<p>The company has more than 300 staff in the region, with operations in the UAE, Oman, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. Last week, Mahindra Satyam signed a deal with state-backed Oman firm Omran to provide support for major projects.<br /><br />"As part of the global expansion strategy for Mahindra, we obviously take into account business growth," CEO C P Gurnani told Arabian Business magazine.<br /><br />"We clearly know that the Gulf Cooperation Council and Middle East and North Africa (regions) are growing in terms of business velocity and momentum," he added.<br />Mahindra earlier this month inked a deal with US information systems giant Cisco, a key step in its bid to move beyond the Indian domestic market, where it has a hand in everything from auto manufacturing to computers.<br /><br />After a decade in the region, the company was seeing a boom in GCC states like the UAE and Qatar. It was one of the pacesetters for Indian expansion into the Gulf, an ever-growing but relatively new market, Satyam's MENA head, Bobby Gupta, said.<br />In the Middle East, the Satyam-Cisco team will largely be focusing on helping clients implement cloud computing, considered the new frontier in IT.<br /><br />This region "is going to be one of the biggest areas with Cisco. We're talking about water, energy management, catering to the needs of a digital consumer," he said.<br />"The Middle East will be big deal for us and Cisco as a market," he added.<br /><br />The company said in a statement that it aims to see USD 500-700 million in profits over the next three to five years on a global scale as a result of the deal.</p>
<p>The company has more than 300 staff in the region, with operations in the UAE, Oman, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. Last week, Mahindra Satyam signed a deal with state-backed Oman firm Omran to provide support for major projects.<br /><br />"As part of the global expansion strategy for Mahindra, we obviously take into account business growth," CEO C P Gurnani told Arabian Business magazine.<br /><br />"We clearly know that the Gulf Cooperation Council and Middle East and North Africa (regions) are growing in terms of business velocity and momentum," he added.<br />Mahindra earlier this month inked a deal with US information systems giant Cisco, a key step in its bid to move beyond the Indian domestic market, where it has a hand in everything from auto manufacturing to computers.<br /><br />After a decade in the region, the company was seeing a boom in GCC states like the UAE and Qatar. It was one of the pacesetters for Indian expansion into the Gulf, an ever-growing but relatively new market, Satyam's MENA head, Bobby Gupta, said.<br />In the Middle East, the Satyam-Cisco team will largely be focusing on helping clients implement cloud computing, considered the new frontier in IT.<br /><br />This region "is going to be one of the biggest areas with Cisco. We're talking about water, energy management, catering to the needs of a digital consumer," he said.<br />"The Middle East will be big deal for us and Cisco as a market," he added.<br /><br />The company said in a statement that it aims to see USD 500-700 million in profits over the next three to five years on a global scale as a result of the deal.</p>