Company Brief
New Delhi, March 04, 2014
Global workforce solutions leader, Kelly Services, today released their findings of the Kelly Services India report titled ‘Understanding the mind of an employee’. This paper analyses motives behind employees moving jobs across five key sectors: Engineering, IT, Financial Services, FMCG and Pharmaceuticals. It is a given that employees do shift jobs for financial gains. This report throws light on the reasons behind employee movements Kelly Services India saw in 2013.
This report also gives some direction to employers who might see active job movements once the appraisal cycle ends this year. The reasons in 2014 are unlikely to be any different. It gives HR professionals an opportunity to reflect and attempt remedial measures to address the same.
"There is a need for today’s HR to identify the key factors that lead to movement of the employees across sectors and deploy necessary retention plans", said, Mr Kamal Karanth, Managing Director, Kelly Services India.
The report shows that 70% employees stated compensation as the reason behind changing jobs in the engineering sector, it was also seen that there were 15-20% of the candidates who switched jobs to get exposure into a new area of work. In the IT sector job satisfaction was one of the primary reasons for switching whereas for senior roles monotony in the role was the main driver. Life Science and Pharma seem to be sectors witnessing progress in terms of hiring IT professionals from mainstream IT Industry. Among all other industries, BFSI continues to lead in hiring IT professionals as improved technology is key for banking Industry to innovate and progress.
The Financial Services job market is very varied; in the Back office space most of the movements in Finance, Business Intelligence & Analytics took place for better roles, quality of work/projects and salary hikes. In many organizations supervisors were not really the factor for movements.
In the FMCG sector Brand equity/market reputation of the company was primarily the driving force for attracting candidates to a role, at senior leadership levels, we saw that candidates were looking at challenging opportunities where they can use their experience and expertise in setting up new businesses. Pharma sector on the other hand saw that the major motivator to change jobs is better and higher position/role than the current one, and the benefits/incentives associated with it like compensation hikes, perks, career development, etc.
Mr Karanth further added that, "It is vital for leadership teams and HR departments to constantly revive policies for the existing employees. At the same time it is equally important for them to think of various strategies to engage better with them so that the rate of workforce retention increases."
For further information, please contact:
Avantika Samkaria
Text 100
M: +91 9818836164
E: avantikasamkaria@text100.co.in