Skip to main content

Salaries for IIM-A graduates up by 20 p.c.

* 76 p.c. accept offers to work in India

* Highest international salary accepted was Rs. 1.44 crore per annum

* 30 per cent to join consulting sector, 11 to start their own ventures

AHMEDABAD: Contrary to the apprehensions of a general slowdown in the international economy affecting management institutions, students of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, fetched an average of 20 per cent higher salaries this year compared to last year.

With the campus placements of the two-year Post-Graduate Programme in Management, Post-Graduate Programme in Agri Business Management, and the newly introduced one-year Post-Graduate Programme in Public Management and Policy completed successfully, a happy IIM-A director, Samir Barua, said at least his institution was not impacted by the economic crisis.

‘Most preferred institute’

He also said that the IIM-A continued to be the most preferred institute for recruitment not only in terms of the diversity of the organisations that participated in the recruitment process but also by the offers made by them.

Prof. Barua declined to draw any comparison between the IIM-A and other management institutions in the country on the issue of salary and said that he was not aware what “bonus” components, which mark a bulk of the total salary package offered by international and Indian companies, had been incorporated in the total average salary in the placements conducted in the campuses of other IIMs .

He also said it would be wrong to judge the performance of the students and the standard of the institutions solely on the basis of the highest salary offered instead of going by the average salary offered to the entire batch by the different companies.

The highest international salary accepted in this year’s campus recruitment went up to Rs. 1.44 crore per annum as against Rs. 1.20 crore offered last year. Even the average international salary offered this year was about Rs. 47.60 lakh , against Rs. 36 lakh last year.

Domestic salary

The average domestic salary jumped up by about 30 per cent from Rs. 13.7 lakh last year to about 17.85 lakh this year while the highest domestic salary accepted was about Rs. 70 lakh.

The chairperson of the IIM-A PGP placements committee, Piyush Sinha, said that though the financial sector was supposed to have been hit hard by the economic slowdown and many companies had imposed “hiring freeze,” as many as 113 of the 255 students of the 2006-08 batch would be joining the financial sector.

Recruitment

The major banks to recruit the graduates included Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan, Merill Lynch, Deutsche Bank and Barclays .

While about 30 per cent of the students would be joining the consulting sector, about seven per cent would go to general management and over three per cent to operations.

At least 11 students in the current year’s batch have already opted out of the placements to start their own ventures.

Pointing out that 76 per cent of the students accepted offers to work in India and another 11 per cent in the Asia-Pacific region, as against the total of 77 per cent last year, Prof. Barua said for the first time a French student, Diane Gabriel, doing her dual degree programme from both the ESSEC business school and the IIM-A, had preferred to stay back in India and would be joining a local company after completing her degree.

Similarly in the Agri Business Management Programme, the average salary offered increased from Rs. 10 lakh to Rs. 12.30 lakh .

For a batch of 31 students, 30 companies participated in the placements which for the first time also saw consultancy and other peripheral companies vying with agro-based industries to recruit the IIMA PGP-ABM students.

Of the first 33-students batch of the PGP-PMP, mainly coming from the government and other public sector organisations for a one-year stint in public management and policy, nine students would be returning to the parent organisations who had also sponsored their IIM-A studies. The salary offered to the remaining 24 students, having an average 12 years of work experience, ranged from Rs. 15 lakh to Rs. 40 lakh per annum with an average of Rs. 24 lakh per annum. Prof. Barua said the batch size for the PGP-PMP course for the next year would be expanded to 45 students.

© Copyright 2000 - 2008 The Hindu

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Quality education still elusive (The Hindu Edit)

The key finding in a recent study that even top schools in major cities in India suffer from the entrenched tendency to impart rote learning may have some shock value to those who believe that private educational institutions place greater emphasis on quality and holistic education. However, for those closely observing the school education scenario, it is a re-affirmation of a bitter truth: schools in our country are, by and large, quite far from seeing education as a process of learning with understanding, acquiring knowledge through self-discovery and conceptualisation; rather, education remains a mere transmission of information in a rigid classroom atmosphere, where the emphasis is on memorisation and the objective is to rush through a pre-determined syllabus and prepare children for examinations. While on the scholastic side the WIPRO-Educational Initiatives 'Quality Education Study,' which covered 89 schools, shows a fall in learning standards among students in classes 4,...

Rooting For Home Essay by Mark Tully

In humans, as in plants, roots grow deeper if left to grow in one place, untransplanted MARK TULLY Magazine| Jan 12, 2009 T homas Hardy, who wrote some of the best known English novels, one of which was called The Return of the Native , said, "I am convinced that it is better for a writer to know a little bit of the world remarkably well than to know a great part of the world remarkably little." The bit of the world Hardy knew remarkably well was his native place, the county of Dorset in the west of England. It was a very small bit of the world, and a remote rural bit at that, which did not keep up with the fast-moving times of the last quarter of the 19th century. Hardy's novels reveal the profound influence of his native place but he was not a country bumpkin. One biographer of Hardy has said, "The two contrasting modes of feeling—for his native soil and for his cultural mecca (London)—entwine, sometimes fusing, sometimes pulling asunder, always with varying ...

How much you will charge to laugh?

Sonal Kalra, HT City, DDun My deepest sympathies to the family and friends of those who are always `dead' serious I give you three seconds to recall the last time you laughed out loud. One...two...three, done. All those who remembered the last `LOL' they'd casually typed while chatting on Facebook can take turns to slap each other. And the others, who at least tried to recall their real laughter but could not, listen to me. Kya, problem kya hai? Do people, who have to bear you every day of their lives, not deserve to sometimes see the twinkle in your eyes or the teeth that you claim to religiously brush every morning? Kya aapke toothpaste mein namak hai? Then what is the matter, people? Yesterday I observed this man at a friend's get-together. He was there to attend a party, but his face bore an expression as if the host had put a gun to his head and dragged him there. Someone told a joke, everyone laughed, even those who had heard it before. But this one's e...