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and professionals becoming obsolescent a
tangible reality. What one knows today will be
outdated tomorrow. No other professional working
in any other sector encounters such immense
pressures to learn, to perform, to compete and
survive. The demands on today's professionals
are unrelenting and stringent. The software
professional has to:
- Learn new technologies in the shortest possible interval
- Master the nuances of technology
- Apply IT across a plethora of applications and in different emerging domains (Banking, Manufacture, Telecom, Insurance)
- And most important in globally competitive business critical solutions
In an environment where the IT professional is intellectually stretched and job security, at best, an oxymoron, it is unsurprising that money is an overriding consideration for an IT professional. They are rightly demanding the best possible payment for their skills.
IT professionals have been unfortunately branded
Mammon worshippers for their willingness to
market skills to highest bidders by those
unwilling to analyse recent history. Let's be
honest: Companies no longer take care of their
employees from cradle to grave, evident from the
global acceptance of
GE performance model wherein an employee is sacked for not delivering for two subsequent quarters. Corporate ethics and employee interests are dead amply evident in the recent exposes of corporate rapacity and greed. The Gods of the new economy Andersen Consulting, Enron and Worldcom proved they had feet of clay. Amidst such turbulence and incertitude, money is the only guarantee.
Gloibalisation has unleashed a battle for survival of the best. Its not an arena for the weak-hearted, laid-back, passive employees desiring lifetime employment, seeking security; working 9-5 based on historically acquired skills and competencies looking for gratuity and post retirement benefits. Hence the instant gratification mindset of employees is understandable among a generation battling with different technology terrain every two years.
(Mr. Achyut Menon is CEO Options, a
Hyderabad-based leading executive recruitment firm) |
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the salary offered is a mere 5 per cent higher or a mere 5 per cent lower. Experienced recruiters and HR managers can vouch they have met candidates who have rebuffed offers from stable companies and joined rather questionable companies with dubious work environments for Rs 10,000 more a year.
The intrinsic nature of the rapidly-changing constantly innovative technology landscape will continue to fuel paucity of technology skills and a bull run for high-quality talent. Knowledge workers are aware that in a fast-paced technology environment, human capital is the only bleeding edge competitive tool for companies.
Hence, it is but
right for talented employees to
expect acknowledgement, and
recognition for skills and
compensation practices that
precisely evaluate and reflect their
contribution to the company. The
high valuation of human capital and
IPO (independent professional
offering) awareness has, has
however, fostered a feeling of
indispensability and invincibility
blurring the distinction between the
refined art of negotiation and the
discredited art of blackmail. Every
recruiter or hiring manager can
recount shenanigans of IT
professionals who have accepted the
offer letter from a company, committed joining dates and then
used the offer letter to bargain
for a
higher salary with the existing employer
or another employer.
The recession and the talent glut has not tempered expectations of IT employees who continue to believe they are chosen inheritors of the earth. The Assure poll corroborates that most IT professionals firmly believe they are underpaid. This despite a 10 per cent growth in annual salaries in India, exponential for a sector grappling with severe recessionary climate. An Hewitt Associates survey pegged salary increments in India's tech sector at 15.5 per cent in 2001and 12.1 per cent in 2002. Tech salaries are still 20-30 per cent higher compared to other sectors with average salaries ranging between Rs 1.2 lakh and Rs 1.5 lakh for every year of experience. According to a recent Nasscom study, the average employee cost in the software and services industry is approximately 30 per cent as against 15 per cent in other sectors. Employee rewards constitute a large percentage of this cost. Yet attrition rates continue to hover at 15 per cent. Most HR professionals believe the number will register a steep rise on first signs of economic
uptick.
(B Kartika is a freelance writer) |
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(The views expressed here represent points of view of individual
writers. AssureConsulting.com does not necessarily endorse them)
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