Visakhapatnam | 17 March 2026: Eisai Co.’s launch of its Global Capability Centre (EGCC) in Visakhapatnam marks a deliberate shift in how global pharmaceutical enterprises are structuring and governing their IT backbone. More than a geographic expansion, the move reflects a strategic transition toward centralized, insourced, and tightly governed digital infrastructure.
Located within the existing Eisai Knowledge Centre, the EGCC builds on over a decade of the company’s presence in India, evolving from a support base into a core node of global IT operations.
From Distributed IT to Centralized Control
Eisai Co. is a Japanese research-based pharmaceutical company headquartered in Tokyo, specializing in human health care (hhc) with a focus on neurology and oncology. Founded in 1941, it develops key products for Alzheimer’s, cancer, and insomnia. Eisai operates globally, employing over 10,000 people, among them about 1,500 are in research.
Headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, Eisai has significant operations in the U.S., Europe, India, and China. The company reported over ¥789 billion in revenue for FY2024, reflecting its strong position in global pharmaceutical markets. Eisai is listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange and is a member of the Topix 100 and Nikkei 225 stock indices.
Eisai’s decision to consolidate global IT infrastructure operations within the EGCC signals a broader enterprise priority: reducing fragmentation across regional systems while strengthening control, consistency, and governance.
In its initial phase, the centre will anchor:
- Global IT infrastructure management
- System standardization across markets
- Centralized governance frameworks
This shift away from regionally managed IT toward a unified operating model reflects a growing need for resilience, security, and execution speed in globally distributed organizations.
A Phased Capability Build-Out
Eisai’s approach follows a structured sequencing strategy, prioritizing operational stability before capability expansion.
Over time, the EGCC is expected to scale into:
- Cybersecurity and risk management
- Data and advanced analytics
- Enterprise applications and digital platforms
This phased model reflects a risk-calibrated approach to GCC maturity, where infrastructure consolidation forms the foundation for higher-order capabilities.

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