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| DEGREE OF DISTRESS: Indian graduates hunting
for jobs in New York City |
On July 1
last year, Deepak Jain took over as dean of the Illinois-based Kelloggs
School of Management. Within a fortnight, he learnt that some of the students
hired for top consulting jobs were being asked by their employers to defer
joining. Guwahati-born Jain immediately swung into action. He reached
out to Kelloggs well-connected alumni and requested them to come
up with six-nine-month long projects so that the graduating students forced
to wait out could be productively employed. He followed this up with road
shows in the US and in select foreign markets, holding discussions with
recruiters. The number of projects on offer was more than we required,
he recalls.
Dean Jain didnt act in haste. The summer interns for 2002 (students
doing internships in summer 2001 and graduating in 2002) were finding
fewer and in some cases no options as the recession deepened in the US.
That was radically different from the heady days of the 1990s when most
companies grabbed interns and booked them for jobs. If bagging internships
is difficult, getting a job offer of choice is tougher in a market that
plunged into recession even before it could recover from the dotcom bust.
International students have an additional problem. Having forked out up
to $80,000 (Rs 38.4 lakh) for a good MBA course, they face the difficulty
of finding an employer willing to justify to the Immigration and Naturalisation
Service (ins) its demand for an H-1B work visa. Between October and December
2001, 58,000 H1 visa applications were filed with insdown 58 per
cent as compared to the same period in 2000. Indian students comprise
up to 10 per cent of business school students in the US.
Yet, going to the top 10 schools matters more now than ever before. With
Ivy League institutions struggling, prospects for students from second
and third tier schools are bleaker. Traditionally, 70 per cent of the
graduates from business schools opt for jobs in investment banking and
consulting because these companies offer faster and better growth opportunities
to graduates. But this year consulting giants like Booz Allen & Hamilton
Inc and AT Kearney announced cutbacks at the beginning of the recruitment
season.
Bhawana Malhotra, a 1993 graduate from Lady Shri Ram College, Delhi, moved
to Wharton after working with Arthur Andersen and McKinsey in Delhi as
a tax and legal expert. Today, she is open to returning to India if the
right offer comes her way. Students should factor in
the risk of recession. We can face it at any point in our professional
lives, she says.
Dean Jain has taken the challenges of recessionary job market to spell
out a future role for management schools. They should come up with
the concept of short-term projects and institutionalise it like a residency
programme for doctors. Lets have a business residency programme,
he says.
Though the US economy has begun to show faint signs of recovery, the job
market rules may well have changed forever. Unlike the 1990s, students
will in future have to rely on networking, career fairs, job postings
for summer positions and the alumni.
Anil Padmanabhan
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