Birlasoft Limited (NSE:BSOFT)
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May 5, 2026, 3:29 PM IST
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Q2 24/25

Oct 23, 2024

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to Birlasoft's Q2 FY 2025 post-results 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. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star then zero on your touchtone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Abhinandan Singh, Head of Investor Relations, Birlasoft Limited. Thank you, and over to you, sir.

Abhinandan Singh
Head of Investor Relations, Birlasoft Limited

Thank you, and welcome, folks. By now, you have received our Q2 results. Those are also available on our website, www.birlasoft.com. Joining me on this call today are our CEO and MD, Mr. Angan Guha, and our CFO, Ms. Kamini Shah. As usual, we'll begin the call today with opening remarks from both Angan and Kamini. And then we will open up the floor for your questions.

But before I hand over the floor to Angan, a quick reminder that anything that we say on this call on the company's outlook for the future could be a forward-looking statement, and therefore, that must be heard or read in conjunction with the disclaimer that appears in our second quarter FY 2025 investor update, which you would have received, and that is also available on our website as well as filed with the stock exchanges. With that, let me hand over the floor now to Mr. Angan Guha, our CEO and MD. Over to you, Angan.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Thank you. Thank you, Abhi. So good evening, and good morning to everyone, wherever you are, and thank you for joining us today as we share some perspectives on our company performance during the second quarter of the current fiscal year. I trust all of you have seen the results. So with regard to our Q2 performance, I would like to share a few observations. One, we are back to sequential growth in this quarter, even as demand conditions continue to be challenging. The strong rebound in our revenue performance during the quarter on the revenue has been led by growth that has been more broad-based, so most of our industry verticals and service lines and accounts have grown. With an improvement of our revenue trajectory, we expect recovery in our margins, as the investments start paying in, as we go forward.

Through all of this, I am pleased to note that we continue to generate very, very strong cash flows. So with that, now let me delve into the Q2 performance. On a year-on-year basis, our revenues for the quarter grew 4.5% in rupee terms, 3.2% in dollar terms. On quarter-on-quarter basis, our Q2 revenues have grown 3.1% in rupee terms and 2.6% in dollar terms, which really represents a strong rebound in our revenue growth from a Q2 standpoint. Our reported growth has been driven by stronger growth in all of our core services business, because of the quantum of the pass-through has been much, much lower in Q2 than it was in Q1.

The rebound in our revenue performance has been driven by initiation and contribution of several of the delayed projects. As you may recall, we had spoken about it in Q1. Some of the projects had not started. They have started in Q2, and as a result, we are seeing improved growth from a revenue standpoint. The incremental business is also coming from consolidation deals, which demonstrates our ability to gain wallet share in an operating environment that remains very difficult. Such deals, however, are often needed to be made with upfront investments and a flexibility in terms of pricing, which affects margins in the short to medium term. But as the engagements normalize, I'm sure you will see an uptick in the margins.

There has been strong growth in our Manufacturing and E&U verticals, along with continued traction in the BFSI business. As you would recall, BFSI has grown strongly for the last seven quarters, and we continue to see strong performance in BFSI as well. Our Life Sciences businesses has been a struggle. I believe it will continue to be soft for a couple of more quarters before we turn the corner there. Our margin performance has not been very good, and that is a concern for us, and that is something that we will work on as we go forward in terms of how to improve the margins. We have a lot of levers that we will be speaking about, as we go forward in order to improve the margins.

The consolidation deals that I've mentioned has witnessed pricing pressure, and it's a natural phenomenon in these businesses where you start off the business with a lot of investments, but as you mature the engagement, it helps us with enhanced margin as we go forward. Looking forward, I feel the demand environment has not really changed, and what we have seen over the past few quarters actually continue. Our client budgets have not gone down, but it is on a hold-and-wait pattern, so we will have to see how our client spending goes forward. With the election looming in the U.S., which is our biggest market, it is a wait-and-watch for our clients.

Overall, while we do see some green shoots, there might not be too much clarity till the end of the year as things unfold in terms of whether our customers will be continued to focus on cost takeouts or start investing in the transformation projects. While the growth is now back, we expect to continue the growth momentum in the coming quarter. The coming quarter, as you know, is a soft quarter, thanks to furloughs, but we hope the growth momentum will continue. It will take a couple of quarters for us to get the margin back on track, the coming quarter, because we will be giving a salary hike. There will be a little bit of a dent in terms of how we deliver margins or we look at margins for Q3.

But we are very confident that starting Q4, you will see the margin improving. And over the next subsequent quarters, every quarter you will see a margin improvement going forward. Our proactive deal pipeline remains very healthy. The customer decision-making is taking a little bit of time, which is why it is reflective on our TCV performance. But I strongly feel that our Q3 and Q4, we will have a better TCV performance than what we have seen in the first half year. Our deal flow, our funnel, it continues to be very strong. One good silver lining in this entire thing is the fact that almost 50% of our deals that are coming in are either in existing new or in net new, which is a positive.

T hat helps me, you know, deliver better growth performance as we go forward. So with that, I will hand it over to Kamini, our Chief Financial Officer, to share her perspectives of the quarter, that is under review. Over to you, Kamini.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Thank you, Angan. Good evening, everyone. Thank you for joining us. Let me take you through the financial highlights for the second quarter of the current financial year. On the quarter two performance as Angan explained, our performance has been fairly broad-based, with the majority of our verticals and service lines registering sequential growth. You may recall that in the preceding quarter, we had witnessed some deferment of new project ramp-up in our ERP service line, which had also impacted some of our verticals, manufacturing in particular.

Several of those delayed projects have started to ramp up during the quarter under review, and that is reflected in our financial performance. Consequently, we have recorded a healthy revenue growth during Q2 FY 2025 on both a year-on-year basis as well as a quarter-on-quarter basis. Our consolidated revenues grew 2.6% in dollar terms to $163.3 million.

In INR terms, it has been INR 1,368 crores, a sequential growth of 3.1% and a year-on-year growth of 4.5%. I'm happy to say that the revenues of our top five, top 10, and top 20 accounts have grown quarter- on- quarter by 3.9%, 2.4%, and 2.3% respectively. As a result, our top five, 10, and 20 accounts now contribute 36.7%, 52.5%, and 64.9% respectively to our total revenue. Amongst our verticals, both Manufacturing and E&U were up by 4.7% each quarter- on- quarter, while BFSI grew by about 1.4% quarter on quarter.

The Life Sciences vertical remains weak during the quarter under review, and we do expect this to return back to growth in a couple of quarters, as Angan had alluded to. From an operating standpoint, our ERP business grew by about 2.3% sequentially, due to the fact that some of our projects, delayed projects, came back on track. Our Digital and Data business that has been under pressure over the preceding couple of quarters, has registered a strong rebound and it grew 6.6% quarter- on- quarter. The Infra business, which had recorded a very strong growth in the preceding quarter, witnessed a sequential drop due to the base effect, but this is expected to be returned to a growth trajectory going forward. Moving on to the EBITDA performance.

Our EBITDA for the quarter was at $19.7 million versus $23.4 million in the previous quarter, and the EBITDA margin stood at about 12.1%. You would recall that in the sequential preceding quarter, that is in Q1, there was a one-time benefit of INR 222 million, which has been given back. Quarter two FY 2025 performance reflects the absence of that. Moreover, as Angan had also spoken about, we have gained some wallet share through consolidation deals that do require some pricing flexibility. These deals tend to be more on-site centric to start with, which is also reflected in our on-site ratio in the current quarter, and this becomes a margin lever as our engagements mature. The investments that we have been making have already started reflecting in increased recognitions of our capabilities in the market space.

We will continue to make investments as necessary, but we are now focused on driving returns from these investments. Our cash stood at about $15.2 million, which is about INR 1,275 million in rupee terms. Effective tax rate for the quarter has been about 24.9%. We do expect the ETR for the full year to be in the range of 25%-26%. Coming to some key balance sheet items. Our cash and bank balance at the end of Q2 stood at about $221.8 million, which is up by 27.8%. This is after reflecting the payout of $13 million as dividends, which was made in Q2.

