Go ahead and get started here this morning, with Cognizant. We're very pleased to have CFO Jan Siegmund . Thank you for joining us.
Thanks for having me.
Before we get started with you, Jan, I do have an important disclosure to read. For those disclosures, please see the Morgan Stanley Research Disclosure website at morganstanley.com/researchdisclosures. If you have any questions, please reach out to your Morgan Stanley rep. Jan, I guess let's just dive right into it. You know, we'll start with demand and kind of what we're seeing here. You know, this past quarter, you didn't provide a revenue growth outlook for the year, but did note that growth would come in below what your multi-year targets and outlook that you provided at the last Analyst Day. Can you provide an update on what you've seen in the last few months as it relates to decision cycles and demand across verticals, especially given the uncertainty in the macro environment?
Yeah, James. The demand in our industry has been slowing, and we have been talking about the slowing of demand in our book of business, I think for the last two quarters.
Yeah
I n our last fiscal year. As you might imagine, the economic uncertainty and, the overall economic outlook, hasn't really changed that much in the last few months. I would describe basically this trend of clients, being, more careful about their investment decisions. I would see, the scoping of projects seeing, and we have seen, a slowing of our pipeline conversion into bookings also. All indicators that I think, on a relative broad basis, demand has been slowing to some degree. This doesn't mean there is not enough business out, it's a large market, but on the margin, we have seen a slower, slow environment.
Is there anything that sticks out across verticals, like where certain verticals maybe are slightly slower than others, or where verticals are still holding up quite well? Anything you can call out there?
It's a, it's a question that I asked, also our teams when we looked into it. The interesting part is that, it was really very hard to manifest in our book of business, a specific trend by industry. We had, in each industry's clients that have been expanding and growing with our book with us and, we have been doing well, and other clients have been more curtailing their demand. I would see it more on a client-by-client basis.
Okay.
Rather than broad-based industry trends.
Got it. Got it. You know, I guess another question that bears asking here is, how much of this softness in your business do you think is a function of the macro environment versus the Cognizant-specific, related to Cognizant?
Yeah
S pecific issues like fulfillment challenges you've had over the last few quarters?
Yeah. For that, really throughout the last year, we had to work with our fulfillment issues that were driven by high attrition in our associate base.
Mm-hmm.
That curtailed our revenue growth on one hand, but it also, as we have mentioned, had an impact on our booking success. We, in a simple way, it's harder to sell something to a client when you are not fulfilling the stuff that they have already.
Right
G ven to you.
Right.
I think there were correlated effects that were related to our fulfillment issues that we had last year. In the last two quarters, really pronounced in the fourth quarter, we saw a very meaningful improvement of our attrition, and the situation on fulfillment has really meaningfully improved. We are now in a phase of where we are fulfilling to a much better degree.
Mm-hmm
T o client needs. We anticipate that now as the fulfillment basically is being addressed, that we are focusing obviously, then we talk about Ravi, very much on driving demand, selling business which we now can also fulfill.
Right.
The fulfillment issues have been the driver for our revenue disappointments, largely in the last quarter, but they were paired with flat bookings growth.
Right. Right
T he combination of this is now I think the picture has shifted, and we need to really focus on driving bookings growth and to convert that into revenue.
On that fulfillment improvement, you know, a lot of that, what you've seen thus far would've come, you know, before Ravi took over as CEO. You know, he obviously has a reputation for being, you know, managing a strong fulfillment and delivery capabilities, et cetera. You know, what were the changes that were made and what are the opportunities for further improvement in the delivery organization?
Yeah. Let's address the improvement in attrition first. It's hard to really be completely analytical. You can't really see into the minds of every associate, as they leave, you know.
Right.
As a whole, I think I would have to recognize that the overall industry dynamic on employment has changed in the last six months. We have in the tech sector in particular, which is very relevant for our job market, has seen a slowing of demand for people. Silicon Valley natives have slowed their hiring and announced layoffs. That I think has changed the mindset, we saw industry-wide obviously a slowing of attrition. That's probably the majority of our improvement as well. In particular in the fourth quarter, I think our improvement was a little bit stronger.
If we like to address this to our own measures that we have focused on, in particular in the last year, we made meaningful investments into our compensation. We had a merit increase for a vast batch of our associates in October. We're now paying our bonuses in March, and we have another merit increase in April. There are three-quarters of a consistent compensation policy that I think may be now showing our associates of confidence. There's a range of other measures that are gaining momentum, our focus on training, internal promotions, improved benefit packages, and so forth. It has been really a broad-based effort to improve our overall employee value proposition, which I think is what we're seeing here. The arrival of Ravi, I think, Too early to see.
