Fed Up Indian IT Professionals Want To Be Able To Leave Their Jobs Sooner (mashable.com)
An anonymous reader shares a report: India's major IT firms have long required their employees to give a three-month, "non-negotiable" notice before leaving the company, but they could be soon forced to change that. Fed-up IT professionals from across India have reached out to the government, complaining that it is "unrealistic" for anyone to plan that far ahead. Over 28,000 professionals have signed a petition, addressed to the ministry of labor, to take immediate action on the matter. Part of the problem is that many companies are unwilling to wait for three months to have a person join them, many cited in the report say. Some of India's top IT firms including Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, Tech Mahindra, HCL, Accenture and IBM impose the three-month notice period policy on their employees.
Typical Corporations. Always stretching the boundaries on abuse. Doesn't matter what field you are in. You can be a janitor. You will.. be abused. As long as there is a surplus of people. This event will continue to grow.
indian i.t. wages are so low. competition for open positions consist mostly of the unemployed or those who have recently completed school.. not the currently employed looking for a better job with more money.
Indian ITers: "unrealistic" for anyone to plan that far ahead."
No wonder their software is even worse than what we in the west call spaghetti code, without any detectable design.
So in my country of 5 million this would be... ~112 signatories. Three months is standard here in Norway, sure sometime you'd like to jump ship straight away. But on the flip side it's three months instead of two weeks if they want to get rid of you too and that means a lot when it comes to unexpectedly applying for a new job. My opinion? If your company doesn't know if they need your skills three months from now they're running a cowboy shop where you can just as easily find yourself out the door as you got in the door. It won't be that much fun when you're on the short end of that stick.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
Send them back? Wow, are you going to be shocked when you read the article. Maybe slashdot should adopt those crazy titles like "You cannot believe how long IT professionals have to wait in India" and then put on some unrelated, suggestive picture for the link. Of course, then, folks at slashdot would start wondering why nobody takes them seriously. Oh wait...
Believe nothing -- Buddha
Globalization is great for the multinational corporations and for a country's overall GDP.
And if you are going to Ithaca Community College and taking their Econ 101 class? Globalization is good. Globalization increases "everyone's" living standard.
Now, in reality the folks that get hurt are quite a few at ALL levels so the Harvard Economist who says that all we need to do is "move up the food chain" is talking out of his ass.
See, nothing like this has ever been experienced ever in the human race. Please, the English Industrial Revolution was nothing like this - ever!
So, policy - I don't know. This is so fucking weird and there's no template for it. We're on our own. But what I can say is, populists shit is not the answer - even Bernie got is wrong. Remember, if it sounds good, how you're gonna pay for it?
That question breaks most populist plans.
I'll go away now.
Yours,
Some dipshit academic.
My wife is Filipino and in the Philippines there is a 30-day notice requirement. Your employer can even sue if you leave without sufficient notice. Turns into a major pain when, for example, you are immigrating to a country like the USA where immigration paperwork moves in an unpredictable manner...lots of halts and sudden stops. Her employer was a foreign company who didn't care and just had her keep working after giving initial notice, but she knew several people it had been a problem for in the past. In fact, one of their new hires was being threatened with suit by her previous employer for giving something like 29.5 days notice because THEY didn't read it until the next morning.
Wait, so they cannot leave? Sounds like indentured servitude to me.
How does that work?
Unless they've legalized slavery (which I'm not saying I'd put past them), you can always just say "fuck you" and walk out the door. Are they sitting on three months' wages or something? ... and who wants somebody who's already given notice sitting there for three months and probably doing no real work or really crappy work?
I thought even the two weeks notice thing was dead in the real world.
Just walk, man. What are they going to do, chain you to your desk?
You or your employer can part ways at any time for any reason. The rest of employment-at-will tilts the playing field to the employer. IMHO, the employment-at-will laws are in need of serious reform to restore a level playing field in the US.
Yeah, bring a cow dung seller, or a tailor to do IT job....idiot.
Am in USA working for one of these companies. I have 3 months notice back in India and in USA also. If I quit and join another company in US without giving 3 months notice, I have to pay $10000. If I dont, its deducted from my gratuity in India.
Added to that, they give my name to a debt collection agency with some non enforceable contract details. It might not affect my credit history, but is a major hazzle to deal with the debt collection agency.
That $10000 is a major decision point in switching job and is the reason why am a slave to this company.
BTW, its an Indian subsidiary of an American international company. Not even a proper Indian corporation.
Does that mean Indian IT workers also get 3 months notice before firing/layoff?
