India's best employers: Shaping a better future
In the wake of the pandemic, the best employers demonstrated resilience, actively engaged with employees and were passionate about charting a new brave path

The best laid plans of mice and men often go awry’. This Robert Burns adage best captures the last two years. While 2020 was unprecedented, 2021 tested the resilience of the human spirit to the core.
For corporate India, just as business had started getting back to normal, they were once again thrown off track as the pandemic continued to reshape the business environment. Yet, it brought out the best in many and they used the disruption to carve out a unique employee and customer experience.
This year, the Kincentric Best Employers study showed that great organisations are able to find and create windows of opportunity even under the most challenging circumstances.
While the Kincentric Best Employers study remains as rigorous and intense in its processes as always—employee listening for their engagement levels, audits on all the people practices and leadership interviews to check for alignment between business imperatives and employee experiences—we had the Best Employers continuing to ace the demanding asks.
The Kincentric Best Employers in India managed higher productivity through the pandemic to improve business results through people.
An employee is engaged when they want to ‘Say, Stay and Strive’, according to the Kincentric model.
Say has elements of being a positive brand ambassador about the workplace, Stay has the essence of wanting to be a part of the future of the organisation and Strive is that discretionary X factor that an employee is willing to put in to make things happen.The Best Employers have managed a distinctively higher Strive score (7 percentage points over the rest) which means employees in Best Employer companies were at their productive best and wanted to and did go over and beyond to accomplish goals. Productivity levels have been up for the Best Employers despite misconceptions on work from home and the slackness it assumes.
Eight-three percent of their employees strongly agreed that their organisation invests in new ideas and 87 percent concurred that they have a work environment that supports a collaborative culture. Far from feeling isolated or alienated as everyone moved to a work from home arrangement, the Best Employers made best use of technology to actively create more connections and productively build networks to learn and deliver. Cross functional/cross geographical teams were more common and used effectively to brainstorm and solve organisational problems. The technology provided truly enabled employees to be effective and speed of decisions reinforced agility in enhancing employee and customer experience.
Unrelenting focus on talentEighty-eight percent of employees in Best Employers say they get adequate support for learning and development and 84 percent said their organisation is attracting the right talent. Best Employers stepped up in talent investment and differentiated themselves by having career conversations with the right talents. Succession plans were intentional. Best Employers went back to the drawing board to aggressively work on articulating their culture and made it a fundamental differentiator. Prioritised wellnessHealth and well-being were at the forefront for Best Employers. Eighty percent of employees say their work-related stress was manageable. The health, safety and engagement of both on-site and remote employees were prioritised and Best Employers strove to provide as much flexibility when it came to determining when, where and how work gets done. Employees were encouraged to take time off and access to total wellness was at hand anytime.
First Published: Feb 28, 2022, 17:12
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