One of the concerns for everyone in the Indian IT Industry - for both the insiders
and the (abroad) customers are the rising cost of man power. In the last 3 to 4 years
(Indian Financial Years Apr-Mar) the industry has grown tremendously. All the 3 Indian
IT majors have joined the billion dollar club, continued to double there revenue every
year and are now multi-billion corporations. All of them are close to having over
100,000 employees. They have been joined closely by Tier 2 IT companies as well in
the multi-billion dollar club and many of them have over 50,000 employees with them.
This is formidable human resource capital but they don't come cheap, this unprecedented
growth has been pushing the salary further to unsustainable levels.
Further more, for Indian IT services firms nearly 50% (it ranges from 40%-60% depending
on the size and offshore/onshore mix) of their revenue is spent in salary and related
expenses. Only in few other industries, a single raw material* costs nearly 50% of
the revenue. Certainly no other industry (may be Oil and Steel in recent years) have
seen its raw materials* cost increase over 30% year on
year. So far the Industry have been able to cope with this in several
ways - productivity gains, fresh resource augmentations, training, process/tool
improvements and more but this certainly gives sleepless nights to CEOs including
myself. I strongly believe whether it is stock
market, economy in general or salaries, all of them cannot defy gravity for long
and keep growing upwards. Indian
Stock market which sky rocketed with its BSE Sensex hitting 21,000+ few months
back is now trading at 15,000 levels. All goes through cycles of ups and downs; bearish
days are also good for the economy in the long run. In Australia conservationist welcome
forest fires because they burn the outer layers of the trees which fall down and add
nutrients to the soil. In the long run this helps the soil to remain fertile and nurture
new life. This is nothing new, it has been happening this way there for millions of
years.
Am I forecasting doom days here? - Certainly No. Tough days - Definitely Yes. There
are several indicators for this trend. First is the obvious US Slowdown (and a short
recession), second is the Indian Rupee to Dollar appreciation, Third is the increasing
cost of raw materials and the lower margins - gone are the days of hefty profit margins
in IT industry. All these have started to show their impact - news are trickling in
of delayed joining dates for campus hires by the IT Majors (at this time this sounds
more as rumours to me) and if slowing down in the rate of lateral hires/job market.
The best indication I follow for sensing Chennai's Job market is "The Hindu"
newspapers Wednesday Opportunities supplement - this week I hardly saw 1 or 2 IT related
openings. Normally you see here several full page and half-a-page advertisements by
all popular IT brands.
What are the consequences of this:
-
First, it will separate boys from men (girls from ladies). The "me too"
players will get killed and consolidation will happen in the industry, which is good
for any industry to mature
-
For the 3 Indian Majors this will mean little, it is likely to be business as usual.
The senior teams there would have easily seen this coming for several quarters and
they certainly had time to fine tune there strategies
-
It will be difficult for Tier 2 companies who are aspiring to get into the elite league
as their growth rates will slow down
-
For small and emerging companies tough days are certainly ahead. There will be churn
but the blood-bath may be limited and short
-
Niche players depending on their offerings and geographies have better chances of
surviving this and also growing a little due to easier talent access and lesser competition.<Shameless
plug begin> This includes companies like mine "Vishwak".
We are focused on Media Industry and have been investing heavily on the Indian domestic
market for last few years. We are witnessing good growth on both these areas and our
investments in Indian market are starting to paying off . Here first mover advantage
give us significant head start along with our better understanding of the market<end>
I know this can start a lively debate here and I welcome it, please start posting
your comments, observations and thoughts.
*I prefer calling them as Human Assets but that
will give a different financial meaning in this context, so let us have them as raw
materials here
Read the complete post at http://www.venkatarangan.com/blog/2008/04/04/IT+Job+Market+In+India+Amp+Industry+Trends.aspx