Wipro Limited
Q2 2022 Earnings Call Transcript
Published:
- Operator:
- Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to Wipro Limited Q2 FY ‘22 Earnings Conference Call. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Ms. Aparna Iyer, Vice President and Corporate Treasurer. Thank you and over to you.
- Aparna Iyer:
- Thank you, Stanford. A very warm welcome to our Q2 FY ‘22 earnings call. We will begin the call with business highlights and overview by Thierry, our Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director; followed by a financial overview by our CFO, Jatin Dalal. Afterwards, the operator will open the bridge for Q&A with our management team. Before Thierry starts, let me draw your attention to the fact that during this call, we may make certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act 1995. These statements are based on management’s current expectations and are associated with uncertainties and risks, which may cause the actual results to differ materially from those expected. The uncertainty and risk factors are explained in our detailed filings with the SEC. Wipro does not undertake any obligation to update the forward-looking statements to reflect the events and circumstances after the date of filing. The conference call will be archived and a transcript will be made available on our website. Over to you, Thierry.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Aparna, thank you. Hello, everyone. It’s really good to be able to speak to you again this quarter, especially as you join us today during the festive time. I know that in many parts of India are celebrating Navratri and Durga Pooja. So thank you for joining us. We’ll make sure not to keep you here for too long, okay. Joining us today on this announcement is my leadership team. So our Chief Human Resource Officer, Saurabh Govil; Chief Financial Officer, Jatin Dalal; and our Chief Growth Officer, Stephanie Trautman. For me, personally, this is a special earnings call to be able to speak to you from Bangalore. This is my first official visit to the India offices, since I took charge in July last year. In the last three years - three days, I've met with our senior leaders and teams in India, it's absolutely been incredibly energizing. The openness and your hospitality I've experienced in India has always been very welcoming. But you can imagine my eagerness and anticipation to meet our teams and see our campuses here and they did not disappoint. It's been great so far. Of course, I've only just started to travel essential travel, of course. I was in the U.S. last week, meeting with our regional CEOs and GBL leaders, our Chief Growth Officer, and those are key leaders of our business. Each of them, I must say, has steered Wipro through a very difficult time during the pandemic. And I'd like to thank every one of our 220,000 colleagues across the world for their commitment, their trust, and their dedication to our customer success despite the challenges of the pandemic. It is very encouraging that over 85% of our employees globally are now vaccinated with the first of the COVID-19 vaccines and over 50% are fully vaccinated with the recommended two doses. In many parts of the world, we are starting to return to our offices in a staggered manner. For example, in India, our fully vaccinated senior colleagues can now come to office twice a week. The return to work will be a careful and gradual process as you can imagine. We are really keeping the safety of our employees and the needs of our customers in mind as we plan this, right? In the second quarter, I'm happy to share with you that our new revenue run rate surpassed the 10 billion mark - the $10 billion mark. It will be interesting for you to know that $2.4 billion of this was added just in the last 12 months. This revenue milestone assumes greater significance because we achieved this while undergoing our largest ever internal transformation. Our revenue growth during the quarter was 8.1% in constant currency terms. You may recall this as being well ahead of the top end of our guidance range of 7%. And even if we exclude our two recent acquisitions, that is Capco and Ampion, we grew over 4.6% in constant currency terms. This marks the second consecutive quarter of 4.5%-plus growth. It signals the underlying demand and the execution momentum we have generated, and majority of our growth was volume-led. We've experienced secular growth across all markets, all sectors and global business lines. Our recent acquisitions too, I must say, have performed ahead of expectations. The demand environment continues to be very strong and our pipeline is a clear reflection of that. In fact, our pipeline is among the highest in recent quarters. We have a good mix of large and medium-sized deals. There are, in fact, many midsized deals and slightly smaller sized transformation deals in the market right now. This is all good news for us. Our order book in terms of annual contract value has jumped 28% in H1. And in terms of TCV, the order book is up 19% year-on-year. We have strengthened our large deal and brought in specialized expertise there. So I'm really confident our participation and win rate of deals will accelerate. Let me come to the operating margins now. I'm pleased to share that in Q2, we have sustained Q1 operating margins, adjusted for the one-time gains we had in the last quarter. And frankly, we have maintained our operating margin despite absorbing the full impact of our recent acquisitions of Capco and Ampion and in spite of investing heavily in our business across sales capabilities and talents. An additional point to note here that we've also offered a salary increase covering 80% for our colleagues in September of 2021, marking a second salary hike in this calendar year. There is significant traction across all our markets, as I said, leading to broad-based growth. Americas and Europe, our top two markets grew at 15% and 29% year-on-year, respectively, even without the recent acquisitions. In Americas 1, we grew 20% year-on-year, with most of the sectors showing strong growth
