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Category: Case Studies

Real HR outsourcing case studies from TMS – how Indian and global companies cut costs, ensured compliance and scaled teams with EOR, staffing and payroll.

  • Case Study: Deploying 150 Developers for a US SaaS Company in Bangalore

    Case Study: Deploying 150 Developers for a US SaaS Company in Bangalore

    Case Study: Deploying 150 Developers for a US SaaS Company in Bangalore

    IT Staffing Scale-Up

    Client Background

    A US-based SaaS company specializing in enterprise resource planning (ERP) solutions for the mid-market segment decided to establish a development centre in India to accelerate its product roadmap. The company, with approximately 400 employees in the US and annual revenue of USD 80 million, had no prior presence in India. The leadership team wanted to build a high-calibre engineering team in Bangalore to work on core product development, quality assurance, and platform engineering.

    The company’s initial plan called for 150 software professionals across multiple technology stacks including Java, Python, React, AWS, and Kubernetes. The timeline was aggressive: the team needed to be operational within 3 months to align with the product release cycle for the next fiscal year. However, the company had not yet incorporated an Indian entity, and the process for setting up a Private Limited Company with all statutory registrations was estimated at 8-10 weeks.

    Challenge

    The client faced several interconnected challenges that made the hiring timeline extremely difficult through conventional methods.

    First, the absence of a legal entity in India meant the company could not directly employ anyone. Incorporating an entity, opening bank accounts, completing EPF, ESIC, Professional Tax, and Shops and Establishments registrations, and setting up payroll infrastructure would consume the entire 3-month window before a single hire could be made.

    Second, the requirement for 150 skilled technology professionals across multiple stacks and experience levels (junior to architect level) demanded a massive recruitment effort. In Bangalore’s competitive talent market, where GCCs and technology companies compete fiercely for developers, sourcing this volume of qualified candidates within the timeline required a recruitment infrastructure the client did not possess in India.

    Third, the client needed all employees to be compliantly employed from day one, with full statutory coverage including EPF, ESIC, Professional Tax, health insurance, and income tax management. Any compliance gaps could create legal exposure and reputational risk for the parent company.

    Fourth, the compensation structures needed to be competitive with Bangalore’s GCC market while aligning with the parent company’s global compensation philosophy. CTC design, tax optimization, and benefits structuring required deep knowledge of Indian compensation practices and tax regulations.

    TMS Solution

    TMS proposed an Employer of Record (EOR) model that allowed the client to begin hiring immediately while the entity setup process ran in parallel. The solution was structured in three phases.

    During weeks 1-2, TMS established the operational framework. Our team designed the CTC structure for 12 distinct role levels, from junior developers to principal architects, optimizing for tax efficiency while ensuring competitiveness with Bangalore GCC market benchmarks. We set up the payroll processing infrastructure, configured compliance systems for Karnataka state requirements, and created onboarding workflows aligned with the client’s global HR processes.

    During weeks 2-12, TMS executed a massive recruitment campaign deploying a dedicated team of 12 recruiters and 4 sourcers exclusively for this engagement. We activated multiple sourcing channels simultaneously: LinkedIn Recruiter campaigns targeting passive candidates with specific technology stack experience, employee referral campaigns through our existing network of technology professionals in Bangalore, partnerships with 8 specialized technology recruitment agencies, outreach to technology communities and meetup groups, and job postings on targeted platforms including Naukri, Indeed, and specialist technology job boards. TMS managed the complete hiring funnel, including resume screening against the client’s technical specifications, initial technical phone screens by our technology assessment team, coordination of client technical interviews across US time zones, offer management with 24-hour turnaround from final interview to offer, and background verification for all candidates.

    Throughout the 3-month period, TMS managed all 150 professionals on its payroll as the EOR. This covered appointment letter issuance with compliant terms under the Karnataka Shops and Establishments Act, monthly payroll processing including CTC breakdowns and payslip generation, EPF registration and monthly ECR filing for all employees, ESIC contributions for eligible employees, Professional Tax deduction and remittance under Karnataka rules, income tax (TDS) computation and monthly deposit, group health insurance covering INR 5 lakh per employee plus family, and employee query resolution through a dedicated HR helpdesk.

    Results with Metrics

    The engagement delivered measurable outcomes across all key parameters.

    On recruitment performance, TMS screened 2,200 candidate profiles, conducted 680 technical phone screens, facilitated 420 client interviews, and extended 185 offers to secure 150 acceptances, representing an offer-to-join ratio of 81%. The average time-to-fill across all positions was 28 days, compared to the Bangalore market average of 42 days for similar technology roles.

