TalentSprint and Salesforce Join Forces to Skill up Students for the Future of Work

TalentSprint, an EdTech platform for DeepTech education and part of the NSE group, has announced a collaboration with Salesforce, focused on skilling college graduates with Salesforce skills for the jobs of the future. The collaboration will focus on training aspiring college graduates (Engineers with a Computer Science / Information Science background, BTech, MCA, BCA) to be software developers, ready to take on roles in IT services and consulting firms and carry out Salesforce implementations for their global clientele.

Comments on the news, Arundhati Bhattacharya, Chairperson and CEO, Salesforce India, said, “The pandemic has made digitization as well as collaboration an imperative. As technology adoption continues to grow, we are committed to addressing the training and re-skilling imperative – equipping people with the tools needed to take on jobs that this new digital economy demands and increasing our capacity to do so with the help of partners. We are delighted to partner with TalentSprint, to help grow the skills of graduates and meet the growing demand for Salesforce professionals across the country.”

Dr. Santanu Paul, CEO and MD, TalentSprint, added, “Our constant endeavor is to offer differentiated deeptech programs that offer learners a significant career advantage. We are delighted to partner with Salesforce to offer this unique Certified Salesforce Professional Program to engineering students nationwide. This program provides everything that a young learner seeking a great career could aspire for, such as hands-on experiential learning, multiple globally relevant certifications, and systematic preparation for starting tech careers with top-tier IT firms straight out of college or university.”

+ posts

Arya has been a part of the Content & Research Team at Hrnxt.com. She is a keen observer of  economic developments, emerging businesses, people in business and keeps a tab on latest happenings in the business environment.

What's your take on this post ? Comment: