Facing a multinational onslaught 
 
Sanjay K Pillai / New Delhi January 12, 2005 
(Business Week) 
 
 
Multinational companies are beginning to hire the best
and the brightest from campuses – and they're stepping
up their hiring. The outcome could be job hopping.  
  
Here’s a forecast that information technology company
men would ignore at their peril – IT company employees
will start to demand fatter pay cheques and job hop in
the next 12 months. That warning comes from Partha
Iyengar, vice president at Gartner Inc. Says he: “I
expect the mercenary behaviour to reappear in the next
12 months.”  
  
Oddly enough, the reason the IT industry will start to
see huge attrition rates is the very success of
outsourcing to India. Spurred by this, multinational
companies around the world have decided to come to
India, set up shop and hire aggressively.  
  
That should be music to the ears of the thousands of
employees at IT companies who are itching to switch
jobs, at a time when attrition rates at software
companies are hovering around the high teens. 

  See who’ll be hiring 

Company     Current headcount Additions        Time 
-------     -----------------  --------        ----- 
Sap AG           1100           3000           2006 
Merrill Lynch    800 TCS+Satyam 2000           2005 
EDS                             2000     
CSC              1800           3000           2005 
Philips Software over 1000      double -
 
Xansa            -              7000           2007  
People soft      360            1000           2005 
GE               15000          8000           2005 
Accenture        10000   
WNS Global       5000           6500-7000      2005 
Honeywell -      90-100 per month in 2004 -
 
Sun Microsystems 700            850-900        2005 
JP Morgan        2000        4000 Nxt couple of yrs 
Mellon           2100           2500 -
 
Aviva            3700           760 in India:
190 in SL                                      2005 
Veritas          675            1350           2005 
Reuters          340            1200           2005 
Syntel           850            1350-1400 -
 
Royal & Sun      -              1100 Nxt few yrs 
Hughes Software  3000           5500           2006 
Alcatel          600            1200           2005 
Cap Gemini       1100           2600           2005 
Lyolds TSB       1500           2500           2005 
Ness Tech        1350           2700           2005 
Deloitte         500-1000       5000 Nxt 5yrs 
 
  
A quick look at the number of people multinationals
are hiring tell the story. The top three multinational
companies, IBM, Cognizant Technology and Accenture,
added over 15,000 people in India in the last 10
months. Include Daksh, which IBM acquired, and the
number leaps to around 20,000. At the same time, the
top three Indian software companies too added about
20,000 people in India.  
  
Wipro itself recruited over 5,000 people in the
quarter ended in September. So the number of people
being hired could be similar for both the top local
and multinational companies in the months ahead.
Accenture which has about 10,000 people in India is
expected to double its headcount by the end of this
year.  
  
A look at the next 10 or so multinationals that have a
presence in India and the next 10 Indian software
companies reveals a very different story.  
  
Multinationals such as Microsoft, Oracle Corporation,
Electronic Data Systems, Computer Sciences
Corporation, Cisco Systems, Intel, Xansa, SAP,
PeopleSoft, Cap Gemini and Deloitte have cumulatively
ramped up by over 20,000 people in India in the last
10 months and have announced plans of hiring an equal
number, if not more, in the coming months and years.  
  
In contrast, 10 Indian mid-tier IT companies like
Patni Computers, NIIT, Mastek, i-flex, Polaris, CMC,
Tata Infotech, Mahindra British Telecom, Birlasoft and
MPhasis BFL have cumulatively added less than 10,000
people.  
  
That doesn’t exactly auger well for their future – it
can be argued that the IT services business is a
people intensive game.  
  
Notes an analyst at a Chennai-based IT firm: “
Multinationals are stealing the thunder from Indian
companies. History always repeats itself. It happened
to the fast moving consumer goods, financial services,
automobile and pharmaceutical industries. We are now
seeing a replay of it in IT services.”  
  
The bottomline, he contends, is that the Indian IT
services industry is losing out to multinationals when
it comes to recruitment.  
  
 Agrees Vivek Paul, vice chairman of the
Bangalore-based Wipro Ltd: “Foreign companies will end
up hiring more Indians than Indian companies will, not
because they are US or foreign based service companies
but because of US companies setting shop in India.
This will be a very fast growing area.” 

