Search for Stocks /

CyberTech Systems & Software Ltd: 44% Profit Growth, 100% Jugaad with ArcGIS

Spotted a factual error — a wrong number, date, or fact? Tell us and we will check the source.

1. At a Glance

CyberTech Systems & Software Ltd (CSSL) is that mid-cap cousin of the IT family who doesn’t code billion-dollar apps but quietly makes money from maps and SAP implementations. Incorporated in 1995, it provides spatial analytics, SAP cloud solutions, and IT services — mostly for U.S. clients. FY25 sales? ₹236 Cr. Profit? ₹36 Cr. CMP? ₹163. ROE? 15%. And debt? A laughable ₹6.7 Cr. Basically, this is an IT firm that behaves like a fixed deposit but with occasional caffeinated profit spikes.


2. Introduction

If Infosys is Shah Rukh Khan of IT and TCS is Amitabh Bachchan, then CyberTech is that underrated Pankaj Tripathi character actor — always reliable, rarely in headlines, and surprisingly profitable in certain roles.

The company’s niche? Maps + SAP + Cloud. They’re into Esri ArcGIS (fancy name for “where’s what?” mapping software) and Spatialitics — their in-house geospatial analytics SaaS. It’s like mixing Google Maps with your company’s ERP to know not just where your assets are but also how fast they’re depreciating.

They’ve got U.S. subsidiaries, Canadian step-down units, and partnerships with Microsoft, Cisco, ESRI, and SAP. Translation: they hang out with the cool kids at the IT cafeteria but don’t get invited to headline events.

Question for you: would you rather own the company that builds ChatGPT… or the one that quietly ensures your city sewer mapping integrates with SAP billing?


3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)

CyberTech is not trying to be another IT sweatshop. Its playbook:

  • SAP Cloud Solutions: Helping enterprises move their dusty ERP to shiny cloud servers.
  • Esri ArcGIS Platforms: Fancy maps for governments, utilities, and security agencies. Basically, “find my pothole” for municipalities.
  • Spatialitics Cloud SaaS: A geospatial platform that claims to “bridge enterprise & location data.” In desi terms, “tumhare bijli ke bill ka GPS.”

Revenue: 99% IT services, 1% mutual fund income (because, why not).
Clients: U.S. government agencies, public safety, healthcare, retail, utilities.
Locations: U.S. offices in Chicago, Philly, LA, Denver, Salt Lake City. Indian ops in Mumbai, Pune, and Thane (where the dev center churns out geospatial code like

Read Full 16 Point breakdown. Continue reading →
EduInvesting runs entirely on reader support — ₹360 a year keeps the lights on.
Become a member
Already a member? Log in
Read Full 16 Point breakdown. Continue reading →