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MAM

India West Indies Test series average at 3.76 TVR

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MUMBAI: Debunking the notion that viewer fatigue might happen with India cricket taking place almost every month, the recently concluded three match Test series at home between India and West Indies averaged a TVR of 3.76 on Neo Cricket according to Tam data for c&s 4+ market.

This was much better compared to the TVR of 2.49 that the away three match Test series between the two countries had managed on Ten Cricket earlier in the year. Of course timings also played a big role in the performance in addition to the fact that the big names were present.

Not surprisingly the highest rated match this time was the drawn match in Mumbai where both teams finished on the same score. That match got a TVR of 4.36. All the three Test matches crossed a TVR of 3. This shows that if the quality of the match is good and India is doing well then viewers will tune in.

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MPG India senior director R Venkatasubramanian called the delivery amazing for Test cricket. “The series had exciting cricket being played. Each match was interesting and there were turning points.”He adds that the CPRP for both the India West Indies series away and at home was satisfactory.

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MAM

India’s employability gap persists despite strong hiring intent

Only 1 in 5 institutions achieve 76 to 100 per cent placements within six months of graduation.

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MUMBAI: India’s young workforce is ready in numbers, but the real question is whether they are ready for work and senior leaders from industry, academia and policy gathered in Delhi to find practical answers. A closed-door roundtable hosted by Vaishali Nigam Sinha, co-founder of Renew, brought together key voices to discuss actionable solutions for bridging the persistent employability gap. The session highlighted that while job opportunities are expanding, the alignment between education and industry needs remains a critical challenge.

According to Teamlease EdTech’s Career Outlook Report HY1 2026, 73 per cent of employers plan to hire freshers in the first half of 2026, signalling steady recovery in entry-level hiring. However, employers are shifting focus from mere qualifications to demonstrable capability, placing greater value on internships, live projects and proof-of-work.

Teamlease Edtech, founder and CEO Shantanu Rooj emphasised the need for better alignment, “India’s employability challenge is no longer about access alone, but about alignment between education and work. Employers are increasingly relying on demonstrable capability such as internships, projects, and applied learning as indicators of readiness.”

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Vaishali Nigam Sinha stressed the importance of execution over intent, “India has both the talent and the opportunity. What is needed now is alignment. We have to move from intent to execution by embedding employability into the system itself.”

Other prominent speakers included Dr Chenraj Roychand, Chancellor of Jain (Deemed-to-be) University, who called for universities to evolve from degree providers to ecosystem enablers, Prof M. Jagadesh Kumar, Chairman of the Board of Governors at IIM Calcutta, who highlighted the need for flexibility and multidisciplinary learning, and Dr T.N. Singh, Director of IIT Patna, who advocated deeper industry engagement through research and experiential learning.

The discussion also drew insights from the book Accelerating Impact. Enabling Dreams – Making India Employable by Shantanu Rooj and co-authors, which features contributions from leaders like Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw, Dr Krishnaswamy Kasturirangan and Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar.

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During the event, Teamlease Edtech Foundation launched Project SEED, a national initiative aimed at bridging the education-employability gap for underserved youth. The project focuses on early intervention at the school level to guide students towards informed career choices and work-integrated pathways.

With only 16.67 per cent (1 in 5) of institutions achieving 76–100 per cent placements within six months of graduation, the conversation made one thing clear, India’s demographic dividend will deliver real value only when education and employability walk hand in hand. The gathering served as a timely reminder that the future of India’s workforce depends not just on creating more jobs, but on preparing young people far better to seize them.

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