Zensar Tech expects digital to hit over 50% revenue in 2-3 years
The company now expects digital to contribute more than half of its revenue in 2-3 years against 37% at present. The average digital deal sizes will also triple to $10 million plus from $3-5 million currently.

The company now expects digital to contribute more than half of its revenue in 2-3 years against 37% at present. The average digital deal sizes will also triple to $10 million plus from $3-5 million currently.
“We took a conscious decision to prune our list of clients wherever we didn’t see a strategic fit,” Kishore said. “We identified a list of more than 50 clients when I joined and we are almost done with that pruning. Very little is left.”
“Our focus is we must only do work with companies with whom we can add strategic value in digital, cloud, analytics, customer experience, cyber security. We must be relevant to each other,” he said. The impact is starting to show in company’s quarterly results. The number of $1million plus clients in Zensar’s portfolio has grown to 70 from 65, and in the $5 million plus category, it has doubled to eight in the last eight quarters. The top 20 clients now account for 56.1% of the company’s revenue, compared with 52% in the third quarter of 2016.
Kishore said the company will continue to implement this strategy as it acquires new companies.
Pune-based Zensar has acquired retail tech firm Keystone Solutions and user design firm Foolproof in the last one year for an undisclosed amount.
“The spending environment is very good but it is happening largely in digital stacks. In almost all sectors — retail, financial services, healthcare, telecom, manufacturing — all of them are spending 80% of their investment dollar into digitalled technologies,” said Kishore.

More than half of the new deal wins are in the digital, he said, adding that digital revenue has grown 56% CAGR in the last two years. The company will continue to grow digital revenue organically and through acquisitions.
“We are an acquisitive company. Our acquisition strategy is tuckins. These are $25-75 million deal sizes to add new capabilities. We have identified set of 12 areas around digital in retail, finance, manufacturing,” he said.
Indian companies are competing with larger global rivals including IBM and Accenture for a bigger share of the outsourcing business.
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