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{{Infobox company {{Infobox company
| name = Cognizant | name = Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp
| logo = ] | logo = ]
| caption = Passion for making a Difference | caption = Passion for making a Difference
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| location_country = {{nowrap|]}} | location_country = {{nowrap|]}}
| area_served = Worldwide | area_served = Worldwide
| key_people = {{nowrap|John E. Klein (])}} | key_people = John E. Klein (Chairman)<br>] (CEO)
| industry = ], ] | industry = ], ]
| products = | products =
| services = IT, ] and ] services | services = IT, ] and ] services
| revenue = {{ubl|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 8.843189&nbsp;billion (2013) <ref name='xbrlus_1'>{{cite web|url=http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1058290/000119312514067531/0001193125-14-067531-index.htm |title=COGNIZANT TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS CORP 2013 Annual Report Form (10-K) |publisher=United States Securities and Exchange Commission |format=XBRL |date=February 25, 2014}}</ref>}}|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 7.346472&nbsp;billion (2012) <ref name='xbrlus_1'/>}}}} | revenue = {{increase}} US$ 8.84 billion (2013)<ref name=6-K>{{cite web|url=http://www.google.com/finance?q=NASDAQ%3ACTSH&fstype=ii&ei=AdI0VKCGMszRkAXshIDYCg|title=Cognizant Annual Report|publisher=Cognizant}}</ref>
| operating_income = {{ubl|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 1.67791&nbsp;billion (2013) <ref name='xbrlus_1'/>}}|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 1.361496&nbsp;billion (2012) <ref name='xbrlus_1'/>}}}} | operating_income = {{increase}} US$ 1.67 billion (2013)<ref name=6-K/>
| net_income = {{ubl|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 1.228578&nbsp;billion (2013) <ref name='xbrlus_1'/>}}|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 1.051263&nbsp;billion (2012) <ref name='xbrlus_1'/>}}}} | net_income = {{increase}} US$ 1.22 billion (2013)<ref name=6-K/>
| assets = {{increase}} US$ 8.13 billion (2013)<ref name=6-K/>
| assets = {{ubl|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 8.134718&nbsp;billion (2013) <ref name='xbrlus_2'>{{cite web|url=http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1058290/000119312514190136/0001193125-14-190136-index.htm |title=COGNIZANT TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS CORP 2014 Q1 Quarterly Report Form (10-Q) |publisher=United States Securities and Exchange Commission |format=XBRL |date=May 8, 2014}}</ref>}}|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 6.521571&nbsp;billion (2012) <ref name='xbrlus_1'/>}}}}
| equity = {{ubl|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 6.135791&nbsp;billion (2013) <ref name='xbrlus_2'/>}}|{{nowrap|{{increase}} US$ 4.854383&nbsp;billion (2012) <ref name='xbrlus_1'/>}}}} | equity = {{increase}} US$ 6.13 billion (2013)<ref name=6-K/>
| num_employees = 178,000 (March 2014)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cognizant.com/company-overview |title=Company Overview |publisher=Cognizant |accessdate=13 March 2014}}</ref> | num_employees = 178,000 (March 2014)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cognizant.com/company-overview |title=Company Overview |publisher=Cognizant |accessdate=13 March 2014}}</ref>
| homepage = {{URL|http://www.cognizant.com}} | homepage = {{URL|http://www.cognizant.com}}
| intl = yes | intl = yes
}} }}
'''Cognizant Technology Solutions''' is a ] ], consulting and ] company. It is headquartered in ], ], ]. Cognizant is included in the ] and the ] indices. Originally founded as an in-house technology unit of ] in 1994,<ref name="mishra">Mishra, Pankaj (2013-03-21). Cognizant’s Francisco D’Souza: The horizon chaser. Live Mint and the Wall Street Journal, 21 March 2013. Retrieved on 2013-07-30 from http://www.livemint.com/Companies/VduU2oUfVOTxR4MYarjjiJ/Cognizants-Francisco-DSouza-The-horizon-chaser.html.</ref> Cognizant started serving external clients in 1996. <ref name="mishra" /> Cognizant's ] was launched in 1998, after a series of corporate splits and restructures of its parent companies, the first software services firm to be listed on the Nasdaq.<ref name="mishra" /> During the ], it grew by accepting the application maintenance work that the bigger players were unwilling to perform. Gradually, it ventured into application development, complex ] and consulting work. Cognizant saw a period of fast growth during the 2000s, becoming a ] company in 2011.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rediff.com/business/slide-show/slide-show-1-tech-cognizant-joins-the-fortune-500-club/20110506.htm |title=Cognizant joins the Fortune 500 club |date=6 May 2011 |publisher=rediff |accessdate=27 June 2012}}</ref> In 2011, the ] named it as the world's third most admired IT services company after ] and ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/mostadmired/2011/industries/30.html |title=World's Most Admired Companies (Information Technology services), 2011 |publisher=Fortune |accessdate=27 June 2012}}</ref> '''Cognizant Technology Solutions''' is an American ] that provides of custom information technology, consulting and business process outsourcing services. It is headquartered in ], ], ]. Cognizant is included in the ] and the ] indices. Originally founded as an in-house technology unit of ] in 1994,<ref name="mishra">Mishra, Pankaj (2013-03-21). Cognizant’s Francisco D’Souza: The horizon chaser. Live Mint and the Wall Street Journal, 21 March 2013. Retrieved on 2013-07-30 from http://www.livemint.com/Companies/VduU2oUfVOTxR4MYarjjiJ/Cognizants-Francisco-DSouza-The-horizon-chaser.html.</ref> Cognizant started serving external clients in 1996. <ref name="mishra" /> Cognizant's ] was launched in 1998, after a series of corporate splits and restructures of its parent companies, the first software services firm to be listed on the Nasdaq.<ref name="mishra" /> During the ], it grew by accepting the application maintenance work that the bigger players were unwilling to perform. Gradually, it ventured into application development, complex ] and consulting work. Cognizant saw a period of fast growth during the 2000s, becoming a ] company in 2011.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rediff.com/business/slide-show/slide-show-1-tech-cognizant-joins-the-fortune-500-club/20110506.htm |title=Cognizant joins the Fortune 500 club |date=6 May 2011 |publisher=rediff |accessdate=27 June 2012}}</ref> In 2011, the ] named it as the world's third most admired IT services company after ] and ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/mostadmired/2011/industries/30.html |title=World's Most Admired Companies (Information Technology services), 2011 |publisher=Fortune |accessdate=27 June 2012}}</ref>


