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Businesses The Almighty Buck Technology IT

Fed Up Indian IT Professionals Want To Be Able To Leave Their Jobs Sooner (mashable.com) 114

An anonymous reader shares a report: India's major IT firms have long required their employees to give a three-month, "non-negotiable" notice before leaving the company, but they could be soon forced to change that. Fed-up IT professionals from across India have reached out to the government, complaining that it is "unrealistic" for anyone to plan that far ahead. Over 28,000 professionals have signed a petition, addressed to the ministry of labor, to take immediate action on the matter. Part of the problem is that many companies are unwilling to wait for three months to have a person join them, many cited in the report say. Some of India's top IT firms including Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, Tech Mahindra, HCL, Accenture and IBM impose the three-month notice period policy on their employees.
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Fed Up Indian IT Professionals Want To Be Able To Leave Their Jobs Sooner

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  • by Neuronwelder ( 990842 ) on Thursday March 02, 2017 @11:07AM (#53962265)
    Typical Corporations. Always stretching the boundaries on abuse. Doesn't matter what field you are in. You can be a janitor. You will.. be abused. As long as there is a surplus of people. This event will continue to grow.
    • no, as long as government continues to suck the cock of big business and give them anything they want, the abuse will continue.

      it appears that ONLY police and similar 'brothers' are allowed to form unions. for authority figured, unions are ok. for us, unions are bad.

      (is your head spinning yet?)

      • You kind of got the first one partially right: The 'government' you are angry at, is the "puppet" of corporate puppeteers. They falsely have the appearance of a governing body. . (We don't have a government anymore - we have a corporation.). The 2nd one is true: They cater to police unions only because they can use the police as a wrecking ball.. Their police minions will get ordinary folks to comply with the insanity of, oh, let's say a governor's whims... And 'politicians' don't want the police on the si
  • by johanw ( 1001493 ) on Thursday March 02, 2017 @11:18AM (#53962341)

    Indian ITers: "unrealistic" for anyone to plan that far ahead."

    No wonder their software is even worse than what we in the west call spaghetti code, without any detectable design.

    • by ElizabethGreene ( 1185405 ) on Thursday March 02, 2017 @11:36AM (#53962523)

      This is worse for many H1-B workers here in the US from major consultancies.

      They sign on to 12 or 18 month commitments with penalties of thousands of dollars per month for early termination. They also can't begin work until they've provided a bond to cover this penalty. Their contracts also include provisions for binding arbitration, no class action lawsuits, a requirement to notify the employer before any legal action, and a gag clause so they can't talk about it.

      Combine this with consultancy blacklisting and "Indentured Servitude" is absolutely correct.

  • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Thursday March 02, 2017 @11:18AM (#53962345) Homepage

    So in my country of 5 million this would be... ~112 signatories. Three months is standard here in Norway, sure sometime you'd like to jump ship straight away. But on the flip side it's three months instead of two weeks if they want to get rid of you too and that means a lot when it comes to unexpectedly applying for a new job. My opinion? If your company doesn't know if they need your skills three months from now they're running a cowboy shop where you can just as easily find yourself out the door as you got in the door. It won't be that much fun when you're on the short end of that stick.

    • by ghoul ( 157158 )

      Good part of this is when companies want to do RIF they will give the person 3 months notice and then ask them not to come to office. They still get their salary while they are totally free to job search. Many get a job within a month , take 2 months vacation and join the new place. If the company wants to reduce headcount immediately they give 3 months salary in cash. (While this does not save money directly sometimes companies need to hire in a certain skill but hiring is on freeze till the bench of folks

      • by Manoj ( 2296 )

        Wha happens if an employee just stops showing up for work on their own? I assume they will be fired. Does this still need a three month cooling off period?

        • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday March 02, 2017 @12:24PM (#53963031)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by Kjella ( 173770 )

          Wha happens if an employee just stops showing up for work on their own? I assume they will be fired. Does this still need a three month cooling off period?

