What CX and EX Leaders Can Learn from HCLTech’s 2026 Fortune Recognition
It’s 9:17 a.m.
You’re staring at three dashboards that disagree with each other.
CSAT is up.
Employee attrition is rising.
Your AI pilot looks impressive in demos—but customers still repeat themselves across channels.
Someone in the room asks the question no one wants to answer:
“If we’re investing so much in experience, why doesn’t it feel… admired?”
That tension—between activity and admiration—is where modern CX and EX leadership now lives.
And it’s exactly why recognitions like HCLTech being named to Fortune’s World’s Most Admired Companies 2026 list matter far beyond branding headlines.
This isn’t about trophies.
It’s about how experience-led companies align technology, people, and purpose at scale—and what CX leaders can operationalize from it.
Short answer: Admiration is the outcome of consistent experience design across customers, employees, partners, and society—not a campaign or metric.
Fortune’s ranking evaluates companies on nine parameters, including leadership quality, innovation, talent attraction, and social responsibility. These are not siloed traits. They are experience signals.
For CX and EX leaders, “most admired” status reflects three realities:
Admiration is what happens when journeys connect instead of fracture.
Short answer: 2026 is the year CX ambition collides with AI reality.
CX leaders face a paradox:
Many organizations have AI everywhere—and coherence nowhere.
HCLTech’s recognition lands at a moment when leaders must answer a harder question:
The companies admired today solved that problem yesterday.
Short answer: Experience leadership is no longer about touchpoints—it’s about systems thinking.
HCLTech was recognized for:
None of these live inside a single CX function.
They emerge when:
As CEO C. Vijayakumar notes, the focus remains on meaningful, AI-driven outcomes—not AI theater.
That phrase matters.
Meaningful outcomes require experience orchestration, not automation chaos.
Short answer: Experience orchestration connects people, platforms, and purpose across the entire enterprise.
Most CX failures don’t happen at the frontline.
They happen between teams.
Experience orchestration solves for:
Instead of asking:
Orchestration asks:
Here’s a practical framework CXQuest leaders can adapt:
Admired companies align AI investments to why they exist, not what’s trending.
Without this, AI accelerates inconsistency.
Employees experience the organization before customers do.
If tools frustrate teams:
HCLTech’s scale—226,000+ people across 60 countries—makes this non-negotiable.
A. AI works when it:
B. AI fails when it:
Admired companies design AI with human override built in.
Customers notice when leadership words and frontline reality diverge.
Admiration grows when:
Consistency is the most underrated CX capability.
Short answer: Technology should simplify lives, not impress slides.
Many CX stacks are overengineered and under-loved.
Admired organizations:
HCLTech’s positioning across AI, cloud, engineering, and software highlights a critical insight:
Treating CX as a departmentExperience is an outcome of organizational behavior, not a team.
Measuring satisfaction, ignoring trustHigh CSAT does not equal high admiration.
Scaling AI without reskilling humansAutomation without enablement creates silent resistance.
Optimizing journeys in isolationLocal improvements can damage global experience.
Admiration is built in meetings, incentives, and hiring decisions—not brand films.
Short answer: Start where friction is loudest—not where technology is newest.
Ask these questions:
Those are your experience fault lines.
Use this as a CXQuest-ready diagnostic:
| Area | Question | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Leadership | Do leaders share CX accountability? | Yes = alignment |
| EX | Do employees trust internal tools? | Yes = adoption |
| AI | Can humans override AI decisions? | Yes = safety |
| Data | Is insight shared across teams? | Yes = coherence |
| Purpose | Can teams explain why changes happen? | Yes = belief |
No. It reflects peer, analyst, and leadership perception shaped by lived experience.
Yes. Orchestration matters more than scale.
Only when paired with clear ownership and human judgment.
Use shared outcomes like trust, effort reduction, and time-to-resolution.
Mistaking automation progress for experience progress.
Companies don’t become admired by accident.
They earn it—decision by decision—by refusing to separate technology from humanity, customers from employees, and innovation from responsibility.
That’s the real experience advantage.
And in 2026, it’s the only one that compounds.
The post HCLTech’s 2026 Fortune Recognition: Why “Most Admired” Companies Win the Experience War appeared first on CX Quest.

