Showing posts with label IIT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IIT. Show all posts

Monday, April 6, 2020

Covid-19: Gartner revokes job offers at IIMs; IITs too witness cancellation

With countries virtually shutting down amid the rising Covid-19 pandemic, recruiters, especially multinationals, are revisiting their hiring plans, throwing the placement processes of India’s top management and technology institutes into disarray.
Several students of Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) have found their job offers revoked by US-based research and advisory firm Gartner.
IIM Calcutta and IIM Ahmedabad have confirmed the revocations, with an official at the former’s placement panel saying Gartner rescinded its final placement offers as well as those for internships.
“The institute is trying to contact them to find an agreeable outcome,” the IIM Calcutta official said. Amit Karna, chairperson of placements at IIM Ahmedabad, said: “Gartner has revoked offers made at the final placements. It had hired three students. No other firm has revoked final offers. The institute is finding new opportunities for affected students by reaching out to our alumni network, existing and new recruiters.”
When contacted, Gartner refused to comment. A few students of IIM Bangalore took to LinkedIn, saying their summer placements and job offers were rescinded by a US-based firm. But IIM Bangalore said it was in touch with the company, and trying to find other offers for the affected students.
U Dinesh Kumar, chair, career development services, IIM Bangalore, said: “All firms have told us they are going to stand by their commitments. Offers have only been postponed. The companies are trying to work out plans once there is clarity on the lockdown after April 15. Mostly, financial sector firms have postponed offers, as they haven’t been able to begin internships due to logistics and data safety issues.”
Kumar agreed some Gulf-based firms had withdrawn their summer placement offers because of travel restrictions, but the placement team had found other opportunities for the affected students.
Taking a middle path, a leading fast-moving consumer goods multinational has offered virtual assignments to those it picked for summer internships instead of postponing their commitment. The company is likely to take a call on final placements after the lockdown is over, as management trainees joining will happen only in June or July, sources said.
At IIM Calcutta, a start-up has revoked seven internship offers.
“Some of our prominent regular recruiters have come forward to hire additional interns. The placement team is arranging new internships for those who lost their opportunities,” the IIM Calcutta official said. An official of IIM Shillong’s placement committee said while none of the full-time offers had been revoked, certain medium-sized organisations and start-ups had pulled out summer internship offers. “We are dealing with an unprecedented situation, and the placement season has also been affected. We feel that the greater impact of the pandemic will be felt next year, because there could be cases of reduced hiring across sectors to cover up the losses incurred,” the official said.
Sources said offers from US-based companies were the worst affected.
Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) have also been grappling with similar cancellations, especially by international recruiters. The All IITs’ Placement Committee (AIPC) has written to recruiters, requesting them not to cancel offers.

So far, IITs including Delhi, Kanpur, and Madras have seen at least one recruiter revoking job offers.

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Pichai a brilliant student who never showed off: IIT professor

Current Affairs

Sundar Pichai, the new CEO of the core business of Google, was a shy but brilliant student who never showed off his knowledge unnecessarily, recalls his teacher at the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur.
The Chennai-born Pichai, then known by his full name Pichai Sundararajan, cleared the IIT entrance test in 1989 and enrolled for a four-year undergraduate course in metallurgical and materials engineering.
"He passed out in 1993 with a B.Tech (honours) degree. Being the topper, he was awarded the Bidhan Chandra Roy Memorial silver medal," Sanat Kumar Roy, professor in the institute's metallurgical and materials engineering department, told IANS over phone.
Roy, who taught metallurgical thermodynamics to Pichai, said he showed a keen interest in electronics material and did his final year thesis on the subject.
He was shy, calm and quiet, and "very, very brilliant".
"Such was his brilliance, that it was very much evident that he wanted to do something different. His interest in material sciences was visible from the second year itself. He alone opted for electronic material in his batch," recalled Roy, himself an IIT alumnus.
Pichai, who came from an ordinary middle class family was "unquestionably intelligent".

 In August, 1993, Pichai left for US, where he joined Stanford University and completed an MS course in material sciences and engineering and an AMBA from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, where he was adjudged a Siebel Scholar and a Palmer Scholar...Read More