== History == == History ==

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Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp
Cognizant Technology Solutions Logo
Company typePublic
Traded asNasdaqCTSH
NASDAQ-100 Component
S&P 500 Component
IndustryIT services, IT consulting
PredecessorDun & Bradstreet
FoundedJanuary 26, 1994
FounderFrancisco D'Souza
Lakshmi Narayanan Edit this on Wikidata
HeadquartersTeaneck, New Jersey, United States
Area servedWorldwide
Key peopleJohn E. Klein (Chairman)
Francisco D'Souza (CEO)
ServicesIT, business consulting and outsourcing services
RevenueIncrease US$ 8.84 billion (2013)
Operating incomeIncrease US$ 1.67 billion (2013)
Net incomeIncrease US$ 1.22 billion (2013)
Total assetsIncrease US$ 8.13 billion (2013)
Total equityIncrease US$ 6.13 billion (2013)
Number of employees178,000 (March 2014)
Websitewww.cognizant.com

Cognizant Technology Solutions is an American multinational corporation that provides of custom information technology, consulting and business process outsourcing services. It is headquartered in Teaneck, New Jersey, United States. Cognizant is included in the NASDAQ-100 and the S&P 500 indices. Originally founded as an in-house technology unit of Dun & Bradstreet in 1994, Cognizant started serving external clients in 1996. Cognizant's IPO was launched in 1998, after a series of corporate splits and restructures of its parent companies, the first software services firm to be listed on the Nasdaq. During the dot com bust, it grew by accepting the application maintenance work that the bigger players were unwilling to perform. Gradually, it ventured into application development, complex systems integration and consulting work. Cognizant saw a period of fast growth during the 2000s, becoming a Fortune 500 company in 2011. In 2011, the Fortune magazine named it as the world's third most admired IT services company after Accenture and IBM.

History

Cognizant has its roots in The Dun & Bradstreet Corporation, a joint venture between Dun & Bradstreet (76%) and Satyam Computers (24%). Srini Raju was the CEO of this company established in 1994. Kumar Mahadeva played a major role in convincing D&B to invest $2 million in the joint venture. He was born in Sri Lanka, where his father led his nation's civil service. Mahadeva traveled to England for his studies, earning a master's degree in electrical engineering from Cambridge in 1973. Originally called DBSS, the unit was established as an in-house technology unit, and focused on implementing large-scale IT projects for D&B businesses. In 1996, the company started pursuing customers beyond the D&B fold.

