Even as top line growth holds steady, IT giants such as TCS, Infosys and Wipro are shedding jobs, signalling a shift to automation, pyramid reset and legacy rationalisation
IT company says recruits failed to meet qualifying criteria and were given three chances
The first round of terminations happened in February when the company let go of 320 trainees on similar grounds
The layoff comes a day after the IT major announced its plan to hire 20,000 fresh engineering graduates this fiscal year amid prediction of weaker than expected revenue growth
IT services company Infosys on Wednesday said it did not use force or intimidation tactics when it laid off trainees at Mysuru campus over performance-related issues, and that it was explaining the circumstances to the labour department authorities. In an interview to PTI, Shaji Mathew, Chief Human Resources Officer at Infosys, however, conceded that assessment failure percentages this time around have been "slightly higher" than in the past but dismissed charges that the tests had been designed for failure. On whether the layoffs would severely dent Infosys' brand as the company goes out to campuses for FY26 hiring, he said that plans to hire 20,000 freshers for next fiscal are on track and they should have nothing to worry about as they will get one of the best corporate training. Responding to allegations that testing parameters, assessment criteria and syllabus were altered and intimidation tactics were resorted leading to the 300 plus terminations at Mysuru campus recently, ...
IT workers' labour body NITES filed an official complaint with the labour ministry after Infosys laid off more than 350 trainees at its Mysuru campus
Stringent changes to the training test have led to a sharp rise in failure rates at Infosys. Out of 930 trainees who joined on October 7, only 160 passed on their first attempt
Affected employees, who were being trained at the company's Mysore campus, told Business Standard that the entire layoff process was being handled harshly
The development comes at a time when Google already fired six per cent of its total workforce in January, leaving 12,000 Googlers without a job
Non-tech companies are taking steps to hire top talent from the IT sector in order to drive their organisations towards digitisation. Most of this demand is for experienced employees
The screening tests may also get more stringent as the firms are under pressure to honour campus offers but are already overstaffed
Wipro too sacked about 600-700 employees during the fiscal 2016-17
Company joins Wipro and Cognizant in using pink slip route to control costs