Our operating cash flow for the quarter was at about $12.9 million on the back of a sequential improvement in our quarterly collections during quarter two, which stood at $176 million. This has been the highest in the last six quarters. DSO continues to be a focus area for us, while it was at about 58 days for Q2. This has gone up quarter- on- quarter, primarily because of shifting of some collections that came in the first couple of days of October, and this will definitely show up in the quarter three DSO, which traditionally has been better and in line with our historical levels. As you would have observed, the board today has recommended an interim dividend of INR 2.5 per share. This reflects our intention to reward shareholders, while also keeping in mind our capital allocation requirements.

In conclusion, I would say that we expect to stay on the growth-oriented trajectory moving forward. We have made investments necessary to ensure that we have a differentiated value proposition in the market space. We will continue to focus on generating strong cash flow with an eye on key performance metrics in order to drive margin recovery, and this will be aided by an upturn in the demand conditions as and when this happens. Thank you very much. Back to you, Abhi.

Abhinandan Singh
Head of Investor Relations, Birlasoft Limited

Thank you, Kamini, thanks, Angan. Moderator, let's start with the Q&A session, please.

Operator

Thank you very much. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touchtone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. We'll take our first question from the line of Ravi Menon from Macquarie. Please go ahead.

Ravi Menon
Lead Analyst, Macquarie

Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. I think we talked a bit about the onsite increase in revenue, about $13 million or so, and offshore why it has declined by $9 million. I imagine this also had a big impact on the margins, so if Kamini can comment on that.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah, you are absolutely right, Ravi, because of the shift in the onsite ratio that we've seen in this quarter, moving up to almost 51%. Like we mentioned, a lot of our consolidation deals are largely in the onsite space, and that's the reason why we've had this impact from a margin standpoint.

Ravi Menon
Lead Analyst, Macquarie

Right. So over time, we would expect this to shift offshore?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

I kind of missed what you said. No?

Ravi Menon
Lead Analyst, Macquarie

Uh, sorry.

Operator

Mr. Menon, can you use your handset mode, please?

Ravi Menon
Lead Analyst, Macquarie

Sorry, one second. So would this shift offshore over time, Kamini? Is that what we should expect?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. Yes, Ravi, that is the intention, which is why I also called that out, right? Typically, in some of these consolidation deals, they start to be more onsite-centric, and we do expect that to start shifting more offshore.

Ravi Menon
Lead Analyst, Macquarie

That really explains, you know, the onsite revenue increase, but offshore, why should this decline?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

So there are, I think, some of our engagements that came to an end, Ravi, which is the reason why, you know, from a ratio standpoint, and that's the reason you see more of the growth that is coming from an onsite standpoint.

Ravi Menon
Lead Analyst, Macquarie

All right, great. Thank you. And one last follow-up for me. On the deal wins, you know, we are still a bit below what we were clocking even last year. Though the demand situation is a bit better. So, Angan, you know, if you could comment on that.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Angan?

Abhinandan Singh
Head of Investor Relations, Birlasoft Limited

Angan, would you want to comment? Are you there?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah, yeah, I'm there. Yeah. Sorry, sorry, I was on mute. Okay. So, Ravi, first of all, thank you for that question. If you look at our half year performance on deal flow, we've delivered about $300 million worth of signings. That is obviously lower than what we delivered last year. But that is not such a big concern for us at this point in time, because we've not lost any deals. Some of our decision-making of our customers have got pushed out to Q3 and Q4 . So you will see an uptick in deal flow in third quarter as well as fourth quarter.

But the good news in this entire thing is our pipeline is still improving, and almost 50% of our deal wins are in the net new or the existing new space. So there are some green shoots there, but clearly our focus, if there are two focus, Ravi, that I would call out in the next six months, will be improving deal flow and of course, needless to say, improving margins.

Ravi Menon
Lead Analyst, Macquarie

Thanks so much, Angan. Best of luck.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our next question from the line of Sudhir Guntupalli from Kotak AMC. Please go ahead.

Sudhir Guntupalli
Analyst, Kotak AMC

Hi, Angan. Hi, Kamini. Thanks for the opportunity. The first question is, I'm just trying to understand what your underlying core business growth would have been, given that there is a reduction in the quantum of pass-through compared to the last quarter. So is it fair to say that your core underlying business growth would have been somewhere in the range of 4.5% because there is a 20-30 basis points out of a sequential reduction in pass-through? Is that a correct assessment?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So, Sudhir, you know, well, the way we look at it, and, pass-through obviously has reduced significantly. So you are right, that the core business, services business would have grown at a faster clip. But equally, you know, we would love to say that, as our infrastructure business matures, the pass-throughs are not a manifestation of a pass-through in itself. It'll be a part of the deal going forward, correct? So from that standpoint, you know, a pass-through is also a kind of services. But at a fundamental level, what you're saying is right, Sudhir, that, you know, the growth has got rebounded because of, you know, the project starting in the ERP space that Kamini mentioned in her opening remarks.

Sudhir Guntupalli
Analyst, Kotak AMC

Fair enough, Angan. So I understand that it is now pass-through has been an integral part for most of the companies. But I was just trying to separate out and see how the underlying business momentum would have been from the previous quarter to this quarter. So you are saying that it is fairly in the range of that 4.5% ballpark?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

That's, that's correct, yes.

Sudhir Guntupalli
Analyst, Kotak AMC

Yeah. Okay. And just on this 260-70 basis points worth of margin drop, let's say I think following up on Ravi's question earlier, some impact of it was obviously because of the onsite ramp-up that happened, onsite heavy nature of it. But you also alluded to the word pricing flexibility. So how much of, you know, this 200 basis points drop was due to pricing flexibility, and how much is because of purely onsite-centric of that ramp-up?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So, Sudhir, let me try and answer that question, and maybe then I'll hand it over to Kamini for her comments also. So, Sudhir, if you really think about it, right, quarter one, we delivered an EBITDA of about 14.7%, correct? Now, that obviously had an exceptional item of about INR 222 million, which we kind of didn't have in quarter two. So technically, our like-to-like margins would have been at about 13%, 13.1% EBITDA. Now, this quarter, we've delivered 12.1% EBITDA, right?

So that one percentage point, 100 basis points, you can probably half of it will be because our revenues have come more on-site, which by nature is lower margin business, as a part of the consolidation deals, and half of it is because of the pricing flexibility. But like Kamini said, you know, these are new deals that we are winning. We are helping our customers transition. And over a period of the next two, three quarters, when new deals will mature, you will see the margin coming back. But equally, Sudhir, I would also take this opportunity to make one more comment. See, we are going ahead with our salary hike in quarter three.

So really, as the salary hike will, you know, dent our margins by 150 basis points further, but obviously, a part of it we will definitely recover operationally. So, you know, Q3 will be a muted quarter, from a margin standpoint, but Q4 onwards, you will see a clear margin improvement. I wanted to give you the entire picture, Sudhir, so that you're clear. But, you know, we have a complete program that is running in our company today, where we are looking at every single lever to get the margin back to where it ideally should be, which is, our desired levels.

At that, you will see a lot of effort from the management team, starting Q4, because Q3, like I said, it is what it is, due to the salary hike. But Q4 onwards, you will see an uptick in the margins, and then subsequently, every quarter, you will see an uptick in margins. Kamini, do you have a comment?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

No, I mean, I think you've covered it, Sudhir. I think to a large extent, I think the focus will be on how all the levers that we have defined to be able to get the margins back on track, and it's really a combination of the impact, is a combination of being more on-site centric. As we look at more offshoring, I think we will be able to recover that back.

