Business Standard

GLOBAL GOES LOCAL

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have thousands of people in their campuses helping their parent remain profitable.

Today, there are about 1,100 GICs in the country, employing more than 800,000 people, and generating approximat­ely $23 billion in revenues, according to Bain & Co and industry body National Associatio­n of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom). Among them are GE, J P Morgan, Standard Chartered, Airbus and Boeing.

“It’s their ability to create cost savings for an enterprise, while tapping India’s talent pool that has led to this impressive growth,” the report said. While the focus on reducing cost is still important, the shift towards digital is also making global tech firms to boost their India presence. Globally, organisati­ons are spending as much as 45 per cent of their IT budgets on digital technologi­es as against 20 per cent a few years ago, according to the Bain & Co. report.

Most of the hiring, therefore, is being done in areas of digital and analytics. While these functions are new to the country, companies are excited about the large number of fresh engineerin­g graduates as they can be easily trained and put on projects as and when required. Given the talent crunch in the US and Europe, smaller companies are looking to India to hasten their transition to digital technologi­es.

“The trend of captives stepping up hiring in India would continue,” says Rituparna Chakrabort­y, cofounder and executive vicepresid­ent at staffing agency TeamLease. “Not just companies such as Facebook and Google, we may see pharma giants, banks hiring people in India. It may not be necessaril­y only technology companies. It is a recognitio­n of India as the hotbed for talent regardless of what is happening across the world.”

Broadridge, a US-based technology services provider to financial services sector, says it would hire 1,500 people at its newly-added facility in Bengaluru. The company employs nearly 3,000 people together at its Hyderabad and Delhi offices.

“Broadridge India is currently looking at hiring a mix of freshers and laterals; people who are dedicated to technology and innovation, and the developmen­t of new capabiliti­es related to blockchain implementa­tion, artificial intelligen­ce and other disruptive technologi­es,” says V Laxmikanth, managing director, Broadridge Financial Solutions (India).

Luxoft Holdings, a Switzerlan­d-based software developmen­t firm, recently announced that it would set up a developmen­t facility in India. Luxoft has, however, not divulged other details about its hiring plans. Another cloud-based technology service provider Xactly, which is stepping up hiring in India, did not respond to an email with detailed queries sent by Business Standard. Two small firms, Rubrik and Luxoft, will together hire up to 2,000 people in India More jobs will be created in emerging areas such as blockchain, fintech and artificial intelligen­ce There are 1,100 global in-house centres focused on product developmen­t in the country, employing 8,00,000 people Switzerlan­d-based Luxoft Holdings plans to set up a new product developmen­t facility in the country More senior leaders, those three levels below CEO, of global companies to be based out of their India GICs in the next three years The scale and scope of work managed by GICs is set to increase

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