    On compliance metrics, 100% of employees were compliantly onboarded on the TMS payroll from their first day of employment. Zero compliance observations were raised during the engagement period. All monthly EPF, ESIC, PT, and TDS filings were completed before their respective deadlines. Full Form 16 generation was completed for the partial financial year.

    On cost performance, the blended cost-per-hire was INR 85,000 per position, 30% below the client’s budget assumption of INR 1,20,000 per hire. The EOR management fee provided a predictable, all-inclusive cost structure with no hidden charges. Total project savings compared to the client’s initial estimates were approximately INR 52 lakh.

    On operational outcomes, the 150-person team was fully operational within 90 days of engagement commencement. First-month attrition was zero, and 3-month attrition was 2.7% (4 departures, all backfilled within 15 days). Employee satisfaction with the onboarding and payroll experience scored 4.3 out of 5 in TMS’s post-onboarding survey.

    After 6 months, when the client’s Indian entity was fully operational with all registrations complete, TMS executed a seamless transfer of all 150 employees from the EOR payroll to the client’s direct entity. The transfer was completed within 30 days with zero employee attrition and full continuity of EPF accounts, ESIC coverage, and service tenure recognition.

    Key Takeaways

    This engagement demonstrated that the EOR model enables companies to launch India operations at full speed without waiting for entity incorporation. A dedicated, well-resourced recruitment campaign can deliver 150 technology hires in Bangalore within 3 months. Proactive compliance management from day one protects both the client and the employees. Clean, well-planned transfers from EOR to direct entity can be executed with zero disruption. Investing in competitive CTC structuring and a strong employer value proposition delivers high offer acceptance rates even in a competitive market.

    Planning a rapid technology team build-up in India? TMS can deploy your team through EOR while your entity is being set up, ensuring zero delays and full compliance. Contact us at +91-XXXXXXXXXX or email [email protected] to discuss your requirements.

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  • Case Study: Transforming Payroll Compliance for 2,000+ Contract Workers Across 5 States

    Case Study: Transforming Payroll Compliance for 2,000+ Contract Workers Across 5 States

    Case Study: Transforming Payroll Compliance for 2,000+ Contract Workers Across 5 States

    Manufacturing Payroll Compliance

    Client Background

    A leading Indian automotive component manufacturer with 6 manufacturing plants across Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Gujarat, and Rajasthan employed over 2,000 contract workers through a combination of 12 different staffing vendors. The company, a Tier-1 supplier to major automobile OEMs, had been managing its contract workforce through a decentralized model where each plant independently engaged local staffing agencies for worker supply.

    The company’s total contract workforce included shop floor operators, quality inspectors, warehouse handlers, machine operators, and administrative support staff. These workers were essential to the manufacturing operations, with contract labour constituting approximately 40% of the total workforce across all plants.

    Challenge

    A surprise EPF inspection at the Maharashtra plant uncovered significant compliance irregularities, triggering a comprehensive review that revealed systemic problems across all locations.

    The compliance audit exposed critical issues across multiple dimensions. On EPF compliance, 3 of the 12 vendors had not deposited EPF contributions for 2-4 months despite deducting the employee share from worker wages. This created a dual liability: the company as principal employer was ultimately responsible for unpaid contributions, and the workers were being deprived of their retirement savings. The estimated EPF arrears across all plants totalled INR 1.8 crore including interest and damages.

    On ESIC compliance, ESIC contributions were irregular across several vendors, with some vendors failing to register workers who were eligible for ESI coverage. Workers who needed medical treatment were unable to access ESI facilities due to unregistered status, creating both a welfare concern and a legal liability.

    On minimum wage compliance, the review found that 2 vendors in Tamil Nadu and 1 vendor in Gujarat were paying wages below the applicable state minimum wage for the scheduled employment categories. The shortfall ranged from INR 500 to INR 2,000 per worker per month, and affected approximately 350 workers.

    On documentation, none of the 12 vendors maintained the complete set of registers and records prescribed under the Contract Labour Act, Minimum Wages Act, and Payment of Wages Act. Muster rolls were incomplete, wage registers were inconsistent with actual payments, and several vendors lacked valid contractor licenses.

    The company’s management recognized that the decentralized, multi-vendor model had created an unmanageable compliance risk. The principal employer liability under the Contract Labour Act meant the company faced potential penalties, worker claims, and reputational damage with its OEM clients, who increasingly required supply chain compliance as a vendor qualification criterion.

