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How
We Did It
The methodology of the DQ-IDC Best Employers
Survey 2006 |
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Research
Design
The survey was designed and carried out in two phases. In the first
phase, HR questionnaires were sent to around 250 IT companies. These
spanned systems to software companies, and domestic and export players.
The questionnaire sought information on areas such as employee strength,
salary structure, training days, tenure of top management, etc. Of the 250
companies, 51 companies participated in the first phase. Out of these, 32
companies were then short listed for the second round, that is, the
employee survey, based on the following parameters:
Total employee size: Hardware, software and marketing IT
professionals in India only, as on April 1, 2006. This did not include
either back-end employees or employees posted outside India.
Revenue CAGR (compound annual growth rate from fiscal (2003-04 to
fiscal 2005-06).
Average tenure of senior management (GM level and above): The
tenure figure was factored by the age of the company to remove any
discrepancies that may have arisen between old and relatively new
companies.
Total average training: Included the entire gamut from induction
and technical to soft skills and others. The data was weighted on the
total hardware, software and marketing IT professionals in the company.
Retention rate: Share of employees (at least three months-old in
the company) who were still with the company on March 31, 2006.
Average salary hike (in percentage).
The first shortlist of companies was based on these six parameters, which
were given different weights based on their relative importance. In the
second phase, a large-scale survey was conducted by IDC India among 3,006
employees of the 32 short listed companies, across the country. The
sampling was done on the basis of the distribution of employees in
different cities. The employee survey comprised a self-administered
questionnaire as the instrument with employees at different levels. This
questionnaire included 53 statements under different broad
parameters-composite satisfaction, company culture, job content/growth,
training, salary & compensation, appraisal systems and people.
Employees were asked to rate each of the statements on a 10-point
agreement scale.
Other than the above
parameters, employees were also asked about their salary structure,
preferred company in the industry, etc. The Employee Satisfaction survey
covered seven major cities-Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata, Hyderabad,
Pune and Bangalore. In each city, the sample quota was assigned based on
the company's employee strength in that city. A further classification
of employees was done on the basis of job profile (hardware, software and
marketing) and years of IT experience (less than 2 years, 2-5 years, 5-10
years and more than 10 years). In order to retain objectivity, every
attempt was made to take on an unbiased sample and to ensure that the
management of the company did not influence the selection of respondents
(employees) or their responses. |
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BES Ratings
Scores from the HR survey and the Employee Satisfaction survey, calculated
separately, were combined to arrive at a composite score. Companies were
then given ranks based on the composite scores.
The HR score of the
selected 32 companies was calculated based on the six parameters, indexed
and weighted on a total score of 100. The six parameters used were-Total
employee size; Revenue CAGR (2003-04 to 2005-06); Average tenure (years);
Total average training; Retention rate; and average salary hike (%).
The Employee survey
score was calculated based on 10 parameters, which was also weighted and
indexed on a total score of 100. The ten parameters used in this case-
Overall satisfaction score; Composite satisfaction (company image);
Company culture; Job content/growth; Training; Salary and compensation;
Appraisal system; People; Preferred company (Internal: percentage of
respondents of a company who said their own company was the preferred
one); & Dream Company (Industry: Percentage of respondents in the
total sample who preferred a particular company).
The scores on the above
parameters like Company image, Company Culture, Job content/growth,
Training, Salary & compensation, Appraisal system and people were
calculated on the basis of number of statements under each of these
parameters. A correlation analysis was run between overall satisfaction
and statements across all these broad parameters. It gave us the
dependency of the dependent variable (overall satisfaction) on each of
these statements, which, in turn, provided the weights of each of the
statements. The weighted average of the individual scores of statements
gave us the scores at each of these broad parameters level, and these were
used for the final ranking.
The HR and Employee
Satisfaction score was weighted and indexed on a 100-point score to arrive
at DQ-IDC BES score, 2006. Dataquest and IDC India decided the weights for
all parameters in consultation with HR experts from the Industry, and
these were used in the survey analysis. The weights were finalized before
the survey, to ensure complete unbiased ranking.
