In the quarter ended March, the company’s overall headcount fell by 791 to 84,403.
This was a consecutive quarter and the third in its history when HCL reported a fall in overall headcount.
Despite this, HCL reported 23 per cent growth in revenues during the quarter, an indication the non-linearity (de-linking revenue growth from a proportionate increase in headcount) drive it initiated few quarters ago had started showing results.
In an interview with Business Standard, Anant Gupta, president and chief executive, said the company would continue to drive non-linearity initiatives, even if these resulted in a marginal fall in headcount.
“It is not that headcount will necessarily go down but we will continue to drive non-linear growth.
"Whether it results in growth or a marginal reduction in headcount is an outcome of that,” he said.
During the quarter, HCL’s infrastructure services business saw a net addition of 638 employees.
With a headcount of 52,305 in the core software services segment, the company reported a reduction of 1,638 on a net basis.
“Hiring growth has been lagging revenue growth for IT companies for some time.
"This trend is likely to continue,” said Ashish Chopra, analyst with brokerage firm Motilal Oswal.
On condition of anonymity,
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