          There's still "avskjedigelse" which would be instant termination for cause, but most of that would be criminal conduct like embezzlement, information theft, violence or threats. Gross disloyal conduct, showing up drunk or high or not showing up at all could also be reasons, but general tardiness or poor work performance will generally not be enough. You can still get laid off, but that's a much longer process with warnings where you'll be on notice that termination may follow if you don't improve. And you

        • In Poland in such case you would get disciplinary firing - it goes on an employment certificate which you are expected to show your next employer (you can avoid it, but it would be very suspicious). This is only true for standard work contracts. Other types of contracts are often used to limit costs and avoid regulations related to work contracts.

          Regardless of employment type your former employer can also sue you for losses and lost income caused by your sudden departure

          • it goes on an employment certificate which you are expected to show your next employer

            damn! they have you by the short hairs, don't they?

            sounds quite the nanny state.

            as bad as the US has been getting, we're not that bad yet. no friggin way I'd give power to any previous employer to control my working life and really, my destiny, like that.

            that's fucked up! how did that happen? do you need a dr's note if you call in sick, too? (I know, some countries do require that, which is also very non-trusting and

            • sounds quite the nanny state.

              GP didn't say it was legally required, only that it would be very suspicious not to show an employment certificate. I'd expect something like this to be more of an industry standard than a law.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • A mandatory three-month notice will lead to a standard unwillingness to contract three months out, because by negotiating shorter lead times than this the company will be at a strong advantage in salary negotiation: they know that the applicant is currently on their notice period, or already unemployed, and have no option of staying with their current employer.

      This works on those who naïvely apply to only one company at a time, which is most of the "goody two-shoes starts at the bottom level" crowd.

  • Wait, so they cannot leave? Sounds like indentured servitude to me.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • No, nothing like that. It was always possible, and Indian companies do it to discourage finding a job. And in general, you will find yourself doing either nothing or some sh***y work during those 3 months instead of transferring technology to someone else. In a rare case, yes you would be using the 3 month period to ramup up someone else, but which company gives 3 months for someone to rampup really?
      • Ha. Knowledge transfer. Maybe they need some foreign workers in to train their replacements.
  • You or your employer can part ways at any time for any reason. The rest of employment-at-will tilts the playing field to the employer. IMHO, the employment-at-will laws are in need of serious reform to restore a level playing field in the US.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 02, 2017 @11:39AM (#53962547)

    Am in USA working for one of these companies. I have 3 months notice back in India and in USA also. If I quit and join another company in US without giving 3 months notice, I have to pay $10000. If I dont, its deducted from my gratuity in India.

    Added to that, they give my name to a debt collection agency with some non enforceable contract details. It might not affect my credit history, but is a major hazzle to deal with the debt collection agency.

    That $10000 is a major decision point in switching job and is the reason why am a slave to this company.

    BTW, its an Indian subsidiary of an American international company. Not even a proper Indian corporation.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      This is why Americans are generally negative towards foreign tech workers. Not only are you a slave, you raise expectations for everyone else.

      "Why won't you work 100 hours a week for spare change like our slave? I think we'll just replace you with a slave, and you have to train them to get any severance."

    • you guys are very clearly abused. its sad that its that way.

      perhaps you need to consider a revolution in your country. fix your own society, first, THEN come here once your own problems are sorted out.

      good luck.

    • What do you mean by "gratuity"?
    • by ebvwfbw ( 864834 )

      So what's the big deal? Bail out and get a much higher paying job. I was stiffed about 20K years ago. The company refused to pay. Goods, services, housing, food, etc, all of that was supposed to be covered. I don't see 10K as much of a problem at all.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday March 02, 2017 @11:55AM (#53962717)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • I'm in Canada, and I have seen people being escorted out of work in less than 30 minutes.
      Some guy is called in a meeting, he goes there nonchalantly not knowing what is going to happen, then he has to give back his badge/key and is escorted by security outside the building. Some people were not even allowed to say "bye" to their coworker.
      It works like this in North America.
      • I'm in Canada, and I have seen people being escorted out of work in less than 30 minutes.

