Bad impact of Demonetisation on placements in Leading B-schools, students facing rough roads
Bad impact of Demonetisation on placements in Leading B-schools, students facing rough roads
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Final placements for the 2015-17 batch at the country's leading business schools seem to be feeling the impact of dampened economic sentiment. Placement cells at Management Development Institute (MDI), Gurgaon, SP Jain Institute of Management and Research (SPJIMR), Indian Institute of Foreign Trade (IIFT), Indian Institute of Management (IIM), Indore, and Welingkar Institute of Management Development and Research among others, said that a combination of factors including demonetisation, lacklustre business sentiment and a cautious attitude on the part of recruiters have taken a toll, making this placement season the most challenging in recent years.

Companies have slashed hiring numbers, in some cases by as much as 30-40%, said people on campuses. Some regulars didn’t turn up, citing a hiring freeze, while others backed out at the last minute, even after taking part in pre-placement talks. “It has been a challenging year,” said Abbasali Gabula, deputy director, external relations, at SPJIMR. “Companies are always uncomfortable with uncertainty; it makes them hesitant about taking hiring decisions.” 

The institute recently wrapped up final placements but Gabula said it helped that the school had planned for a tight placement season by getting more potential recruiters to campus. "We brought in 104 companies, compared to 82 last year," he said.

BIGGER BATCH, BIGGER WORRY
About 50% of our total recruiters were new companies," Gabula added. Pidilite, HSBC and AstraZeneca are among regulars that didn't come to SPJIMR this time. Flipkart had earlier announced its decision of staying away from all campus placements. Some, such as Standard Chartered, finished their entire recruitment through the pre-placement offer route. MDI Gurgaon took over seven days to place its entire batch, compared with three last year. As many as 138 recruiters were invited, up from last year's 123, to make up for a decrease in the number of offers per company.

Regular recruiter DCM Shriram did not participate in placements, citing demonetisation, while General Motors did not come either. McKinsey Knowledge Centre hired fewer people and IDFC Bank didn't participate, although it had made a presentation earlier, said Kanwal Kapil, placements chairperson at MDI.

Those with larger batch sizes are finding the going tougher.IIM Indore started the process in December with a batch size of 611across streams and said it still has students left to place.

NEW COMPETITORS
Another reason why placements have become more challenging, said Kapoor, is the emergence of the new IIMs, which are also winning their share of offers. While campus sources suggested IIM Kozhikode was struggling to place its entire batch, placements chair Priya Nair said: "It is not much of a challenge. We will be coming out with our closure report soon." IIFT, which wrapped up placements by the first week of January last year, has more than 25 students left to place, according to sources.

Recruiters were much more cautious this year, said Sanjay Verma, joint corporate and placement advisor, IIFT. "The intake has definitely reduced," he said. The saving grace this year has been fintech, consulting and fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) companies, said campuses. Welingkar Institute of Management Development and Research, where placements are still going on, said that many companies had reduced hiring numbers by nearly 30-40%. "We were able to tap companies in the financial services, consulting analytics, market research, internet-based companies," said a Welingkar spokeperson. "The relative newcomers to the campus have been analytics and startups in certain categories."

 

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