Just give the three month notice, just stop coming in. What are they gonna do, fire you?
We have cheap gas, cheap stuff, a plethora of crappy food options, sports, and sit-coms.
What else is there?
Watched enthusiastically by the gun slinging, corporate ass licking redneck white trash!!!
In Belgium the time the company gives you is twice of what you have to do. This wil also depend on how long you work somewhere.
So a standard will be that if you have to do 6 weeks when you leave, the company will have to give you 3 months notice If you have to give 6 months, the company will have to give you a year. That would mean that you probably work there for 15 years or so.
Most companies will just let you go and pay out, but by law they can require you to come that period.
As this is something that is all over Belgium, it also means that if you get a new job, nobody will be surprised if you say you will be available in 3 months. When they start looking, they will be aware that this will happen and fire you before they fire the old guy,
e.g. You do the last job interview in December. You sign the contract to start 1st of April. You give your letter of resignation and you do your three months.
From the side of the new company, they start looking for somebody in November, they find you in December. They sign the contract you start the first of April. They can fire the guy you are replacing any time they want, but say they want somebody there till you come without overlapping. They call him into the HR office and tell him he is fired. He gets his box and leaves. He will get a payout of 6 months.
What they can do is do this in January and ask to stay 3 months and get the three months. Stay 6 months or do it at the end of March and stay 6 months.
"But this is of disadvantage of the company" people will say. "Yes it is, so?" I will say.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
My last company required a 3 month notice period. When I found a new job I negotiated a start date 90 days in the future and gave my notice. Then the company I gave notice to felt that they no longer wanted me working on any "sensitive" projects so that put me on "garden leave".
Then they realized they were wasting money and couldn't hire a replacement until I left, that's when they asked me if I would consider leaving earlier...
If it is a commonplace requirement in India then hiring companies will understand and make offers that factor in the notice period, and if that happens often enough employers will start to see it as a burden on them and drop the practice.
Nullius in verba
I'm sure that if you really wanted to go quickly, you could easily find a way.
For example if you gave in your notice then just started turning up way late or not at all etc, or worse, became anti-productive, they would let you go or fire you ASAP just to get you out the way.
LOL. This made my fucking day
Don't give any notice. At all of the places I have worked, I have only ever given notice to one. The rest of the time I quit on the phone or on the spot.
Companies don't give you notice when they are going to let you go, so you shouldn't give them notice when you are going to let them go either.
So What. I'm feed up with 3 million H1B's damaging American's chance at employment. If these H1B Zombies are so fucking smart, why can't they make a difference back home?
This is funny because they leave India to go to San Francisco and people are still shitting in the street.
Not. There certainly are blacklists and there is communication between hiring entities. Usually, promoted by the highest level within the organizations.
Its amazing that a cow dung seller from India could do the job of an American IT consultant!!!
Maybe he would do the job and speak English better than shitty Indian consultants...
Does India have a H1B visa program like the US? There may be some skilled foreign workers willing to come in and meet the local employers requirements.
Some of India's top IT firms ... impose the three-month notice period policy on their employees.
When I don't want to work for a company any more, I don't continue to follow its policies for three months just because they tell me to. What are the consequences for not complying, and what is enabling these companies to impose those consequences?
Secession is the right of all sentient beings.
What happens if you don't give notice?
Do they fire you?
Do they sue you for the money they would have given you?
Do they sue you for the value you would have added and they didn't pay you for yet?
Do they write an angry letter to your mother?
In all seriousness, what is the "or else" in these case?
As working conditions improve, education improves, benefits improve. The workers, previously used to having no power and being abused, start to demand better terms of employment.
The dichotomy is that all these improvements result in higher labor costs. Where the developing country had a labor cost advantage, eventually this advantage is lost.
The end game is that India starts outsourcing to Pakistan. Or Bangladesh. Or wherever, the point is only that Indian labor becomes relatively expensive and then companies start looking elsewhere for cheap labor. India isn't there yet and may take decades to get there. Given the trends though, India will eventually fall victim to lower cost providers.
Those last three weeks will be devoted to training your replacement. If this universe were symmetric, he might even be an American
Multiple news papers seem to have picked it up and added their slant.. all over a petition on change.org (https://www.change.org/p/ministry-of-labour-and-employment-to-stop-indian-it-companies-from-forcefully-holding-employees-with-3-months-notice-period)
So the best case scenario is that it the petition reaches its target, a letter goes out to the ministry of labor - definitely not "but they could be soon forced to change that" as the summary states.