    TMS Solution

    TMS was engaged to consolidate the entire contract workforce of 2,000+ workers under a single, professionally managed payroll and compliance framework across all 5 states. The transformation was executed in a structured 90-day plan.

    During the assessment phase (weeks 1-3), TMS deployed compliance auditors to all 6 plants simultaneously. The team reviewed every vendor’s compliance records, worker files, wage registers, and statutory filings. A comprehensive gap analysis documented 147 distinct compliance observations across the 12 vendors and 5 states. TMS created a remediation roadmap prioritizing critical issues (unpaid statutory contributions) over administrative gaps.

    During the transition phase (weeks 4-8), TMS assumed the employer role for all 2,000+ contract workers through a phased transition. The existing vendor workforce was transferred to TMS payroll in batches organized by plant location. New employment contracts compliant with each state’s Shops and Establishments Act and applicable labour laws were issued to every worker. EPF and ESIC registrations were verified and corrected where necessary, with UAN activation and KYC seeding completed for all workers. Contractor licenses were obtained by TMS in all 5 states, and principal employer registrations were verified and updated for the client.

    During the stabilization phase (weeks 8-12), TMS operationalized the new payroll and compliance framework. A unified payroll system was configured with state-specific minimum wage rates, Professional Tax slabs, and Labour Welfare Fund contributions for Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Gujarat, and Rajasthan. Monthly payroll processing was standardized with a common calendar across all plants. Statutory filing workflows were established with dedicated compliance officers for each state. A real-time compliance dashboard was deployed, giving the client’s central HR team visibility into compliance status across all plants.

    To remediate the legacy compliance gaps, TMS worked with the client’s legal team and the previous vendors to settle the outstanding EPF and ESIC arrears. Payment plans were negotiated with EPFO for the arrears, with the client recovering a portion of the amount from the defaulting vendors as per the service agreements.

    Results with Metrics

    The compliance transformation delivered quantifiable results across all key areas.

    On compliance performance, 100% statutory compliance was achieved within 60 days of TMS assuming payroll operations. All 2,000+ workers were registered for EPF and ESIC with active contributions. Zero compliance observations in the next 12 months of operations across all 6 plants. All 5 state-level monthly filings (EPF ECR, ESIC, PT, LWF) were completed before deadlines without exception.

    On financial outcomes, the estimated compliance liability of INR 1.8 crore was resolved through a combination of arrears settlement and vendor recovery. Consolidated vendor management reduced the management overhead from 12 vendor relationships to a single TMS engagement, saving approximately INR 35 lakh annually in administrative costs. Standardized payroll processing eliminated wage discrepancies and minimum wage shortfalls.

    On worker welfare, all 2,000+ workers gained uninterrupted access to EPF savings and ESIC medical facilities. Worker grievances related to payroll and statutory benefits dropped by 90% within 3 months. Payslips with clear breakdowns of all earnings and deductions were issued to every worker monthly for the first time.

    On operational efficiency, payroll processing time was reduced from a plant-by-plant cycle of 8-10 days to a centralized 3-day processing window. The client’s central HR team gained real-time visibility into contract workforce data, compliance status, and cost analytics through TMS dashboards. Audit readiness improved from approximately 40% (based on the initial assessment) to 100%, with all prescribed registers and records maintained digitally.

    Key Takeaways

    This engagement demonstrated that decentralized, multi-vendor contract labour management creates significant compliance blind spots for principal employers. Consolidating contract workforce management under a single professional provider dramatically reduces compliance risk and administrative overhead. The principal employer’s liability under the Contract Labour Act makes proactive compliance management a financial imperative, not just a legal obligation. Centralized payroll systems with state-specific configurations are essential for multi-state manufacturing operations. Real-time compliance dashboards transform compliance from a periodic audit exercise to a continuous monitoring discipline.

    Is your contract workforce compliant across all locations? TMS can audit your current compliance status and deliver a unified payroll and compliance framework for your contract workforce. Contact us at +91-XXXXXXXXXX or email [email protected] for a compliance assessment.

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  • Case Study: Deploying 500 Relationship Managers Across 15 Cities in 45 Days

    Case Study: Deploying 500 Relationship Managers Across 15 Cities in 45 Days

    Case Study: Deploying 500 Relationship Managers Across 15 Cities in 45 Days

    BFSI Contract Staffing

    Client Background

    A mid-sized Non-Banking Financial Company (NBFC) specializing in personal loans and SME lending was preparing for a major expansion of its distribution network. The NBFC, with assets under management of approximately INR 8,000 crore, had been operating through a network of 50 branches in 8 cities. The board approved an aggressive expansion plan to add 30 new branches across 15 cities within 2 months, requiring 500 new Relationship Managers (RMs) to drive loan origination at the new locations.