- Jatin Dalal:
- Thank you very much Thierry. And good evening, good morning to all participants. I will share some financial details now. As Thierry mentioned, for the first half our TCB win has been quite healthy at 18% and our ACE wins have been 29%. We have signed in quarter to nine deals with a TCB of $580 million. Our quarter two revenue growth was 8.1%, which as you know is significantly ahead of our guidance range of 5% to 7% and that reflected in constant currency 28.8% healthy year-on-year growth. Our operating margin for the quarter were 17.8% and it was a good sustenance considering the 1% that we received as benefit one time in quarter, one on sale of our Ensono business. Our tax rate improved compared to last year where we close at 22% versus 22.5% of last year. Therefore our net income increased by 18.9% in quarter two and our EPS increased at 23.8% year-on-year. The -- if you see our cash flow performance, operating cash flow was 81% of our net income. We had $2.7 billion of net cash on the balance sheet and $4.3 billion growth cash on the balance sheet. We had a good realization of 75.11 at the end of the quarter, and we had $3.3 billion of ForEx hedges. We have guided as Thierry articulated 2% to 4% sequentially and the constant currency exchanges are mentioned in our press release. And we'll be very happy to take your questions from here. Thank you.
- Operator:
- Shall we open up for Q&A?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Absolutely.
- Operator:
- Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question-and-answer session. The first question is from the line of Diviya Nagarajan from UBS. Please go ahead.
- Diviya Nagarajan:
- Hi, congrats on the strong quarter, and thanks for taking my question. Just a couple of things. I think if you were to kind of rate how you're seeing the progress of your strategy in the last few months and separate us out from bottom-up strategic gains versus the overall demand balance that you're seeing right now. Where would you put the contribution of either? And in terms of the strategic path and the route that you would like to take, how far do you think the organization has reached change and what is left to be done?
- Jatin Dalal:
- So Diviya, this is Jatin. If you don't mind, can you repeat your question? Your line was slightly blurred. We couldn't follow your question.
- Diviya Nagarajan:
- Okay. So I - my question, basically was that how much of the growth right now would you attribute to your bottom-up strategic initiatives and the results that they are producing? And how much would you basically say it's the demand lift that you're getting because of what's happened overall to digital? And the second part of that question is that, from a strategy point of view, what is actually the progress? And in terms of the milestones that you've been tracking, and what is left to be done? Thank you.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Okay. Diviya, I'll try to respond to the two points. The first one is a difficult one, obviously. It's difficult to disconnect the impact of a market and what's more specific to Wipro itself. I think there is a real adequation between a good market and an organization that is very aligned to the priorities of our clients. And so the bottom line is that, yes, we are benefitting from a good market. We are seeing that the market continues to be good, and if not continue to get better. But we’re also seeing that we are having a better impact with our clients that we are having a better impact, and that we are actually performing better on the deals we are going after. And so I think at the end of the day, I cannot split scientifically, but there is no question that this performance is the result of the performance of Wipro in a good market. The second point around the impact of our strategy. The strategy that we have laid out, Diviya, about 15 months ago now was one, a strategy of obsessive focus on growth. And that's what we've done by allowing our teams to focus the time for the clients in the market. We've simplified the model. We've simplified organization. We have reinforced our internal processes, so that people can have more time for the market, spend more time with the clients. We have adjusted our ambition and really redefined where we felt we wanted to play with our clients and really be their partner in that transformation. And this is what we've been doing day after day. And then two more things or three more things. We have been very clear on the fact that, we wanted to focus on investments around our top accounts. That's what we've done. And the result is that what you're seeing today is that we've increased significantly the number of deals over 100 of account over $100 million. We've increased the number of accounts over $75 million or over $50 million. So we've increased the size of our large account, those accounts have been a growth engine for us. We have been clear on the fact that we wanted to further invest and bet big on the power of developing partnership with technology companies like AWS, Microsoft, Google, or SAP, and this is what we’ve been - or ServiceNow. This is what we've been doing. And here also we've been getting remarkable growth over the last quarters. And finally, we have a strategy to go after a big deal as well. And that, with that in mind that we've organized our big deal team around our Chief Growth Officer, Stephanie. And so I would say that when you look at the way we have built, if I can say, if we - the way we have produced this growth, if fully aligned to the - it's the absolute result of the strategy we've been driving over the last 15 months.
