A visit to Infosys Technologies' Mysore campus highlights the extraordinary measures Indian companies are resorting to these days to attract and retain top talent. The 334-acre site boasts a multiplex theater shaped like a giant white dome, four huge food courts, 96 hotel-like guest houses, and a stylish activity center with a gym, pool hall, and eight-lane bowling alley. Last year the outsourcing company trained 20,000 recruits in everything from software writing to teamwork. Expansions under way will enable Infosys to train twice as many. "When I heard IBM's presentation at a job fair, they talked a lot about their brand and innovation but not much about training," says Sanjay Joshi, 22, a graduate of MS Ramaiah Institute of Technology in
Building showpiece campuses the size of many U.S. colleges is just one way big Indian employers are battling to hold on to budding engineers, designers, and finance specialists. Not long ago,
The scale of the human-resources challenge is dizzying. Six years ago, for example, Accenture Ltd. (ACN) had 250 workers in
Satisfying high career expectations can be tough. Just a few years ago, IBM (IBM), Microsoft (MSFT), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), and Coca-Cola (KO) could lure all the top Indian grads they needed on the strength of their names. "Now multinationals are losing talent because they made false promises about careers," says Soumen Basu, who heads Manpower's (MAN)
So companies look for creative ways to satisfy ambitions. Hyderabad-based Satyam Computer Services Ltd. (SAY) has grown from 9,000 to 42,000 workers in four years while annual sales have more than tripled, to $1.46 billion. Satyam has created 1,773 business units, many with modest sales. Each is headed by its own chief executive, who bears responsibility for boosting productivity, reducing costs, and fostering innovation.
That means a lot to engineers such as Karthikeyan Natarajan, 32, who joined Satyam in 2003. Now he heads a 20-person group designing kitchen appliances and aerospace components. His office is adorned with certificates showing he has completed international programs in skills such as quality control and global leadership. He says he is often approached by big
Perhaps the cheapest way for companies to cultivate loyalty is to build ties with employees' families. Satyam and others encourage parents to visit the workplace. When a worker gets recognized, Satyam calls or sends letters of thanks to the parents. "If
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