholders, clients and employees,” Infosys interim CEO and MD U B Pravin Rao said at the Citi Global Technology Conference 2017.
He added that the company has also reached out to investors and industry consultants and “more or less, the feedback has been extremely positive and reassuring”. Rao said Nilekani’s return has brought in a sense of stability at the board level. “Nandan’s primary focus as the non-executive chairman is more on the board governance, board oversight but at the same time, he will also be tasked with CEO succession planning,” he added.
On August 18, the then CEO Vishal Sikka quit Infosys, citing slander. The following week saw the exit of four board members, including Chairman R Seshasayee, who had blamed co- founder N R Narayana Murthy’s “misguided campaign” for Sikka’s abrupt exit. Co-founder Nandan Nilekani was named the non-executive Chairman in a move that was seen as the company bowing to the demands of co-founders and large institutional investors.
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Infosys expects its revenue to grow by 6.5-8.5 per cent in constant currency during FY 2017-18.