- Operator:
- Ms. Nagarajan, do you have any further questions?
- Diviya Nagarajan:
- Yes. Just a follow-up to that. You had earlier spoken about the Chief Growth Officer driving the large deal engine, and how it is nearly complete. Given that we've had a little bit of a slowdown in TCV in the last couple of quarters, I appreciate the ACV has gone up. But in terms of total deal value, are you happy with where it is right now? And what should we expect in terms of the deal trends going forward from your initiative?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- I'll take it a little bit and then I'll ask Stephanie to build on it. For sure, we are happy with the performance in bookings. I mean, the quality of the deals we've closed this quarter with our clients - with our top clients, a good mix of large and midsized deals. There's a good volume of activity that is fueling this growth. We didn't have a mega deal this quarter and we knew it. So, it's not like you you're turning an opportunity into a mega deal in a few months’ time. Those deals typically take more time. What we've done is geared up the engine, the big deal team to start to produce more opportunities in our pipeline for the foreseeable future for the next quarters. And that's absolutely what Stephanie has been doing with bringing in a lot of top talent recently. Stephanie, you want to build on it?
- Stephanie Trautman:
- Yes. Thanks, Thierry. I - from a large deal team perspective, in the first few months of building out that team, we've been focused on the current pipeline, so everyone on the team is actively involved in deals. We've seen some clients slow down a bit in their decision-making and others who have perhaps broken the opportunities into smaller opportunities, but we're still engaged. And then we've also pivoted towards more proactive origination of large opportunities, working closely with our existing client base and also our partners to create opportunities as well as respond to opportunities. So I think that is what is informing our pipeline moving forward.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Absolutely. Thanks, Stephanie. And just to conclude, on your point, just facts. If you mentioned ACV and TCV, DVR. So, ACV has jumped 28% year-on-year in H1. TCV has jumped 19% year-on-year. So, from those two aspects, we are growing well as well.
- Diviya Nagarajan:
- But if I have multiple follow ups, but in the interest of time, I will come back into the queue. Thanks and wish you all the best for the rest of the year.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Thank you.
- Operator:
- Thank you. We take our next question from the line of Mukul Garg from Motilal Oswal. Please go ahead.
- Mukul Garg:
- Yes, hi answering my question. Thierry, I just wanted to focus a bit on the supply side of the equation. The demand environment definitely looks very, very favorable. And you guys have been doing ahead of your own expectation, but at some point of time, the high attrition and the high addition of pressures would have some drag on the incremental growth opportunities, which is there in the market. Do you think you've already started seeing some of that right now or is that something which can lead to delays in business to a quarter down the line if the attrition remains this elevated or it would be..?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Mukul, I will start by answering the following. The guidance given for Q3 does not assume an improvement of attrition. Okay. So certainly in different terms if attrition would go down we could potentially do a little better. Now, I frankly don't believe that attrition will improve that can also reduce in the next quarters. I actually believe that given the environment we’ll continue to face the high level of attribution at least in the next two, three quarters. Because yes, we have obviously acted on it in many ways. You've heard I've mentioned the fact that we have initiated a new cycle of compensation increase for 80% of our people in September. But besides that, we've also ramped up our fresher’s strategy. And, going for a lot more, we’ve revised frankly, the level of ambition of our fresher’s intake. To that I'd like to ask you so how to maybe jumping and tell us also from fresher’s standpoint, not only in terms of numbers, but also in terms of strategy, what we've decided to do.
- Saurabh Govil:
- So Mukul as you’ve called out, the demand environment is very strong and supply side we have to work on. And the interventions which we are looking at is more long term and is more in depth. So it's not only adding numbers or adding more people, it's also making sure that how do we make up -- upskill them and also retain them for a longer period of time. So for example, for fresher’s as we go on for the campuses this year, and we just concluded the national talent and test log for India, where we had more than 200,000 people applying for it. We are having a communication plan that I think is unique, where we not only share with them what happens as a compensation when they join, but also a plan for them in terms of carrier and compensation over the next five years. And that's built in their contract. So it's very clearly driving a plan that we increase the retention of these of these people because we are seeing a high attrition in this three to six year category. And if you're able to retain these fresher’s and build right culture in the organization retain over long period of time is going to long term impact and help us in the supply side. So it's a very different shift. It's not only about adding numbers, it's very strategic thing through that we will be able to increase the retention of our freshers for a longer period of time. And look at both cost and attrition as a long term player.
