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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Shocking Revocation of Offers from Premier Institutes
In a move that has sent ripples through India's higher education landscape, Oracle Corporation has revoked dozens of campus placement and pre-placement offers extended to students from top Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) and National Institutes of Technology (NITs). This development, unfolding just weeks before many students were set to join the company, underscores the precarious nature of campus recruitment amid a turbulent tech job market. Students who had secured these coveted positions after rigorous internships, coding challenges, and interviews now find themselves back at square one, forcing placement cells at these elite institutions to scramble for alternatives.
The revocations primarily targeted full-time roles for the 2026 batch, with pre-placement offers (PPOs) from summer internships last year being particularly hard-hit. Packages ranged from 35 lakhs per annum (LPA) and above, often classified as 'Day 0' offers under IIT policies that allow only one accepted offer per student. This policy, designed to ensure equity, has ironically compounded the crisis for affected graduates who turned down other opportunities.
Specific Institutes and Student Profiles Hit Hard
Several premier IITs and NITs have reported impacts. At IIT Hyderabad, four offers were cancelled, while IITs Kanpur, Kharagpur, Delhi, Guwahati, Madras, and IIT (BHU) Varanasi also saw multiple revocations. NIT Warangal confirmed at least three cases, including standout student Aditya Kumar Barawal, who earned his PPO after an Oracle internship. Barawal's resume boasts clearing the National Defence Academy (NDA) exam with All India Rank (AIR) 77, launching a startup that generated over Rs 1 lakh in revenue within 30 days, AI/ML research experience, and hackathon victories.
Placement coordinators, like Utkarsh Ranjan from NIT Warangal, have publicly appealed to other recruiters, describing affected students as 'highly talented and hardworking.' Unofficial tallies from student forums suggest over 50 offers across IITs alone, with more from NITs and even Birla Institute of Technology and Science (BITS) Pilani. These students, many from Computer Science (CS), Electronics, and AI branches, represent the cream of India's engineering talent pool.
Oracle's Restructuring: From Layoffs to Hiring Freeze
The root cause traces back to Oracle's massive global workforce reduction in early 2026. The company laid off approximately 30,000 employees worldwide, with around 12,000 cuts in India—primarily in Bengaluru and Mumbai offices focused on cloud infrastructure and artificial intelligence (AI) divisions. Emails terminating employment arrived as early as 6 AM IST, offering severance of four weeks' pay plus one week per year of service.
Revocation emails to students cited 'internal restructuring,' 'changes in hiring capacity,' 'headcount adjustments,' and 'business needs.' No performance issues were flagged, highlighting how corporate priorities override individual commitments. Oracle, a multinational database software and technology giant headquartered in Austin, Texas, had aggressively hired during the 2025-26 placement season but reversed course amid economic pressures and AI-driven efficiency gains. For context, Business Today reports detail the scale of these changes.
Student Reactions: From Devastation to Determination
Social media erupted with anguish and appeals. On Reddit's r/Btechtards and LinkedIn, students shared screenshots of revocation emails, lamenting months of preparation wasted. One IIT Hyderabad student noted, 'We cracked Data Structures and Algorithms (DSA) marathons, built projects, only for this.' Barawal posted optimistically: 'Ready for the next challenge,' urging connections for opportunities.
The emotional toll is profound. Under IIT's 'one student, one offer' rule, these graduates couldn't pursue backups, facing a job market flooded with laid-off professionals. Placement seasons, typically concluding by May, leave little room for recovery. Forums buzz with stories of delayed joinings elsewhere—some pushed to September—intensifying uncertainty.
Placement Statistics at IITs and NITs in 2026: A Mixed Picture
India's 23 IITs and 31 NITs produce over 1.5 lakh engineering graduates annually, but 2026 placements reflect tech sector woes. Phase 1 data shows IIT Hyderabad at 62.42% for BTech, IIT Delhi at 79%, IIT Bombay with 42 companies making 98 offers on Day 1. Overall averages hover at 70-80% for top branches like CS and AI, down from 85-90% pre-2023 due to hiring slowdowns.
Top recruiters include Google, Microsoft, Goldman Sachs, but mass hirers like Oracle, Infosys, and TCS have scaled back. NITs report similar trends: Warangal's placement rate dipped below 70% amid fewer IT visits. High packages persist—up to Rs 2 crore internationally—but volume is down 20-30%, pushing more students toward startups, PSUs (Public Sector Undertakings), or higher studies.
Broader Impact on India's Higher Education Job Ecosystem
This incident spotlights systemic vulnerabilities in campus placements, which account for 40-50% of jobs for IIT/NIT students. Tech firms, employing 70% of CS graduates, cut fresher hiring by 80% from FY22 peaks amid AI automation and global slowdowns. Engineering colleges now pivot to non-tech sectors: finance, consulting, core engineering, and government roles via GATE (Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering).
Placement cells are activating alumni networks and off-campus drives. Institutions like IIT Madras emphasize upskilling in AI, cybersecurity, and data science. However, Tier-2/3 colleges face steeper challenges, with unplaced rates exceeding 50%. The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020's push for multidisciplinary skills gains urgency.
Expert Perspectives and Institutional Responses
Career experts urge diversification. Prof. Ashwin Mahajan, IIT Bombay placement head, notes, 'Campus hiring evolves; students must build portfolios beyond offers.' Placement coordinators are blacklisting repeat offenders, echoing past IIT bans on 20+ firms for similar revocations.
Government initiatives like Skill India and PMKVY (Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana) offer bridges, but experts call for stronger offer-binding clauses. University Grants Commission (UGC) monitors, yet enforcement lags. As India Today highlights, this disrupts not just careers but institutional reputations tied to placement metrics.
Actionable Advice for Affected Students and Peers
For those hit:
- Leverage Networks: Update LinkedIn, connect with alumni via placement cells. Target PSUs (ONGC, BHEL), banks (SBI PO), or startups via AngelList.
- Upskill Strategically: Free courses on Coursera (Google Data Analytics), edX (MIT AI), or NPTEL. Focus on cloud (AWS), cybersecurity, full-stack development.
- Explore Alternatives: GATE for PSUs/IISC MTech; GRE for MS abroad (US, Germany); UPSC/SSC for civil services; entrepreneurship via incubators like IIT Startup Hubs.
- Legal/Policy Recourse: Document communications; placement cells can negotiate. Freelance on Upwork for experience.
- Mental Health: Campus counseling; peer support groups.
Proactive peers: Diversify applications, reject no-backup offers, build GitHub portfolios.
Future Outlook: Resilient Hiring Amid Uncertainty
India's higher ed must adapt. Projections show tech hiring rebounding by 2027 with AI-specialized roles, but mass recruitment wanes. NITs/IITs invest in industry tie-ups: IIT Madras' Roberts AI hub, NIT Warangal's semiconductor focus. Balanced curricula blending tech with domains like fintech, healthtech promise stability.
Government's Rs 1 lakh crore R&D fund and NEP's flexible degrees position India globally. Success stories abound: Laid-off alumni founding unicorns. This crisis, painful as it is, catalyzes innovation in India's Rs 10 lakh crore higher ed sector.
Path Forward: Strengthening Campus Ecosystems
Stakeholders—universities, industry, government—must collaborate. Robust contracts, skill-aligned curricula, and off-campus bridges are key. For students, resilience trumps reliance on single offers. As India's engineering powerhouse evolves, those adapting thrive, turning setbacks into launches.
Photo by Skytech Aviation on Unsplash

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