Thanks to Covid, it's raining jobs, perks for IT geeks in country


Bengaluru, Aug 16 (IANS): The Covid crisis has unleashed disasters for countries across the globe. However, for the IT professionals in the country, it has emerged as a boon.

The huge capital inflows have enabled large, as well as startup IT firms to launch all-out attempts to acquire a talent pool. Not only this, IT companies are vying with each other in giving offers to this skilled pool.

Taking note of the situation experts opine, on an informal note, that rules have been made on minimum wages in the interest of an employee. Going by the recent trends in the IT industry though the government must be putting caps on maximum wages to protect employers.

Startups are making generous, creative offers to attract the talent, while reputed companies are expanding hiring programmes and taking up compensation review.

BharatPe CEO & Co-founder Ashneer Grover has announced hiring of 100 persons to the tech team for the ICC T20 World Cup scheduled to be held in Dubai between October 17 and November 14.

He claims to offer market leading salaries and life-changing equity, BMW Superbike, in-vogue gadgets for WFH Life. "Join us now and work from Dubai during the T20 world cup. Join and ride in style," the company announcement reads. The company is offering to choose from BMW G 310 R, Royal Enfield Himalayan, Java Perak, KTM RC390, KTM Duke 390 bikes.

I is also offering gadgets such as iPad+pencil, Bose headphones, Smart Keyboard folio, Harman Kardon speakers, Green Soul Monster chair, Firefox Typhoon 27.5D bicycle and others.

Another reputed company has resumed its plan of giving Benz cars to its coveted employees. The company has already given 50 plus Benz cars in 2013 to employees, sources in the IT industry explain.

However, Yashu Ved, a senior techie with a prominent company says, these offers are not a new phenomenon. Joining bonus up to Rs 6 lakh is common in the IT industry. "If a professional gets Rs 6 lakh as retaining bonus, he will have to pay around Rs 1 lakh as tax. If it is given in the form of a bike or gadget, there will be no tax deductions, he adds. "The companies are pursuing the right candidates aggressively," he says.

The demand for technical professionals' has gone skywards in the industry as startups have started paying almost two times higher than what larger companies are offering. The development has reversed the trend in the IT industry. The software professionals who once only focused on large companies are now keen on joining startups.

Talking to IANS, Subramanyam S, Founder, President and CEO of AscentHR explained, there is huge flow of capital into the IT ecosystem. Startups which do not have to really demonstrate profits and revenue and profitability, have started throwing in more money towards candidates. Since they want resources on board and show certain efforts towards building concepts, good market strategy, the amount of money being thrown at the startups in terms of salary cost has become stupendous, which is going to hurt the larger industry, he points out.

"The capital inflow is coming which is not going to stop for the next 5 or 10 years, ecosystem for starters is going to be a killer in India. The startups are suddenly throwing higher costs than larger industries are doing. Earlier, people were not joining startups because they were not comfortable and secure. Today, start-up ecosystems have become very attractive for talented people. They pay 1.75 to 2 times what larger industries are paying," Subramanyam notes.

Covid drew up the IT curve in the industry on how processes can be managed even when there is a calamity of not being able to put all workforces together, he adds.

"We are seeing an upward trend in the industry. Secondly, there has not been a great amount of skills that have come out of colleges and universities for the past two years which we call as two cycles. Lack of availability of these two cycles has suddenly pushed the cost of recruitment itself very high and people with 5 years of experience have suddenly become very important," Subramanyam notes.

Tech jobs have seen a steady uptick as the reliance on tech solutions across businesses and extension of the ‘remote work' continue. Our India Hiring Tracker revealed that IT was one of the top sectors to drive hiring activity in the previous quarter, says Sashi Kumar, Head of Sales, Indeed India.

Sashi Kumar further states, postings on Indeed, a real time indicator of labour market activity further indicated that demand for tech software jobs grew 19 per cent between July 20 and July 21.

"Other roles in the tech help category such as sap consultant, database administrator, systems administrator, technical support, and support engineer also saw a 5 per cent increase in the same period. We believe the transition of digitization and ‘virtual' operations will continue to create strong demand for tech-related jobs across sectors." says Sashi Kumar.

In Covid scenario, the accountability quotient of an individual becomes very important. That suddenly puts an onus on the employer to hire people who are trained, who can independently handle and who are accountable. Suddenly you have a set of persons who are really critical for the organization. That is the challenge. That, coupled with the non -availability of resources for about 2 cycles has hurt cost for the industry, Subramanyam of AscentHR says.

Market leaders, TCS, Wipro, Infosys, quote their level of attrition between 12 per cent and 18, as per sources, while the level of attrition has reached 30, he adds.

For a guy in search of employment, multiple options available and multiple choices give him the ability to choose. The candidate will take one offer which is already a 30 per cent hike and demand a 10 per cent extra. Then he gets a 40 per cent hike. By then he is relieved, if he gets the third company he can tell him he would join in 2 days and get a 10 per cent premium, Subramanyam says.

Offer drops are going very high, almost at 40 per cent, a very high level, which is not an acceptable phenomenon, Subramanyam elaborates.

Talent market is comparative right now. On the engineering side and technical side there is tough competition to attract the right candidates, says Rahul Raj, Founder & CEO, Flobiz, a Bengaluru based SMB digitization start up.

"If you are looking at quality engineers, we are already seeing a crunch. Because of the crunch, the expectation is getting higher. They are looking for flexible work, CTC and technology stack. The companies which are going to provide quality work with all this are able to rope in candidates.

"As for the non technical part of it, there is a massive talent pool and there is no crunch. On the engineering side and technical side there is tough competition to attract the talent.