Sudhir Guntupalli
Analyst, Kotak AMC

So, that helps. So, Angan, again, just to clarify, so you are saying if you remove the one-off benefit that you had in the denominator in June quarter, operationally, your margins have contracted just hundred basis points this quarter, despite the very sharp rise in on-site centric nature of the ramp-up and, some amount of pricing flexibility. So just operational contraction on margin is just hundred basis points?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. I mean, arithmetically, that is true, Sudhir. But obviously, I mean, we are not happy. I mean, it's. I mean, it is stating the obvious because, you know, we would love our. As I had always said in the last year, that we wanted our margins to be between 15%, 15.5%- 16.5% range. We are far away from there. The point I'm making is, yes, if you were to compare quarter on quarter, we have 100 basis points of degradation of margin, but clearly, we are nowhere close to the 15% to 16% range. So our endeavor is to start improving, starting Q4 onwards, and then over the next four, five, six quarters, get to our desired levels.

Sudhir Guntupalli
Analyst, Kotak AMC

Very much, sir. And just one last question, if I may. So while TCV trends obviously, on a year-on-year basis were down, and I know that you don't report on an ACV basis, but internally, when you look at the ACV trends for the H1 on a year-on-year basis, so are you very worried? Are you concerned about the growth implication that it may have, or that is broadly in the same ballpark that you might be expecting?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

So two things, Sudhir. Our win ratios are anywhere ranging between the 30%-32% range at this point in time. Clearly, there is an opportunity to improve the win ratio. Ideally, we want our win ratios to be 35%-38%, so there is an opportunity there. But, you know, it is also a manifestation of how the clients are deciding. Now, I can only tell you two things. One, we've not lost a deal to competition, a significant deal. I mean, you would have lost some small little deals here and there, but we've not lost a significant deal. And our pipeline is probably only improving at this point in time.

So I'm not so worried per se, because to activate, you know, like I said, almost 50% of our order book is now either EN or NN, which also adds to the fact that it gives me a little bit of confidence that the growth momentum will continue in the future quarters. But Sudhir, at the end of the day, we aspire to grow order book year- on- year also, which we have not done well, which is why I said, apart from the revenue growth that we have to absolutely focus on.

The two key focus areas for us as a management team is to deliver a strong order book in Q3 and Q4, and start the margin improvement journey, which may not happen in Q3 for obvious reasons. But starting Q4, keep improving quarter on quarter, so that over the next four, five quarters, we can get to our desired level.

Sudhir Guntupalli
Analyst, Kotak AMC

Very much, sir. And you're actually, despite the impact of furloughs, you seem to be confident about the current growth momentum continuing into Q3. Is that because of the fact that the ERP seasonally has a dip in the quarter every time? Is that the correct assessment that gives you confidence, or is there something else in the pipeline which might be giving you that confidence as well?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So Sudhir, two reasons. One is we are also affected by furloughs, right? So I don't want you to take away saying that the growth momentum will be significant. I'm only saying the growth momentum is back in Q2, which we missed in Q1. Q1, if you remember, we de-grew revenues quarter- on- quarter. So Q2, we are back on quarter-on-quarter growth. We will strive to deliver quarter-on-quarter growth even in Q3. Quantum, I can't say. It may be a muted quarter overall, but we will still be on the growth trajectory. Our focus, however, will be to start, you know, keep investing in our business, which we have always done, and start improving margins starting Q4. But yeah, I mean, we are relatively comfortable to say that our growth momentum will continue from here on.

Sudhir Guntupalli
Analyst, Kotak AMC

Very well, sir. Thank you so much. All the very best.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Hasmukh Vishariya from Tata Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.

Hasmukh Vishariya
Equity Research Analyst, Tata Mutual Fund

Yeah, hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Am I audible?

Operator

Yes, please go ahead.

Hasmukh Vishariya
Equity Research Analyst, Tata Mutual Fund

Yeah. Hi, so, Sir, I have two questions. One is, so you have fairly spoken about the deal wins and existing and NN component of it, and probably H2 would be better than H1 in deal wins perspective. So can you throw some light in terms of renewal rates for you guys?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So, so Hasmukh, again, a very important question. So look, our renewal cycle essentially comes in more in the third quarter and the fourth quarter of the financial year. So our renewals will be much more than it is in the first and second quarter. So obviously, our net new and existing new business will be a lower percentage of our overall order book, because there'll be a lot of renewals that happens typically as a business cycle between October and March, which we will play through. Now, we are discussing with our clients in terms of the renewal work as we speak. So I can't really comment whether renewal work will have pricing pressure or not. It is hard for me to say.

We are working on it at this point in time, and we will see how we can continue to negotiate with our clients and work with our clients to make sure that we keep renewing our business at healthy margins. So it is a little bit of a wait and watch, but we will not lose any renewal business, if that is what you are referring to, Hasmukh. We will renew everything. At what price points we renew, we will only know as we go through our Q3 and Q4.

Hasmukh Vishariya
Equity Research Analyst, Tata Mutual Fund

Okay.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

And can we just add on to what you said, and then, Hasmukh, I think most of our renewals are typically in the second half of this year. And, you know, we have no indications as of now that there is any concern from a renewal standpoint.

Hasmukh Vishariya
Equity Research Analyst, Tata Mutual Fund

Got it. Got it. My second question is on the, let's say, your comment about you have not lost any significant deal into competition. So just wanted to understand, whether, this, has any element of, let's say, pricing discounts or probably, on-site heavy, sort of ramp-ups and relatively lower margins in the, near term. Does that is linked to this point, or, is it anything else as well?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

No, Hasmukh, you're exactly right. Correct. So, because we are winning some of the deals which are more consolidation-orientated in the medium term, you will see pricing pressures because, you know, in the medium term, you know, the revenue is coming from our on-site, and over time, as the engagement matures, the revenues will start moving offshore, which will automatically give us higher margins. So from that perspective, Hasmukh, our on-site revenues are up, which is why you see the, you see the margin pressure. In terms of new deal wins, when I said that we have not lost a deal with anybody, any significant deal, it is also a manifestation of our real strength, right? The deals that we are fighting in our existing clients and deals that we are fighting in our new clients.

In that space, in our real estate, we have not lost anything. Some of the deals have got pushed out to future quarters, which we are still tracking on. And we don't see that to be a big concern because at some point in time, we will close those deals.

Hasmukh Vishariya
Equity Research Analyst, Tata Mutual Fund

Got it. Got it. And my last question is on the ERP front, right? So we have seen companies talking about, let's say, the traction coming in the ERP front, be it SAP or Oracle or any other ERP system, right? But if I look at your deal wins, your growth, that traction doesn't look in your numbers. So any clarification there?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So, Hasmukh, one is our ERP business has grown in this quarter. Now, I'm not saying whether we are happy with that growth or not, because just like you alluded, you know, Hasmukh, there is an enormous opportunity on the ERP space going forward based on everything that we have heard from both SAP and Oracle. So we want to capitalize on that opportunity. So we are putting in place a proper strategy to win more deals there. Our pipeline on the ERP side is looking up. Q2, we have seen growth. Q3, seasonally, it's a weak quarter, which so it will be diluted, but I'm reasonably confident that Q4 also you will see good growth in the ERP business.

Hasmukh Vishariya
Equity Research Analyst, Tata Mutual Fund

Perfect. Perfect. Thanks a lot.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our next question from the line of Dipesh Mehta from Emkay. Please go ahead.

Dipesh Mehta
Senior Research Analyst, Emkay

Yeah, thanks for the opportunity. A couple of questions. Again, you, I think, highlighted a couple of times some of the factors which weigh on the performance. And deal intake, I think for last few quarters, we expected it to improve. So far, not improved. So progress on some of these improvement measures is not progressing to the extent at which we might have anticipated a few quarters back.

