As the company limps forward with a new board of directors, India's IT industry is standing by in loose accord to ensure that Satyam's problems don't cast a pall over an industry already slowing amid a global recession.
Unlike U.S. financial and auto execs, Satyam's new directors have resisted asking for a government bailout. Karnik said such a move of desperation would send the wrong signal to the market. Satyam this week continued seeking emergency funds from institutional investors, while India's corporate affairs minister suggested "many" companies are interested in acquiring the outsourcer. Karnik would say only that Satyam is "exploring all opportunities."
Most Satyam customers and employees are staying put, Karnik said, but that will change in a hurry if things head south. "Customers are keeping options in mind and are probably talking to other companies," Karnik said. India's Nasscom (National Association of Software and Services Companies) continues to urge Satyam's competitors not to poach its customers, though interviews with U.S. CIOs confirm it's being ignored.
Representatives of India's IT community remain adamant that Satyam's situation is unique, and they spoke in solidarity on the InformationWeek Webcast. Imagine the CEOs of Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and IBM getting on a Webcast -- as leaders from Infosys, Microland, Nasscom, and Satyam did this week -- to toe the industry line if one of their companies was crippled because of accounting fraud.
Asked whether India needs stronger corporate governance regulations, Nasscom president Som Mittal said India's IT providers already are subject to close oversight -- PricewaterhouseCoopers had signed off on Satyam's books. Still, Nasscom has set up a task force to advise member companies on governance best practices.
Surjeet Singh, CFO of Indian IT outsourcer Patni, said the business reality of "doing more with less" will, in the end, make outsourcing even stickier than it is today, but he suggests common problems among Indian companies, such as attrition, may go away as growth slows. The real problems are Satyam's, and the rest of the industry is busy making sure those problems don't affect them.
Meantime, new fraud revelations continue to emerge. An Indian prosecutor this week said Raju had forged bank documents and inflated head count to divert funds. Multiple law firms filed class-action suits against Satyam on behalf of investors, and the Indian government widened its probe to other companies linked to Satyam's founder.

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Infosys' Gopalakrishnan: Business (mostly) as usual
Photo by Norbert Schiller/Flickr![]()
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