Monday, December 14, 2009

The next biggest worry for Mahindra Satyam is staff exodus

BANGALORE | HYDERABAD: O R N Suresh, the 33-year-old manager working on a British Petroleum (BP) project at Mahindra Satyam, the decision not
Satyam

to take up job offers from rival Indian firms has not really been a smart move. It was quite risky, to say the least, to continue working in a company which was witnessing a few contracts move to rival IT companies. Infact, after BP decided to shift projects from his company to TCS and Wipro earlier this year, things were not the same at Mahindra Satyam.


“We never had any issues with the delivery of projects, and even though I had an offer to serve at Wipro for another oil firm some eight months ago, I thought Satyam offered better job satisfaction,” says Suresh.

As Mahindra Satyam tries its best to regain the faith of customers, employees and investors, the company faces a daunting task. While the global recession ensured that voluntary attrition remained abysmally low, the improving business environment will soon witness rivals wooing the talent which is available. And they are sure to poach in on the highly skilled hands who are willing to jump the fence at Mahindra Satyam.

Some 400 professionals who are at present working for BP at Satyam will soon become redundant after BP completely shifts the projects to rival TCS and Wipro over the next few months.

Apart from customer attrition, many Satyam employees are also realising that the new management’s relentless focus on pruning the costs means far less job security than nine months ago.

“The Rajus were extremely good at dealing with people, whereas the Mahindras have created a lot of discomfiture in the organisation by driving away our senior leadership and imposing their decisions on us. This makes us feel like outsiders. But for the fraud, an average Satyamite will still prefer Raju to the Mahindras as an employer,” said a senior employee who is currently working for banking and financial services customers at Mahindra Satyam.
The Satyam scam doesn’t seem to have dented the image of B Ramalinga Raju, especially among the employees, who still repose a lot of faith in him and the previous management.

A worsening global economic crisis ensured that there were no jobs available for those seeking better options in the market. For hundreds of Satyam employees who were on the bench, the new cost-cutting strategies and tactics were not really very employee-friendly.
“You cannot really blame the new management - even Wipro was forced to lay off many of it employees during the recession,” said another employee who is currently working at the company’s back office division. However, many of the employees feel that the new management is not able to show empathy to the present employees the way the old Satyam management used to.

Perhaps it is this disconnect between the employees and the management which will work in favour of other IT companies who are eagerly waiting to recruit skilled hands willing to jump the boat. “We always thought Satyam was an over democratic company. It was a friendly company where even those on the bench was treated royally. Tech Mahindra has adopted a hire-and-fire policy and the employee satisfaction levels are very low,” said an associate with the Citigroup project.

Meanwhile, one of the biggest worries which Mahindra Satyam has to face is its fading popularity as an employer. And, whenever business picks up, the company may lose out to rival companies in acquiring new talent given the image it has conjured up in the market.

“I will never recommend anybody to join Satyam. Firstly, from a $2 billion company, it has been reduced to a mid-sized IT player. Secondly, the new management is yet to visualise and comprehend the scale of Satyam’s operations, employee and customer expectations. It’s like a cafe owner buying Taj Krishna. Moreover, with no big projects on the cards, I do not think anybody should risk their career by taking up a job there,” said a Merrill Lynch project head.

Large multinational technology firms such as Accenture and IBM, apart from domestic rivals have already started their recruiting campaigns. “The management’s toughest challenge now is to retain the workforce they have. With Accenture and IBM conducting walk-in interviews every Saturday, more than a quarter of Satyam’s associates’ resumes are circulating in these offices,” said a Mahindra Satyam employee working for an insurance customer.

0 comments: