{"title":"Evolving Client–Vendor Relationship: As Manifested Through an Artificial Intelligence Research Unit of an Indian IT Organization","authors":"Vinay Reddy Venumuddala, Rajalaxmi Kamath","doi":"10.1177/02560909241254998","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The Indian information technology (IT) sector is traditionally known for delivering IT and business process management (BPM) services to clients across the globe. To ensure the longevity of this client and service provider relationship, Indian IT organizations have made significant client-specific investments and actively engaged them in offshore development activities. One of the outcomes from such investments can be seen in terms of the very high maturity standards that Indian IT organizations currently exhibit in the context of IT–BPM service delivery. In recent times, these organizations are also undertaking offshore projects around emerging technologies. Such projects, especially those related to artificial intelligence (AI), are largely centred around the automation of client-focused BPM services. Given their relative nascency, such projects are primarily led by the AI research units that are rapidly diffusing across Indian IT organizations. In this study, we rely on a four-month-long ethnography to explore a client and vendor (or service-provider) relationship as manifested through one such AI research unit of an Indian IT organization situated in Bengaluru, India. Our objective from this study is to understand how these new offshore AI projects affect the longevity of the relationship between clients and the Indian IT service providers. Given the nature of emerging technology workflows, our findings indicate a tilt more towards meeting client-side expectations than that of vendors in these projects. We portend that this can potentially disrupt the longevity of the client–vendor relationship in the Indian IT services sector, and, therefore, both the clients and vendors must attend to the peculiarities of offshore emerging technology projects to mitigate such disruptions.","PeriodicalId":35878,"journal":{"name":"Vikalpa","volume":"40 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Vikalpa","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/02560909241254998","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Business, Management and Accounting","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Indian information technology (IT) sector is traditionally known for delivering IT and business process management (BPM) services to clients across the globe. To ensure the longevity of this client and service provider relationship, Indian IT organizations have made significant client-specific investments and actively engaged them in offshore development activities. One of the outcomes from such investments can be seen in terms of the very high maturity standards that Indian IT organizations currently exhibit in the context of IT–BPM service delivery. In recent times, these organizations are also undertaking offshore projects around emerging technologies. Such projects, especially those related to artificial intelligence (AI), are largely centred around the automation of client-focused BPM services. Given their relative nascency, such projects are primarily led by the AI research units that are rapidly diffusing across Indian IT organizations. In this study, we rely on a four-month-long ethnography to explore a client and vendor (or service-provider) relationship as manifested through one such AI research unit of an Indian IT organization situated in Bengaluru, India. Our objective from this study is to understand how these new offshore AI projects affect the longevity of the relationship between clients and the Indian IT service providers. Given the nature of emerging technology workflows, our findings indicate a tilt more towards meeting client-side expectations than that of vendors in these projects. We portend that this can potentially disrupt the longevity of the client–vendor relationship in the Indian IT services sector, and, therefore, both the clients and vendors must attend to the peculiarities of offshore emerging technology projects to mitigate such disruptions.
印度信息技术(IT)部门历来以向全球客户提供 IT 和业务流程管理(BPM)服务而闻名。为确保这种客户与服务提供商之间的关系长盛不衰,印度信息技术组织针对客户进行了大量投资,并积极开展离岸开发活动。这些投资的成果之一,就是印度 IT 组织目前在 IT-BPM 服务交付方面表现出的极高成熟度标准。最近,这些组织还围绕新兴技术开展离岸项目。这些项目,尤其是与人工智能(AI)相关的项目,主要围绕以客户为中心的业务流程管理服务自动化展开。鉴于这些项目相对较新,它们主要由人工智能研究部门领导,而这些部门正在印度 IT 企业中迅速普及。在本研究中,我们通过为期四个月的人种学研究,探讨了位于印度班加罗尔的一家印度 IT 企业的人工智能研究部门所体现的客户与供应商(或服务提供商)之间的关系。我们的研究目标是了解这些新的离岸人工智能项目如何影响客户与印度 IT 服务提供商之间的长期关系。鉴于新兴技术工作流程的性质,我们的研究结果表明,在这些项目中,我们更倾向于满足客户方的期望,而不是供应商的期望。我们预言,这可能会破坏印度 IT 服务行业客户与供应商之间的长期关系,因此,客户和供应商都必须关注离岸新兴技术项目的特殊性,以减少这种破坏。