A recent AC Nielsen-ORG Marg campus survey confirms
this. Microsoft, Intel, Texas Instruments and other
multinationals outgunned Infosys Technologies, Wipro
and Satyam as preferred employers.  
  
What this implies is that the battle for talent will
intensify – and the big Indian software boys and the
big multinationals will walk away with the best and
the brightest.  
  
 N Lakshmi Narayanan, President and CEO at Cognizant
Technology, who concedes that attrition rates will go
up, believes that the battles will be fought on
college campuses around the nation. 

“Hiring by multinationals will have more of a
trickle-up effect rather than a trickle-down effect.
This will lead to small companies losing people to the
mid-tier ones and the mid-tier ones losing people to
the larger ones. In turn, this will see more and more
of the small and medium companies going to campuses
for hiring,” Narayanan notes.  
  
Indeed, most observers think that Indian companies
will have contend with more competition, both on
campus and at the lateral level, for talent. If,
currently, five companies are contending for bright
students on campus on day one, there could be eight
and then 12 or more in the future.  
  
As Narayanan points out, the level of employee
attrition depends on the growth of an industry – the
higher the growth, the higher the average attrition.
And employees gravitate to companies that see higher
growth because these companies offer them better
growth opportunities.  
  
“This is precisely what we are seeing with
multinational company hiring in India – they are
hiring from a zero base which helps them to be seen as
growing faster, because of which, their suction power
is also seen to be higher,” the Cognizant CEO says.  
  
This, of course, implies that mid-tier companies that
report below industry average growth rates are going
to be hit with a double whammy – they will be unable
to hire from the best campuses and they’ll be unable
to retain existing employees.  
  
To be sure, the smaller IT companies are aware of this
emerging situation and are doing their best to combat
it through better brand building.  
  
Says Ashok Soota, chairman and managing director of
the Bangalore-based $50 million MindTree Consulting:
“We are conscious of this but as a company we have
invested in creating a good brand. We have had
absolutely no problem in attracting talent so far and
the fact that recent best employer surveys have put us
in the top league is proof of that.”  
  
MindTree itself plans to hire about 1,000 people at
its newly-opened Hyderabad centre in the next two
years.  
  
The case of Virtusa Inc, a US-based mid-tier company
with about 1,600 employees across the globe, about
1,100 of them in India, is similar.  
  
Says Santanu Paul, general manager at Virtusa’s Indian
operations: “The demand-supply gap for talent is there
but ultimately I think size will not matter as much as
the quality of work. This apart, we have an aggressive
campus strategy which has helped us grow our brand on
campuses.”  
  
Virtusa has grown from 0 to 1,400 people in about four
years in the country and though Paul refuses to
disclose this, the company may end up with about 2,800
people by the end of next year.  
  
Most IT company heads differ on when when the
demand-supply mismatch will end. “If you ask me how
long the multinational company hiring will continue,
it will take the next several years (perhaps 7 or 8
years) until an equilibrium is reached,” says
Narayanan.  
  
MindTree’s Soota, though, predicts that the situation
will ease much earlier. “I expect this to happen only
for the next two years as by then the hirings by
multinational companies would have stabilised,” he
says.  
  
Significantly, the kind of people that the top
multinational companies are hiring and the kind of
people the top Indian companies are hiring are very
different.  
  
“The bulk of multinational company hiring will be
broad-based and not just for niche or specialist
skills. It would be similar to Indian companies going
to China and hiring people for broad-based skills,”
says Narayanan. At home, the top Indian companies are
hiring specialists.  
  
Multinational companies are tapping the low cost
employee advantage that Indian IT companies have by
setting up base here. What does all this mean for
Indian IT companies and their competitiveness?  
  
“I think that if you look it on an ongoing basis, the
broader question is, will the US IT service companies
with an Indian back end be in a position to trump us
or stop us in our growth? The answer is absolutely
not. Regardless of the fact that they have set up shop
in India, we continue to have the process discipline
and the global collaboration which they don’t. So
there is no doubt in our mind that even when US
companies set up shop in India, we continue to retain
an advantage,” replies Wipro’s Paul.  
  
That has to be seen. Meanwhile, the threat of
multinational companies increasingly writing the
software story in India rather than India’s IT
companies is real and simply can’t be dismissed. 
 
  
 
  
  
 



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