- Mukul Garg:
- Sure, thanks. Thierry, the second part of the question was on, how should we look at the attrition and the pricing for both traditional or legacy part of the business as well as plowed and new part of the business? The historically the legacy portion has obviously been more profitable, although growth is not there. But -- with more people getting trained on new technologies where the wages are obviously higher. Do you think, you know higher attrition has started creeping up there as well?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Although definitely we are getting a significant growth from those areas that you're referring to, it's true. Today we are significant part of our growth is coming from Cloud area, from data, from digital transformation, from engineering services from cybersecurity. And again, this is based on this revenue mix that we have, based our assumptions for the -- for the guidance for Q3.
- Saurabh Govil:
- But Mukul just to add to what Thierry is saying, yes, these are hot skills today. And there is a high attrition. So if I see this is one area where we are working towards where the upscaling part will help. But it is an area where we have huge demand and there is a supply and the skill deficit. So it's not about that the demand is much more in what we require in the industry with an industry issue which we look at.
- Jatin Dalal:
- So to, this is Jatin. Just to add, Mukul conceptually if the demand is high as Saurabh has mentioned, and there is constrained supply today, if more people get trained in that area, in fact, it will overall reduce the pressure on attrition in that area over a period of time though that specific individual may be more marketable in them with a new…
- Mukul Garg:
- Okay, fair enough. Again, thanks for taking my question. I get back in the queue.
- Operator:
- Thank you. The next question is from the line of Sandip Agarwal from Edelweiss. Please go ahead.
- Sandip Agarwal:
- Yes. Hi, good evening, thanks for taking my question and congrats on a good quarter. One question Thierry, that when you see your current clients work, progress and execution, and the way technology is getting adapted across horizon, what is your sense at what stage of implementation we are? Is it very early stage? Or do you think that we are somewhere in the middle of it? So that was one? And second, I wanted to understand that while you say that attrition may not cool off in the next quarter, will it be fair to say that the peak of attrition is behind us? Thank you.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- On the first point, which is, you want to understand at which stage of transformation. If you want to think about the potential that technology can represent for an organization for a company in terms of transformation of its ways of working. I think we are, the best of the transformation is ahead of us. I mean, the potential of -- if you look at the cloud, so first of all, if you look at Cloud transformation, what I'm reading and is quite consistent here, we probably have touched, say, 20%, of the cloud transformation wave. And so the biggest part of it, and the largest part of it is ahead of us. If you're looking at security, no, there is no question that security will continue to represent budget increase for our clients in the next years. If you look at data, in data, the way we are leveraging data to drive insight for better decision making is immense potential -- present an immense potential for a lot of industries. And, again, the best is ahead of us. Finally, if you look at engineering services, and other areas where we are investing significantly and getting nice growth, we know that this is an area where, in many, and across many industries, companies will have to invest in their R&D, and we'll need support from companies like us to support and augment their R&D investments. And so across all these different areas, the bulk of the transformation is ahead of us. On the attrition, which is your second point, I actually don't believe that the worse of attrition is behind us. I think it will, as I said, it will continue to, to possibly increase in the next quarters before cooling down. Again, that's, that's at least our assumptions as of today.
- Sandip Agarwal:
- Okay, thank you. That's very helpful. Thanks a lot.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- You're welcome.
- Operator:
- Thank you. The next question is from the line of Apurva Prasad from Elara Capital. Please go ahead.
- Apurva Prasad:
- Thanks for taking my question. Thierry, couple from my side. So how durable is the demand environment. And is the conversation around scope increase with your large customers giving you that confidence of durability of demand and the continuity of current growth momentum? And I asked this in context of higher ACB growth versus TCB growth?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- So on the first point, I mean, I would answer a frank, yes. Yes, the demand is strong, and will remain strong. Just based on the previous point I just covered there's so much transformation ahead of us. Our clients are placing investment in technology as you know, among their top priorities. To a point Apurva, where it's not anymore a topic for the CIO only, it's a topic for every CXO in an organization, right. The CMO, is investing more in technology, the head of supply chain is investing more in technology, the business expressed strong demand for technology. And obviously, all the different functions, HR, Finance, Operations, all are pushing for programs to be developed. So the demand will continue to remain strong.
