This isn't a temporary dip — it's a structural shift, and pretending it isn't happening wastes time you could spend adapting. Three forces are compounding: IT services giants pivoting to "AI-first" delivery and redeploying existing staff instead of hiring fresh; global tech slowdown reducing bulk campus hiring at MNCs; and a swelling pool of computer science graduates chasing a shrinking number of entry-level seats.
Why This Happened
| Cause | What's Actually Happening |
|---|---|
| IT services AI pivot | TCS, Infosys, Wipro and peers are using AI coding tools to do more with existing headcount, and explicitly redeploying engineers freed from completed projects instead of net-new hiring |
| Global tech slowdown | MNC India offices reduced bulk graduate intake in line with global hiring caution and cost discipline |
| Oversupply of graduates | India produces far more CS/IT graduates annually than the 40K–60K entry-level roles available through campus channels |
| AI raising the entry bar | 60–70% of fresher job descriptions now list AI/ML proficiency as a requirement — even for roles that historically didn't need it — narrowing who qualifies as "ready" |
Where the Hiring Actually Is
| Channel | 2026 Reality |
|---|---|
| Global Capability Centres (GCCs) | India offices of Google, Amazon, Microsoft, JPMorgan and 1,700+ others are adding net new roles — better pay, more technical depth than IT services, and actively hiring freshers for platform/data/infra teams |
| Product-based startups (Series A–C) | Smaller hiring volume per company, but consistent demand for freshers who can ship — especially with a strong project portfolio |
| IT services (TCS/Infosys/Wipro/Cognizant) | Still hiring, but volumes are down and bars are higher; NQT-style tests remain a viable entry route, just more competitive |
| Off-campus drives & hiring platforms | The largest absolute number of fresher roles now flows through off-campus channels, not campus placement cells |
| Core/PSU sector | Manufacturing and PSU campus recruitment has also contracted sharply — not a reliable fallback for CS graduates |
The Playbook If Campus Placement Doesn't Work Out
1. Don't wait for one more campus drive — start off-campus applications in parallel
Apply to 8–10 off-campus roles per week from month one of final year, not after placements "fail." Off-campus hiring runs on its own calendar, independent of your college's drives.
2. Build one project that proves you can ship, not just study
A deployed, working project (even small) that solves a real problem outperforms a high CGPA with no portfolio in 2026 screening. Recruiters increasingly use project depth as the first filter when resume volume is high.
3. Add a visible AI/ML skill — even a basic one
You don't need to become a GenAI engineer (see our GenAI career guide if you want to go deep), but being able to talk credibly about using LLM APIs or building a small RAG project clears the new screening bar that's appeared in fresher JDs.
4. Target GCCs specifically, not just brand names
GCCs are quietly the largest source of net-new fresher hiring right now. Search by "Global Capability Centre" or "GCC India" plus the company name — many don't appear in the same job boards as the parent brand's global postings.
5. Take a structured DSA + aptitude prep seriously even for service companies
NQT-style tests (TCS, Infosys, Capgemini) are more competitive now with fewer seats — preparation that would have been "enough" two years ago often isn't anymore. See our DSA roadmap for a structured plan.
6. Don't take a 6–12 month "training program" offer at face value
Some service companies are extending offer-to-join gaps significantly given reduced demand. Get the joining date and any "bench" clauses in writing, and keep applying elsewhere until you've actually joined.