    The expansion cities included a mix of Tier-1 (Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata, Hyderabad, Pune, Ahmedabad) and Tier-2 (Jaipur, Lucknow, Indore, Nagpur, Coimbatore, Visakhapatnam, Bhubaneswar, Chandigarh) markets. Each branch required 12-20 RMs depending on the market size and loan portfolio targets.

    Challenge

    The NBFC faced a constellation of challenges that made this expansion exceptionally complex.

    The recruitment scale and timeline demanded hiring 500 qualified RMs within 45 days across 15 cities, many of which were new markets where the NBFC had no existing presence, employer brand, or recruitment relationships. RMs in the BFSI sector require specific qualifications including financial product knowledge, local market understanding, credit assessment basics, and regulatory awareness. Hiring unqualified or poorly screened RMs would directly impact loan quality and portfolio risk.

    Multi-city compliance presented a massive operational challenge. Each of the 15 cities fell under a different state’s regulatory jurisdiction, requiring separate Shops and Establishments Act registrations, Professional Tax registrations (with different rates and deadlines), Labour Welfare Fund contributions in applicable states, and minimum wage compliance based on state-specific notifications for the financial services category. The NBFC’s existing HR team of 15 people was already at capacity managing the current 800-person workforce and could not absorb the compliance burden of 7 new states.

    Compensation structuring needed to balance market competitiveness with the NBFC’s cost targets. RM compensation in the BFSI sector typically includes a fixed component plus performance-linked incentives. The CTC structure needed to be competitive enough to attract quality talent while maintaining the cost-per-acquisition economics for the lending business.

    Speed to revenue was the ultimate pressure point. Every day of delay in deploying RMs translated to missed loan origination opportunities. The NBFC estimated that each RM would generate approximately INR 50 lakh in monthly loan disbursements once productive, making the cost of delayed deployment approximately INR 25 crore in monthly disbursements for the full 500-person team.

    TMS Solution

    TMS designed a comprehensive contract staffing solution that addressed recruitment, compliance, and payroll challenges through an integrated approach.

    For recruitment, TMS activated a distributed hiring model with recruitment pods in each of the 4 geographic zones (North, South, East, West). Each pod consisted of 3-4 recruiters with BFSI sector experience and local market knowledge. TMS sourced candidates through BFSI-specific job portals and databases, referrals from existing BFSI professionals in our network, local newspaper advertisements in Tier-2 cities, campus partnerships with commerce and management colleges, and walk-in drives organized at each new branch location.

    The screening process was customized for the RM role: educational qualification verification (minimum graduation), prior experience assessment (preferring candidates with 1-3 years in lending, insurance, or financial product sales), local language proficiency evaluation (critical for customer-facing roles in Tier-2 cities), background verification including criminal record and previous employment checks, and regulatory compliance verification including CIBIL default status check.

    For compliance, TMS established registrations in all 7 new states within the first 2 weeks. Our compliance team obtained Shops and Establishments registrations, Professional Tax registrations, and EPF and ESIC registrations at each location. Contractor licenses were secured under the Contract Labour Act where applicable. State-specific minimum wages were mapped for the financial services employment category.

    For payroll, TMS configured a multi-state payroll system with 15 city-level cost centres, state-specific Professional Tax configurations, applicable Labour Welfare Fund deductions, and incentive processing capability for monthly performance-based payouts. All 500 RMs were employed on TMS payroll with full statutory coverage from their first day.

    Results with Metrics

    The deployment delivered results that exceeded the NBFC’s targets across all parameters.

    On recruitment performance, 500 RMs were deployed across all 15 cities within 42 days, 3 days ahead of the 45-day target. TMS processed 3,800 applications, screened 2,100 candidates, conducted 1,400 interviews, and extended 620 offers to achieve 500 joinings (81% joining ratio). All 500 RMs cleared background verification with zero adverse findings.

    On compliance metrics, registrations were completed in all 7 new states within 14 days of engagement commencement. 100% statutory compliance from day one across all 15 cities and 8 states. First-month payroll was processed on time with zero errors across all locations. All monthly EPF, ESIC, PT, and TDS filings were completed within prescribed deadlines.

    On business outcomes, the 500 RMs collectively originated INR 120 crore in loan disbursements within the first 3 months of deployment. Branch profitability targets were achieved 2 months ahead of schedule in 22 of the 30 new branches. The RM attrition rate was 12% in the first 6 months, below the BFSI industry average of 18% for similar roles, attributed to competitive compensation structuring and proactive engagement by TMS HR.

