I bet at least 50,000 of them are for American companies. 
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-0...employees.html

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-0...employees.html
Tata Consultancy Hires 70,000 Employees
By Ketaki Gokhale - Jun 15, 2011 1:41 PM GMT+0800
Demand for Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. (TCS)’s outsourcing services is so robust the information- technology company hired 70,000 workers last fiscal year and plans to add 60,000 more this year.
Tata Consultancy projects annual sales, which have quadrupled since 2005 to $8.4 billion, will increase 20 percent a year for the “foreseeable future.” That has it and Indian rivals Infosys Technologies Ltd. (INFO) and Wipro Ltd. (WPRO) hustling to find hundreds of thousands of qualified candidates as global IT purchases grow 7.1 percent this year to $1.7 trillion.
Tata Consultancy’s expertise at using low-cost IT workers to replace more expensive labor in developed countries helped it land contracts with Deutsche Bank AG (DBK), Hilton Worldwide Inc. and Air Liquide SA last fiscal year. The company, Asia’s largest computer-services provider by market value, reported record annual income of $2 billion.
“As long as there’s growth, you don’t want to leave business on the table,” said Ajoyendra Mukherjee, Tata Consultancy’s vice president for human resources. “What we’re trying to do is make sure the supply chain is large enough to meet our growth requirements in the future.”
By Ketaki Gokhale - Jun 15, 2011 1:41 PM GMT+0800
Demand for Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. (TCS)’s outsourcing services is so robust the information- technology company hired 70,000 workers last fiscal year and plans to add 60,000 more this year.
Tata Consultancy projects annual sales, which have quadrupled since 2005 to $8.4 billion, will increase 20 percent a year for the “foreseeable future.” That has it and Indian rivals Infosys Technologies Ltd. (INFO) and Wipro Ltd. (WPRO) hustling to find hundreds of thousands of qualified candidates as global IT purchases grow 7.1 percent this year to $1.7 trillion.
Tata Consultancy’s expertise at using low-cost IT workers to replace more expensive labor in developed countries helped it land contracts with Deutsche Bank AG (DBK), Hilton Worldwide Inc. and Air Liquide SA last fiscal year. The company, Asia’s largest computer-services provider by market value, reported record annual income of $2 billion.
“As long as there’s growth, you don’t want to leave business on the table,” said Ajoyendra Mukherjee, Tata Consultancy’s vice president for human resources. “What we’re trying to do is make sure the supply chain is large enough to meet our growth requirements in the future.”
Comment