So can you help us understand how much of it is because of external factors, and how much would be because of internal factors, which you can course correct and which you have identified, and let's say, steps taken to improve on those parameters? If you can give some broad sense around it. Second related question is also on margin side, because our expectation range is much higher than where we are currently operating. So if you can provide some color around those things from medium-term perspective. And last question is about... Maybe if you can answer this, and then I have one follow-up.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

... Sure, Dipesh. Sure. So Dipesh, I will give you my point of view, and then I will ask Kamini also to add in, right? So look, Dipesh, the reality is, in the first quarter, the quarter one and quarter two, we have not delivered on our margin goals. That is the reality, right? But look, we are, we have a clear plan that has got outlined. Now, you know, I can't discuss the plan in too much detail, but suffice to say, there are three or four areas that we will definitely look at which are more internal, right? So one is clearly the on-site and offshore ratio. Like we said a little while ago, our on-site revenues have gone up over time as there is maturity in the engagements.

We are very confident, and we've done it in the past, so that gives me confidence that the team will be able to execute well, move more revenues offshore, and automatically, the margins, for those engagements will start looking up. So clearly, an on-site/offshore ratio is one area. The second big lever for us is in terms of our utilization. Our utilization is off from the peak. Our peak utilization was at a much different level, and our endeavor would be to continue to drive utilization upwards. So that will also give us a, another lever for margin improvement. As a part of regular business, course of business, we are also looking at working with our customers, though we have pricing pressure on the new deals.

In our existing book of work, where we have served customers for the last four years, five years, six years, we are going to customers and see if we can get some pricing enhancements with those customers. Not enhancements, for all our colleagues in that particular project, but some of the very senior colleagues, so that is another lever that we will use. Finally, our quality of revenue. Though we are doing a little, our infrastructure business is looking up slightly, but you have seen our digital business also grow. As a part of our digital business thrust, our quality of revenue will significantly improve. These are the three or four levers that, Dipesh, we are very confident about implementing to get the margins back to where we want it to be.

The only reason I say that Q3 will, you know, in a matter of sense, be muted, is because we will give a salary hike. And like I clearly pointed out, that will have 150 basis points impact on our margins. But of course, we'll recover. We will try and recover, part of it or most of it as we go forward. We will see how that goes. But Q4 onwards, you will clearly see a margin improvement. Now, when you win deals, we also have to gain market share, which we are gaining.

Some of these deal margins are, will come up as you go forward, which is why I said, Dipesh, if you must give us a couple of more quarters to really see the margin turn around, and over the next four, five, six quarters, you will see the margin bounce back to the levels that we were in, let's say, Q3 and Q4 of last year.

Dipesh Mehta
Senior Research Analyst, Emkay

Sure. The similar question on revenue side and deal intake side, you addressed it well on margin side. If you can help us understand, because your deal intake continues to remain muted, revenue growth is also, let's say, this quarter is different, but if I look YoY, it is still weaker. If I put that in context of $100 million deal which started ramping from April. So two-part question: First, $100 million deal, whether ramp-up is on schedule, and second thing is, despite $100 million deal, growth is muted. If you can address it, thanks.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So Dipesh, again, a great question. So first of all, the $100 million deal is on schedule. And one more thing I want to state, Dipesh, see, structurally, there is no issue, neither with our clients nor with us, right? It is only a matter of seasonality in terms of when we win a new deal, at our size of the business, how much time will it take me to turn that into profit? So with that backdrop, let me talk a little bit about the revenue. See, we've grown revenues seven quarters in a row till the last quarter, where we de-grew revenues, and this quarter we have bounced back on revenue growth. I'm reasonably confident that the revenue growth will continue.

Now, Q3, again, let me state this upfront, is going to be a muted quarter because of seasonality, but you will see growth in Q4 for sure, and even in Q3 to a very large extent. So from my standpoint, the growth momentum will continue. Now, the order book, and I'll tell you why. There is a scientific analysis there. Though my order book is being muted, like, Kamini also suggested a little while ago, most of my renewals happen in Q3 and Q4. So by Q1 and Q2, a large part of our order intake has been net new, which will obviously give some growth momentum going forward.

Now, the trick though, Dipesh, I will admit that apart from renewing our existing book of work, which we do in Q3 and Q4, we have to win more deals, more net new deals in Q3 and Q4 also. If we can make that happen, then, even I am—then, you know, one can confidently say that not only Q3 and Q4, but Q1, Q2 of next year, will also show good revenue growth.

Dipesh Mehta
Senior Research Analyst, Emkay

Understood. Last question related to whether you require some course correction to improve it, or you think current way of operation is sufficient for us to deliver desired results?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

No. So, Dipesh, we always look at ways to improve. We don't need to course correct. We are set on a course. We have identified the areas that we want to focus in, and we are firmly on our way to building a great business. So we don't need to course correct on anything, but there are a lot of areas of improvement. So for example, our sales cycle needs to improve. We are investing in that. Our capabilities need to continue to be stronger. We will invest in that. We have created a Rest of the World business. We want to invest in that and start growing businesses in both areas. So a lot of these small little areas that we need to invest and grow. Our Life Sciences business has not delivered for the last three quarters.

They have to come back to growth so the overall strategy of the company remains the same, there is no change there, but we definitely need to course-correct in these small little areas where we need to double down on our investment. Now, Dipesh, one of the questions that you asked me on margins, we've over-invested, in my mind, in capability building, but our investments will not stop. We will continue to build, build on this investment. And as we build this investment, these investments have to deliver results to us, and that is what we will very closely monitor going forward. That whether these investments that we've already made or we will continue to make in the future, what returns are they delivering to us? And that is also another big lever we are looking at, Dipesh.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Thank you. Thanks for the opportunity.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, in the first round, we would request participants to limit themselves to one question, please, and come back for follow-ups so that others can also get an opportunity to ask a question. Thank you. We'll take our next question from the line of Sandeep Shah from Equirus Securities. Please go ahead.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Yeah, thanks. Thanks for the opportunity. Angan, just wanted to understand, what has made you so go so aggressive in terms of a vendor consolidation deal? Because in the last six quarters, you were investing, you were expecting the growth to remain better on a YoY basis, which we have delivered in the first four quarters. So is it some portfolio-specific issue, client-specific issue, which makes you compelled to go on vendor consolidation deal and take the margin to 10%, which is multi-quarter low?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. Sandeep, so first of all, Sandeep, you know, let me start by saying we are not proud of the margin situation that we are in today, right? I mean, we definitely want to get the margins to our desired levels, which I have consistently maintained at 15%-16%, right? So are we comfortable or we are happy where we are at the margin levels? We are not happy. And, you know, it is my commitment to you, and when I say my commitment, I mean the entire management team's commitment, that we will, over time, get the margins back to where it should be. But let me answer the question that you asked. It's a very pertinent question. See, we grew six quarters in a row, quarter on quarter, right?

Now, the consolidation deals are important, Sandeep, because we also need revenue certainty, right? As the world becomes much more, how do I say it? It's very difficult to predict, unpredictable. It is important for me also to start winning some annuity kind of business. And as you focus on annuity business, Sandeep, you know that in any case, that in the first couple of quarters, it is about investment, it is about knowledge transfer, till those investments mature, and then you can start making money. So it is important, because look, Sandeep, I mean, I understand what you're saying, that, you know, what was the need of going after consolidation deals when we had a high margin and a reasonable growth business? But remember, Sandeep, we are not here for quarter- on- quarter.

Quarter- on- quarter is important, but we have to build a business for the next decade, if you will. And unless I pivot the company to build more annuity kind of work, you know, we will never, ever get there. But the trick, Sandeep, would be to continue winning consolidation deals, but also start winning much more digital deals, transformational deals. And as you know, because of the uncertainty, there are not too many transformation deals on the table. There is tremendous uncertainty in the market.

