A “HIRE” Balancing Rope

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Suma Subramanian

Partner and Director, CaptiveAide

After months of work sorting the legal and infrastructure areas of your captive entity in India, the least problematic ought to be that of hiring staff, right? After all, the industry has been around for a long time and there are experienced professionals available for hire as are 2.5 million young graduates who stream out of colleges annually, of which, over a million have engineering qualifications. hiring in India isn’t so simple.

Hiring of experienced staff as lateral movements has the attendant risks of fitment, culture and cost associated with it.

As for young blood (fresh from campus), not much is readily employable as is. Nasscom, the technology industry’s representative body, has found that unless trained after they graduate, about 75% of tech grads are not employable. The reality of staffing your captive center in India isn’t pretty – but careful and strategic planning will help in a big way.

Mixed Bag

The best path to take when you’re hiring for your captive center is the middle path. Obviously the post right at the top will not depend upon age or even knowledge of the technology in depth but someone who understands the nuances of working with global in-house centers and is comfortable in managing stakeholders within the parent organization.

Depending on the nature of work (processes) the traditional pyramid structure may work, where the base is made up of young staff – and the more experienced, older employees/managers making up the middle and the top.

 Train Gain

Hiring the right peope alone is not enough. From the outset, invest on training programs for every single person joining the captive. This will provide a good base for employees to understand the organization they are being hired for, its customers,overseas counterparts they will interact with and so on. While Skype is cheaper (even free!), I would rather have a few senior managers meet the new employees face to face. It’s a great way to forge work bonds and build trust.

Culture mash-up

There’s every likelihood of one side misunderstanding the other even in the work environment where you’d expect clinical efficiency. And that’s because office environments differ hugely depending upon the geography they are in. One thing that is a must do are culture workshops that need to be held on both sides of the ocean. Additionally, I’d suggest having a cultural mash-up between the captive and parent, wherein employees engage in discussions, exchange stories, fables, have meals together and so on. Being horrified before the work begins in real earnest is better than rude shocks once deadlines loom.

Go Local

Offshore captive centers have to make sure they deliver the goods to the parent, but the parent needs to be nurturing as well. Take stock of local holidays; if you still need employees to work on an important local holiday, think of rewarding employees in a way that they feel motivated enough to sacrifice that holiday.

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Girish Kamath

Sr. Partner, Head – GCC Operations

30+ years in the Indian IT industry. 18+ years of experience as a Managing Director building and running Global Competency Center (GCC) captives. Built and operationally managed 1800+ resources across multi-city, multi-functional GCC for a leading US gaming company for over 10 years. Subsequently has built 5 additional GCCs in India.

Earlier in his career, he managed large, distributed programs for global customers across Europe and US for a large global IT services company.

Suma Subramanian

Co-founder and Managing Partner

30+ years experience in People Management, Human Resources Strategy, Design, Change Management and Operations. Formerly, Chief People Officer with a leading Infrastructure Management services company and before that, with one of the world’s largest IT services firms, managing HR for their largest business division with 10,000+ workforce and responsible for their key “Best Employer practices” in her corporate HR role

Transitioned captive operations for some of the world’s largest financial institutions. As the HRO Practice Leader, she is responsible for creating the high-performance workplace, creating a work culture that mirrors the GCC parent.

She is an Executive Coach, and is Certified in Change Leadership from Cornell University, a Certified NLP Practitioner, a Lead Assessor ISO9001 & Assessor BS7799

Narayanaswamy H (aka Swamy)

Co-founder and Managing Partner

35+ years of Finance and Operations experience with over two decades of CFO/COO level experience with global companies. Significant experience in Mergers & Acquisitions, raising Capital, post merger Integration

Been an advisor to several global enterprises and their offshore capability centers As CFO for the captive delivery center of one of the largest decision sciences companies, played a key role in growing it to 2000+ people. Prior experience includes setting up MNC subsidiaries including legal, regulatory and compliance matters

Jawahar Bekay

Founder & Managing Partner

Established CaptiveAide in 2016 as a specialist consulting and operations capable firm dedicated to helping companies from outside India to set up their captive entities or what are now called Global Capability Centers or GCC.

35+ years in the global IT industry with over two and half decades as CEO and strategic-level experience with global enterprises and markets. Co-founded one of India’s leading IT services companies in the infrastructure space. Co-founded Asia’s leading internet software development company. Global head of strategy and CEO for Indian captive operations for a $350M IT services company.

He has worked with large F500 and Global 200 clients in successful offshoring strategies both service provider and captive. Has built, acquired, integrated and managed multiple, cross-border companies.

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