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The Top 10: 8 - Infosys Technologies: Is Feel-good Enough?
Despite a great brand image and employees acknowledging its care, Infosys fares badly primarily due to worries on compensation and growth opportunities
Friday, August 31, 2007

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Even if you compare only apples with apples, Infosys ranking below IBM and Capgemini definitely marks the beginning of a new phase: a phase where managing employees better is not the prerogative of companies headquartered here.

But the flattening of the world does not stop there. What is equally noteworthy is that Infosysthe poster boy of offshoringand IBMthe symbol of the traditional mightshare two of their three high rating and low rating parameters. While their employees appreciate them for their high standards of corporate governance and fair business practices, they are not too happy with the salary and perks. So the large companies now have similar issues to tackle, irrespective of where they are headquartered.

Infosys still scores high on the HR front and ranks #2, same as last year. Slipping in employee satisfaction ranking is partly because of new entrants like IBM and Capgemini who had the late mover advantage of addressing the newer needs of employees, such as work-life balance. Also, partly, because of too much reliance on feel-good HRwelfare activities, facilitieswhile not doing enough in core areas of work like growth opportunity, valuing peoples opinion, independence at work, and technology.

Bikramjit Maitra,
VP & head, HR

High Ratings

Industry rank

Standards of corporate governance

11

Professionalism towards employees, suppliers, and customers

16

Fairness of business practices

18

Low Ratings

Growth opportunities

20

Adequate compensation

20

Relevance of perks and benefits

20

Best Showing

Facilities/resources/support/intranet

1

Company image

1

Welfare policies

1

Salary and compensation is an area most large companies have done badly, including Infosys. This is understandable because many smaller companies do compete on that, while large companies cannot afford to do so. Interestingly, a few years back, when Infosys used to pay not so well, the employees were more satisfied about the salary, but today not only has the industry salary level gone up, employees expect that as a leading company, it should be a leader in pay as well.

Bikramjeet Moitra, VP, HR however defends his companys compensation policies saying they are at par with industry standards.

Infosys, even today, scores heavily on brand image, better than TCS and IBM, and that acts as a pull for its prospective employees, most of who come from campuses directly.

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