Innovation needed to drive additional revenues for Indian IT-ITeS: Nasscom-BCG
25 Jul 2007
Mumbai: NASSCOM and The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) today released the IT trade body''s Innovation Report 2007 on innovation in the Indian IT-ITeS industry.
The
report addresses three aspects of the innovation agenda
- the factors that form a powerful imperative for innovation;
the approach for firms to spur innovation; and specific
recommendations to expand the innovation ecosystem in
India. It benchmarks the Indian innovation ecosystem with
leading innovation ecosystems around the world, and outlines
recommendations for developing India''s innovation ecosystem
for the country to realize this multi-billion dollar opportunity.
Sharing
findings of the report, Kiran Karnik, president, NASSCOM,
said, "India has established itself as a distinguished
leader on the world stage in the IT-ITES arena - Indian
firms have successfully dominated the first two phases
of evolution characterised by export led growth driven
by factor arbitrage and gaining domain experience and
superior delivery capabilities.
However, the industry is now entering the third phase where Indian firms needs to recognize and act on the importance of ''Innovation'' for maintaining their competitive edge and fuelling further growth to challenge global players.
Traditional
factors that led local firms through the first two phases
are being fast eroded by rising factor costs, geographical
and cultural affinity to other destinations, global firms
building sizeable Indian capabilities, very few big Indian
players and future governance and management challenges
for firms if they follow the current linear expansion
model."
He added, "Focusing on innovation besides differentiating
Indian IT-ITES industry will also allow it to tap additional
revenue streams worth $50 billion by 2012."
"Innovation is the top priority for global corporations
today-for growth, differentiation and leadership. If the
Indian IT industry can further enhance its ability to
service this top priority of global corporations, the
market opportunity is inestimable," said Lakshmi
Narayanan, chairman, NASSCOM.
"While
the Indian IT-ITES industry has shown strong revenue growth
over the years largely led by exports, investments in
deep domain knowledge and IP creation would help fuel
this growth story. To sustain high levels of growth, the
industry needs to focus on cultivating and nurturing an
ecosystem of innovation and institutionalize it. Be it
process innovation, product innovation, business model
innovation and the like, India is uniquely positioned
to define that platform and set newer benchmarks both
for the domestic and global IT industry," said Lakshmi
Narayanan, Chairman, NASSCOM.
James
Abraham, partner and director, BCG, commented, "Support
from ecosystem is very important in making innovation
at firm and country level successful. Relative to several
international examples, Indian ecosystem is weak and requires
significant bolstering. The study identifies specific
initiatives which need to be undertaken by different stakeholders
The report outlines several challenges faced by the Indian
innovation ecosystem such as:
- Insufficient
mentoring and networking support for start-ups and entrepreneurs
- Lack
of entrepreneurs focused on IP development in emerging
technologies
- Lack
of knowledge sharing between IT-ITES firms and key user
industries
- Severe
lack of funding at the seed / start-up stage
- No
platforms for all stakeholders to interact with each
other
- No
market-place for innovation trading in India
- Tenuous
partnership between industry and academia
- Lack of meaningful collaborations between industry and research institutes