    On cost performance, the blended cost-per-hire was INR 12,000 per RM, significantly below the industry average of INR 25,000-30,000 for BFSI roles. The contract staffing model provided the NBFC with complete cost flexibility, allowing branch-level adjustments based on performance. Total HR administration cost savings compared to direct hiring were estimated at INR 1.2 crore annually.

    Key Takeaways

    This engagement demonstrated that large-scale, multi-city BFSI deployments are achievable within aggressive timelines when supported by a staffing partner with local market presence and BFSI domain expertise. Contract staffing provides NBFCs with the workforce flexibility essential for rapid distribution expansion without permanent headcount commitments. Multi-state compliance management is a critical capability that most NBFCs cannot efficiently build in-house for new market expansion. Performance-linked compensation structures, when properly designed and administered, drive both recruitment success and business outcomes. Centralized payroll management with local compliance execution is the optimal model for geographically distributed BFSI workforces.

    Expanding your BFSI distribution network? TMS can deploy your sales and relationship management teams across any number of Indian cities with full compliance coverage. Contact us at +91-XXXXXXXXXX or email [email protected] to discuss your expansion staffing needs.

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  • Case Study: Delivering Compliant Payroll for 300 Medical Representatives

    Case Study: Delivering Compliant Payroll for 300 Medical Representatives

    Case Study: Delivering Compliant Payroll for 300 Medical Representatives

    Pharma Field Force Payroll

    Client Background

    An established Indian pharmaceutical company with a portfolio of over 150 branded formulations across therapeutic segments including cardiology, diabetology, gastroenterology, and orthopedics decided to expand its field force to penetrate deeper into Tier-2 and Tier-3 markets. The company had a direct sales force of approximately 600 Medical Representatives (MRs) covering metro and Tier-1 cities, but lacked the infrastructure to rapidly deploy and manage a supplementary field force for smaller markets.

    The company planned to deploy 300 additional MRs across 12 states to cover approximately 2,500 new doctors and 1,200 new pharmacy outlets. These MRs would promote a targeted subset of the company’s product portfolio, focusing on high-growth brands in the diabetes and cardiology segments. The field force would operate in geographically dispersed territories spanning cities like Patna, Ranchi, Raipur, Guwahati, Bhopal, Varanasi, Allahabad, Dehradun, Jammu, Madurai, Mysore, and Mangalore, among others.

    Challenge

    Managing a field force of Medical Representatives presented unique challenges that differed significantly from office-based or factory-based workforce management.

    Geographic dispersion was the primary operational challenge. The 300 MRs would be distributed across 12 states, with many working in remote territories where the nearest TMS or client office might be 200-300 kilometers away. Each state had distinct statutory compliance requirements, minimum wage rates, and regulatory nuances. Some MRs would be the sole representative in their territory, requiring robust remote workforce management capabilities.

    Pharma-specific compensation structures added complexity to payroll management. MR compensation in India typically includes a fixed salary, daily allowance (DA), travel allowance (TA), headquarters allowance, night halt allowance, and periodic incentives based on prescription generation and sales achievement. Each component has different tax treatment, and the allowance structure must comply with state-specific expense reimbursement norms. Daily field expense tracking and reimbursement processing for 300 dispersed MRs creates a significant administrative workload.

    Compliance complexity was amplified by the multi-state nature of the deployment. Professional Tax rates and filing requirements differ across all 12 states. Labour Welfare Fund applicability varies (mandatory in some states, not applicable in others). Minimum wage classifications for pharmaceutical sales representatives are not uniformly defined across states, requiring careful mapping to the appropriate scheduled employment category. ESIC applicability needed to be assessed based on wage levels and location, as several MRs would fall below the ESIC wage ceiling of INR 21,000 per month in their initial months.

    Attrition risk in the pharma field force is historically high, with annual attrition rates of 25-35% for MRs in Tier-2 and Tier-3 markets. High attrition translates to continuous recruitment cycles, frequent full-and-final settlements, and constant compliance churn as employees join and exit across multiple state jurisdictions.

    TMS Solution

    TMS designed a specialized pharma field force payroll and HR management solution that addressed the unique requirements of managing a geographically dispersed, field-based workforce.

