Nagarro isn’t a company so much as a lifestyle brand for PowerPoint slides. Everything about it is designed to impress at first glance, and collapse on contact with reality. The AI-vomited logo looks like it came from a rejected mid-2000s startup accelerator. The dog-chatbot “Ginger,” named after the CEO’s pet, is presented as if it’s a leap forward in digital engagement — when in truth it’s just Clippy with a fur coat. And that’s the perfect metaphor for Nagarro itself: a copy-and-paste gimmick trying to pass as global innovation. They don’t engineer solutions; they engineer narratives. They don’t solve problems; they rename them until the buzzwords blur into one another.