iGate
employees in India received an email from the company's communication
team at around 8 am, explaining the situation and telling them not to
discuss it on social media, or talk to journalists.
The
Fremont, California-based company followed it up with a web-based town
hall for its employees in India, in which a pre-recorded audio message
from its founder-promoters - Ashok Trivedi and Sunil Wadhwani - was
played. In it, they explained the facts of the case to employees.
Senior
managers told team members about the board's decision to sack Murthy,
and asked them not to discuss it even with other employees inside the
office, said staff at iGate's Bangalore campus, where about 7,000 people
work.
With nearly $1 billion (about 5,500 crore) in revenues, iGate has around 30,000 employees, a majority of them in India.
On
Wednesday, several iGate employees told ET, on condition of anonymity,
that they were concerned about the company's growth after the exit of
Murthy, who has been its face for most of the past decade.
iGate's India employees shocked
One
of the employees, who worked at iGate's White Field office on the
outskirts of Bangalore, said his team members were 'shocked' and had
spent more time at the canteen and smoking zone than inside the office.
"Everyone was stunned, but nobody was allowed to discuss it," he said.
Murthy,
who joined iGate in 2003 after losing his job at Infosys for getting
involved in a sexual relationship with his secretary Reka Maximovitch,
is often credited with growing iGate from a little-known software firm
to a billion-dollar company that challenged larger rivals such as
Infosys and TCS.
Employees said his departure
might see other senior-level exits, especially those groomed by him.
"Phaneesh was popular among employees, and the fact is that we have lost
a leader," said one employee.
But not all
employees are shocked. Some said these events were part and parcel of
the software industry. "Having a relationship with a subordinate is
nothing new. In this industry there are many cases, some are reported
while others are not," one of them said.
Murthy
was a popular face at iGate's Bangalore campus, which he used to visit
at least once a month. For many employees, especially the juniors at the
software company who admired Murthy's shrewdness, his departure has
been difficult to digest.
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