In 1996, Dun & Bradstreet (D&B) spun off several of its subsidiaries including Erisco, IMS International, Nielsen Media Research, Pilot Software, Strategic Technologies and DBSS, to form a new company called Cognizant Corporation. Three months later, in 1997, DBSS was renamed as Cognizant Technology Solutions. In July 1997, D&B bought Satyam's 24% stake in DBSS for $3.4 million. Headquarters were moved to the United States, and in March 1998, Kumar Mahadeva was named CEO. Operating as a division of the Cognizant Corporation, the company mainly focused on Y2K-related projects and web development.

In 1998, the parent company Cognizant Corporation was split into two companies: IMS Health and Nielsen Media Research. After this restructuring, Cognizant Technology Solutions became a public subsidiary of IMS Health. In June 1998, IMS Health partially spun off the company, conducting an initial public offering of the Cognizant stock. The company raised $34 million, less than what the IMS Health underwriters had hoped for. The money was earmarked for debt payments and upgrading of the company's offices.

Kumar Mahadeva decided to reduce the company's dependence on Y2K projects: by Q1 1999, 26% of company's revenues came from Y2K projects, compared with 49% in early 1998. Believing that the $16.6 billion ERP software market was saturated, Mahadeva decided to refrain from large-scale ERP implementation projects. Instead, he focused on applications management, which accounted for 37% of Cognizant's revenue in Q1 1999. Cognizant's revenues in 2002 were $229 million, and the company had zero debt with $100 million in the bank. During the dotcom bust, the company grew by taking on the maintenance projects that larger IT services companies did not want.

In 2003, IMS Health sold its entire 56% stake in Cognizant, which instituted a poison pill provision to prevent hostile takeover attempts. Kumar Mahadeva resigned as the CEO in 2003, and was replaced by Lakshmi Narayanan. Gradually, the company's services portfolio expanded across the IT services landscape and into business process outsourcing (BPO) and business consulting. Lakshmi Narayanan was succeeded by the Kenya-born Francisco D'Souza in 2006. Cognizant experienced a period of fast growth during the 2000s, as reflected by its appearance in Fortune magazine's "100 Fastest-Growing Companies" list for ten consecutive years from 2003 to 2012.

In September 2014, Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp struck its biggest deal, acquiring healthcare IT services provider TriZetto Corp for $2.7 billion. Cognizant Shares, rose nearly 3 percent in premarket trading.

Acquisitions

Company acquired Country Date Business Reference
Cadient Group United States USA October 2014 Digital Healthcare
TriZetto Corp United States USA September 2014 Healthcare
itaas Interactive TV Solutions United States USA April 2014 Digital Video services Cognizant buys US Video Solutions Company
ValueSource Technologies India India October 2013 IT services
Equinox Consulting France France October 2013 Financial Services Consulting Firm
C1 group (6 companies) Germany Germany December 2012 btconsult GmbH ; C:1 Solutions GmbH ; psc Management Consulting GmbH ; C:1 SetCon GmbH ; Enterprise Services AG ; C:1 Holding GmbH
Zaffera United States USA September 2011 SAP Consulting
CoreLogic India India India July 2011 Mortgage processing
Galileo Performance France France June 2010 Consulting related to the measurement, management and continuous optimization of IT system performance
PIPC Group United Kingdom UK May 2010 Program & Project Management Consulting
UBS India Service Center India India October 2009 Business process outsourcing, industry research
Pepperweed Advisors United States US 8 September 2009 Business Consulting, Program Management
Active Intelligence Canada Canada February 2009 Consulting, implementation and support services for Oracle Retail Merchandising, Planning and Optimization suite
Strategic Vision Consulting United States US June 2008 Business Consulting for media and entertainment companies
marketRx United States US 16 November 2007 Life Sciences Analytics, healthcare KPO
AimNet United States US September 2006 IT infrastructure services
Fathom Consulting Canada Canada April 2005 Telecom & Automotive IT Services
Ygyan Consulting India India February 2004 SAP consulting
Infopulse Netherlands Netherlands December 2003 IT services
Aces International United States US April 2003 Siebel CRM consulting
American Express Travel-related Services account from Silverline Technologies United States US Sep 2002 Financial services
UnitedHealthcare Ireland Limited Republic of Ireland Ireland June 2002 Healthcare services (a subsidiary of the UnitedHealth Group)

Services

Cognizant provides information technology, consulting and BPO services. These include business & technology consulting, systems integration, application development & maintenance, IT infrastructure services, analytics, business intelligence, data warehousing, CRM, supply chain management, engineering & manufacturing Solutions, ERP, R&D outsourcing, and testing solutions.