    For payroll design, TMS created a pharma-specific CTC structure that optimized tax efficiency while complying with all statutory requirements. The structure included basic salary set at 40% of CTC, House Rent Allowance at the applicable rate, a Daily Allowance component structured as per Income Tax Act provisions for field employees, a Travel Allowance component with separate limits for local travel, outstation travel, and headquarters-to-field travel, a medical allowance component, and performance incentives processed quarterly based on the client’s prescription audit data.

    The payroll system was configured to process the 12-state salary computation with state-specific deductions, handle variable daily and travel allowances based on actual field days reported through a mobile attendance app, process quarterly incentive payouts computed by the client’s sales analytics team, manage advance payments for field expenses and subsequent adjustments, and generate location-wise cost reports for the client’s regional managers.

    For compliance management, TMS established registrations in all 12 operating states within the first 3 weeks. The compliance framework included EPF registration and monthly ECR filing for all 300 MRs, ESIC registration and contributions for MRs with gross wages below INR 21,000, Professional Tax registration and monthly/quarterly remittance across 12 states with different slab structures, Labour Welfare Fund contributions in applicable states (Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Madhya Pradesh, and others), minimum wage compliance with quarterly tracking against state notifications, and bonus provisioning and payment under the Payment of Bonus Act.

    For field force HR management, TMS deployed a mobile-first HR platform that enabled MRs to mark attendance through geo-tagged check-ins from the field, submit daily call reports and travel expense claims through their smartphones, access payslips and tax computation details digitally, raise HR queries through an integrated helpdesk, and submit leave applications and view leave balances in real-time. A dedicated HR coordinator was assigned for every 75 MRs, providing personalized support and ensuring no query or concern went unaddressed.

    For recruitment support, TMS provided ongoing recruitment services to manage attrition backfill. A dedicated pharma recruitment team with access to MR candidate databases sourced, screened, and onboarded replacement MRs within 15-20 days of a vacancy notification, minimizing territory coverage gaps.

    Results with Metrics

    The engagement delivered consistent, measurable results across all management dimensions.

    On payroll performance, 100% on-time salary processing for all 300 MRs every month, with disbursement completed by the 1st of each month. Zero payroll errors across the first 12 months of operation. Expense reimbursements were processed within 7 working days of submission, compared to the industry average of 15-20 days. Form 16 generation and distribution was completed by May 31st, well ahead of the June 15th deadline.

    On compliance metrics, 100% statutory compliance maintained across all 12 states throughout the engagement. All monthly EPF ECR filings, ESIC contributions, and Professional Tax payments were completed within prescribed timelines. Zero compliance observations during the client’s annual internal audit. Quarterly minimum wage validation confirmed all MRs received wages at or above the applicable state minimums.

    On operational efficiency, the mobile attendance and expense management platform achieved 95% adoption within the first month. HR query resolution time averaged 4 hours, compared to the industry benchmark of 24-48 hours for field force HR. Monthly cost reports were delivered to regional managers by the 5th of each month, enabling data-driven territory management decisions.

    On attrition management, first-year attrition was 22%, below the pharma field force industry average of 30% for Tier-2 and Tier-3 markets. Backfill hiring averaged 18 days from vacancy notification to new MR joining, well within the 21-day target. Exit processing, including full-and-final settlement and statutory account closure, was completed within 15 days of the last working day for every exiting MR.

    On business impact, the 300-MR field force covered 2,480 doctors and 1,150 pharmacies within the first 6 months, achieving 99% of the coverage target. The client reported a 28% increase in prescription generation from the targeted Tier-2 and Tier-3 markets. Territory productivity, measured as prescriptions per MR per month, reached the client’s benchmark within 4 months of deployment.

    Key Takeaways

    This engagement demonstrated that pharma field force payroll requires specialized capabilities in multi-state compliance management, variable allowance processing, and mobile-first HR platforms. Geographic dispersion amplifies compliance complexity exponentially, making centralized expertise with local execution the optimal model. Tax-optimized CTC structuring with pharma-specific allowance components can increase MR take-home pay by 8-12% without increasing the CTC. Mobile HR platforms are essential for managing dispersed field forces, driving both operational efficiency and employee satisfaction. Rapid backfill hiring capability is critical in high-attrition field force roles to maintain territory coverage and business continuity.

    Managing a pharmaceutical field force across India? TMS provides specialized payroll, compliance, and HR management for pharma companies with field-based workforces. Contact us at +91-XXXXXXXXXX or email [email protected] for a customized pharma field force solution.

