Engineering graduates falling prey to fraudulent job offers
After almost a year of searching for an IT job in Chennai, S.
Mohana, an engineering graduate from Tirupati, recently got a mail from
‘Infinity Software Services', telling her, “Congratulations, you meet
all the requirements of our vacant post for a software trainee. You can
join us from February 1, after a brief round of verification about which
you will be intimated shortly.”
Mohana was ecstatic, because all that she had to do to get the job was
enrol for an ‘online trainee course on database management' by paying Rs
10,000 to a certain placement agency she had registered with. A month's
power-point lessons on ‘basics of database management' later, she went
to the offices of ‘Infinity Software Services' in Nungambakkam, only to
find an entirely different company with an entirely different name
functioning from that address. “It was an animation company, and the
staff there had no clue of the job offer. The agency that offered me the
job doesn't exist too. Even the email IDs have become dysfunctional
(sic) now,” she said.
This is not an isolated incident of engineering graduates being duped.
Nearly 60 students of Aarupadai Veedu Institute of Technology were lured
by an agency that promised them software jobs with decent pay once they
shelled out Rs. 5,000 each for training. “Despite several warnings from
professors and college administration, we decided to go for the
agency's offer. When you don't have campus recruitments, it is natural
to fall for such offers,” said a student.
MCA students are the ones who often cheated in large numbers. S.
Selvaraghavan, a student from a private engineering college on OMR,
says, “Most of these agencies know that a certain number of students are
not eligible for recruitment in IT companies or have many arrears. They
approach us through a common Google group. While many students ignore
such mails, there are some who take them seriously because the mail has
employee codes, holograms, office locations, details of the training
programmes — complete with name and designation of the signatory. These
often convince students.”
Many of these emails originate from IDs that do not look fake. “I got an offer from hclvacancies@rediffmail.com,
saying I got selected in the off-campus interview I had attended that
weekend. So I had no doubts at all,” says Kannan Rajkumar, a graduate of
SRM University. “When I responded to the mail, I was asked to deposit
Rs.10,000 in a bank account as a refundable deposit for sending air
tickets for the interview in Bangalore. Sometimes, these companies also
insist on medical tests and clearly ask us to bring cash, because they
don't accept payment by cards,” he said.
TCS is among the many companies often cited as a potential employer by
such fraudulent offers. The company, on the careers page of its web
site, has put an alert about fake job offers and has also created a
toll-free TCS Careers Serviceline for people to report such job alerts.
Other companies including Wipro, HCL Technologies, Maruti Suzuki, Tata
Motors, Hyundai, Aricent have expressed their concerns too.
“Companies do not send job offers from free email services like Gmail,
Rediffmail, Yahoomail or Hotmail. They might employ the services of an
agent, agency or company to conduct employment interviews, but they
certainly do not authorise people to charge any security amount or even
offer jobs,” says an HR official of TCS.
NASSCOM has urged students to be careful of such fraudulent offers.
“Companies have an operation process, details of which are available on
their websites. Students can always call the numbers listed to get more
clarity, instead of falling prey to the fake offers,” says K.
Purushottaman, regional director, NASSCOM. “And, never trust any company
that asks you to deposit money affront. No reputed company will ever
ask you to do that.”
Source : Hindu
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