In 2011, the company's revenue from IT services was split roughly evenly between application development and application maintenance. Its business process outsourcing portfolio leans towards "higher-end" services i.e., work that involves domain knowledge and skills, such as legal services or healthcare claims processing rather than simple voice-based support services.

In the 2012 earnings announcements, the CEO Francisco D'Souza categorized the company's service offerings in three groups: Horizon 1 (application development and maintenance), Horizon 2 (BPO, IT Infrastructure Services & business consulting) and Horizon 3 ("SMAC" - Social, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud). As of September 2012, the Horizon 1 services accounted for over 75% of the company's revenues, and Horizon 2 services about 20%.

Business model

Cognizant's original corporate headquarters in Chennai, now an offshore delivery center.

Like many other IT services firms, Cognizant follows a global delivery model based on offshore software R&D and offshore outsourcing. The company has a number of offshore development centers outside the United States and near-shore centers in the U.S., Europe and South America.

In its early years, Cognizant gained business from a number of American and European companies with the help of the D&B brand. The company's senior executives envisaged the firm as a provider of high-end customer services on-par with the six contemporary major system integrators (Accenture, BearingPoint, Capgemini, E&Y, Deloitte and IBM), but at lower prices.

Offshoring and hiring in the U.S.

Cognizant is among the Top 10 companies receiving H-1B visas to bring immigrant workers to the United States. The company has been steadily increasing its U.S. work force. In January 2011, the company announced plans to expand its U.S. delivery centers, including a new 1,000-person facility in Phoenix, Arizona. In February 2011, Cognizant said it had 60 full-time recruiters actively hiring in the U.S.

In 2009, an investigation by the US Department of Labor (DoL) found Cognizant in violation of the H-1B provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Administrative Act. DoL found that 67 of its workers hired under the H-1B program were underpaid. According to Cognizant, this was due to unintentional administrative errors. The DoL investigation revealed that Cognizant had achieved 99.7% compliance in its management of H-1B visa-related issues. The company paid US$509,607 in back wages to the 67 employees. No fines or visa restrictions were imposed, since DoL did not discover any willful violations. Joseph Petrecca, the director of the Wage and Hour Division's Northern New Jersey District Office, praised the company for taking immediate steps to correct the violations: "This level of cooperation sets a standard for others in the industry."

Operations

Geographies

In addition to its global headquarters and delivery center in Teaneck, N.J., as well as the U.S. headquarters in College Station, Texas, Cognizant has nine additional U.S. delivery centers: Bentonville, Arkansas; Bridgewater, New Jersey; Chicago, Illinois; Des Moines, Iowa; Holliston, Massachusetts; Minot, North Dakota; Phoenix, Arizona; Southfield, Michigan; and Tampa, Florida.

The company has more than 150,000 employees globally, of which over 100,000 are in India across 10 locations with a plurality in Chennai. The other centers of the company are in Bangalore, Coimbatore, Gurgaon, Hyderabad, Kochi, Kolkata, Mangalore (CoreLogic), Mumbai, and Pune. The company has local, regional, and global delivery centers in the UK, Hungary, China, The Philippines, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, and Mexico.

Business Units

Cognizant is organized into several verticals and horizontal units. The vertical units focus on specific industries such as Banking & Financial Services, Healthcare, Manufacturing and Retail. The horizontals focus on specific technologies or process areas such as Analytics, mobile computing, BPO and Testing. Both horizontal and vertical units have business consultants, who together form the organization-wide Cognizant Business Consulting (CBC) team. Cognizant is among the largest recruiters of MBAs in the industry; they are involved in business development and business analysis for IT services projects.

According to the 2011 financial statements, the major portion of Cognizant's revenues is derived from clients in the Financial Services (42.3%) and Healthcare (25.9%) industries. Other substantial revenue sources include clients from Manufacturing, Retail & Logistics (18.6%) and Communications, Information, Media & Entertainment and Technology (13.2%) industries. By geography, most of the revenue is derived from North America (77.2%) and Europe (19.2%).

Corporate affairs

Marketing and branding

The company's flagship customer conference is Cognizant Community—sometimes simply called Community. It is held annually in the United States, Europe, Australia and Asia (Singapore, India and Japan). The summit, which features notable keynote speakers in the world of business, technology, economics and even adventure sports, has been praised as "a model industry event".