So in an ideal world, Sandeep, I would like to win many more transformation deals in our customers, especially in the Life Sciences and the BFSI space, as we start winning market share on the consolidation bit. So I agree with you, it is a couple of quarters of dip in margins, but when I look at the long-term goals and the long-term picture, you know, you'll realize that it is a sound strategy.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Angan, any number you would like to throw in terms of percentage annuity business versus project base today versus when you joined?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

No, so I don't we don't want to give a view like that at this point in time, Sandeep, only because some of these deals we have just won. We are just about to, you know, work on building on those deals. But give us a couple of quarters, then we will clearly call out in terms of what will be our annuity business, which will be a part of our quality of revenue, right? How am I moving the quality of revenue from more staff aug base to more annuity work? So at some point in time, we will come back on that. Not that we don't have the figures today, but it is more of a foundational level today. So in a couple of quarters, we will be back with those statistics as well.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

So in this journey from taking a vendor consolidation deal to improve the annuity, don't you believe a margin aspiration which you still have at 15%-16% would be difficult? Because these vendor consolidation deals are more competitive, and in that scenario, this aspiration of 15%-16% could be difficult.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Sandeep, I wouldn't say that, and I'll tell you why I wouldn't say that. Look, it may take time for me, okay? It may take longer than expected. But the reason why we want to keep that margin profile going is because it is not that we want to build our company only on consolidation deals. Consolidation deals will be a part of our business from a market share perspective, but we also want to build a great digital business, a great data business, and that business is also growing. I don't know if you realize this, but I'm sure you do. Our digital and data business has also grown to become almost $250 million-$280 million, right? So I'm not so worried that we will not win digital and data.

So if I were to win more consolidation deals and make more money in the digital deals that we will continue to win, I think we can balance the margins out. Now, can I get to a 15% margin two quarters out? The answer is no. But over a period of time, is that my aspiration? It absolutely is, and we will drive towards that.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Yeah, just a follow-up. In the earlier reply, you said we may touch the margins of 3Q and 4Q of FY 2024 after four to six quarters. Is it I have heard correctly?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

That is our aspiration. Now, we'll have to. You see, in today's market, Sandeep, it is very hard to predict what is gonna happen five quarters out. But I can only say two things, Sandeep. One, after Q3, which will be our absolute bottom because of the salary hikes, Q4 onwards, we will start improving margins. And Q4, Q1, Q2, Q3 of next four quarters, you will see our margin uptick coming in. Because by the time all the deals that I and Kamini spoke about will also mature and the margin uptick will happen. Now, when will I get to our Q4 levels, which was at, whatever, between 15.8% or 15.3%? That is hard for me to say. It's too volatile for me to comment on that, Sandeep, at this stage.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Okay. And the last question, despite core services growth being higher, why utilization has just gone up by 30 basis points? Because this kind of growth is more through services and less through pass-through.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So, Kamini, would you take that question?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, Sandeep, I think that's largely because of the fact that, you know, some of our revenue growth has come through, as we mentioned earlier, consolidation deals, and a lot of it has been done also through subcontracting agencies that we work with, which will not get reflected in our utilization to that effect. So that's the reason why you would probably see the utilization only at a marginal increase on that.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

So, Kamini, in that scenario, these deals move from onsite to offshore, even subcontracting costs will come down?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah, that's the expectation. As we start replacing these people with our own employees, yeah, we would expect this cost to come down, Sandeep.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Any color?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

What is the subcon cost?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Sorry, go ahead, Sandeep.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Just any color in terms of what was the subcon cost in 1Q by 2Q FY 2025?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

No, so, Sandeep, we don't give specifics regarding that, right? But it's definitely a lever on which we work on.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Oh.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Um, hmm.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Yeah, go ahead, Angan.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

No, no, I was saying, Sandeep, that is the point that Kamini was making. As these deals mature and the work moves from onsite to offshore, offshore becomes a far more higher leverage for margin improvement. That was the only point that was made.

Sandeep Shah
Director of Equity Research, Equirus Securities

Okay. Thanks, and all the best.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our next question from the line of Shraddha from Ambit. Please go ahead.

Shraddha Agrawal
Software Engineer, Ambit

Yeah, hi. Two questions, Angan. First is, we've seen that our onsite mix has improved by some 700 basis points, and despite that, revenue has grown by only 2%. So just wanted to check the underlying volume growth, because, much of the revenue growth seems to be led by shift in business towards onsites.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So, Shraddha. Well, it is not that we have shifted work from India to the U.S. It is a manifestation of the deal wins that we've had. The newer deal ramp-ups have been more onsite, correct? Now, the reason why our revenue growth has been, what, about 2.6% quarter- on- quarter, whereas the onsite ratios have gone up higher, it is only because there are certain projects that have also come to a closure. You have to look at it from that perspective. But like, clearly, like Kamini said, from a margin improvement standpoint, over time, we would like to improve our offshore ratios to get that.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Shraddha, if I could just add to what Angan said, right? In the last quarter, we've had some element of pass-through revenue that we spoke about, which were more offshore-centric, and I think that has also played a role in terms of our onsite being a little lower in last quarter from a ratio standpoint. Which is why I think you shouldn't compare it directly if you look at our previous quarter trends. I think the differential would be we were operating at about 46%-48% rate, and that's probably what gone up to about 50%-51% that you see this year. I hope that clarifies.

Shraddha Agrawal
Software Engineer, Ambit

Is it also to do, Kamini, with the fact that probably our on-rolls employee growth has seen a decline, whereas revenue growth this quarter would have been led by increase in subcontractors?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

I think it would be a combination of both, Shraddha, because a lot of the consolidation deals do involve taking over of subcontracting parties that are based onsite, and that's the reason why you would see that.

Shraddha Agrawal
Software Engineer, Ambit

Right, and secondly, when I look at our sales and support headcount, that has also seen a decline of almost 10% sequentially. So just to get clarity out here, is it more of support staff rationalization or are we consciously looking at some sales headcount rationalization as well?

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

So, Shraddha, right now our focus is a lot on support staff optimization that we see over here at this point of time. Like Angan said, I think we continue to invest in sales both general and specialist space, so I don't think that's an area of investment that we will cut back on. So we are looking at optimization all the time in terms of how do we do a lot more automation in our existing processes that will enable us to reduce headcount associated with that.

Shraddha Agrawal
Software Engineer, Ambit

Right. And just last question, Angan, you've been mentioning that the deal pipeline looks quite strong and robust. So any characterization in terms of what is the mix of small or large deals? Or is it still more of vendor consolidation deals in the pipeline, or do you see more of transformational-led deals with some improvement in the macro environment? So just some characterization on the deal pipeline would be helpful. Thank you.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

So, Shraddha, our deal pipeline is definitely strong, and it is improving quarter- on- quarter. I feel that, you know, the answer to your question will only lie after the stability comes in, correct? Now, if the cost of doing business in our customers become higher going forward, depending upon the outcome of the election results, I see more cost optimization deals are back on the table. Now, Shraddha, I don't want you to take away the fact that cost optimization deals are margin diluters. They may be margin diluters in the medium term, but in the long term, they can definitely deliver a lot more margins for us as we go forward. So consolidation deals are not a bad word. It is, in fact, good that we will be winning market share.

So currently, the deals that we have on the table is really 50-50. We've got 50% transformation deals, we've got 50%, vendor consolidation deals, but these deals have to convert. Even the transformation deals are market deals. We are doing some great work, with our E&U customers, with our BFSI customers. There are some really, really good work and good deals on the table. The issue is, when will the stability happen and those deals convert? If some of those convert in Q3, you will see the deal flows improving, but the quality of those deals will also be far better, than just doing consolidation, Shraddha. So we will wait and watch. We are hopeful that some of them will convert in Q3.

Shraddha Agrawal
Software Engineer, Ambit

Great! Thanks, Angan, and wish you all the best. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Manik Taneja from Axis Capital. Please go ahead.