- Apurva Prasad:
- Got that. And just on this point of yours and strong demand and in context of the current tight supply environment, what do you think is your propensity for getting rate card increase? And what part of the portfolio in your opinion is amenable to that increase? Or is it the case that this is more stable and the benefits are flowing through more by means of greater offshoring and volumes?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Well, Apurva, I think there's opportunity today. There are opportunities to have these discussions with our clients. In this current context, our clients, our clients feel the same. They are also exposed to attrition. They have exactly the same phenomenon. And so, I think it's a reality that more important for them today is the ability to continue to drive those programs without slowing down. Now, from a portfolio standpoint, I would say, I would still talk about the certain level of stability of the pricing.
- Apurva Prasad:
- Got it. Thank you and all the best.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Thank you.
- Operator:
- Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, in order to ensure that the management is able to address questions from all participants in this conference call, please limit your questions to one per participant. For any further questions, you may come back for follow up. The next question is from the line of Gaurav Rateria from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
- Gaurav Rateria:
- Hi, congratulations on great performance. First question for Thierry, where are we right now, in the whole organizational restructuring process? Have you seen any material change in the top 100, Top 200 heads as far as the global account executives are concerned? And, or is this something which is ahead of us and these changes are likely to happen in the coming quarters?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Gaurav, excellent question. Thanks for that. One is in terms of operating model organization changes we have implemented the new operating model new organization on January 1. And we have given ourselves a quarter to stabilize this organization model, it's actually been incredibly efficient rapidly. And frankly, I don't want to be overly optimistic, I mean, not positive about it, every new model requires a certain amount of progression, but frankly, very positively surprised by the level of maturity of the model after a few months. We have today a model that the organization and all our leaders consider is the model that is working and actually delivers the upside that we want that we were expecting in terms of simplicity in terms of, reducing the number of silos inside your organization, the ability to create a one Wipro mind set and getting actually freeing up time for our people to spend more time with customers. The second part of your question which is about the rotation or if you like the evolution of our leadership organization. What I can tell you is we have upgraded if I can say about 25% of our account executives around the world. Okay. And the second aspect is that if you look at that our top 200 leaders across the organization two years ago, we had only 1% of them were account executives, today 8% of them are account executive. There is a significant change in the mix of leadership towards client facing people.
- Gaurav Rateria:
- Got it? Second question. I'll put it in two parts. One Thierry, you mentioned couple of quarters that one of the key jobs which you had to do was to build a pipeline, actually. And the last few quarters have been good on the conversion. So just want to understand where are we in this journey, in terms of broad basing of our participation in the deals? And the second part of the question is for Jatin, with respect to understanding, the leverage to manage margins in the second half, is it fair to say, given the supply environment being tight margins should be lower in the second half compared to first half? Thank you.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Okay, so I think the first one on the on the on the pipeline. We've seen the pipeline progression quarter after quarter. It's been a consistent progression, the trend has been positive. But more importantly, I would say two things. The quality of the pipeline has improved. We have a pipeline now that is more aligned to our strategy in terms of priorities, in terms of focusing on offerings, where we want to invest, and also focused around our key accounts. So the first, the proportion of our pipeline coming from our top accounts, is a lot bigger than what it was several quarters ago. So from that standpoint, it's all positive. Finally, I would say in terms of deal conduction, I think we are also seeing a positive trend. We've improved the way we are quantifying our bills, we've improved the way we are mobilizing the one we broke organization to win deals. And -- the laser focus, in line with our strategy, around accounts and in specific offerings allowed us to invest into cap talent into top capabilities. And this is definitely helping us converting those pipe this pipeline into deals. On the second question, Jatin?
- Jatin Dalal:
- Yes, thanks Thierry. So the answer to the question is yes. There is there is tremendous, I would say, competition for great talent. And that means that we need to remain very invested in our talent. We need to make sure that our supply curve is properly supporting our growth curve, and in fact, ahead of our growth curve. So we are we are capturing every demand that comes in. For all of that in terms of impact or risk on margin. Yes, there is a risk on margin. And I think that's not just Wipro. But that that's the industry fact. Having said that, we executed as you know, this quarter well. We were able to drive operational improvements in realization, utilization and offshoring. And that covered effectively the impact that we had to take for three months impact on salary. So I think it's going to be it's going to be a growth going forward, which will end how do we balance the effort that we put on our operating levers to be able to cover for the margin is that is going to be a balance that we will have to continue to fight on. But we have done well, which we are proud of in quarter two. But there are there are clear investment agenda on talent going forward, which we have to remain cognizant. And that's what we are baking in as we think about second half.