Finance

Cognizant was listed on NASDAQ in 1998 and added to the NASDAQ-100 Index in 2004. After the close of trading on 16 November 2006, Cognizant moved from the mid cap S&P 400 to the S&P 500. The company claims to be in excellent financial health, reporting over $2.6 billion in cash and short term investments for the quarter ending 30 September 2012.

Corporate Social Responsibility

Cognizant's philanthropic and corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives are conducted through the voluntary efforts of Cognizant employees and the financial and administrative support of the Cognizant Foundation. Registered in March 2005 as a "Charitable Company" under the Indian Companies Act, the Cognizant Foundation aims to help "unprivileged members of society gain access to quality education and healthcare by providing financial and technical support; designing and implementing educational and healthcare improvement programs; and partnering with Non-Government Organizations (NGOs), educational institutions, healthcare institutions, government agencies and corporations".

Cognizant's has a grassroots corporate social responsibility project called Outreach, for which Cognizant's employees volunteer to support schools and orphanages.

At the 2011 Maker Faire, the company announced plans to fund a Maker Space at the. New York Hall of Science, a Making the Future after-school program and a partnership with Citizen Schools to promote STEM education in the United States.

In 2012 Cognizant Foundation made donation to Vidnyan Vahini - a not-for-profit organization located in Pune in India for its Mobile Science Laboratory (MSL).

Environmental record

Cognizant's sustainability efforts include a Go Green initiative launched in 2008 focused on energy conservation, recycling, and responsible waste management. In October 2012, Newsweek magazine ranked Cognizant 50th among the 500 largest publicly traded companies in America, in its annual Green Rankings.

Fortune 500

Year Rank
2014 308
2013 352
2012 398
2011 484
2010 498

See also

References

  1. ^ "Cognizant Annual Report". Cognizant.
  2. "Company Overview". Cognizant. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  3. ^ Mishra, Pankaj (2013-03-21). Cognizant’s Francisco D’Souza: The horizon chaser. Live Mint and the Wall Street Journal, 21 March 2013. Retrieved on 2013-07-30 from http://www.livemint.com/Companies/VduU2oUfVOTxR4MYarjjiJ/Cognizants-Francisco-DSouza-The-horizon-chaser.html.
  4. "Cognizant joins the Fortune 500 club". rediff. 6 May 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  5. "World's Most Admired Companies (Information Technology services), 2011". Fortune. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  6. ^ "No modest ambitions for Cognizant". Express Computer. 8 October 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  7. Swati Anand & Ishan Srivastava (6 November 2010). "'Cognizant is like a $4-billion tech startup'". Times of India. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  8. ^ Silvia Sansoni (14 June 1999). "The contrarian". Forbes.
  9. "Cognizant back in search of Satyam". Business Standard. 4 April 2009. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  10. Kumar Mahadeva quits as Cognizant chief
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  12. "Dun & Bradstreet Spinoff Will Split in Two". The New York Times. 16 January 1998. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  13. Rasheeda Bhagat (9 February 2012). "Cognizant rising by Chennai beach". The Hindu. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  14. IMS sees some positive impact from Cognizant sale by Eric Auchard. Rediff, 16 November 2002 | 1149 IST.
  15. "Cognizant founder steps down". The Hindu Business Line. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
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  35. "Cognizant Acquires Infopulse For $5 M". The Financial Express. 3 December 2003. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
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  46. 2011 Corporate Fact Sheet
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  49. CSR World. Last accessed on 6 March 2012.
  50. Cognizant Foundation extends aid to five NGOs
  51. "Cognizant Outreach distributes notebooks". The Hindu. 27 June 2010. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  52. "Industry insights from Cognizant for AUT faculty". The Hindu. 14 May 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  53. "Cognizant to Unveil 'Making the Future' STEM Education Initiative at World Maker Faire, New York Hall of Science". Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  54. Mary Moore (12 December 2011). "Cognizant to donate $810K to Museum of Science for STEM". Boston Business Journal. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  55. Cognizant goes for green I.T. Manila Bulletin. 15 August 2011.
  56. "Newsweek Green Rankings 2012". Retrieved 5 January 2013.
  57. "2012 Fortune 500 rank". CNN Money. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  58. "2012 Fortune 500 rank". CNN Money. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  59. "2012 Fortune 500 rank". CNN Money. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  60. "2011 Fortune 500 rank". CNN Money. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  61. "2011 Fortune 500 rank". CNN Money. Retrieved 29 May 2013.

External links

  • Business data for Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp:
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