The IDC India team was
led by Parijat Chakraborty and Shailendra Gupta and assisted by Shakyadev
Mitra. |
Revisiting Maslow
Maslow's Theory of 'Hierarchy of Needs' forms the basis of organizational
behavior and is widely referred to by HR managers while devising company
policies on people management. According
to Abraham Maslow, individuals are driven by physiological needs, safety needs,
social needs, esteem needs, and last but not the least, self-actualization
needs. The first two forms of needs, commonly refered to as lower level needs,
translate into wages, office-sponsored refreshments and meals, job security,
among others. Corporate India, especially the IT industry, has reached the
threshold limit as far as these basic needs are concerned. Our survey too
reveals the same. Every IT company is at loggerheads to get it right as far as
HR initiatives are concerned and the industry workforce is well aware of that.
Secondly, job security is no longer an issue, thanks to the imbalance in the
demand-supply equation.
Next come social needs. With an increasing number of projects coming to IT
companies in India and more and more of team-based projects materializing, the
third need in Maslow's pyramid has been satisfied as well.
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Base: 3,006 employees
BES Survey
2006
Source: DQ-IDC
Growth opportunity, work-life
balance and work culture are the three most critical attributes that the
industry workforce looks for in their company of dreams. Salary, though
low in the wishlist, has gone up in importance with 20% of the respondents
identifying it as an aspirational driver as opposed to 18% last year
Note: Employees were asked to name the most
important reason for joining a company and rank them from 1 to 7 in order
of importance to them. The chart shows growth opportunity and career
development (41% respondents voted for this parameter) as the preferred
and desired attribute in their dream job. |
Having crossed the first three hurdles, HR management is facing its toughest
challenge today-that of satisfying the esteem needs and self-actualization
needs of the workforce.
Recognition is an important component of an individual's esteem needs and
the IT industry has realized that it has to cater to this requirement of its
workforce. Companies like CSC, Cadence, Induslogic, among others encourage
writing white papers which are put up on the company website or the Intranet.
Aztechsoft, for example, offers a completely performance-based growth path
irrespective of the experience profile of the employee. These initiatives could
be referred to as a trend in the industry as well as an indication of the fact
that companies are rising to the need for catering to employee esteem. The last
and the final stage is about offering employees the challenge and the
opportunity to reach full career potential and in the process meet ones
self-actualization needs. While the industry has managed to make the initial
footprint at level four, the final level still remains rather elusive and most
challenging by far. As employee expectation continues to soar with more and more
youngsters wanting to achieve the most at the earliest, this could well be the
most difficult hurdle for HR think-tanks.
Money Matters
The Best Employers Survey over the last four years has seen a dip in salary and
compensation-a key driver of employee satisfaction. In fact, salary has been
featuring below parameters like growth opportunity, work-life balance,
organization culture, job content, job security, and technology. However, this
could be an aberration to some extent. Most HR managers Dataquest spoke to in
the Top 20 companies see this as one of the top challenges. Interestingly, while
employees do not see salary as the most critical component of their dream job,
it remains the most important reason for taking up a new job-over 54%
respondents sighted salary as the topmost consideration for a new job.
While salary has taken a backseat to some extent, this is really not a
generic trend. Salary still remains a key consideration in case of niche players
where on one hand there is requirement for high-skilled professionals, while on
the other, availability of competent professionals remains low.
Payouts under such circumstances also work out to be far higher than the
industry average.
Finally, BES 2006 has seen a great deal of upheaval in the overall tally.
Several new names have made it to our Top 20 while some have fallen from grace.
The industry as a whole is moving in the right direction, whether we refer to
our Top 20 or the ones who unfortunately could not make it to the top this year.
This is because all companies are taking a host of initiatives to make sure they
keep their employees satisfied. However, true to the characteristic of any
maturing industry that has plenty to offer, both in terms of number of jobs and
work environment, average satisfaction levels have dipped. Employee expectations
are at an all time high. And it may take a little while before the industry can
really crack the most difficult code of what it really takes to keep the
workforce truly satisfied.
Bhaswati Chakravorty
bhaswatic@cybermedia.co.in Page(s) 1 2 3 4
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