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  • Case Study: Building a 50-Person GCC in Hyderabad for a European Fintech

    Case Study: Building a 50-Person GCC in Hyderabad for a European Fintech

    Case Study: Building a 50-Person GCC in Hyderabad for a European Fintech

    GCC Setup Support

    Client Background

    A European fintech company headquartered in Berlin, specializing in payment processing and digital banking infrastructure for neobanks and challenger banks, decided to establish its first Global Capability Centre in India. The company had 280 employees in Europe (Berlin and Amsterdam offices) and had grown its revenue to EUR 45 million annually. The leadership team identified India as the optimal destination for building a product engineering and data analytics team that would work on the company’s core payment processing platform and fraud detection engine.

    The initial plan called for a 50-person team comprising backend engineers (Java, Go), data engineers (Python, Spark), DevOps engineers (Kubernetes, AWS), QA engineers, and data analysts. The company planned to grow the centre to 150 professionals within 2 years. Hyderabad was selected as the preferred location based on the Telangana government’s proactive support for fintech companies, competitive talent costs (15-20% below Bangalore), and the growing presence of fintech and banking GCCs in the city.

    The company had no prior presence in India, no local entity, and no team members with experience in Indian employment law, tax regulations, or recruitment practices. The leadership wanted to minimize execution risk while achieving a fast launch, making the Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) model the preferred approach.

    Challenge

    The fintech company faced several challenges that made a direct setup approach impractical given its constraints.

    The absence of India knowledge was the fundamental barrier. The company’s HR and legal teams had no experience with Indian labour laws, entity formation procedures, tax obligations, or compensation practices. Building this expertise internally would require months of learning and still carry significant execution risk.

    The entity formation timeline created a critical path dependency. Incorporating a Private Limited Company in India, obtaining PAN, TAN, and GST registration, setting up bank accounts with FEMA-compliant foreign investment channels, and completing all statutory registrations (EPF, ESIC, PT, Shops and Establishments) was estimated to take 10-12 weeks. The company could not afford to wait this long before commencing hiring.

    Fintech-specific talent requirements added recruitment complexity. The company needed engineers with experience in payment processing systems, high-throughput transaction platforms, PCI-DSS compliant environments, and real-time fraud detection algorithms. This niche skill set is in high demand among fintech GCCs, Indian digital payment companies (Razorpay, PhonePe, Paytm), and banking technology firms in Hyderabad.

    Cultural integration concerned the leadership team. As a European company with a strong engineering culture emphasizing autonomy, flat hierarchies, and open communication, the company wanted to ensure the India team would operate with the same cultural values, not as a remote outsourcing centre but as a true extension of the Berlin engineering team.

    Data security and compliance requirements were elevated due to the fintech domain. The India centre would process sensitive financial data subject to European regulations (PSD2, GDPR) and Indian regulations (RBI data localization guidelines, IT Act). The workspace, network infrastructure, and employee access controls needed to meet PCI-DSS and SOC 2 standards from day one.

    TMS Solution

    TMS proposed a comprehensive BOT engagement designed to deliver a fully operational, culturally aligned, and compliance-ready 50-person GCC within 18 months.

    During the Build phase (months 1-6), TMS executed a multi-track program to establish the GCC foundations.

    On the legal and compliance track, TMS’s legal advisory partners initiated the Private Limited Company incorporation process for the client. Simultaneously, TMS began hiring on its own EOR payroll, enabling the client to start building the team immediately. TMS completed STPI registration for the entity, set up Hyderabad-specific compliance infrastructure (Telangana Professional Tax, Shops and Establishments Act registration), and established the statutory compliance framework.

    On the infrastructure track, TMS secured a managed office space in HITEC City, Hyderabad, with PCI-DSS compliant network segmentation, secure VPN connectivity to the Berlin office, dedicated server room for sensitive workloads, and access control systems with biometric authentication. The workspace was designed to reflect the client’s European office culture: open plan, collaborative spaces, and a casual atmosphere rather than a traditional Indian corporate office.

    On the talent acquisition track, TMS deployed a dedicated recruitment team of 5 specialists with fintech domain expertise. The sourcing strategy targeted engineers from Hyderabad-based payment companies and banking GCCs, open-source contributors with experience in relevant technology stacks, graduates of premier institutions (IITs, IIITs, BITS) with payment or fintech project experience, and engineers from the broader technology ecosystem with transferable skills. TMS screened candidates against both technical requirements and cultural fit criteria defined in collaboration with the Berlin engineering leadership. Technical assessments included live coding sessions evaluated by TMS’s technical panel and the client’s engineering managers.

    Over the 6-month Build phase, TMS onboarded 35 professionals: 2 engineering leads, 8 backend engineers, 6 data engineers, 5 DevOps engineers, 8 QA engineers, and 6 data analysts. All were employed on TMS’s EOR payroll with full statutory compliance.

