The programme -- at its beta stage -- has seen firms like L&T Infotech, Telenor, RBS, YES Bank, Godrej Industries, Paytm, Zomato and Delhivery coming on board.
Similar to Facebook, the enterprise offering allows users to connect with their colleagues, see newsfeed, comment and share posts, create groups and chat using Work Chat.
However, users cannot use their personal accounts to log in and the access is managed by the organisation. So, if an employee leaves an organisation, the login ceases to work and hence, the corporate data stay safe.
"At Facebook, our mission is to make the world more open and connected, and this is also true in the workplace. In a mobile-first world, we want to help people find simpler ways to collaborate and connect with co-workers," Facebook at Work Director Julien Codorniou told reporters here.
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"Over 60,000 companies globally signed up globally for the pilot. Of these, we have already got 450 companies on board. These include different sectors from banking, telecom, travel, retail and real estate," Facebook at Work Asia-Pacific Head Ramesh Gopalkrishna said.
Gopalkrishna, however, declined to comment on the number of users for Facebook at Work.
"India is one of Facebook at Work's top countries and our teams will start testing the solution with more companies... Facebook is focussing on adding companies with 5,000-10,000 employees before opening the platform," he added.
Of Facebook's over 1.62 billion global users, over 142 million come from India.