The day after iconic Kannada film hero Rajkumar died, India's IT-BPO capital came to a standstill but the contingency plans of companies prevented any disruption in services. |
While information technology firms got a large number of their people to work from home, BPO companies diverted the traffic to their centres in other cities. |
This is because almost 95 per cent of the staff could not make it to their work stations as mobs went on a rampage in the city. |
IBM, a majority of whose 40,000 staff in India are spread across eight centres in the city, is understood to have totally shut shop for the time being, keeping only a small portion of its BPO work going. |
According to IBM executives, most of the work has been diverted to the company's Delhi centre. Pureplay BPO firms like 24/7 Customer, too, had to down shutters today, making do with little staff, and had to divert work to other centres in India. |
Almost the entire IT staff of software vendors chose to stay away from work as many of them had the liberty to co-ordinate work from home, unlike BPO staff that cannot work out of home because of data security or unavailability of bandwidth. |
Infosys' IT employees, too, did not have to turn up for work ahead of the company's annual results tomorrow. |