Manik Taneja
Executive Director of IT Services, Axis Capital

Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. Angan, I just wanted to get your thoughts with regards to something that you've really emphasized since you came on board. You've been talking about significant focus on in-quarter execution and bringing in predictability to the company, but what we've seen play out over the course of last couple of quarters is things unraveling quite sharply, so essentially, would you want to simply give us some sense as to what adverse things may have happened at an internal or within the organization level, given the fact that from a macro backdrop standpoint, FY 2024 was equally bad, but you, you ended up delivering incredibly well, and now we've seen this unravel, so it would be great to understand what challenges you faced internally, because of which the performance has taken such a big hit.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So, Manik, I will be as brutally honest as I possibly can on this question. So it's a very important question. So look, I am not, I am not worried about our execution capability. We have got a strong team. Our teams can execute, and I feel very confident that we have the right team to execute. Now, of course, we will look at people based on performance. If people do not deliver, then we obviously will get new leaders in. But by and large, I'm pretty confident that the team that we have on the ground can deliver. But look, we will continue to make that investment. So I wanted to get that out of the way to begin with. So Manik, look, last seven quarters, we've executed significantly well.

So what went wrong in the last two quarters? And look, I can, I will say that we are not very proud of it, right? In the last two quarters, we focused on winning some deals from a market share standpoint, which is basically infrastructure deals, which give us long-term revenue certainty, et cetera. Now, like I was probably answering Dipesh, I could have taken a call that we will not do those deals at all. We will stay out of it. But then, at some point in time, my growth trajectory would have stopped, Manik, because the market is getting incredibly volatile as well as competitive, and I need to win market share.

Now, as you win deals of this nature, you know, traditionally these deals, you will have to invest in them before you can start seeing returns, and that is what has happened. That is why you see the last two quarters being very unpredictable, and it is also a manifestation of how our clients perform. Say, for instance, Q1. Why did our revenue shrink? Because the deals that we had won, our customers did not ramp them up. As a result, we could not get revenues in Q1. That has come back in Q2, right? Similarly, now, the deals that we have won in the ERP space or in the other consolidation space, eventually will start delivering margins as well.

So, Manik, in an ideal world, I would have loved to say that, you know, I will always be predictable, but so couple of quarters, you have situations like that. We are not proud of it, but, you know, we don't want to be defensive on it. My job is to create more predictability, I understand that, and we will create more predictability going forward. But Manik, I will also say this: even in the future, will there be a couple of quarters where there will be a little bit of unpredictability? It will happen because the markets are very volatile. But our job now, going forward, is to be very predictable over the next six, seven, eight, nine quarters, so that, you know, investors like yourself also get a view on it.

But there will be, I will admit, there will be a couple of quarters in between when the unpredictability will be there. But I do not for one moment doubt the execution capability of the team. That I think is strong. Equally, if people, like I said, we are a performance-oriented organization. If people do not deliver, we will change. We will make the necessary changes.

Manik Taneja
Executive Director of IT Services, Axis Capital

Appreciate that input, Angan. A couple of clarification questions. Given the challenging demand environment that you've spoken about, do we probably see a rehash of our strategy around cutting the long tail of customers? That's question number one. The second question was a bookkeeping question around the sales and support headcount. This number had gone up sharply between Q4 of last year to Q1 of FY 2025, and then once again has come back to a similar level in the current quarter. What explains these quarterly changes on this headcount, on this metric?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So I'll answer the first question. The second question I'll probably ask Kamini to comment on. So look, we are on an endeavor to cut our tail. We've done a lot, but given the circumstances, like you rightly pointed out, Manik, we'll do even more, right? My original thought was that, you know, we're at an optimal level, but with the market uncertainty and with, you know, the way the things are happening in the world, I feel we have more possibility to cut down the tail, and so the team has a plan in place to reduce the tail even further, right? So we will be on it, because that also has a manifestation of redeploying your human capital for growth rather than for sustainment. So that we will continue to do. On the SG&A, I will hand it over to Kamini for Kamini's comments.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah, yeah. So yeah, thank you, Angan. So Manik, while it does appear to be that on one quarter the headcount gone up and come down on the in the next quarter, it's primarily because of two reasons, right? The reason the headcount went up is, you know, a couple of quarters we had spoken about our investment in our tech transformation internally within Birlasoft, what we call the project was Project Optima, where we had actually started ramping headcount on that project, and that continued. The reduction this quarter that has happened has been in other areas, where we have started optimizing some of our support staff in areas that have been automated and as we are realizing the benefits out of that. So I think that's there are two different and distinct areas, while it appears to have happened quarter- on-q uarter.

Manik Taneja
Executive Director of IT Services, Axis Capital

Thank you, and wish you all the best for the future.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Vibhor Singhal from Nuvama Equities. Please go ahead.

Vibhor Singhal
Executive Director, Nuvama Equities

Yeah, hi. Thanks for taking my question. And, Angan, real appreciation from my side. I think you've taken real trouble to explain the situation that, the company is in. Really appreciate. I think the company, as you rightly said, I think there will be volatile quarters there and then. And amidst that, a company or the management should not lose the long-term goal that they are after. So completely appreciate that. But I have a more strategic question, which is not related to just one or two quarters, but from a longer term point of view. Now, we've been saying that the last two quarters have been weak in terms of TCV, but if I look at our FY 2024 TCV also, that was also up only 1% Y o Y.

So actually, if you look at it from FY, if you compare the numbers from FY 2023 onwards, our deal close for the past six quarters have not been that great or have been quite modest. So, and in that, we have also taken some vendor consolidation and infrastructure deals, which have basically impacted our margins.

So if I remove those deals, our the deal win in our core area, which was transformation projects and all, that has been pretty weak, so to say. So, is it that these kind of deals have dried up, or is it that we are not able to match up as to what exactly is required in those kind of deals? And when do you think this situation can change over the course of, let's say, maybe two, three, four, whatever quarter, whatever time that it takes? And then I have a follow-up to that question.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So, Vibhor, first of all, I think your analysis is spot on, correct? So last year, if you look at it, you know, our order signings were just 1% growth over the previous year, FY 2024 over FY 2023. So clearly, that was a cause of concern. But even though that happened, if you look at our net new and existing new business, that has shown reasonable traction, which is why barring Q1, we are able to show growth in Q2 and hopefully in Q3, though Q3 is a muted quarter again, but definitely in Q4, correct? So that is a manifestation of the fact that though the overall deal flow may be soft, correct, but at least the net new is going up. So that's number one. Number two, are we happy with the situation of our deal signings? Absolutely not.

There is a lot of focus within the company as a part of the management team to drive the deals up. So hopefully Q3 and Q4 will be better. But in the longer term, there are two points that I want to make, Vibhor. See, we have the pipeline. That I am absolutely certain about. The pipeline also has a large number of transformation projects that we are working on. Apart from, we are also working a lot of vendor consolidation projects. There are two issues in the market, though. The real estate, that is our current real estate, I can't talk about the market in general, but in our current real estate, right, our deal signings are getting delayed. Now, not that our customers that we serve are in financial trouble or anything.

I mean, they are very strong financially, but it's a wait and watch model in our customer real estate in terms of how the election results will pan out, and hopefully after that, you know, the things will start looking up and start looking better. See, our dream is to deliver growth on order book even this year, though it is gonna be a very tall order, because in the first half year, we've delivered only $300 million of signings, and I really need to deliver more than $550 million in the next two quarters even to show growth. But we will endeavor to do that, because at the end of the day, if those deals close, we can really make it happen.

But in the longer term, once the election cycle is over, I think, based on what I know today, based on all my customer interactions, the transformation projects will be back on the table. Typically, after an election cycle happens in the U.S., since almost 86%-87% of our business is in the U.S., it will take a lag of about six months, but I'm damn sure that, you know, all the transformation projects will be back on the table.