    During the Operate phase (months 7-15), TMS managed the day-to-day HR and administrative operations of the GCC while the team ramped to its target size.

    Payroll and compliance management included monthly payroll processing for the growing team (reaching 50 by month 12), EPF and ESIC contributions and filings, Professional Tax remittance under Telangana regulations, income tax (TDS) computation including ESOP perquisite calculations (the client offered RSUs from the parent company to select India employees), and quarterly performance incentive processing.

    HR operations covered ongoing recruitment to reach the 50-person target, onboarding integration programs connecting new hires with Berlin teams, employee engagement initiatives including quarterly team events, learning and development sponsorship, wellness programs, performance management process facilitation aligned with the client’s global review cycle, and attrition management with proactive retention interventions.

    TMS also managed the transition of employees from the EOR payroll to the client’s newly registered Indian entity. The transfer was executed in two batches: the first batch of 20 employees transferred in month 10 (once the entity had all registrations operational), and the remaining team in month 14.

    During the Transfer phase (months 15-18), TMS executed the formal handover of all GCC operations to the client.

    Employee transfer was completed for all remaining employees, with new appointment letters issued by the client entity, EPF trust transfer coordinated with EPFO, ESIC coverage seamlessly transitioned, and service continuity confirmed for gratuity and leave calculations. Operational handover included transferring the office lease to the client entity, migrating vendor contracts (housekeeping, security, internet, catering), handing over all compliance documentation, statutory registrations, and filing records, and providing a 90-day post-transfer compliance support period. Knowledge transfer ensured the client’s India HR team (hired during the Operate phase) was fully trained on all compliance processes, payroll procedures, and statutory requirements through structured handover sessions and documented standard operating procedures.

    Results with Metrics

    The BOT engagement delivered a successful, fully operational GCC that exceeded the client’s initial expectations.

    On team building, the 50-person team was fully assembled by month 12, ahead of the 15-month target. The team composition matched the planned skill distribution across backend, data, DevOps, QA, and analytics roles. 48 of the 50 team members (96%) remained with the organization through the transfer to the client entity, exceeding the 90% retention target.

    On compliance and payroll, zero compliance observations throughout the 18-month engagement. 100% on-time payroll processing with zero errors. All statutory filings (EPF, ESIC, PT, TDS) completed before deadlines across the entire engagement period. Successful STPI registration enabled the client to benefit from customs duty exemption on imported hardware.

    On cost performance, the total cost of the 50-person team over 18 months was approximately USD 2.8 million (including all salaries, benefits, infrastructure, compliance, and TMS management fees). This represented a 62% cost saving compared to the estimated cost of an equivalent 50-person team in Berlin over the same period. The per-engineer fully loaded annual cost averaged USD 38,000, within the client’s target range of USD 35,000-45,000.

    On entity and transfer execution, the Indian Private Limited Company was incorporated within 8 weeks. STPI registration was completed within 12 weeks. The employee transfer was executed with 96% retention (48 of 50 employees). The complete transfer was finalized within 3 months of the Transfer phase commencement. Post-transfer compliance support was provided for 90 days with zero issues.

    On business impact, the Hyderabad team delivered its first production code contribution within 10 weeks of the first hire joining. By month 12, the India team was owning 3 independent microservices within the payment processing platform. The fraud detection model developed by the Hyderabad data engineering team reduced false positives by 18%, directly improving the client’s customer experience metrics. The Berlin leadership team rated the India GCC a success and approved the expansion plan to 150 professionals within 2 years.

    Key Takeaways

    This engagement demonstrated that the BOT model is ideally suited for fintech and regulated industry GCCs, where compliance, data security, and cultural alignment require expert management during the critical early stages. EOR hiring enables immediate team building while entity formation processes run in parallel, saving 2-3 months on the overall timeline. Fintech GCC recruitment demands domain-specific sourcing strategies; generic technology recruitment approaches are insufficient for attracting engineers with payment system and financial data expertise. Cultural alignment between the India GCC and European headquarters requires deliberate investment in workspace design, communication practices, and integration programs from day one. A phased employee transfer approach (batched over 2-3 months rather than a single big-bang transfer) reduces risk and allows for process refinement between batches.

    Planning a fintech or technology GCC in India? TMS provides the BOT expertise to build, operate, and transfer your India centre with minimal risk and maximum speed. Contact us at +91-XXXXXXXXXX or email [email protected] for a BOT engagement proposal tailored to your requirements.

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