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IT Firms Slow Campus Hires, US slowdown hits job in India. some firms even withdrawing offer latter


By Dr arvind, Section Jobs Wanted/Available
Posted on Tue Aug 12, 2008 at 03:44:19 AM EST

From Matrimonials to swank offices, software engineers have been much sought after since the information technology boom brought thousands of lucrative jobs into India. Times are changing, though.

As the US economy goes from bad to worse, India's biggest outsourcing customer is getting stingy about placing new orders.

Why hirings are down

  • The IT-BPO industry, which generates $40 billion (Rs 1.72 lakh crore) in export revenue and employs 2 million people, has been hit by slowing growth.
  • The US, which accounts for 70% of India's outsourcing orders, is cutting IT budgets.
  • IBM hasn't recruited at all this year from Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai, from where it picked 66 students last year.

Survival tips
What IT professionals can do to ride out the turbulence:
  • Join the right company, not the one that pays you the most.
  • Invest in skill, competence on your own, don't outsource it to the company.
  • Work hard. You can't take it easy at such a time.
  • Have patience, the good times will return.
(As suggested by HCL Technologies CEO Vineet Nayar) But economic troubles at home appear to have slowed IBM's hiring plans.

The result: IT firms are hiring less and offering less as they pick talent from campuses.

In some cases, they are even refusing to go through with offers they've already made.

This is the first time since the outsourcing boom began a decade ago that IT companies are dragging their feet on campus hiring, placement officers at colleges across India told Hindustan Times.

"This year, there has been a 15 per cent drop in hiring from our campus," said Colonel P. Ramesh at Pune-based Army Institute of Technology, from where only 194 students were picked this year, compared to 232 last year The drop was sharper at Pune Vidyarthi Griha - down to 131 from 260 last year, said A.M.

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Kanetkar, placement head at the engineering college. "Companies like Wipro, Cognizant and Tata Consultancy Services didn't even participate in placement activities this time." The scene is as gloomy in and around Delhi, which has seen a mushrooming of private engineering colleges in recent years.

Tech Mahindra Ltd, India's eight largest software services exporter, had recruited 111 students from Noida-based Amity University last year The number is down to 20 this year, said Ajay Rana, director of technical placements. Several colleges in Bangalore said they have received hints of delays in recruitment from many companies.

Two of these - Sapi- ent and Schneider - have even withdrawn offer letters given to students of BMS College of Engineering, said H.S. Jagadish, of the Bangalore-based institute.

Kanetkar said 10 of his students were also denied jobs by IT giant IBM even after getting offer letters.

IBM has been upbeat about hiring in India, following a 2006 announcement by its chief Sam Palmisano that the firm would invest $6 billion (Rs 25, 800 crore) here to make it the company's biggest hub outside the US.

The company hasn't recruited at all this year from the Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai, from where it picked 66 students last year.

IBM avoided making any specific comment. An e-mail response from the company said: "We have instituted mandatory communication and aptitude tests to ensure that students still meet our criteria for providing high levels of services to our clients." Other companies were rather forthcoming.

Satyam Computers and HCL Technologies - India's fourth and fifth largest software services exporters - agreed they were going slow on hiring and focusing more on quality and skills of potential recruits than just their degrees.

The fall in placements comes despite companies changing their hiring mix in favour of fresh graduates, in a bid keep wage bills under check. In other words, the scene is worse when it comes to overall hiring by IT compames.

So much so that jobs in the IT sector are fast losing the lure they once had.

"Now the demand is more for engineers studying in civil, mechanical and electrical branches," said Shradhanjali Nayak, spokeswoman for Kalinga Institute of Information Technology, Bhubaneswar.

Source: HT, Aug-11-08(With inputs from Swaha Sahoo in New Delhi, BR Srikanth in Bangalore, MR Venkatesh in Chennai, Soumyajit Pattnaik in Bhubaneswar)

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