News »Browse Articles »
India`s 1st rural BPO set to hire 500 more youth
0
India`s 1st rural BPO set to hire 500 more youth
16 Feb 2009:He was selling puppies till a year ago in the backward Krishnagiri district of Tamil Nadu. But when India’s first rural BPO, Fostera, set
up shop on a narrow lane at Sanasandiram village in his district, R Muraliraj turned into a confident `call centre guy.`
"I am a higher secondary graduate but could not speak English at all when I came here," he smiles, putting on his headphones to talk to ICICI customers in Guntur in Andhra Pradesh in fluent English.
It may be the hour of recession and lay-offs, but the government-run BPO is on a hiring spree. Multi-national telecom and banking
companies are knocking on the doors of Fostera at Sanasandiram to outsource their help desk, loan collection, credit card processing, form-filling, insurance and editing work.
Over the next three months, Fostera (short for fostering rural technology), floated by the Krishnagiri district administration over a year ago, will hire about 500 young people from Tamil Nadu`s hinterlands for monthly salaries ranging from Rs 5,000 to Rs 8,000. The BPO, which was working just one shift, is switching to three shifts a day to manage the tide of offers, says Fostera CEO MR Ashok Kumar.
Daughters and sons of agricultural and construction labourers, who have barely passed high school, will soon put on headphones and work the helplines for bank and insurance customers in English, Tamil, Telugu and Kannada. About 300 young people have already been put through voice and non-voice training. "We look for youth with the right attitude and high energy levels. Communication skills can be instilled, but attitude cannot be taught," he says.
Fostera, which is presently a 25-seater facility, will soon start two more call centres in Uthangarai taluk in Krishnagiri district, each with a capacity of 75. In Uthangarai taluk, which has high unemployment and illiteracy rates, marriage halls are being converted into BPOs, providing jobs for those above 18 who have finished school.
When IT major Microsoft recently undertook a pilot project on online electoral roll registration in Tamil Nadu, it chose to use Fostera`s BPO employees. "Though from a rural background, their hunger for learning is amazing. They grasped the data entry applications within 10 to 15 minutes," says Govind Kanshi, architect advisor of Microsoft India.
Source:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Indias-1st-rural-BPO-set-to-hire-more/a
up shop on a narrow lane at Sanasandiram village in his district, R Muraliraj turned into a confident `call centre guy.`
"I am a higher secondary graduate but could not speak English at all when I came here," he smiles, putting on his headphones to talk to ICICI customers in Guntur in Andhra Pradesh in fluent English.
It may be the hour of recession and lay-offs, but the government-run BPO is on a hiring spree. Multi-national telecom and banking
companies are knocking on the doors of Fostera at Sanasandiram to outsource their help desk, loan collection, credit card processing, form-filling, insurance and editing work.
Over the next three months, Fostera (short for fostering rural technology), floated by the Krishnagiri district administration over a year ago, will hire about 500 young people from Tamil Nadu`s hinterlands for monthly salaries ranging from Rs 5,000 to Rs 8,000. The BPO, which was working just one shift, is switching to three shifts a day to manage the tide of offers, says Fostera CEO MR Ashok Kumar.
Daughters and sons of agricultural and construction labourers, who have barely passed high school, will soon put on headphones and work the helplines for bank and insurance customers in English, Tamil, Telugu and Kannada. About 300 young people have already been put through voice and non-voice training. "We look for youth with the right attitude and high energy levels. Communication skills can be instilled, but attitude cannot be taught," he says.
Fostera, which is presently a 25-seater facility, will soon start two more call centres in Uthangarai taluk in Krishnagiri district, each with a capacity of 75. In Uthangarai taluk, which has high unemployment and illiteracy rates, marriage halls are being converted into BPOs, providing jobs for those above 18 who have finished school.
When IT major Microsoft recently undertook a pilot project on online electoral roll registration in Tamil Nadu, it chose to use Fostera`s BPO employees. "Though from a rural background, their hunger for learning is amazing. They grasped the data entry applications within 10 to 15 minutes," says Govind Kanshi, architect advisor of Microsoft India.
Source:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Indias-1st-rural-BPO-set-to-hire-more/a
Search News
News Categories
What's the News?
Post a link to something interesting from another site, or submit your own original writing for the BPO community to read.
Most Popular News
-
Tips for resume preparation
Published about 11-01-2009 | Rated 0 -
Indian IT-ITES industry to create 10 million jobs by 2010
Published about 09-01-2009 | Rated 0 -
SWOT analysis on Indian ITES sector
Published about 24-02-2009 | Rated +1 -
Financial BPO set for high growth
Published about 09-01-2009 | Rated 0
Most Recent User Submitted News
- Essar may merge arm with BPO unit
Published about 15-10-2009 | Rated 0 - BPO firms of India to expand RP operations
Published about 14-04-2009 | Rated 0 - `Market share of Indian BPOs to double by 2010`
Published about 23-04-2009 | Rated 0 - Big deals begin to click again for IT companies
Published about 11-11-2009 | Rated 0







