Infosys will hire both freshers and experienced professionals in America

These are positions in data analytics, enterprise cloud applications and cybersecurity

Reuters  |  SAN FRANCISCO 

Infosys, Vishal, Sikka, Vishal Sikka
Vishal Sikka. Photo: Suryakant Niwate

Ltd, the India-based computer services giant, on Wednesday touted its new strategy to hire and train 10,000 American workers over the next two years at the company's annual leadership meeting in San Francisco.

is the largest employer of workers under the U.S. H1-B program for skilled workers, which has been under fire as the Trump Administration moves to tighten a range of immigration laws. Many large hire so-called outsourcing firms such as to manage their computer operations.

announced three weeks ago that it would hire 10,000 Americans, and said on Monday that it had leased 35,000 square feet of office space in downtown Indianapolis.

Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb, who succeeded Vice President Mike Pence in the state's top office, and Indiana University President Michael McRobbie appeared at the San Francisco event to voice their support.

Ravi Kumar, Infosys's deputy chief operating officer, said the company will be looking to hire both experienced professionals and recent college graduates at a range of skill levels.

Each month, Kumar said, the company plans to put large batches of prospective employees through training courses of eight to 10 weeks that will prepare them for positions in fields like data analytics, enterprise cloud applications and cybersecurity.

Kumar said the new moves did not reflect any major change in the company's business model, with U.S. workers being compensated at the same level as H1-B professionals.

The company also used the meeting to highlight the launch of Nia, a new artificially intelligent service that is designed to allow IT professionals to automate more of their tasks. stressed that AI and automation are the future of technology, and that innovations in these areas will allow enterprises to be more productive without having to hire more people.

"If problem solving is going to be done by machines, then problem finding is the human frontier," said CEO in his keynote.

 

 

Infosys will hire both freshers and experienced professionals in America

These are positions in data analytics, enterprise cloud applications and cybersecurity

These are positions in data analytics, enterprise cloud applications and cybersecurity

Ltd, the India-based computer services giant, on Wednesday touted its new strategy to hire and train 10,000 American workers over the next two years at the company's annual leadership meeting in San Francisco.

is the largest employer of workers under the U.S. H1-B program for skilled workers, which has been under fire as the Trump Administration moves to tighten a range of immigration laws. Many large hire so-called outsourcing firms such as to manage their computer operations.

announced three weeks ago that it would hire 10,000 Americans, and said on Monday that it had leased 35,000 square feet of office space in downtown Indianapolis.

Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb, who succeeded Vice President Mike Pence in the state's top office, and Indiana University President Michael McRobbie appeared at the San Francisco event to voice their support.

Ravi Kumar, Infosys's deputy chief operating officer, said the company will be looking to hire both experienced professionals and recent college graduates at a range of skill levels.

Each month, Kumar said, the company plans to put large batches of prospective employees through training courses of eight to 10 weeks that will prepare them for positions in fields like data analytics, enterprise cloud applications and cybersecurity.

Kumar said the new moves did not reflect any major change in the company's business model, with U.S. workers being compensated at the same level as H1-B professionals.

The company also used the meeting to highlight the launch of Nia, a new artificially intelligent service that is designed to allow IT professionals to automate more of their tasks. stressed that AI and automation are the future of technology, and that innovations in these areas will allow enterprises to be more productive without having to hire more people.

"If problem solving is going to be done by machines, then problem finding is the human frontier," said CEO in his keynote.

 

 

image
Business Standard
177 22