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Changing HR paradigm in the ITES sector

Punita Jasrotia Phukan / New Delhi

In the Indian ITES sector, as many as 200 personnel are hired every working day of the year. As per Nasscom’s annual market intelligence study—Strategic Review 2003, there would be a requirement of 1.1 million professionals in the ITES-BPO segment by the year 2008. While this might spell good news in terms of growing employment opportunities, it also means increasing challenges for the HR managers of this industry. In its nascent stages, the BPO industry did enjoy a positive demand-supply situation favourable to the companies.

However, intense competition in the industry has changed the scenario to a certain extent. From just hiring anyone and everyone (due to shortage of manpower), the requirement presently is for professionals with more domain-specific skill sets and business analysts with programming skills. This trend clearly reflects that Indian ITES companies are tapping high-value service segments.

Growing challenges

High level of attrition: While India does have a large talent pool (annually 167,000 engineering students and 1.54 million graduates pass out of the country’s educational institutions), not all are ‘industry-ready’ or equipped with the necessary skill sets to become useful to the companies. This means that while there is plenty of supply at the entry level (voice processes), there are huge gaps in the middle management and senior management levels. This has resulted in increased levels of poaching and attrition cases. Presently, the average attrition rate faced by this industry is somewhere around 30-35 percent. Praveen Kankariya, president and chief executive officer of Impetus, however believes that the industry is witnessing an attrition level as high as 60 percent. "One would not find a person in the BPO industry working with the same company for four to five years. In this period, on an average, people would have changed three to four jobs."

Zia Sheikh, managing director of Infowavz points out, "Competitors are very eager to get experienced people and are willing to make very fancy offers to cut short their training time and investment through poaching. Such indiscipline has further accentuated the problem in India." Experts state that the attrition rate in non-voice processes is significantly lower than voice processes, in which the industry average is somewhere around 35-40 percent. In the case of data-based activities, the attrition rate is not very high with the industry average being about 10 percent.

Not a serious career option: Another very critical issue of concern for HR managers is that most students and professionals working in call centres do not see this industry as a long-term career option. This was also revealed in a recent study conducted by NFO India, part of NFO WorldGroup, and PeopleEquity Consulting, a Bangalore-based HR consultancy. Due to the inherent nature of the job (monotonous and lacking challenges), most of the time there is low interest in the work.

Mismatch of expectations: Expectations mismatch leads to higher attrition. According to T Hari, director of corporate human resources Daksh, this is partly due to the perceptions created in the general public with respect to the career growth, type of work, compensations offered, competition, etc. Many a times, people are not able to create a work-life balance and often opt out. Sunil Kumar, vice president of HR for Vertex India feels that an effective way to deal with these challenges is to position the ITES/BPO industry as a meaningful career opportunity for young agents/associates. The right positioning will help attract the right profile of agents, it will automatically manage their expectations from the industry and this will in turn lead to lower attrition rates.

Communication issue: Lack of effective communication is another contentious issue. Says Kumar of Vertex India, "Handling a large number of employees does lead to communication gaps in BPO companies." The absence of regular, two-way communication between agents, their immediate team managers and the senior management is a common complaint and one of the reasons for high attrition rates in the industry.

High training costs: On an average, BPO companies incur three types of training costs—voice/ accent, soft skills and process training. For a start-up, in the initial stage the training costs maybe high as the company may have to outsource the voice/accent and soft skills training. Process training in the case of start-ups is usually done by process trainers from the customers’ side while the BPO company has to bear the expenses. However, on reaching a stable growth stage, companies are able to build up a resource base and avoid outsourcing. Says Kankariya, "Training is very important in this industry, due to the nature of job and the kind of requirements, which an employee has to fulfil. It generally accounts for four months salary of the agent hired, though the actual training would probably be for just for a month. In the last two years, the training cost has grown by 45 percent as against total cost of one employee which has grown by 190 per cent." According to Sangeeta Gupta, vice president for Nasscom, the industry is facing a major problem as it is unable to source the requisite trained manpower.

Solutions

Moving towards B class cities: Due to the high demand and supply gap and scaling attrition numbers, many companies are moving towards ‘B class’ cities like Chandigarh, Bhopal, Lucknow and Dehradun, to attract talent and set up their operations. There is also a change in employee profile, with organisations looking for older and experienced people who will bring in stability. The requirement is for those people for whom salary is not just a pocket money, but a career opportunity. The ideal employees for BPOs would be people from middle and lower-middle income households, who are willing to work hard and have a strong sense of responsibility and dedication towards their employers. Initially though it might lead to scaling of training costs (upto 30-40 percent), as this section might lack in basic communication and soft skills. But the effort would be worth it, believe experts.

Formation of forums: To prevent poaching/ swapping and manage recruitment consultants in the market, many companies have formed forums. One such has already been set up in Hyderabad and other cities are likely to follow suit.

Educating about career opportunities: The common misconception is that there are only three positions in call centres—that of an agent, a team leader and the project leader. There is however more to it. According to Deepak Dhawan, vice president of HR of EXL Services, there is an immense opportunity for professionals with a CA or MBA background: "An individual can choose from managing quality, get into training, Six Sigma process, problem solving equations, relationship management, HR and workflow activities or business development."

It is necessary to communicate to the agents that there is a clear growth path for them in the next five years and an agent need not retire as an agent from the company. In terms of growth opportunities, data management, transaction processing and other back-office support activities are really going to be the key growth drivers for the offshore BPO industry in India.

Government initiatives

Nasscom has recently started a project with different private players (like Wipro, EXL, GE), training institutes and academia in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala, for preparing an "employable" ITES workforce. The Kerala Government, under its PeopleFIRST initiative, plans to create readily available employable manpower for the ITES industry. According to Aruna Sundararajan, IT secretary of Kerala, such an initiative will open up large employment opportunities in various disciplines in the ITES sector, empowering students with industry-relevant skill sets. "It will help chart out indicative domain-wise manpower requirement projections from the industry. Skill set standardisation, government recognised certification in ITES, inclusion of ITES as a discipline in graduate studies by universities, etc, will help in making ITES as a career choice by students," she says. The programme will be launched in November 2003 and the training is expected to get started by January 2004. In addition, states like Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra and West Bengal are also looking for such an option.

In the future, HR managers have to continuously evolve career paths, motivate their employees and create a culture of oneness, which will also act as retention tools. In case of training, there would be an emergence of specialised training institutes with the customer care skills being outsourced to many training companies.

Contact the writer at punita@expresscomputeronline.com

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