Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Scary! 95% Engineers In India Are Not Employable
DataQuest
|April 2017
Aspiring Minds’ new study “Automata National Programming Report’, conducted across 500+ colleges and exclusively shared with Dataquest, claims that over 2/3rd couldn’t even write code and hence 95% engineers are not employable
In the backdrop of the slow business and automation challenge, IT services and BPO companies are finding it difficult to keep their existing workforce intact. Thousands of IT professionals are standing on the verge of losing their jobs. It was recently confirmed by a research done by a US-based firm HfS Research which said that India’s IT services industry will lose 6.4 lakh jobs in next five years. It is a whopping number! If these many people are rendered jobless, the foundations of the Indian IT would be terribly shaken. India will lose the chance to stand as a significant player in the global IT market.
For years, Indian IT has focused on all sorts of jobs including the ‘low-skilled.’ Many of the professionals neither have the skills nor the inclination to meet the demands for new-age skills such as artificial intelligence, big data, IoT, robotics, and more.
REALIZING THE PROBLEM
How can IT industry counter this challenge? What are the ways to put people into the newer roles without handing them the pink slips? But the biggest step towards solving any problem lies in realizing that there is a problem. The problem does not alone lie with the IT companies. Institutions and engineering colleges imparting IT education or B-Tech in computer science are equal partner in the hearsay. IT professionals are the by-product of the education given by colleges and the demand of the IT companies. It has surfaced in a new study ‘Automata National Programming Report’ conducted by Aspiring Minds. The study underlines that “in an ecosystem with a huge IT industry as backdrop and aspirations in Data Science, Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning, over 95% engineers in India have been found unemployable for software development jobs.”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 2017-Ausgabe von DataQuest.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON DataQuest
DataQuest
The GCC Boom: India's Journey from Cost Arbitrage to Innovation
India's 1,700+ GCCs are shifting from cost to co-creation. Can India convert scale, AI depth, and leadership ambition into true orchestration power for global enterprises?
16 mins
October 2025
DataQuest
'Je ne sais quoi' is now 'Je ne sais quAl': From metrics to experiences at Genesys Xperience 2025
At Genesys Xperience 2025, CEO Tony Bates showed how agentic AI is shifting businesses from metrics to empathy-driven experiences that build trust.
8 mins
October 2025
DataQuest
Legacy is not enough: Why enterprises need Al-native SaaS
Phenom's Kiran Menon shares how AI-first SaaS is redefining talent experience, augmenting legacy systems, and delivering measurable outcomes.
4 mins
October 2025
DataQuest
SAP's Jan Bungert on how business Al and data cloud are powering India's Techade
Jan Bungert, CRO of SAP Business AI, discusses how SAP is embedding AI into core applications and leveraging SAP Business Data Cloud to help Indian enterprises like Parle and Mahindra unlock trusted insights, efficiency, and measurable outcomes.
4 mins
October 2025
DataQuest
Why the operating system is no longer just plumbing: Raj Das on the future of RHEL
Many enterprises still think of the operating system as a background utility-something you set up once and forget. In reality, modern OS platforms like RHEL are dynamic, intelligent enablers of innovation.
5 mins
October 2025
DataQuest
Don't bolt Al onto ERP—build a connected system from day one
In an exclusive interaction with Dataquest, Paritosh Ladhani, Joint Managing Director of SLMG Beverages, outlines how the Coca-Cola bottler has moved from legacy processes to a fully digitised, AI-enabled, smart-factory ecosystem.
10 mins
October 2025
DataQuest
The future isn't about isolated robots
C Balaji, PSG Head, TVS Electronics draws a rough, but realistic, picture of factories that embrace robots for new business models as well as faster (and smarter) assembly lines and packaging. It's an age of managed automation, performance-based services, flexible manufacturing, mass customisation, vision-intelligence, serialisation and traceability across all areas. But would this world be with or without taxes, accidents and retrofitting? Let's take a walk with Balaji around what's changing and what's staying.
4 mins
October 2025
DataQuest
Hitting 'Reset', Risking 'Reboot' - VMware's Bold Leap from Complexity to Clarity
VMware, under Broadcom, is redefining cloud with VCF 9.0-simplifying portfolios, reshaping partner strategy, and positioning as a product-led platform.
4 mins
October 2025
DataQuest
Feeding the Al beast, with some beauty
Jameson Mendonca, Power Generation Business Leader, Cummins Power System opens up some pistons of carbon hunger of modern data centres while he also shows how Natural gas, Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil, Life Cycle Assessments (LCAs) and Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) can weld well in this new era. And why we should we worried about scope 1 and 2 in the race to be no.1 in AI.
6 mins
October 2025
DataQuest
We allow you to say No!
What's ETA status of real consent, useful personalisation, technology for the everyday commuter and data ethics in the super-busy travel terminal? Anytime now or are we still catching this bus?
4 mins
October 2025
Translate
Change font size
