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Grumbling Workers Anxious Boss
After remaining flat for two consecutive years, average satisfaction dips to 66.5, a drop of over four points. So how do you keep your employees happy? That's the toughest question HR managers face today
Bhaswati Chakravorty
Tuesday, November 21, 2006

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Employee satisfaction is a challenge in the IT industry. And the challenge simply doubles when you talk about the ITeS industry, commonly referred to as BPO. The manpower base of the BPO industry has increased multiple times over the last five years. The segment is currently a $5.2 bn industry, with exports constituting more than 88% of the revenue generated. ITeS is a growing contributor to the Indian GDP, and its growth is projected at greater than 38% for FY 2006. The ITeS-BPO industry is expected to require an additional 93,000 people in the next year, showing an increase in labor demand by 29%. According to studies conducted by Nasscom, the segment is expected to employ over 1.1 mn Indians by 2008. Put simply, it has been a problem of plenty for the industry which is trying to cope with high attrition, high stress and low job satisfaction.

Dip, Dip, Dip
Average satisfaction has slipped this year as compared to last. After remaining flat for two consecutive years, average satisfaction stands at 66.6, a dip of over four points. What it means, effectively, is that most initiatives taken by the industry have not managed to yield the desired results.

Interestingly, if one takes the top 10 companies in the survey, the average satisfaction index stands at 70.4, which implies that the remaining 10 participants have triggered the fall. All companies in the bottom 10, except Motif, are new entrants in the survey this year. In fact, 15 of the 20 participants this year are new entrants with only e4e, Genpact, Ajuba, ICICI OneSource and Motif having been around last year.

Several reasons justify the dip in overall satisfaction levels. For one, most respondents in the survey (employees) felt that companies are not living up to the promises in spite of claims in the advertisements. There also seems to be a loss in pride toward the organization. Second, most employee issues are not finding immediate response from the respective organizations. Appraisal systems and parameters are also an area of dissatisfaction as employees felt that special initiatives and efforts are not taken care of during the appraisal.

How They Fared

Company

Empex Score 2006

Rank 2006

e4e

88.8

1

vCustomer Corporation

83.9

2

Wipro BPO

80.8

3

Genpact

80.3

4

Ajuba Solutions

79.8

5

HCL BPO

79.4

6

OfficeTiger Database

78.3

7

ICICI One Source

78.0

8

Tata Consultancy Services

75.9

9

24/7 Customer

75.8

10

Sutherland Global Services

74.0

11

Brigade Corporation

72.7

12

EXL Service.com

72.6

13

SlashSupport

71.2

14

Transworks Information Services

68.8

15

AXA Business Services

68.5

16

Motif India Infotech

68.1

17

Keane Worldzen

67.5

18

Cambridge Solutions

65.8

19

Integreon

65.8

19

Three of the top five BPOs are new entrants this year. So are all the others except Motif.

Refused to participate: HSBC, IBM Daksh, Hero ITeS, Progeon, Karvy, Techbooks, InTouch Solutions, Nipuna, Evalueserve, NIIT SmartServe, WNS, TWS Holdings and Aegis BPO

Base: 1,896 Source: DQ-IDC BPO E-SAT SURVEY 2006

BPO's Growth Story

Company

Employee size 2005

Employee size 2006

% Growth

Genpact

12,363

15,774

27.6

Wipro BPO

15,207

15,746

3.5

HCL BPO

4,372

7,610

74.1

ICICI One Source

5,278

7,083

34.2

24/7 Customer

4,950

6,345

28.2

Sutherland Global Services

5,949

6,118

2.8

EXL Service.com

3,983

5,486

37.7

Transworks Information Services

3,151

3,645

15.7

vCustomer Corporation

2,400

3,000

25.0

OfficeTiger Database

1,957

2,880

47.2

SlashSupport India

1,200

2,550

112.5

Tata Consultancy Services

1,749

2,478

41.7

AXA Business Services

1,590

2,173

36.7

Brigade Corporation

874

1,703

94.9

e4e

1,331

1,617

21.5

Ajuba Solutions

545

880

61.5

Integreon

580

830

43.1

Cambridge Solutions

474

693

46.2

Keane Worldzen India

321

597

86.0

Motif India Infotech

397

309

-22.2

Most participants have ramped up quite agressively in the last one year. While SlashSupport has nearly doubled its capacity, Brigade Corporation and Keane Worldzen too have grown by 95% and 86% respectively in employee size. The only exception is Motif which has reduced its strength, and has also seen satisfaction levels dip

Base: 1,896 Source: DQ-IDC BPO E-SAT SURVEY 2006

The A-Word
Attrition. It is the single-largest challenge for BPOs, in light of the innumerable causative variables-behavioral, organizational and industrial. This challenge is magnified in the offshoring industry on account of the absence of any historical industry precedence compounded with the typical demographic profile of the employees, often in their early twenties. However, respondents to the survey identify three prime reasons to explain the high-attrition phenomenon, which include perceived lack of growth opportunities in the organization, migration to more stable work environments and, most importantly, search for higher pay-scales. Nearly 35% of the respondents said that they would leave a company for better compensation while nearly 26% cited better growth opportunity as the reason for joining a new job. According to industry insights, salary is really a hygiene factor today, which is used more as a reason to justify frequent job hopping. In reality, the trigger point to join and leave an organization is not compensation.

To counter each of the above, organizations have been focusing minutely on designing and implementing best-in-class retention strategies. The most far reaching yet implicit strategy being adopted by service providers is that of repositioning the BPO industry as an attractive long-term career option, so far considered a 'stop-gap' solution for fresh graduates: The target employee segment. Companies have devised unique strategies to retain employees. Some of these are defined career paths; tie-ups with educational institutes for post-graduation programs subsidized by the service-provider; informal anti-poach agreements with competitors; cross-functional training; performance-linked remuneration; tenure-linked bonuses; recognition schemes and flexible working hours.

However, service-providers assert that for the image makeover of the industry to fructify, solitary efforts are inadequate. The industry needs to collectively make compelling efforts in this area. In their individual capacity, however, service-providers are striving to reinforce the power of their brand-an important pull factor for employees of the industry.

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