Right.
My early impressions are that Ravi is actually currently traveling in India for his first trip. He's spending two weeks out there, learning about our operations and meeting with leadership and associates. He had a very warm welcome and almost enthusiastic welcome by many of our associates. The early signs are that I think his authenticity, his focus on employee value proposition and on employee engagement will help further. That's at least my early read.
Got it. Talking about from a customer engagement perspective, Ravi's known for his involvement in securing large deals at his other employers and the like. A lot of those were larger than what Cognizant has seen in recent years. Can you provide some context around the types of deals that his, you know, that those larger deals have been, and, you know, perhaps even doing some captive acquisitions and how is that going to change Cognizant's go-to-market and what?
Yeah
Y ou know, Cognizant attempts to do?
We started talking about the possibility for Cognizant to more actively engage in the large deal opportunities already at the end of last year.
Okay.
This is one of the drivers that Brian and I felt we had under-leveraged purposefully because we wanted to strengthen our delivery capabilities, our large deal solutioning, our deal review processes, et cetera, pricing abilities. We announced a large renewal in the fourth quarter, kind of as one of the examples that we did work on. Ravi came on board, and just as a reminder for those of you who are not on the day-to-day with Cognizant, really formulated his initial program of focus on focusing on growth, in particular large deals. That's what you're referring to, James. On employee value proposition and world-class, basically employer initiatives and operational excellence. That's the triad of things that he is kind of categorizing the actions that he is issuing under.
We all know Ravi, he is a sales-oriented operator, basically.
Right.
One of the very first things he did is to commit to see 100 clients in the first 100 days, and we put a tracker on our internal website, and so he's making great progress.
Right
O n that, on an everyday basis. Secondly was really to get involved with the portfolio of large deals that we have in the pipeline.
Mm-hmm
To aid to offer his insights and his his point of view to those. The cadence of this type of thing is very much in line with Ravi's image as an operator. It's for every other day and weekly type thing rather than an ancillary review, and he himself is very actively involved in driving them. As a consequence, we have seen we've seen an increase in pipeline and activity, and we have a nice portfolio of these larger deals. The background of your question, James, is what type of large deals are we engaging in? As you would imagine, it's a, it's a portfolio of opportunities.
The focus for us is initially to execute and drive deals that have where we feel good about our execution capability, so may have less complexity, and kind of employ more traditional type of methods, to drive value for our clients. Some of them are more in the BPO area, as you would imagine.
Right.
I think the current economic environment, has actually accelerated the availability of those types of deals where clients.
Yep
L ook for cost relief and consolidation opportunities. We're participating in those. We have some deals come to mind that are in our healthcare sector. We're very differentiated due to our capabilities in the payer space that offer opportunities. We're trying to. It can be completely managed that way, but to really have an open eye to the risk of execution that we're signing up and then the our ability to deliver good value to our clients.
Got it. you know, on that pipeline of bigger deals, how big is that and, you know, how many deals are in that, would you say? Perhaps as importantly, how are you thinking about timing and the cost?
Yeah
A ssociated with that?
I don't wanna talk about the size and the overall size of the pipeline because there's uncertainty, you know.
Okay.
Some of these deals we will be winning. I don't wanna set your expectation. We have like $X billion of deals in our pipeline, and we have to see. They for us, a large deal is a deal that is above $200 million of TCV up to $500 million, a billion-dollar type thing.
Okay.
We're not talking like mega deals, like some of them that are in Ravi's history, I believe. I think we're just moving up the ladder to get into a little bit bigger deal execution for us. That's, I think, as far as I wanna go.
Cycle time on that.
Yeah. These deals take some time. We have been negotiating our CoreLogic renewal, I think, for nine months.
Okay.
I think some of these deals move a little faster and some we do see two quarters out. It's, I think you'll see a natural spectrum. When Ravi and I talk, we would love to have, of course, a nice cadence of steady stream of improvement. Can't always control that, but I feel good that we're gonna see not too distant future, some outcomes here.
Got it. I've been kind of dominating the line of questioning here. If anybody has any questions from the audience or things you wanna dig into, please just raise your hand. We'll give you a microphone, and we'll be able to get your question answered here. You know, turning to supply, you mentioned already that there had been some improvement in attrition. We saw that in the results last quarter. As supply pressures begin to abate, perhaps in part because of macro uncertainty, how are you thinking about the right pace of hiring going forward, and the balance needed there, given the macro environment?
Yeah
A s well as the types of hires that you wanna make?
