The outcome of the World’s Best Multinational Workplaces 2015 survey is not encouraging as not a single Indian company found a place in the top 25 list in the fifth edition of the study carried out by the Great Places to Work Institute.
However, six of the world's top 10 MNCs have a sizeable presence in India. They are Google,
"While many of the organisations in this list are also great workplaces in India, no Indian MNC has made it to this list yet," said Prasenjit Bhattacharya, India CEO, Great Place to Work Institute.
So what are the conditions necessary to feature in the list?
An organization must have at least 40% of its workforce based outside of the home country is the first condition. Most
Further, Indian MNCs need to work on aggressively building a better employer brand outside of India and go beyond the employee cost arbitrage phenomenon.
The study finds a clear link between companies being ranked as great places to work and their financial performance, with most companies being the top or near the top in their respective industries.
As expected
While fun at work emerges as an important indicator of employee perception of a great workplace, other drivers include a team or family feeling, co-workers' willingness to cooperate and the sense of being treated as a full member regardless of position. But throwing the occasional party or having 'Fun Fridays' isn't enough.
Employees in the top 25 companies also placed significant value on factors like competent management, proper resources and equipment for the job, a physically safe work environment and being able to take time off when necessary.
Cisco, which comes in at number 15 on the list is an interesting example where employees rate it as a company where people care about each other because of its policies, even though it has steadily been cutting jobs over the last few years.
Another interesting parameter the study looked at is the 'Trust Index' where employees ranked the statements which best described their feeling towards their workplace. Pride in the workplace emerged as the top indicator of how people felt about their workplace across all geographies except the US where camaraderie ranked as the highest.
Globally, camaraderie came a close second, in part because of the changing nature of the workplace and how companies are responding to it.
(Image: Reuters)