India’s role in global technology is undergoing a significant transformation. For over two decades, the country’s contributions have primarily focused on execution at scale, delivering software, operations, and engineering capacity for international enterprises. While this foundational role remains, it is expanding to include the design of platforms, operating models, and digital systems that influence how technology is constructed and implemented.
This shift indicates a transition from merely participating in value chains to exerting influence over system design amid a fragmented global environment marked by reconfigured supply chains, diverging regulatory frameworks, and increasingly stringent data governance.
Countries that successfully blend scale, talented workforce, and robust digital infrastructure are emerging as strategically significant. India stands out, evolving from a peripheral delivery center to a stable foundation for engineering capacity and digital innovation. Engagement with global enterprises is increasingly revolving around co-developing platforms, AI systems, and infrastructure rather than focusing solely on transactional delivery.
The crucial question centers on the depth of India’s impact on global technology design rather than its level of participation in it.
Scale, Capability, and Digital Depth
India’s current position is bolstered by structural scale, expertise, and a maturing digital ecosystem that goes beyond mere macroeconomic growth. With a GDP of $4.5 trillion and a digital economy anticipated to reach $1 trillion by 2028, India combines market scale with rapid talent expansion, projected to add 5 million developers by 2025 and host over 1,700 Global Capability Centres (GCCs). The ecosystem is further supported by a growing number of over 127 unicorns and a median age of approximately 28, which reinforces a strong culture of digital adoption and experimentation.
However, the shift underway cannot be solely attributed to scale and capability. The key transformation is behavioral; enterprise technology adoption is evolving from experimentation to accountability. This shift is evident in corporate boardroom priorities focusing on cyber resilience (80%), AI return on investment (59%), and workforce upskilling (45%), indicating a stronger emphasis on sustained impact. Technology investments are now becoming more outcome-driven, led by customer experience (56%), product and service innovation (52%), and new digital revenue streams (45%).
In this context, technology’s value in India is increasingly defined by its enterprise-wide impact rather than mere deployment.
The New Operating Model for Technology Leaders
As technology becomes intricately linked to business outcomes, decisions regarding architecture, data, and platform design now shape revenue, risk, and customer experience, rather than focusing solely on delivery performance. Technology leadership is increasingly characterized by its influence over outcomes rather than ownership of execution.
For technology leaders in India, the lines between business and technology roles are blurring. Technology decisions are becoming integral to business design, especially within digital-first operating models, which directly extend leadership accountability to business outcomes beyond technical delivery.
Key Trends Influencing Enterprise Technology Adoption and Leadership:
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Sovereign AI as Embedded Design: Sovereign AI is emerging as a critical design constraint. Requirements for data localization, explainability, and regulatory compliance are influencing system architecture, data structuring, and training/deployment of AI models.
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Infrastructure as a Scale Constraint: The move to production-scale AI is revealing limitations in legacy infrastructure. As workloads become increasingly real-time, distributed, and compute-intensive, organizations are compelled to adopt hybrid and resilient architectures capable of supporting continuous data processing and enterprise-wide AI deployment.
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Agentic AI and Execution Readiness: AI systems are gradually evolving from generating insights to executing tasks across IT operations, customer workflows, and enterprise processes. However, most organizations remain in experimentation or pilot phases, hindered by fragmented data environments and operating models that are not designed for autonomy.
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Capability as a Scaling Bottleneck: Despite the acceleration of automation, human capability remains a limiting factor. Skills gaps and uneven AI adoption persist across enterprises, while GCCs evolve into deeper centers for product engineering, AI development, and cybersecurity architecture, facilitating local access to global innovation.
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Leadership Under System-Level Complexity: Technology evolution, regulatory changes, and organizational redesigns are occurring concurrently, demanding coordination across interdependent systems rather than linear decision-making. This shift emphasizes alignment, coherence, and sustained execution in constantly evolving environments.
When Technology Becomes Business Design
Enterprise technology leadership is now embedded within business definition, where decisions on architecture, data, and AI directly influence risk, revenue, customer experience, and operating models. For technology leaders in India, this represents a departure from merely executing ownership toward comprehensive systems ownership in shaping enterprise technology’s behavior at scale and translating capability into tangible business outcomes.
This evolution raises the execution bar. Leaders must bridge the gap between AI ambitions and production readiness by designing operating models that ensure safe, scalable, and reliable autonomy. As technology providers adopt a “customer zero” approach, internal technology teams are expected to emulate this discipline, validating feasibility, demonstrating impact, and transitioning from theoretical potential to practical production, including with agentic AI.
In this climate, technology leadership is intertwined with enterprise performance; what is built increasingly determines organizational operations.
The author, Amit Gupta, is the CEO and Founder of Ecosystm.
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ETCIO. ETCIO disclaims any responsibility for any damage incurred by any individual or organization, directly or indirectly.
Published on May 20, 2026, at 08:02 AM IST.







