The evolution of Epsilon India from cost centre to growth engine
The centre has become a model for company-wide best practices related to talent development and geographical teamwork

Epsilon’s Global Capability Centre in Bengaluru just turned ten. And while anniversaries are often about looking back, this one is more about how far the company has come and how quickly it has had to adapt.
Epsilon launched its operations in 2015 as a delivery hub, and it now functions as the company's largest site who work on advertising and marketing products and services for Fortune 500 brands. The centre has become a model for company-wide best practices related to talent development and geographical teamwork.
At Epsilon teams work as integrated squads that manage entire product lifecycles across customer platforms and products like loyalty, messaging and retail media. They design, build, test, deploy and run. The principle is clear: build once, scale everywhere. Reusing product components across markets speeds up development and improves quality.
The leadership principle emphasizes that intelligence along with craftsmanship must exist both within the platforms and among teams. “The goal is to build smarter, deliver faster and learn every day. By bringing teams across regions closer, ideas travel and outcomes scale,” says Pratik Nath, Managing Director, Epsilon India.
At Epsilon, employees believe that the impact needs to go beyond the workplace. So, they actively contribute to education, sustainability and social welfare projects, making community responsibility part of everyday work. Together, flexible work policies, open communication, and shared ownership have created a way of working that feels seamless across borders and time zones.
First, an AI leapfrog - embedding intelligence across the build-run lifecycle, so innovation happens at enterprise scale with speed and responsibility. Second, a sharper focus on client delight - delivering measurable outcomes, faster time-to-market, and solutions that help clients succeed in a rapidly changing technology landscape. And third, workforce transformation - building an AI-fluent, future-ready talent pool that can move fluidly between product and services as needs evolve.
India will remain central to this journey. The role of GCCs has already shifted from execution to impact, and the challenge ahead is to move faster, exceed client expectations and turn innovation into outcomes. The future is being built here, and it is being built at speed.
The pages slugged ‘Brand Connect’ are equivalent to advertisements and are not written and produced by Forbes India journalists.
First Published: Sep 24, 2025, 10:00
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