Online recruitment activity rise 13 per cent in July: Monster
City-wise, e-recruitment activity exceeded the year-ago level in 11 of the 13 cities monitored by the index.
New Delhi: Online recruitment activity registered a 13 per cent increase in July over the year-ago period, the highest growth recorded in 2017, says a survey.
The Monster Employment Index for last month stood at 274, up 13 per cent from around 243 in July 2016, registering the second consecutive month of increase and the highest so far this year.
"India is on the verge of transformation due to digital disruption and implementation of GST as a major economic reform. This has led to a positive trend in online recruitment activity," Monster.com, APAC & Middle-East MD Sanjay Modi said adding that the July index has captured this sentiment.
Of the 27 industry sectors monitored by the index, 19 saw increased demand. Home Appliance sector led all monitored industry groups charting a 49 per cent growth over last year, followed by banking/ financial Services, insurance (BFSI)(up 43 per cent).
"BFSI sector has moved to a higher growth trajectory owing to digital disruption. However, e-recruitment in manufacturing has continued to be significantly below the corresponding period a year-ago. This necessitates strong policy impetus to develop manufacturing sector," he added.
Meanwhile, online recruitment activity in e-commerce sector weakened last month as demand eased one per cent below the year-ago level. In terms of occupation, online demand exceeded the July 2016 level in 12 of the 13 occupation groups monitored by the index.
Sales and business development professionals saw the steepest annual growth (up 29 per cent) in July. City-wise, e-recruitment activity exceeded the year-ago level in 11 of the 13 cities monitored by the index. Kolkata (up 45 per cent) registered the steepest annual growth in hiring.
Among other major cities, Mumbai (up 12 per cent) was the only city to exhibit double-digit annual growth rate, while Chennai was down two per cent and Delhi-NCR (down four per cent), the report said.