A very fair question. We, when you look at our numbers, last year, our headcount growth actually exceeded our revenue growth and our, as a consequence, utilization is slightly down. For a variety of reasons, but obviously we're gonna be monitoring and managing our delivery capacity very closely to our anticipated revenue growth opportunity. We will be making the right adjustments, relative to the capacity that we have. There are different types of levers for us to deploy. We have been reducing the use of subcontractors, for example, as one way to adjust our capacity, but we'll be very careful, not kind of whole student body left type of measures.
Right, right.
Iterative adjustments so that we focus our hiring on the areas where we see the highest demand and outlook for it. We also want to be cognizant of delivery. You know, we had delivery issues for a while. Some of our projects do require a little bit of a bench, and so we wanna be ready also for larger deals. This is a daily calibration. I mentioned that Ravi is an operator, so he's not. One thing, his focus is on sales and clients, and the other thing, he's focused on delivery, as you mentioned, and fulfillment. There he has a daily cadence, and so we'll be very closely adjusting our cost base there, basically.
Have you seen a shift in interest in candidates or types of candidates since Ravi's appointment as CEO? Has that shifted at all?
I think it's a little bit too early.
Right
T o see. I'm saying this more as an observer, and Ravi and I have been working for seven weeks, so I get to know him.
Right. Right. Right.
He has quite a following on LinkedIn, I have to say. It does have definitely generated a lot of enthusiasm in our employee base and in our management base also. His track record of success, his deep understanding of our industry, the success story that he is in India has really energized in our own company, our associate base and management. That has been a positive outcome of his appointment.
Got it. Turning to strategy, last month you and Ravi talked through a need to invest to orient the business toward a growth mindset. How are you thinking about the building blocks there? What do you have in-house versus what do you currently need? You know, I guess let's start there.
Yeah.
It's like, what do you have, what do you need, and what are the pieces that need to come together?
It might make sense to split investment into two categories.
Okay
I f you do. Let's start with the easier one, and that is M&A. I think our continued investment into growth markets and into capabilities that we feel are accretive to our portfolio will continue. You have seen in the last two quarters kind of our resumption of our M&A program. I think we assured also on our last quarterly call that We're still working under this capital allocation framework that we had designed, and I have no indication that that will be changing under Ravi. We're continuing to do so in that framework.
Right.
Just as a reminder, that framework, if we assume about a cash flow of $2 billion for our company, about 50% of all cash flow to be invested into M&A. That's the one component. We made strategically aligned acquisitions in faster-growing digital markets, we're feeling good about that program. Maybe more interesting is what type of investments organically do we need to make in order to accelerate our revenue growth? The one and most obvious one is I think the associated dilution with larger deals that we might be facing if we were to be successful in our endeavor to close these large deals. Ravi and I are fully aware that that will come. It could be a pressure.
Historically in our industry, it does create dilution in the early stages of such deals. The tone that Ravi has set for us is to offset and find sources of funding for those types of investments. One of the tasks that I have with my team is to identify areas of efficiency and effectiveness to to work within the existing framework of our P&L. That's kind of what underway. That would be the largest, probably most pronounced investment to think of as a unitary thing. Ravi will be thinking about the type and quality of our sales resources, the effectiveness of our sales and marketing programs, and incentive systems, and so forth. I don't expect like wholesale changes to this, but there's-
Mm-hmm.
Gonna be a fine-tuning, that he's gonna bring with his experience of the industry to what he would think is gonna be the most effective way to drive that growth.
Got it. You know, within that, I guess, and maybe it's still too early to tell depending on what that mix looks like, but are there specific leadership investments or fulfillment investments that you've already been able to identify?
Yeah. I get the question a lot about leadership, and I really don't have any specific information.
Okay.
That, there's gonna be large scale changes to our group. Ravi is quite conscious that the company has gone under quite a bit of, management turnover.
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
It's a balance between letting the company come to its normal operating momentum, which always takes time when you have a new team coming together. Reality is also, this is now Jan Siegmund, my personal comment, that a new CEO will wanna bring talent in.
Right. Right. Right. Right.
That he can trust, that he feels has the skill set to execute well. I would not exclude that that will come, but it is not kind of... It would be at individual areas of improvement and probably won't be a big announcement. It will happen more in an organic kind of...
Right. Right.
Changing the management style. I would anticipate it. I don't know of any right now.
Right.
I personally would think that would make sense.
I guess maybe a subordinate question to that though is, you know, are there any changes or plans already in place to change go-to-market or delivery from a structural perspective outside of wrapping up hiring or adjusting things there?
Yeah. One of the first things that Ravi did in his early weeks is established a little working group that's called, we call it a growth council.
Okay.
