Infosys chairman Nandan Nilekani addresses investor concerns that generative AI could undermine the traditional IT services model. Speaking at the company’s 45th annual general meeting on June 23, he says AI will “amplify” firms that adapt quickly rather than replace companies like Infosys. Nilekani argues that enterprise software delivery involves more than writing code, citing the need to integrate with legacy systems, follow cybersecurity and governance requirements, and complete rigorous testing and architecture work—tasks he says are difficult to fully automate.
He also points to an “AI deployment gap” among large enterprise clients, presenting an opportunity for IT service providers to help organizations implement and operationalize AI in complex business environments. He links the AI wave to accelerating digital transformation, including urgent legacy modernization. Nilekani further says Infosys is pursuing the next growth phase through integrating AI models and autonomous agents into mission-critical enterprise platforms.
Infosys’ CEO Salil Parekh is cited as noting a strong AI deal pipeline. The reports also reference the broader market concern around IT services disruption and mention Infosys targets an AI-first value framework, with an estimated $300–400 billion AI-first services opportunity by 2030.