Personnel Today
  • Home
    • All PT content
  • Email sign-up
  • Topics
    • HR Practice
    • Employee relations
    • Learning & training
    • Pay & benefits
    • Wellbeing
    • Recruitment & retention
    • HR strategy
    • HR Tech
    • The HR profession
    • Global
    • All HR topics
  • Legal
    • Case law
    • Commentary
    • Flexible working
    • Legal timetable
    • Maternity & paternity
    • Shared parental leave
    • Redundancy
    • TUPE
    • Disciplinary and grievances
    • Employer’s guides
  • AWARDS
    • Personnel Today Awards
    • The RAD Awards
  • Jobs
    • Find a job
    • Jobs by email
    • Careers advice
    • Post a job
  • Brightmine
    • Learn more
    • Products
    • Free trial
    • Request a quote
  • Webinars
  • Advertise
  • OHW+

Personnel Today

Register
Log in
Personnel Today
  • Home
    • All PT content
  • Email sign-up
  • Topics
    • HR Practice
    • Employee relations
    • Learning & training
    • Pay & benefits
    • Wellbeing
    • Recruitment & retention
    • HR strategy
    • HR Tech
    • The HR profession
    • Global
    • All HR topics
  • Legal
    • Case law
    • Commentary
    • Flexible working
    • Legal timetable
    • Maternity & paternity
    • Shared parental leave
    • Redundancy
    • TUPE
    • Disciplinary and grievances
    • Employer’s guides
  • AWARDS
    • Personnel Today Awards
    • The RAD Awards
  • Jobs
    • Find a job
    • Jobs by email
    • Careers advice
    • Post a job
  • Brightmine
    • Learn more
    • Products
    • Free trial
    • Request a quote
  • Webinars
  • Advertise
  • OHW+

Global HROpinion

Don’t pay over the odds for staff in new markets

by Personnel Today 10 May 2005
by Personnel Today 10 May 2005

Wage dynamics in emergent markets still amaze me.

I was in Mumbai recently, conducting interviews for two senior roles there. During my visit, I saw a number of candidates, all of whom were well-qualified for the roles we were seeking to fill.

These were candidates for senior roles, with a good 10-plus years in their functional discipline behind them. They brought credible experience to the table, and could clearly hit the ground running. They came from brand-name companies, including Indian, European and US firms.

Education levels were impressive.

Perhaps what struck me the most, though, was the expectation on pay packages.

Candidate after candidate would clearly spell out their current remuneration, and then stun me with expectations of 40% to 50% uplifts in base pay. Tellingly, these were usually the same candidates who averaged 18 to 24 months per employer.

I’m a capitalist – I really am. I believe in free markets and supply/demand cycles. Having lived in China in the late 1990s, though, I’m also painfully familiar with opportunistic job hunters and the Western firms that fuel them.

When we (HR professionals wandering about in new markets) start looking for talent, we quickly become our own worst enemies. We are obsessed with finding skills and experiences like our own. In our home markets, we would never agree pay rises like this; we’d wait until we found the correct intersection of skills, experience and cost.

We have no-one to blame but ourselves for the vicious wage spirals we’re seeing in a number of sub-markets.

Go look for skilled IT folk in Indonesia; do a search for an HR person in India (not personnel admin, but real HR); wander into Ulan Baator to find your next chief financial officer.

Sure, there’s a supply/demand equation in place, and you have to deal with it, but there’s also a basic requirement to exercise a bit of discipline in recruitment and job offers.

Recruiting outside your home market is always challenging. It’s essential that you do your homework and understand current market conditions. Have you researched wage practices? Do you understand availability, or lack thereof, of key skillsets?

As you work through your recruiting process, are you keeping a close watch on your ‘must haves’ rather than your ‘nice to haves’? Are you being realistic, or have you picked up a headquarters’ competency model and forced it to fit onto a very different business culture?

We, as HR leaders for our firms, have a responsibility to understand the markets we operate in. Then we have an obligation to set and manage expectations with our senior leadership. Only from instilling this discipline into our organisations can we make a true difference for our businesses.

Sign up to our weekly round-up of HR news and guidance

Receive the Personnel Today Direct e-newsletter every Wednesday

OptOut
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Denouement? I found excellent candidates for both of my roles in Mumbai, and made two hiring decisions. I paid appropriate market wages, and both candidates are looking forward to coming on board. And neither of them sought 40%-plus increases.

Lance Richards is senior director of international HR for Kelly Services and adviser to SHRM



Personnel Today

Personnel Today articles are written by an expert team of award-winning journalists who have been covering HR and L&D for many years. Some of our content is attributed to "Personnel Today" for a number of reasons, including: when numerous authors are associated with writing or editing a piece; or when the author is unknown (particularly for older articles).

previous post
Sainsbury’s slashes banking jobs
next post
Women promoted to senior posts in HR department shake-up at Asda

You may also like

Microsoft to cut 9,000 jobs globally as role...

3 Jul 2025

HR underprepared for likely increase in M&A activity

24 Jun 2025

Businesses warned not to overlook AI shortcomings

19 Jun 2025

Workplace disputes: ‘Most employment tribunals could be avoided’

12 Jun 2025

Procter & Gamble to cut 7,000 jobs as...

6 Jun 2025

20,000 employees agree to leave Volkswagen by 2030

5 Jun 2025

‘Task masking’ is about poor management, not rebellion

2 Jun 2025

Trade uncertainty means 7 million fewer jobs globally

30 May 2025

Warning issued over loss of ‘frictionless’ business travel...

29 May 2025

Immigration white paper: which jobs will be affected?

19 May 2025

  • Empowering working parents and productivity during the summer holidays SPONSORED | Businesses play a...Read more
  • AI is here. Your workforce should be ready. SPONSORED | From content creation...Read more

Personnel Today Jobs
 

Search Jobs

PERSONNEL TODAY

About us
Contact us
Browse all HR topics
Email newsletters
Content feeds
Cookies policy
Privacy policy
Terms and conditions

JOBS

Personnel Today Jobs
Post a job
Why advertise with us?

EVENTS & PRODUCTS

The Personnel Today Awards
The RAD Awards
Employee Benefits
Forum for Expatriate Management
OHW+
Whatmedia

ADVERTISING & PR

Advertising opportunities
Features list 2025

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin


© 2011 - 2025 DVV Media International Ltd

Personnel Today
  • Home
    • All PT content
  • Email sign-up
  • Topics
    • HR Practice
    • Employee relations
    • Learning & training
    • Pay & benefits
    • Wellbeing
    • Recruitment & retention
    • HR strategy
    • HR Tech
    • The HR profession
    • Global
    • All HR topics
  • Legal
    • Case law
    • Commentary
    • Flexible working
    • Legal timetable
    • Maternity & paternity
    • Shared parental leave
    • Redundancy
    • TUPE
    • Disciplinary and grievances
    • Employer’s guides
  • AWARDS
    • Personnel Today Awards
    • The RAD Awards
  • Jobs
    • Find a job
    • Jobs by email
    • Careers advice
    • Post a job
  • Brightmine
    • Learn more
    • Products
    • Free trial
    • Request a quote
  • Webinars
  • Advertise
  • OHW+