IT hiring: 5 takeaways on what's driving a modest pickup
In the last two months, there's been a modest increase in open IT positions. IT services companies, however, aren't behind it


Kamal Karanth, co-founder and CEO at Xpheno, a Bengaluru-based staffing specialist, explains what’s unfolding. Here are five takeaways:
IT industry lobby Nasscom’s data shows the sector hired 2,30,000 people net in FY22 and only 60,000 in FY23, as the surge reversed into a global tech cut back due to macroeconomic uncertainties. Nasscom estimated that FY24 also saw about 60,000 net hires for the IT sector, with the total workforce at about 5.34 million.
This fiscal year, in August and September, there have been some green shoots, but this increase is still modest, in the range of about 10 percent. The number of active IT job openings in May was 107,000, Xpheno estimated. This rose to 125,000 in August and 1,35,000 in September.
These are still low, compared to March and April figures this year. And the current quarter, because of the larger number of holidays, will likely continue to see lower numbers.
Startups are definitely still not hiring as they continue to face a funding crunch. IT services companies have seen no change in hiring, and software product companies are mostly consolidating their existing workforce. Demand is picking up because there is a new wave of GCCs in India, and domestic large businesses such as banks, pharmaceuticals and health care companies are hiring more IT recruits.
The fortunes of the non-tech companies are more closely associated with the Indian economy. So, for example, if banks and NBFCs are seeing more lending on the back of an improving rural economy, or the country’s biggest conglomerates that are deeply rooted in the domestic market. Growth in their operations is translating to an uptake of tech talent.
As to the GCCs, they have continued to incrementally hire more recruits. While established GCCs have not made a big splash, there have been nearly 45 new ones that have come to India in the last 12 months. A single new GCC can account for as many as 500 new tech hires. Some of the larger multinationals may even hire as many as 1,000 to 1,500 people in the first 12 months after setting up an India centre.
Data science and cybersecurity are two evergreen areas in terms of demand for experienced talent. There is also growing demand for the so-called “full stack" developers and, in fact, full-stack software engineers are in the top three, when it comes to demand for skillsets. Artificial intelligence (AI) talent pool is more work-in-progress because it’s such a nascent field.
Freshers will have to wait for demand from IT services companies. Based on the existing commitments these companies have made, they are likely to hire 60,000 to 70,000 fresh graduates, which is about the same as last year. And last year’s figure was the lowest in two decades, at about 70,000.
Overall, Xpheno estimates fresher hiring could be, at best, between 100,000 and 120,000 this fiscal year.
Productivity increases from AI are yet to kick in at scale, and the existing IT and IT-enabled workforce in India offers sufficient capacity at a time of global macroeconomic uncertainty and lack of any spending on discretionary projects. Hiring increases in the foreseeable future will be incremental.
First Published: Oct 01, 2024, 17:29
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