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March 20, 2008
Satyam expands Africa business
By Leon Engelbrecht, ITWEB Senior Writer
Johannesburg - Satyam Computer Services has
expanded its African footprint by signing up business in Mauritius and
Botswana. The company has also opened a Cape office, says country manager
Chittaranjan Jena.
Satyam is one of India's top IT companies and has aggressively moved into
the South African market in the last two years. The company doubled its
South African revenue last year and is set to report similar growth this
year.
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In Botswana, Jena says, the company is implementing a portal and content
solution for the government. “Our main focus there is government and we
are short-listed for a few other large enterprise resource planning (ERP)
implementations,” he says.
“In Mauritius, we have a fairly large presence with clients like Air
Mauritius, the state bank and the revenue authority,” Jena adds. “We also
implemented the government online project there and we have a strategic
tie-up with Mauritius State Informatics to jointly execute projects and
skills development.”
Cape regional manager Rudra Shatapathy says his office has done brisk
business since opening last year. Satyam, he notes, is doing well in the
insurance and oil industries. He says many Cape companies “are not
properly serviced”. Vendors are largely Gauteng-based and logistics are
expensive as technicians expect to be flown down to the Cape and
accommodated at the clients' expense for the duration of the work, he
explains.
In addition, many Cape manufacturers use JD Edwards (JDE) ERP software,
which is particularly poorly supported in the Peninsula. Shatapathy says
this presented Satyam with an excellent opportunity that it has vigorously
exploited – and the company's Cape headcount is already over 50.
“We are giving them comfort that we are here and have a local presence,”
he adds.
Satyam is also helping Cape-based insurers such as Santam and Old Mutual.
“They are sitting with huge legacy mainframe systems,” he says. “The
challenge is to move them to product-based systems based on .Net.”
The company is also doing business with oil giants BP, Chevron and Engen
and supporting Shell's JDE ERP.
Satyam is developing a human resources (HR) recruiting tool for the Coega
Development Corporation (CDC) at the Ngquru Industrial Development Zone,
near Port Elizabeth. The solution will help investors find staff and help
them with general HR administration and payroll. It will also allow the
CDC and other government agencies to monitor black economic empowerment
and affirmative action.
“The system will be owned by the CDC,” says Shatapathy. “They are
investing money in it and will make money on it. They see it as an
investment and it will generate a return for them,” he adds, saying the
software is, therefore, different from the usual HR package which is a
straight-forward business expense.
In January, Satyam's Singapore-based VP for the Asia, Pacific, India, the
Middle East and Africa, Virender Aggarwal, said the company was working in
15 other African countries and had just set up a sales operation in Kenya.
He also announced the company had then already crossed the 100-employee
threshold in SA, adding the figure excluded local trainees undergoing
postgraduate training in India.
“Satyam continues to commit to local skills-building. In the last three
months, another 45 local graduates have been taken in for the 12-month
skills-development programme,” Aggarwal said.
The company was also “evaluating the idea of setting up a near-shore
delivery centre to service some of [our] large clients”
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