"Large companies can afford, able to attract talent as they are able to provide a better work environment, better perks, they will also be able to offer a brand and job security, stability. Funding is coming in for start ups and for their sustained growth they will also try to rope in talented folks.

"Engineering talent is at a position of advantage. So, anybody who is actively looking for jobs will have multiple options, anybody who is not active will still get inbound requests to multiple companies. As companies are trying to get the best of the candidates, they are also trying to get the best offer, there is nothing wrong in it," Rahul says.

"Employee's well-being is of paramount importance to us and we have had multiple interventions in this regard including facilitating vaccination for them and dependents. We rolled out several intense employee engagement initiatives including career accelerating opportunities, compensation reviews and learning and development interventions. As the demand for digital talent explodes, rising attrition in the industry poses a near-term challenge. We plan to meet this demand by expanding our hiring programme of college graduates for the financial year 2022 to 35,000 globally," Pravin Rao, Chief Operating Officer, Infosys says.

"We remain confident of delivering on the margin guidance, underpinned by our comprehensive review, talent acquisition and retention," said Nilanjan Roy, Chief Financial Officer, Infosys.

 

 

 

 

  

Top Stories

Comment on this article

  • Flavian, Mangalore/Kuwait

    Mon, Aug 16 2021

    Time to stop blaming Modiji. Now rush for IT proficients. But should bot be consideredas a blessing in disguise or at the cost of Pandemic. We have lost in lacs of people due to Covid.

    DisAgree Agree [1] Reply Report Abuse

  • sense_shetty, Mangalore

    Mon, Aug 16 2021

    Engineer is the king .. But Indian IT talent is still working class only ... They cannot produce world products like microsoft . or hardware like dell or IBM ..until we do that we can be considered as slaves of west . they want a ready made template from the west ..nothing of their own .. But I find some good interest now ..there are Indian Web browsers etc

    DisAgree [1] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Rudolf Rodrigues, Mumbai

    Mon, Aug 16 2021

    Millions of existing workers must be reskilled, while new workers must ready for jobs that don't yet exist. "Soft" skills will be just as important as "hard," or technical, ones. The private and public sector need to work together to meet the scale of the challenge. The task of reskilling millions of workers may feel overwhelming. By 2022 alone, 75 million jobs will probably be displaced across 20 major economies, while 133 million new ones will spring up in industries that are only just gaining traction. At the same time, it’s estimated that nearly two-thirds of children who started school in 2016 will go on to have jobs that don’t yet exist. So, how can we adequately prepare tomorrow’s workforce at the same time as retraining the hundreds of millions of people whose work is evolving?

    DisAgree Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Rudolf Rodrigues, Mumbai

    Mon, Aug 16 2021

    Most of these new start-ups are a bubble which would burst in a short period of time! Such types of salaries & perks are logically not sustainable, only hype & hoopla!

    DisAgree [5] Agree [18] Reply Report Abuse

  • Bhaskar, Mangalore

    Mon, Aug 16 2021

    So with millions of presently unemployed college graduates with engineering degrees during the Covid pandemic, you're creating the impression that there is unparalleled employment and success with huge wage increases and inflated salaries? Boom times? Many companies have gone bankrupt. Many businesses remain closed. Who will profit by such propaganda? The IT schools and those who profit out of increased enrollment? Our leaders are doing their best during this ongoing crisis, but shouldn't we see the reality of the effects of the pandemic?

    DisAgree [5] Agree [30] Reply Report Abuse

  • Shankar, Mangaluru

    Mon, Aug 16 2021

    Where is our John, the conspiracy theory specialist? Is covid a brainchild of Indian IT specialists?

    DisAgree [7] Agree [17] Reply Report Abuse

  • John, Mangalore

    Mon, Aug 16 2021

    What's the use, western elite have gone for big farm lands to feed the world GMO food, same time trying bring down stocks and economies worldwide? and bring their single world currency to further enslave humanity under them? to bring in their new world order? for major depopulation and control of world resources ?

    DisAgree [1] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • John, Mangalore

    Mon, Aug 16 2021

    Our Doctors are smarter than Dr Fraudci, 'Dr' gates.... and are well informed... INDIAN DOCTORS for TRUTH, INDIAN BAR ASSOCIATION, mumbai doing wonderful job educating and saving public from so called vaccinations by globalists elite. They have raised a formal complaint against WHO and others also against forced and coercive vaccinations with the President, PM and HM, also based on recent two high court decisions. Their site link is ... https://indianbarassociation.in/legal/ and their latest GLOBAL COVID CRIME information at.. https://indianbarassociation.in/latest-update/

    DisAgree [2] Agree [5] Reply Report Abuse

  • Jossey Saldanha, Thane

    Mon, Aug 16 2021

    India will now improve its GDP ...

    DisAgree [8] Agree [10] Reply Report Abuse


Leave a Comment

Title: Thanks to Covid, it's raining jobs, perks for IT geeks in country



You have 2000 characters left.

Disclaimer:

Please write your correct name and email address. Kindly do not post any personal, abusive, defamatory, infringing, obscene, indecent, discriminatory or unlawful or similar comments. Daijiworld.com will not be responsible for any defamatory message posted under this article.

Please note that sending false messages to insult, defame, intimidate, mislead or deceive people or to intentionally cause public disorder is punishable under law. It is obligatory on Daijiworld to provide the IP address and other details of senders of such comments, to the authority concerned upon request.

Hence, sending offensive comments using daijiworld will be purely at your own risk, and in no way will Daijiworld.com be held responsible.