Wipro said it will acquire Harman's Digital Transformation Solutions (DTS) unit for $375 million in a move that will give the services firm more engineering and research and development reach.
 
Harman is a unit of Samsung. Samsung bought Harman in 2016 for $8 billion in a move that would expand its audio technology as well its reach into auto infotainment, telematics and connected safety systems.
 
 
By selling Harman DTS to Wipro, Samsung gets to focus on the technology with Wipro focusing on services for key industries. Wipro will get 5,600 DTS employees in the deal as well as the leadership team. Harman DTS serves telecom, industrial, life sciences, hospitality and retail verticals.
 
Srini Pallia, CEO of Wipro, said DTS will give the company "specialized engineering expertise" that can be combined with the company's AI and consulting business. DTS will give Wipro heft in domain-led design, connected products, accelerators and autonomous agents.
 
As part of the purchase, Wipro entered a multi-year pact with Harman and Samsung. DTS will be integrated into Wipro's engineering global business unit. The deal is expected to close before the end of 2025.
 

Constellation Research's take

Constellation Research analyst Chirag Mehta said:

“Engineering R&D (ER&D) fueled by AI is now a primary battleground for global enterprises seeking to accelerate innovation and stay competitive in a fast-evolving market. Wipro’s acquisition of Harman’s DTS business—bringing over 5,600 engineers across the Americas, Europe, and Asia—significantly enhances their digital engineering capabilities with deep domain-led design, connected-product expertise, AI-native platforms, and proprietary accelerators .

The broader industry context underscores why GSIs are doubling down here: Cognizant’s recent acquisition of Belcan, an established aerospace and defense engineering leader, reflects the same urgency to capture high-value ER&D opportunities where domain depth and scale matter. By merging specialist strength with global reach, GSIs are positioning themselves to deliver end-to-end engineering services that combine consulting, design, and AI-native execution.

In this light, Wipro’s move is not just about capacity—it’s about competing in a new wave of engineering services where clients demand agility, IP-rich platforms, and the assurance of global scale. The ER&D market is evolving into the next frontier of growth for services firms, and this acquisition marks a critical step in redefining how engineering innovation is delivered worldwide.”