Emerging sectors such as retail, real estate, pharma, private equity and infrastructure are overtaking traditional recruiters like IT and finance in lateral placements at business schools this year. |
Lateral placements refer to executives who have taken a mid-career break to get a B-school degree. |
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The rapid growth in sunshine sectors has forced companies to hunt for mid- and senior-level executives at premier B-schools. |
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Feedback Ventures, an infrastructure consulting company, Arcelor-Mittal, and Reliance Retail are among the 25-30 companies that went to the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad (IIM-A) this time. |
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In all 88 students, each with roughly 18 months of work experience, were qualified to participate in the lateral placements. |
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"This year, companies from non-IT sectors like retail, infrastructure and real estate have come in large numbers to recruit students for both mid- and senior-level management positions," said Jatin Matani, student placement co-ordinator, IIM-A, which started lateral placements in January. |
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The trend was discernible at most IIMs. At IIM-Calcutta, Arcelor-Mittal, Dr Reddy's, Ranbaxy, DLF, Tesco, Pepsi, Trident, and Standard Chartered have dominated lateral placements. |
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At IIM-Lucknow (IIM-L), Reliance Retail, RPG Group and Essar Group have been the large recruiters, apart from the Tata group, Birlas and the Hindujas. |
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"There is a lot of demand for talent in fast-growing industries like retail. Interestingly, even students feel these sectors offer exciting career opportunities," said Kirupa Shankar, member of placement committee, IIM-L. |
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At IIM-L, 35 companies have so far made 100 offers to 80 students eligible to participate in lateral placements. |
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At the Indian School of Business (ISB), Hyderabad too, the rolling placement season has attracted players from non-traditional sectors. |
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