But equally, Vibhor, we have put a lot of investments in Europe and in Asia, and under Manju's leadership, who's our leader for the rest of the world, we are now starting to at least get pipeline in the table, which are more transformational in nature rather than vendor consolidation in nature. So it will take me about six, seven quarters to get the deal flow right, but we are in the right trajectory, and we are in the right direction, Vibhor.

Vibhor Singhal
Executive Director, Nuvama Equities

Got it. Got it. That was really helpful. Just a follow-up to that, Angan. I mean, at this point of time, from a near-term point of view, I mean, it appears that we have got into a kind of a vicious loop. We are chasing, I mean, we got maybe one or two infrastructure consolidation deals, because of which our margins have fallen from 14% to 10% this quarter, and maybe next quarter, because of which I will probably come to maybe some single digit number. On one hand, just one or two deals have taken our margins to this, and now we are actually looking to expand margins next year because most of these projects will move from on-site to offshore.

But at the same time, we are still chasing more deals in the consolidation and the infrastructure space, in which the year one itself will be a margin dilutive. So that will be kind of a recurring phenomenon for us. If we don't go for those deals, our TCV growth will be muted, so our revenue growth won't come. But if we go for those deals, they will be margin dilutive, and our margins won't come. So I think it's become a kind of a judgment call or let's say, a call that we have to make, a dilemma between whether we go for revenue growth or margins, because it appears from the current scenario, in the near term, it is difficult to achieve both.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

No, no, but Vibhor, and again, I will not debate what you're saying. I think you're saying the right thing. But Vibhor, look it from our perspective as a management team, right? Our job is to focus on all three parameters, revenue, margins, as well as order book. All three parameters.

Vibhor Singhal
Executive Director, Nuvama Equities

Right.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Right? Now, the shift would be to kind of deliver margins through our existing program, drive a lot, lot of efficiency, cut costs in our existing programs, and still continue to deliver to our clients, cutting the tail. And I think we have enough and more opportunities to improve margins there. But clearly, I'm going to go after market share. I'm going to win deals at slightly lower margins in the market. But if I'm being able to balance that out, and Vibhor, you know, and again, I can't tell you everything that that we are running within the company in terms of initiatives, but I'm reasonably confident that I can win market share through the vendor consolidation deals. I can win more digital and data deals as well as the markets turn.

Equally, there is a lot of opportunities of cutting the tail, optimizing my cost, Project Optima, that Kamini spoke about, will contribute, over the next three, four quarters to cost takeout. All of these initiatives will come together. So look, I mean, I know what you're saying in the medium term, it may look like that, but, you know, we don't see it like that. Because end of the day, it's not a question of one quarter or two quarters or three quarters. I want to clearly win market share, deliver a lot of growth, and still maintain the margin band. Now, you're right. I mean, in the medium term, it may look like that, but we in the management team are pretty focused on the long-term goal.

Vibhor Singhal
Executive Director, Nuvama Equities

Got it. Got it, Angan. Appreciate that, detailed explanation, and I hope the company management continues to focus on the long-term growth. I think that is what will probably deliver value to the shareholders also. Thank you so much for taking my questions. I wish you all the best.

Operator

Thank you.

Vibhor Singhal
Executive Director, Nuvama Equities

Thank you.

Operator

We'll take the next question from the line of Anmol Garg from DAM Capital. Please go ahead.

Anmol Garg
Lead Analyst, DAM Capital

Hi, thank you for the opportunity.

Operator

I'm sorry, sir. Can you use your handset more, please? You're not clearly audible.

Anmol Garg
Lead Analyst, DAM Capital

Yeah. Am I audible now?

Operator

Yes, please go ahead.

Anmol Garg
Lead Analyst, DAM Capital

Yeah. So a couple of things. Firstly, wanted to understand what is the size of the vendor consolidation deals that we are talking about? Because these deals generally tends to be longer in sizes. And if you can also talk about what kind of vendors from which we are consolidating these deals from, and what is the typical nature of such deals?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Anmol, I can't tell you which vendors we are consolidating from, because that is really confidential information. But the deal sizes range from anywhere between $10 million - $30 million. But there is a small change, Anmol. You know, in today's world, the long tenure deals are pretty much over. I don't think there is any customer who's gonna come to the table and sign a five-year deal, right? So we are also seeing consolidation deals from a one-year to a three-year perspective, right? But, but look, you know, I can't talk about who we are consolidating from, et cetera, because that will be pretty confidential information, Anmol.

Anmol Garg
Lead Analyst, DAM Capital

Right. And like you said, that these deals are typically not that longer in duration. So would you say that the revenue conversion in such deals would be much faster?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Not, not necessarily. See, see, again, it's very difficult for me to answer that question, Anmol, because it depends upon client to client, right? In certain client situations, yes, what you're saying is right. In certain client situations, they may have signed up for a year, but they will, they with a confirmed extension going forward. And you also must understand, Anmol, why customers are signing deals for a lesser tenure than a longer tenure today, it is only because of the uncertainty, right? The same reasons why large mega deals are not yet on the table, the deals are becoming smaller, is the same reason why the tenure is also becoming smaller. So we'll have to see how that plays out, Anmol. Hard for me to answer that question specifically.

Anmol Garg
Lead Analyst, DAM Capital

Right. And just one last thing is that we are talking about a lot of winning more vendor consolidation deals going forward. And like you said, that these deals are typically $10 million-$30 million in size or maybe even bigger. So from that perspective, can we expect that overall the TCV for the company can get relatively better from here on and can even get bigger upwards of up to $50 million or so?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So, Anmol, look, first of all, I don't again, want any of you to feel that we will only run the company on vendor consolidation deals. That's not what I've said. I said vendor consolidation deals will be a part of my overall deal flow, maybe, 30%, 40%-50%, but I will also win 50% transformation deals. It's only taking a little bit of time because of the, seasonality and the uncertainty there in the market, but we are also winning our fair share of transformation deals.

Otherwise, you know, my discussion with Vibhor and Manik, I will never be able to get the margins up to my desired levels if I don't win transformation deals. So for one moment, please don't take away the fact that we are only focused on vendor consolidation deals. We'll definitely do vendor consolidation deals, but we will do transformation deals as well. So that's number one. Number two, I just. Yeah, sorry, please go ahead.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

I was just about to say to Anmol, yeah, Anmol, it makes sense for us to do only consolidation deals where it is strategic and where we are able to actually integrate onsite-based in terms of the opportunities, and that gives more play to the areas that Angan spoke about in the digital space, right? So I think it will essentially be a strategic call. It's not that we're going to be looking at vendor consolidation for every opportunity. I just wanted to call that out, right? Given the fact that, you shouldn't take away anything else from what we are trying to do. Sorry, Angan, please go ahead.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So the second question, Anmol, in terms of whether we can get to up to $250 million per quarter deal signing, that's our dream. We want to get into it, get into that mode so that every quarter we can sign $250 million. I don't know whether Q3 can be that. It's a short quarter. But do we want to attempt to get to $250 million of deal signings in Q4? Absolutely. That's our goal. But we will see. We will see how Q3 converts, and then we will start focusing on Q4.

Anmol Garg
Lead Analyst, DAM Capital

Sure, sure. That's helpful. Thank you so much, Angan and Kamini, for answering my questions.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Thank you.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Thank you.

Operator

We'll take our next question from the line of Ayush from B&K Securities. Please go ahead.

Ayush Lohia
Equity Research Analyst, B&K Securities

Yeah. Thank you so much for the opportunity. Just a couple of questions. If I recall it right, so last quarter, before the last quarter, we were chasing the shorter-term deals, and now we are chasing the vendor consolidation deals. Is it true to understand that, you know, that we are chasing the growth on the back of margins right now and sacrificing to just get the growth wherever we are seeing the opportunity? That's the first line, that's the first question. The second question is that why we are facing the pricing headwind, because if you see the commentary of the larger peers or maybe the mid-cap peers of ours, so there has not been such, you know, negative commentary on the pricing front.