Of senior executives that really evaluate every element of our go-to-market strategy. That is like where are our a variety of sales resources organizationally aligned? What's their incentive system? What's the quality of these types of resources? What do we expect from the KPIs? What, what should be emphasized more or less? I think these are under consideration. The working team is evaluating them and we're gonna make adjustments to how we go. Again, I don't categorize them as wholesale change. I would categorize them as fine-tuning and optimizing, bringing Ravi's insight from his upbringing of how can things be done more effectively and more efficiently.
I think he comes out of a culture, and, with our Indian competitors that clearly have demonstrated, I think a better economic profile, quite frankly.
Right.
On the P&L. He's gonna ask these questions about, where are these, where's the room for improvement?
Right.
I hope we're gonna see some improvement on that.
On that point around the P&L, you know, we've talked a lot about investment this morning and you've outlined that not only here but in previous public forums. How are you thinking about the profitability implications for that near term? Recognizing, you know, you don't have an outlook for the full year. Can you help at least frame the magnitude.
Yeah.
Of investments, timing, and potential costs?
This is what Ravi and I are working on right now, and it's gonna be a lot of factors to balance. We will have to take into consideration the pressures of the economic environment.
Yep
H ow that would impact, for example, our ability on pricing, and so forth. Our likelihood and certainty around a large deal execution, which would determine the pressure that we're gonna see on the P&L, and then the overall cost envelope to put together. So that is work in progress. When we work on that, we work within that framework of our October investor day. So we're not really talking, like, hundreds of basis points of investment, meaning margin deterioration. We're kind of-
Mm-hmm
W anna be really close to the framework of probably, yeah, within that margin profile that this framework set out. I don't wanna be more concrete at this point, but.
Right
We made investments, and I think Ravi and I recognize our margin profile, really, kind of, need to stay kind of in the realm.
Right. Right. How far along are you in terms of identifying those opportunities and, you know, how long should we as investors expect to have to wait to get a, you know, a more concrete framework of where we should expect you to end up?
Yeah. well, for sure in our next quarter.
Okay
We're gonna have much more insight into it, and we'll update on our thinking. Obviously, Ravi's thinking will have progressed, and that's gonna be an important milestone for us.
Got it. Got it. Let's turn to M&A. Historically, M&A has been key to your strategy for expanding capabilities, and we saw that with the three acquisitions you announced last quarter. How do we think about the strategy and pace of acquisitions going forward, especially, you know, with Ravi now kind of looking at it, what's his view on acquisitions and using that as a way to gain capability, et cetera?
Yeah. We're actually up to four in the last two quarters.
Okay.
A few thoughts on the framing of the size of our program. If you add up the acquisitions that for the last two quarters, that is with $800 million of capital to spend, it's pretty close to our annual budget. Now that's a rolling backward look for 12 months. We'll be still governed by the capital that we have at our hands. Logically, I think you're gonna see Well, I will aim to operate within that framework, that will curtail, so to speak, in this case, the volume of M&A that there will be a governor on that volume that we're gonna be seeing. The areas of investment are gonna stay the same.
The last two acquisitions, Ravi actually approved and were in line with his expectations of positioning ourselves in specific strategic areas of faster-growing digital markets, with the specific geography. I think the program has largely staying intact in its structure, and you should expect us continuing to do M&A.
Got it. Got it. You know, back on these larger deals that are in the pipeline and the timing, I think it makes sense that they do take time, and the sales cycle is involved and particularly if you're talking about the, you know, $200 million or more in total value of a contract. What are the things from your perspective that can move that forward or push it back? You know, I know that in previous roles is that, they were able to move quite quickly, but I don't know.
Yeah
I f the world was different, kind of you know, what are the puts and takes?
Well, we have a high sense of urgency.
Okay
T he client largely determines, those things. As a CFO, I don't want to let the sense of urgency put pressure on deal economics.
Okay.
I will be rational about it, but, and, really largely determine of how the client is gonna be driving this thing. We'll be ready to engage, and internally we have a high sense of urgency on this.
Right. Right. Right. You mentioned, like, it's understandable that in the current environment that there's maybe some incremental interest in things like BPO, et cetera...
Yeah
A s customers try to manage costs. Is that a logical place to start or not necessarily?
I think, I think so. For us, it's very fitting. While the BPO is a smaller part of our portfolio, it has been really, and one of the areas where we have been gaining market share, had really success with more sophisticated companies in the portfolio here for us. Gaining share and really growing very nicely and executing very well. For us, that would be an area of strength where we wanna build on the momentum that we have. That, I could easily see that happening.
Jan, thank you very much for joining us here on stage at the 2023 Morgan Stanley TMT Conference. Look forward to tracking the progress through the rest of the year.