With more than 25 years of experience building proprietary platforms and accelerating product development, Ness Digital Engineering has announced a leadership transition with the appointment of Sudip Singh as its new CEO.

In today’s technology landscape, business leadership goes beyond managing resources. The most effective executives are those who can decode the future — understanding how emerging tools reshape business models, aligning talent to leverage them, and having the courage to pivot when the ecosystem demands it.

Singh steps into the role following a successful tenure as CEO of ITC Infotech and a global leadership career at Infosys. He succeeds Dr. Ranjit Tinaikar, who is stepping down after six years leading the company.

“Ness’ strong market presence and deep domain expertise have helped build platforms that support some of the world’s most important businesses,” Singh said in a statement.

“This foundation uniquely positions us to navigate the AI economy, where the real value lies in delivering tangible business outcomes. I’m excited to lead Ness with our customers’ success as our true north.”

One of Singh’s immediate priorities will be scaling the company’s recent innovations, including ATONIS, a full lifecycle AI workbench designed to amplify human productivity in software development.

Beyond building these tools, Ness has also been measuring their real-world impact. The company recently tracked more than 100 engineers using AI copilots in live production environments to assess productivity gains.

The strategic footprint Singh inherits also includes growing operations in Latin America. In 2025, under Tinaikar’s leadership, Ness opened a new office in Guadalajara, Mexico — strengthening its global network of AI centers of excellence and reinforcing the region’s role as a nearshoring hub for North American partners.

According to research from MIT, companies led by executives who are prepared for the digital era outperform competitors with 48% higher revenue growth and profit margins that are 15% stronger. As AI reshapes the competitive landscape, leadership vision may prove just as important as the technology itself.