Reports have circulated that only
one in four engineering graduates in India are employable in the IT -enabled services industry. An article titled "Skills Gap Hurts Technology Boom in India" in The New York
Times on October 19, 2006, said the rest were found to lack required technical skills, English fluency, teamwork skills or oral presentation skills.
The simple fact remains that people raised and educated from the west remain superior in all the above skills. The CVs received from India and Asia number in the tens of thousands every month. If the Middle East wanted, they could fill every company with them, but how many are truly qualified?
Rather than complain about the disparity, watch and learn.
Reports have circulated that only
one in four engineering graduates in India are employable in the IT -enabled services industry. An article titled "Skills Gap Hurts Technology Boom in India" in The New York
Times on October 19, 2006, said the rest were found to lack required technical skills, English fluency, teamwork skills or oral presentation skills.
The simple fact remains that people raised and educated from the west remain superior in all the above skills. The CVs received from India and Asia number in the tens of thousands every month. If the Middle East wanted, they could fill every company with them, but how many are truly qualified?
Rather than complain about the disparity, watch and learn.