Reason to cheer! even for second run InstituteDate: 20-Oct-2009
India : Technology companies,
which are recovering from the downturn hangover, are now knocking at
the doors of not just premier engineering colleges but mid-tier ones
as well. Officials from several colleges say that firms such as TCS,
Wipro, Infosys, HP, Cisco, Sapient, IBM, Convergys BPO and Symphony
Services plan to hire in a big way. At BMS College of Engineering,
100 of the 800-900 students, who will pass out in January 2010, have
already got placed and they have been offered salaries ranging between
Rs 3 lakh and Rs 4.5 lakh per annum. “I am confident that even in
difficult situation, there will be over 50% placement,” BMS placement
officer HS Jagadeesh said. He said NetApp, HP, Aricent, Goldman Sachs,
Infosys, Wipro, MindTree, and public sector units like HAL and BEML
are expected to hire from the college. Cummins College of Engineering
Pune expects companies, such as Infosys and Wipro, and a host of smaller
companies to hire from its batch of 380 students. “IT companies now
prefer to recruit final year students. However, there are many engineering
students sitting on the bench and companies prefer to place them first,
because of their experience,” said Rohini TPO at HKBK. RV College of Engineering’s
director for placement NS Narahari says that they have sent invitations
to 100 companies. Firms like HP and Informatica have already visited
the campus, while Wipro and Infosys have promised to visit in January
2010. Also Read → Mid-tier IT cos on prowl again; look to hire up to 30K → Indian staff remained optimistic about companies' future in Q3 → How to score at an interview → Diwali Sweetener:
Google employees get surprise bonus According to R Nalini, principal
at AVC College of Engineering, TCS, Infosys and Wipro have informed
them that they will visit their campus in January 2010 to recruit freshers
from their batch of 500 students and it expects more than 50% placement.
RVS Engineering College, which saw less hiring in 2009, expects better
placements this time. “The situation was so bad that even BPOs had
stopped visiting the campus,” an official said. However, students are aware
of the weak dollar and the impact of the credit crisis, and are ready
to get placed with salaries ranging between Rs 1.8 lakh and Rs 5 lakh. “IT firms are hiring in large
numbers, but you may not get the desired position or salary,” said
a techie, who was waiting in a long queue for a job interview on Diwali
day. GC Jayaprakash, principal consultant at Stanton Chase International,
said firms have started expanding their operations in India over the
past two quarters and there is a surge in outsourcing contracts. “These companies do not want
to lose out any more business due to the non-availability of human resources,”
he said. To make students industry-ready and save time on training,
firms are collaborating with colleges and universities, to teach technical
skills.“Some engineering colleges are even offering to send their
students to onsite locations of various firms,” said Mr Jayaprakash. HP Khincha, vice-chancellor
of VTU, said: “To increase employability of the students, we are making
efforts to bring the industry and academia together.” Engineering graduates who were unable to find jobs have started to opt for higher education and core subjects such as mechanical, electronic and civil engineering. Posted By : Senior Correspondant
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