- Gaurav Rateria:
- Thank you, Jatin. Thank you, Thierry.
- Operator:
- Thank you. The next question is from the line of Sandeep Shah from Equirus Securities. Please go ahead.
- Sandeep Shah:
- Yes, thanks for the opportunity. And I understand and acknowledge the growth of ACB which is 29%. But if I look at the first half PCB and even if I assume close to 75%, being a new business, and as you move forward 10 years, then the actual new business as a percentage to the first half comes to around 5% as a whole. So, does that worry you in terms of the growth profile going forward, or do you believe for the industry as a whole the group profile is changing, where we have to look beyond the large deal signings, where larger deals are getting converted into smaller deals. And there are enough number of less than $30 million deals which will keep your organic growth of going forward robust. And second question to Jatin, Jatin, this time I think EBITDA margin decline is close to 75 bips, right depreciation savings has been higher than 50 to 70 bips. So, what is causing this and whether depreciation will normalize in a going forward basis.
- Jatin Dalal:
- So, Sandeep, this is Jatin. I will try and respond to both questions if you are okay. On the first one, there is the strength of the performance is reflected in quarter two numbers. It is what we think we can do is reflected in the guidance which we are given. Of course, you can look at look at the likely performance in many ways and you have a point of view that we respect. But you must always see that our industry runs on two fuels. One is the day to day volumes that we are able to add because we see demand and we fulfill quickly and that adds to our revenue and second is large deals. And as you can see the first engine has really been very, very productive in last nine months and it continues to fire very well. And we did not have a mega deal as Thierry spoke about it. But, we are very strong first engine which is firing. So we feel comfortable as we speak. We feel comfortable that we have pipeline for large deals and that will convert at some point. So overall, we are quite okay and well placed is the way we see Sandeep. And the second question on EBITDA versus EBIT? We, as you know, we do have certain cycles of amortization related with the specific costs for which that particular item is getting amortized on. And as and when those cycles come to an end, in their natural course, the amortization ceases to come in the P&L. And that's reflective of that and what you see now is something that can be the basis for your future modeling.
- Sandeep Shah:
- Okay, okay. Thanks. Thanks. And all the best.
- Jatin Dalal:
- Thanks.
- Operator:
- Thank you. The next question is from the line of Vibhor Singhal from Phillip Capital. Please go ahead. Vibhor Singhal from Phillip Capital. Your line is unmuted, please go into question. Please unmute the line from your side.
- Vibhor Singhal:
- Yes. Am I audible?
- Operator:
- Yes, Vibhor.
- Vibhor Singhal:
- Yes hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Thierry, I just had one question from my side. And my question was pertaining to our strategy and the growth that you see in the European geography. We know that the Indian companies have done really well in the U.K., Scandinavia, and even geographies. But the Continental Europe had something that was the reason which I think was of the Indian companies were not able to make so much of inroads due to obviously the barrier. We tried to overcome that over the past year with a lot of local hiring. How do you see pandemic changing that equation? Has it kind of as has as it has over the entire world? Has it kind of lowered those entry barriers for us, as the Indian IT companies and Wipro specifically as well? Do you see more deals coming in through geographies, like Germany, France? Are the local European companies like your Steria Sopra -- every and all these guys able to ramp up and give us good enough competition, which they have not been over the past decade? So how is the growth trajectory in the European geography looking like with all these factors at play?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Look this. My response Vibhor would have just two aspects to it. The first aspect is there is no doubt that companies have learned to work with teams that are working remotely. And when you're working remotely, whether you're working two miles away or you know 5000 miles away, doesn't change anything. You're working with teams that are not on site. And from standpoint, there's no doubt that you know a lot of in the companies across industries in the European market have learned and will be more comfortable leveraging global delivery models if you like. But the sudden aspect for me, is equally important. In Europe more than anywhere else, there are major cultural specificities that requires a deep understanding of the local markets. And the local market of Sweden is not the same that the local market in Finland or in Norway. And I think the companies that are doing well are the ones who understand that and who are able to leverage at the same time, the power of global organizations and develop a stronger local connect. And that's the reason why we have, so significantly invested into local leadership in Europe, and this has been paying off pretty much immediately.
