Kavitha Kumar, head of communications, IIM Bangalore, says: “We have MOOCs (massive open online courses), digitised books, and staff trained in online teaching. We have conducted online faculty development programmes and use online education for our executive programme.” The pandemic has made little difference to teaching as the digital-learning vertical at the institute has always been in place. Others are investing in new methods and pedagogy to retain the experience — introducing interactive expert lectures, group presentations, office hours, and socialising sessions — all online.
The main concern — placements The average annual compensation package upon placement in the past was anywhere between Rs 20 lakh and Rs 30 lakh. A senior employee at a B-school says: “People take a break and pay a high fee with the expectation of returns. Most placements are usually commensurate with experience. Students are in senior leadership roles within a few years.”
In the recent Quacquarelli Symonds global top-50 Executive MBA rankings, IIM Bangalore’s executive postgraduate programme (EPGP) was placed at the 36th spot. On the career outcomes metric, which demonstrates the extent to which graduates of a programme enjoy promotions and salary increases, the institution scored 86.8/100. ISB was ranked 81st, and IIM Kozhikode broke into the 101-plus category.
Vishwanath Pingali, chairperson of MBA-PGPX at IIM Ahmedabad, says: “We see some challenges ahead. There are too many candidates with very high qualifications. They have experience as well as expertise. But I do see jobs reviving and markets opening up after December.” Employers, according to him, will look for talent and recalibrate their requirements when the market is ready to expand. “That is when students, armed with an MBA degree and past work experience will be at an advantage.”
In 2019, ISB saw 79 per cent of its students making an industry shift and 77 per cent a function shift.
The same year, IIM-A saw the highest annual domestic salary for PGPX (postgraduate programme for executives) rising to Rs 60 lakh from Rs 54.6 lakh in 2018. At institutions offering both one-year and two-year MBA courses, the one-year course often sees a higher pay package. In 2015, there was a gap of Rs 72 lakh in highest international salaries received by PGPX and PGP students at IIM Ahmedabad, and a gap of Rs 8.3 lakh in their average domestic salaries.
ISB Hyderabad is working with recruiters and getting students familiar with jobs that might start emerging in the future, and the required skill sets for them. Asked about economic revival and the impact on placements, Milind Sohoni, deputy dean of the Hyderabad campus and academic affairs at ISB, says he sees some sectors reviving and others being hit hard. “It all depends on how long it will take to recover and return to their original state. You will see a differential effect across sectors.”
According to him, sectors like manufacturing which require people to be physically present, will take longer to revive, while IT, which is purely service-oriented, could have people working from home. Other sectors would depend on consumption, as both demand and supply have been impacted, especially transportation, hospitality, and the mobility industry.
“Consumption and wealth creation needs to return. To my mind, the economy is depressed and employment may not be as it was. A few sectors that will hire, especially the services sector and the ones that take time to come back, will see a recovery. We are hoping for a recovery faster than being expected, and that would depend on how the government creates opportunities for industries to grow,” Sohoni adds.
In a class of 75, IIM Bangalore's EPGP 2019-2010 cohorts saw 67 offers made, of which 26 were successful. Kumar of IIM-B agrees that companies across campuses have stalled hiring but says this has not caused significant immediate worry. “There is a relationship with repeat recruiters that we have cultivated over the years. There is an understanding on both sides ensuring that students are not at a disadvantage,” she says.
However, with the economy facing a downturn, hiring freeze across sectors, and pay cuts for senior management, placements will be affected, especially for the senior positions that students usually gain after a one-year MBA.
One-year MBA vs other MBA programmes The standard Executive MBA (EMBA) is part-time and modular and is offered to senior executives who continue to work alongside. It was in 2001 that ISB offered a new MBA model and launched its one-year full-time residential programme and called it Post Graduate Programme (PGP). This programme was geared towards professionals and required applicants to have a minimum of 2-5 years of work experience.