Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Friday, Jul 14, 2006


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Software
Info-Tech - Human Resources
Get Latest BSE Quote
Talent hunt: IT firms under pressure to hike freshers' pay

Vishwanath Kulkarni

`Infosys Rs 2.7-lakh packet may set the benchmark for the industry'


Recruitment packet
The revised pay packet is about 12 per cent higher that the current payout of Rs 2.4 lakh per annum.
The company is planning to hire about 25,000 people this financial year and about 60-65 per cent will be campus recruits.

Bangalore July 13

, As the scramble to attract best talent from engineering campuses intensifies, IT firms are seen under pressure to increase the entry-level salaries.

The current salaries offered by various IT firms ranges from Rs 1.8 lakh per annum to about Rs 2.5 lakh for the campus recruits.

Infosys Technologies Ltd has taken the lead in announcing a higher pay packet for campus recruits, which industry analysts feel could become the benchmark for the industry and may force other players to follow suit.

Infosys said on Wednesday that it would pay its entry-level employees about Rs 2.7 lakh per annum effective April 2007.

This is about 12 per cent higher that the current payout of Rs 2.4 lakh per annum.

The company is planning to hire about 25,000 people this financial year and about 60-65 per cent will be campus recruits.

Increased offer

"The market is getting strained. We had to make an increased offer to attract best talent and we could afford to do it," said Mr T.V. Mohandas Pai, head of human resources at Infosys.

"Typically, we used to hike the salaries once the campus recruits joined the company. But here we are making it in advance," he said.

Others may follow

Mr Gautam Sinha, CEO of headhunting firm TVA Infotech, said the Infy's move to hike freshers' salary could become the benchmark for the industry.

"One could see the other three to four top players being forced to follow Infy's steps in pegging the entry-level salary at Rs 2.7 lakh," he said.

Mr Sinha said there is a pressure to attract good talent from the top 150-200 engineering colleges.

"With huge targets for recruitment, almost every IT firm is eyeing the same kind of talent and the pressure is similar to that one witnesses at the IIMs," he said.

"Hiring from campuses on a large scale started since 2003 and we are in the third year of such massive recruitment," Mr Sinha said adding the trend was set by Indian tech services firms.

Further, over 1,25,000 engineering graduates were likely to be picked up directly from the campuses this year, he said.

Mr Pratish Krishnan, technology analyst at Emkay Share and Stock Brokers, said the hike in freshers' salary would not have any major impact on Infosys' margins.

However, the other domestic and MNC lead players will be seen following Infosys in increasing salaries for campus recruits, he said.

More Stories on : Software | Human Resources | Software | Infosys Technologies Ltd

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



PNB Philip Kotler

Stories in this Section
Agrarian distress


HCL, Teradyne of US in $70-m outsourcing deal
Blasts leave their impact on hotels
Centre okays 2 transmission projects worth Rs 5,778 cr
UTI Bank Q1 net rises 30 pc
Shaken by blasts, chambers line up plans to meet crises
Talent hunt: IT firms under pressure to hike freshers' pay
The long and short of IT: Loyalty bonus
Sensex down 72 points on BoJ rate hike fears
3i Infotech gains on back of orders
Stock split talk drives Nesco
Western Rly to appoint security consultant
International bandwidth capacity grows 95 pc
Ad volumes rise 5% during World Cup
Nilgiri's in talks to offload stake
KKR of US to invest $515 m in Indian IT sector


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2006, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line