- Vibhor Singhal:
- Right? So would you say that we are on track with our strategy of that, of what we've done? Are you happy with the outcome? Could have been better? Or do you think you do expect it to be even better in terms of growth rates and in terms of going forward?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Oh, my team would tell you that I'm, I always consider that we could have done even better. But I think I'm satisfied broadly satisfied with the progress we've made. The consistency, the alignment to the plan, the execution, if you like, of the strategy, and the fact that you know, we are doing what we said we would do. And that I like this consistency.
- Vibhor Singhal:
- Got it. Got it. Great. Thanks for taking my questions Thierry and wish you guys all the best.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Thank you, Vibhor.
- Operator:
- Thank you. The next question is from the line of Manik Taneja from JM Financial. Please go ahead.
- Manik Taneja:
- Hi, thank you for the opportunity, in addition to the data application. Thierry, I want you to pick up on a couple of things. Number one thing is around the fact that while we have seen a significant shift in terms of offshore mix of revenues over the last several quarters, that has also played along with significant increase in utilization, which is which is contrary to what one has seen in the past for the industry. Do you think at some point of time the normal tendency around utilization cooling off as more for gets delivered offshore starts playing out? Or you are seeing some different engagement models in emerging industry because of which offshore utilization rates are holding up quite well? That's question number one. The second question was around the fact that typically second half is much stronger for us versus first half in terms of sequential growth rates? Do we expect something similar to -- get this year as well? Thank you.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- I mean, so I'll start with the point number two and I’ll come back to us to the first one after. The -- there's always a bit of seasonality in in our industry, for sure. And that's, that's why when we talk about sequential growth, we need to take into account seasonality. The guidance of 2% to 4% growth in sequentially in Q3 takes into account this seasonality. It remains that if we look at our growth, 2% to 4% growth in Q3 would actually represent 27% to 30% growth year-on-year, which is quite healthy. On your first point, which is trying to identify trends, or evolution of onshore and offshore mix, I would be a little cautious with drawing conclusions. I think the reality Manik is that, the mix is a factor of many things. The evolution of the mix depends on the type of deals that you're selling. Depending on the level of the cycle of where you stand in, in the transformation, you're going to need either more, local presence or more offshore presence. And so I think it's not necessarily a trend that is systematic, I think it's you can see an evolution depending on the mix of deals in a particular sector, in a particular geography. So that's the point I would make. Yes. Typically, offshore utilization is lower than the utilization we have onshore. And that will certainly remain true. Even in a market of high demand, utilization tend to be higher, that's pretty mechanical.
- Saurabh Govil:
- With the attrition going up here, that also impacts the attrition.
- Manik Taneja:
- And do you think, -- support as customers get much more acceptable of global delivery or offshore delivery?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- I believe you were breaking out a bit. So I hope I understood your question. But you know, if your question was, do you believe that clients are more open to offshore? Is it what you're saying?
- Manik Taneja:
- I was saying, are there more innovative engagement models emerging around offshore delivery, as clients get much more acceptable around or get much more are more acceptable of offshore delivery?
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Yes, no doubt, again, that, what we've learned over the last 15 months were through the pandemic is, will change the way the ways of working. And there's no doubt I would, I would leave you with two views. One is, we know that a significant portion of our employees will spend some days per week working from home, so therefore, remotely wherever they live. And it's absolutely the same that applies for our clients, employees as well. In every of my interactions with clients, we are talking about it, and I think it's an evolution of the workforce to last. And the second thing again, is that, being more being exposed, and having developed the technology that support, remote working, in a secure way, opens new opportunities to clients to think about new operating model and new ways of working with companies like ours. So yes, for those two reasons, there's no doubt that operating model will continue to trend towards more flexibility between physical and virtual.
- Manik Taneja:
- Sure. Thank you, and all the best for the future.
- Thierry Delaporte:
- Thank you.
- Operator:
- Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question. I now hand the conference over to Miss Aparna Iyer for closing comments.
- Aparna Iyer:
- Thank you, Stanford. And thank you all for joining us. In case we couldn't take any of your questions, please feel free to reach out to the investor relations team. Wish you all a very happy, festive season ahead and have a nice day. Thank you.
- Operator:
- Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen on behalf of Wipro limited, that concludes this conference. We thank you all for joining us and you may now disconnect your lines.
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