India's hiring rate recovered moderately from 10 pc in Apr to 35 pc in May 2021: LinkedIn data
Some of the dominant industries on LinkedIn that are actively hiring are -- Finance, Corporate Services, Manufacturing, Healthcare, and Hardware & Networking.
India's hiring rate has recovered moderately from 10 percent in April to 35 percent in May 2021, but the aftermath of the second COVID-19 wave has left professionals in India increasingly vulnerable to the economic uncertainty, as per LinkedIn data.
India's hiring rate on LinkedIn dropped from 50 percent in March 2021 to 10 percent in April 2021. The hiring rate witnessed a modest revival to 35 percent in May 2021, as localised curfews gradually lifted and economic activity partially resumed.
However, working women and young professionals still remain vulnerable to economic turbulence. "Working women are 4x less confident than working men, while the average time taken for new graduates to find jobs has increased from 2 to 3 months," according to LinkedIn.
Some of the dominant industries on LinkedIn that are actively hiring are -- Finance, Corporate Services, Manufacturing, Healthcare, and Hardware & Networking.
On the other hand, the industries that witnessed a decline in hiring include -- Consumer Goods, Media & Communications, Automotive, Marketing & Advertising and Staffing & Recruiting.
Further, more than 9 in 10 companies in India are merging roles, and looking to fill open roles internally.
Top 3 functions with the highest internal mobility rate in India, in 2020, included Product Management, Consulting, and Program & Project Management.
In 2020 in the midst of the pandemic, the demand for Specialised Engineering, Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity and Data Science roles took centre stage.
Nearly a year later, this demand for IT talent continues to surge as Application Developers, Software Engineers, and SAP Specialists emerge as the top 3 in-demand jobs today as per LinkedIn's May 2021 data.
According to LinkedIn, burnout has become a reality in the post-COVID world.
"As this dynamic hustle for upskilling, tech-proofing, and recruiting continues, India's workforce has slowly but surely arrived at the brink of collective burnout," it said.
This sentiment reflects strongly across the rising demand for flexibility in India as every second job seeker prioritises location, hours, and work life balance when looking for a job today, it added.
Edited by Anju Narayanan