Online
recruitment portals are developing innovative tools to help technology
companies spot the right talent in a market where there is a shortage of
skilled professionals.
These ventures help
their clients filter candidates, administer specialised tests and make
the right choice in a process designed to deliver quality rather than
quantity.
"Companies always want the best
developers, who can build the best platform or the next iPad, our job is
to filter candidates accordingly," said 26 year old Harishankaran K,
co-founder of online recruitment portal InterviewStreet.
Founded
in 2009 by two NIT Trichy graduates, it was the first Indian startup to
be selected by the Silicon Valley incubator Y Combinator in 2011 and
has also raised funds from Khosla Ventures.
The
Bangalore-based firm now has clients including Facebook, Flipkart and
Amazon and expects a revenue of up to Rs 18.7 crore this fiscal. A
number of such portals including Hirerabbit.com and HasGeek are helping
aggregate supply in the fragmented Indian online recruitment sector
dominated by older ventures such as Naukri.com.
Interview
Street creates coding challenges based on client requirements and also
allows clients to administer tests from any location and in real time.
Even for many young technology ventures, who do not have the deep
pockets of Interview Street's bigger clients, these tools are proving to
be a major asset.
"We earlier used LinkedIn
and Facebook to hire people with mixed results," said Biju Asokan,
founder of Chennai-based real estate-focused startup Metroplots who
turned to Interview Street.
HasGeek, founded
by Kiran Jonnalagadda, 34, in 2010 with a seed capital of Rs 10,000,
organises technology events attended by scores of coders and developers.
The firm has has bagged marquee clients such as Yahoo, Microsoft,
Google and Facebook.
This fiscal it expects to
earn a revenue of up to Rs 3 crore Another company that is developing
innovative hiring tools is Bangalore-based Hirerabbit. Founded in 2012,
by NIT graduates Piplayan Nayak and Prafull Sharma, both 29, the company
provides software that powers the job site and helps carry out
analytics.
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