So is it something has to do with the capabilities that we are having in, or what's the rationale behind that we are having, you know, some of the pricing pressure in the consolidation deal? Thank you so much.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. Yeah, so Ayush, first of all, you know, sorry, repeat your first question again, Ayush. I got confused with your second question. Repeat the first question.

Ayush Lohia
Equity Research Analyst, B&K Securities

Yeah. So first question was that, if we recall it better, so last quarter to last quarter, we were, you know, kind of chasing the shorter-term deals. We were seeing kind of an uptick. So we got the growth from there onwards. And in this quarter, you know, we are highlighting kind of, you know, that we are chasing kind of the consolidation deals. So is it some kind of a change in strategy? Is there that, you know, that we are ready to sacrifice the margin just to obtain the growth or the opportunities that are available in the market?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

No, no, so Ayush, I don't think or agree with that at all. Even our shorter-term deals, which we did last year... and, you know, you must also realize when we talked about shorter-term deals, it was pertaining to our clients. When our clients had shorter-term projects, we came in to help our clients execute those projects. Those projects necessarily did not mean they were low-margin projects. They were domain-related projects. They were technology-related projects. We made good money and we helped our clients. Our clients wanted us to come in and execute a particular program in a fixed period of time, which we did. We made our money, so it was not margin diluted. The vendor consolidation deals are also not margin diluted.

It is only the timing issue, that when you do a vendor consolidation deal, you take over people, et cetera. For the medium term, you will see pricing pressures and margin pressures, but over time, when you start moving work offshore, like Kamini spoke about, you drive a lot of efficiencies within the program, productivity gains you get, you will be able to get the margins back on track. So we absolutely do not want to chase growth and then sacrifice margins. That's not our strategy at all. We will be a growth-oriented business, and we strongly feel that if we can drive our investments and get return on it, on our investments well, if we can do that part well, and we are on the journey of doing that, revenue growth will automatically deliver more margins, because then the operating leverage kicks in.

So we are very focused on revenue growth, which is profitable growth, Ayush. So I do not want you to think about us as a company that will do growth at whatever cost by sacrificing margin. Far from it. We want to build a healthy growth business with a reasonable margin profile.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Angan, if I can add to what you said, right? Ayush, like I mentioned earlier also, see, our consolidation deals are not going to be a large part of the growth or the TCV that we will be going behind, right? It will make sense for us to only look at those part of the deals which give us integration opportunities to grab a larger wallet share. So, you know, we will, it will be very strategic in nature. I want to re-emphasize that, so that it becomes very important for us to understand as to why we are doing some of these, and not because we just want to grab some revenue at this point of time. I think it's, that is the kind of view that we are taking as far as, consolidation deals are concerned.

Clearly, on top of consolidation deals that we get, in the interim, like Angan said, we are looking at getting more and more digital and data transformation work that will help us grow our existing portfolio and also move into adjacent areas.

Ayush Lohia
Equity Research Analyst, B&K Securities

Great. And the second question is that, you know, that if you see the TCV across the board, it's kind of, you know, is in the comfortable range for each and every other company. So just trying to understand, you know, what are the problems that we are facing that still, you know, the TCV still remains, you know, subdued or maybe below the comfortable range what we actually aspire for. So just trying to gauge what is going wrong or, you know, what has led to, you know, the soft TCV numbers in this quarter.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So Ayush, nothing is going wrong. Fundamentally, I think our customers are fine, our customers are healthy, so there is no issue there. It is only a delay of decision-making. Like, for instance, I mean, there were certain deals that the papers got signed only after the quarter was over, so we couldn't count it in the previous quarter. The deals were already won, and the deals are done, and the papers came in only now. So like I said, am I satisfied with our business? Absolutely not. We have a lot more to do, but I don't think I'm concerned about it from a revenue growth for the future perspective. So if your question is: If there is a soft TCV position this year, will my revenue growth for next year not happen? I don't think so.

My revenue growth for next year will continue, but of course, I have to fix my TCV, right? Like I said, I mean, I'll be more comfortable if I can consistently deliver $150 million-$300 million worth of TCV every quarter. We are not there yet. First two quarters have been a disappointment. Let's see how Q3 goes. Hopefully, Q3 will be slightly better, but again, it's a shorter quarter. Maybe Q4 we will be back on delivering a good quarter in terms of TCV signing. So, we will see, Ayush, we will, you know, work towards that.

Kamini Shah
CFO, Birlasoft Limited

Angan, we also would like to add, right, that we have a healthy pipeline at this point of time, and I think some of the conversions that have got a little delayed, we start getting converted in the upcoming quarters, right? So I think that lead indicator gives us the confidence to say that, you know, it's not that we don't have a pipeline that we should be worried about. It is a question of conversion, which we are working with our sales team at this point of time.

Ayush Lohia
Equity Research Analyst, B&K Securities

So just to, you know, just to follow up on that question only. So if we see the commentary of, you know, the SAP or the hyperscaler or whatever, the companies that we are entrenched with. So those have been, you're calling it out, very strong demand kind of a thing, but our numbers aren't showing in terms of deal wins. So is this something to, has to do with the capabilities that we, you know, that other investments are, you know, still be going on to catch that demand that what the, you know, the SAP and other companies are kind of saying?

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. So Ayush, look, I mean, whether it's SAP, Oracle, everybody is giving a strong commentary going forward, right? So there is a cycle. There is a big cycle coming in with some of these large hyperscalers or the ERP businesses as well. We hope to catch that cycle. We have a lot of deals that are currently on in both sides of the aisle, a lot of GE work, SAP work, a lot of digital deals are on the table. We are fighting to win it. We'll win our fair share. So look, I mean, I don't know what more to say. I mean, we are well invested in those businesses. We are going after customers. The pipeline is there. Now it is a question of converting.

But to your question, Ayush, that you asked a little while ago, is there a problem with our clients? I don't think there's a problem with our clients. It is only the fact that the timing of the deal closures is an issue, which is what we are working on.

Ayush Lohia
Equity Research Analyst, B&K Securities

So, healthcare vertical, when we say that, you know, that we are not facing a clientage issue, so is it fair to understand that on the healthcare side also, we are not facing the specific client kind of issue?

Abhinandan Singh
Head of Investor Relations, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah, Ayush, Abhinandan here. We have run over substantially, okay? But anyway, Angan, just make it the last follow-up, and then we'll...

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah. Abhi, let me answer this question. So, Ayush, look, healthcare, I admit that for the last two to three quarters, we have a muted growth, right? But you give it a couple of quarters, you will see the healthcare bounce back very, very strongly. Now, why is this happening? It is not a sector issue or a client-specific issue. It is only because the real estate that we have, the projects that we sign, like I said, you know, the projects are maybe a one-year project or a two-year project.

The project may has got completed. We delivered the program. The new project is sitting probably another quarter to come, and that's all there is. But in the healthcare space, in fact, we work with very marquee names, very strong companies with strong balance sheets. So it's only a question of timing, but I'm very confident that the team will get the healthcare business also back on growth very, very quickly.

Ayush Lohia
Equity Research Analyst, B&K Securities

Great. Thank you so much. Thank you very much. Wish you all the best for the next quarters. Yeah. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Angan Guha, CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited, for closing comments. Over to you, sir.

Angan Guha
CEO and MD, Birlasoft Limited

Yeah, thank you. So first of all, thank you, everyone. Thank you for joining us in the conference. Hopefully, we've been able to answer all your questions, but if you have any further questions, please do reach out to Abhi, and we will try and attempt to answer all other questions that you may have. Thank you once again for your support to Birlasoft. We and the management team are committed to build a long-term, sustainable, growth-oriented business with a high margin profile. That we are committed on. Quarter- on- quarter, we will focus on execution, and we will get our company there. I look forward to speaking with you again, as a part of our next earnings call. Thank you once again. Have a good evening, good morning, wherever you are. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you, sir. On behalf of Birlasoft, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines.

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