Indian IT companies Wipro, Infosys to tweak hiring strategy
BANGALORE: India's IT companies, which hired approximately 1.5 lakh
students from campuses last year, will be hiring much less during this
placement season starting August-September.
Country's third-largest software exporter Wipro, which had planned to
keep the ratio of on-campus and off-campus hiring at 90:10 in the
beginning of the year, has now changed it to 70:30, a senior executive
from the Bangalore-based company said. "We will hire in a measured way
till we get more (demand) visibility and increase off-campus numbers,"
the executive added.
In campus hires, companies have to make offers and wait for at least six
months till the student finishes his degree. But it can hire off-campus
as and when there is demand for more hands. Off-campus recruitments
include freshers who had opted out of placements and some with very
little work-experience and are picked by companies through hiring drives
and job fairs.
"Off-campus hiring is gaining traction, especially among large IT firms
that are cautious and are not able to take long-term business
decisions," says Nasscom President Som Mittal said. "It helps them to
take hiring decisions based on their needs."
Nasscom has cut IT-BPO industry's growth forecast to 11-14% this year,
down from 16% last year. Some companies like Infosys have given a
revised projection of 5%. IT companies are looking to calibrate hiring
to the slowdown.
Last month, country's second-largest IT exporter Infosys said it could
delay the joining dates of over 25,000 freshers it had hired from
campuses in the 2011 placement season. Its mid-tier rival iGate, too,
has delayed joining dates of close to 1,000 fresh engineers by a month
or two.
TCS, India's largest IT firm which will hire 50,000 people this year, plans to maintain its campus hiring.
Companies say that quality is not an issue in off-campus hiring -
despite many of the applicants being rejects from previous placement
processes - if one is prepared to search harder for the right hires. "If
3 out of 10 people are suitable on-campus, that ratio will be much
lower off-campus. You have to drudge a lot more to get the right
people," says Naveen Narayanan, Global Head -Talent Acquisition, HCL
Technologies.
HCL is willing to take the extra effort and will maintain its 70:30
ratio of on-campus to off-campus this year. It makes economic sense to
spread hiring across all months, instead doing the bulk during placement
season.
Mid-tier firms are following suit, but to break the monopoly enjoyed by
the IT mammoths during placements. "Off-campus increases our chance of
finding the right talent," Parthasarathy NS, COO of MindTree, said.
"Large companies often visit campuses and recruit 95% of the best
students on day one. Smaller firms, which typically visit on day 3 and
4, are left with a very small number," he added.
MindTree has therefore decided to increase its off-campus quota from 10%
of total hires to 30% this year. This strategy is expected to give the
Bangalore-based firm wider reach in tier-III and -IV colleges.
"Given the uncertain economic scenario, I would assume that on-campus
placement numbers are going to come down this year," says Bhaskar
Chavli, Chief Delivery Officer at NIIT Technologies. "Companies may want
to see how business turns out and then decide on hiring targets."
Gurgoan-based start-up CoCubes.com - it connects companies and colleges
through an online recruitment platform - has seen on-campus hiring over
the past one year drop by 30-40%. The start-up, which works with
companies like Capgemini and UST Global, had experienced a rush for
off-campus demand in 2010. Back then Accenture placed urgent orders for
1,500 freshers off-campus in eight weeks and feels sudden demand will
come their way again.
"A similar trend seems to be coming back this year as more companies
wait for the economic environment to stabilise and then finalise their
hiring plans," says Harpreet Singh Grover, co-founder and CEO of
CoCubes.com.
Source : TOI
IT sector may see better hiring in 2013: Survey
MUMBAI: Information Technology services and pharmaceuticals are
likely to drive hiring growth in 2013, to fill mid and senior positions,
said HeadHonchos.com, a leading job search and career management
portal.
"The data in 'Management Hiring: Perspective report 2012', indicate that
IT or software services and pharmaceuticals or life sciences could
potentially drive the hiring growth in 2013," HeadHonchos said in a
release.
Pharma has emerged as a powerful employer, replacing industries like
telecom, which saw significant hiring in the previous year, it said.
The construction or real estate industry, despite slower growth
continues to see hiring, given the infrastructure thrust in the country,
it further said.
Foreign Direct Investment ( FDI) in retail, along with providing an
impetus to senior hiring in retail, is also expected to provide a
much-needed boost to the real estate industry, it pointed out.
Banking and finance is expected to be the dark horse, spurring employment on the back of the Banking Reforms Bill, it said.
In 2012, employers looked most for professionals in IT or software
services, FMCG industries and BPO or ITES, followed by real estate and
pharmaceuticals or life sciences to fill mid or senior positions.
The data released is based on the searches conducted by employers on the portal during last one year.
Elaborating on the findings, HeadHonchos.com CEO Uday Sodhi said,
"Middle and senior management hiring in 2012 was reflective of the less
than optimistic business or economic performance. Our discussions for
2013, with employers across industries indicate a revival of hiring for
mid-senior management positions, signalling progressive business
intent."
Source : TOI
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