        Some guy is called in a meeting, he goes there nonchalantly not knowing what is going to happen, then he has to give back his badge/key and is escorted by security outside the building. Some people were not even allowed to say "bye" to their coworker.

        It works like this in North America.

        When I've seen this happen in the US, although the employee is kicked out, he still gets paid for some length of time. (Usually at least 2 weeks, often a bit more, depending on the circumstances.) I have no idea what the law states. I suspect pay could be stopped immediately, but the company is trying to be nice, figuring that the employee would be less likely to start a legal battle. (Even if an employee is terminated for valid reasons, a legal fight could hurt the company.)

        • The reason they gets paid after they've been let go is because checks are typically withheld for a period of time when they start work. You don't get paid until you've been on the job for some amount of time (typically two weeks, but can be as much as a month).

          They are getting the money back for the time that they already worked before they were fired. Severance packages exist, but aren't typical or required for non-managerial positions.

          Money that the company DOES have to pay is unemployment insurance. If

      • by Terwin ( 412356 )

        I'm in Canada, and I have seen people being escorted out of work in less than 30 minutes.

        Some guy is called in a meeting, he goes there nonchalantly not knowing what is going to happen, then he has to give back his badge/key and is escorted by security outside the building. Some people were not even allowed to say "bye" to their coworker.

        It works like this in North America.

        Last time that happened to me(laid off, not fired), I got 2 weeks severance and 6 weeks accumulated PTO paid out.
        Found a new job in about a month and got 13 months of income that year.

      • This is completely unrelated to severance time and happens in Europe just as well because trendy managers love to copy American bad habits.

  • My last company required a 3 month notice period. When I found a new job I negotiated a start date 90 days in the future and gave my notice. Then the company I gave notice to felt that they no longer wanted me working on any "sensitive" projects so that put me on "garden leave".

    Then they realized they were wasting money and couldn't hire a replacement until I left, that's when they asked me if I would consider leaving earlier...

    If it is a commonplace requirement in India then hiring companies will understa

  • I'm sure that if you really wanted to go quickly, you could easily find a way.
    For example if you gave in your notice then just started turning up way late or not at all etc, or worse, became anti-productive, they would let you go or fire you ASAP just to get you out the way.

  • So What. I'm feed up with 3 million H1B's damaging American's chance at employment. If these H1B Zombies are so fucking smart, why can't they make a difference back home?
    • their country is fucked and everyone knows it.

      they jump ship, come here, becomes virtual slaves and while they still have it better than being back home, this abandonment of their home country is NOT HELPING the home country improve.

      all they are doing is bringing their problems here.

  • Does India have a H1B visa program like the US? There may be some skilled foreign workers willing to come in and meet the local employers requirements.
  • by jdavidb ( 449077 ) on Thursday March 02, 2017 @02:47PM (#53964745) Homepage Journal

    Some of India's top IT firms ... impose the three-month notice period policy on their employees.

    When I don't want to work for a company any more, I don't continue to follow its policies for three months just because they tell me to. What are the consequences for not complying, and what is enabling these companies to impose those consequences?

  • by Pinky ( 738 ) on Thursday March 02, 2017 @03:15PM (#53965001) Homepage

    What happens if you don't give notice?

    Do they fire you?
    Do they sue you for the money they would have given you?
    Do they sue you for the value you would have added and they didn't pay you for yet?
    Do they write an angry letter to your mother?

    In all seriousness, what is the "or else" in these case?

    • by mhkohne ( 3854 )

      If I understand correctly, in India it's more or less illegal to have more than one job at a time. So, they have this thing called a 'relieving letter', which your old company gives you on the way out the door. You need this in order to become legally employed at your next company. (My understanding is that this law is intended to make as many people as possible employed by preventing one person from taking up two jobs. I've no idea if it's really working or not, and as in every culture, there's surely lots

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