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Murthy's growth plan for Infosys was right: Kamath

June 27, 2014 16:59 IST
Lunch time at Electronic City campus, Infosys Technologies Ltd, Bengaluru.

Commending the role of N R Narayana Murthy, veteran banker K V Kamath on Friday said the Infosys co-founder had ‘got the cost equation right’ to improve topline growth.

Kamath, who is also the non-executive Chairman, said it is now upon the ‘successor’ Vishal Sikka to take that agenda forward.

CEO and Managing Director-designate Sikka will take over his new role in August from S D Shibulal.

Sikka is the first non-founder and an outsider to be appointed CEO in the company's 33-years old history.

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Murthy's growth plan for Infosys was right: Kamath

June 27, 2014 16:59 IST
Vishal Sikka has been brought in at a time when Infosys needs to see immediate results.

"The key challenge in Infosys is clearly Narayana Murthy got the cost equation right and was working on the top line growth and it is for the successor to take that agenda forward," Kamath told CNBC.

He added that one has to look at succession with positivity.

"We always look at a company and a succession with great degree of positivity. I would look at Infosys in exactly the same way," he said.

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Murthy's growth plan for Infosys was right: Kamath

June 27, 2014 16:59 IST
N R Narayana Murthy.

Murthy stepped down as Executive Chairman from June 14, completing a second stint at the over $8 billion firm, which he founded along with six engineers in 1981.

He was brought back from retirement in June last year to head Infosys and put it back on a high-growth trajectory at a time when peers like TCS and HCL Tech were out-performing Infosys.

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Murthy's growth plan for Infosys was right: Kamath

June 27, 2014 16:59 IST
K V Kamath.

Asked if there was a timeline to see a turnaround at Infosys, Kamath said the country's second largest software services firm was a profitable company.

"Actually if you look at it, Infosys is a very profitable company so there is no turnaround per se.  

“It is basically to get the top line as it were ticking at a faster pace than it was earlier," he added.

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