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Numbers reflect open-market hires at the level shown.
Equity, bonuses, and overtime are not included. Senior-bracket numbers can rise 30–60% at top studios / tier-1 firms; smaller cities trend 20% lower than metros.
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Service
Executive Chefs in India lead kitchen brigades ranging from 30 to 150 cooks at 5-star hotel chains (Taj Hotels, ITC Hotels, Oberoi Group, Marriott, Hyatt), standalone fine-dining restaurants, boutique properties, and cloud kitchen networks. The role spans menu engineering, food-cost management (keeping cost-of-goods at 28–35%), procurement, FSSAI compliance (Schedule IV Hygiene Standards), staff training, and the relentless standard-setting that drives guest experiences from biryani buffets to multi-course tasting menus. India's culinary recognition on the global stage — with names like Garima Arora (Asia's 50 Best), Manish Mehrotra (Indian Accent), and Gaggan Anand — has transformed the profession into a legitimate high-prestige career path. Entry typically runs through a 3-year B.Sc. Hospitality (or equivalent) from IHM Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai, or Hyderabad — flagship institutes under the National Council for Hotel Management (NCHMCT) — followed by departmental training in kitchens, CDP (Chef de Partie), Sous Chef, and eventually Head Chef or Executive Chef. The NRAI (National Restaurant Association of India) estimates the organised food service industry at ₹5.5 lakh crore, creating strong sustained demand for kitchen leadership talent across every price point.
Service
Flight attendants (cabin crew) in India are the frontline safety professionals and hospitality ambassadors of every scheduled commercial flight. IndiGo, Air India, Vistara (merging with Air India), Akasa Air, and SpiceJet hire heavily from tier-2 and metro India, as do foreign carriers — Emirates, Qatar Airways, Etihad, Lufthansa — which actively recruit Indian applicants via annual open days in Mumbai, Delhi, and Bengaluru. The entry path requires a DGCA Cabin Crew License, obtained after completing a 6-12 week airline-specific type-rating and safety training program; training institutes like Frankfinn, IATA-authorised AHA, and Sushma Industries provide pre-employment grooming. Age at entry is typically 18-27; airlines enforce height (MinIMum arm-reach ~212 cm for most carriers), BMI, and clear-skin requirements at the time of joining. Cabin crew fly 60-90 block hours per month on domestic/international sectors, operate in a strict FDTL (Flight Duty Time Limitations) framework under DGCA CAR Section 7 Series O Part III, and are responsible for passenger safety briefings, in-flight service, emergency procedures, and crew resource management. Senior crew progress to lead cabin crew, pursers, and cabin managers; international carrier pursers can take home INR equivalent of ₹25-55L annually including tax-free allowances.
Service
Hotel Front Office Managers in India are the nerve centre of guest experience at properties ranging from Taj Lake Palace and ITC Grand Chola to Marriott, Hyatt, and Hilton. The role owns the full guest journey — reservations, check-in, concierge, bell services, night audit, and check-out — and operates through Property Management Systems such as Opera, IDS Next, and eZee. A typical 5-star FOM manages 20–60 front-desk staff, drives RevPAR and Average Daily Rate, handles VIP and VVIP protocols (including Bollywood and political arrivals), and ensures C-form filing for foreign guests per the Foreigners Act. The standard entry path is a 3-year B.Sc. Hospitality from an IHM (NCHMCT-affiliated institute in Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai, or Hyderabad), followed by a management trainee stint at a Taj or Oberoi property. Bilingual fluency in Hindi-English, and regional languages, is a strong differentiator. FHRAI (Federation of Hotel & Restaurant Associations of India) membership properties follow shared industry standards on room rates, cancellation policies, and statutory compliance. Demand for experienced FOM talent remains strong as India's hotel pipeline adds 50,000–80,000 branded rooms per year.
Service
Animal Trainers for film and TV prepare dogs, horses, birds, and exotic animals to perform on-cue behaviours for Bollywood, regional cinema, OTT productions, and commercial shoots. In India, the trade is anchored by a small network of established trainers — Sundar Bhatti's legendary work training dogs for iconic Bollywood roles (Moti, Tommy) defined the craft's standards for a generation. Every production using live animals requires an AWBI (Animal Welfare Board of India) No-Objection Certificate per shoot, compliance with the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act 1960 (PCA Act), and a vet on call under AWBI norms. Trainers typically own or co-own their animal stable, negotiate per-day rates through informal CINTAA (Cine & TV Artistes' Association) conventions, and handle welfare logistics that the production unit has neither the knowledge nor the liability appetite for. Entry is entirely through apprenticeship — usually under an established trainer in Mumbai, Hyderabad, Mysuru, or Jaipur.
Service
Archivists in India acquire, appraise, arrange, describe, preserve, and provide access to records of enduring value — from 16th-century Persian manuscripts at the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library to born-digital corporate governance records at Tata Central Archives. The statutory backbone is the Public Records Act 1993, which governs the National Archives of India (NAI) in New Delhi and its regional repositories in Bhopal, Jaipur, Puducherry, and Bhubaneswar. State archives (UP State Archives Allahabad, Maharashtra State Archives Mumbai, MP State Archives Bhopal) operate under parallel state-level acts. Private and institutional archives — Aga Khan Trust for Culture, Godrej Archives, TIFR Archives, various university libraries — follow the same international descriptive standards (ISAD(G) General International Standard Archival Description; DACS Describing Archives: A Content Standard) but with greater flexibility. Day to day means accessioning incoming record transfers, constructing finding aids in EAD (Encoded Archival Description) XML, running preservation assessments (monitoring RH 45-55%, temperature 16-21°C, IPM pest trapping), supervising digitization workflows (TIFF master at 400 dpi, JPEG2000 access copy, PDF/A for text records), and handling researcher access and RTI requests under the Public Records Act and the RTI Act 2005.
Service
Art Curators in India build and interpret exhibitions — selecting artworks, commissioning new pieces, writing catalogue essays, and placing individual works and artists within a larger art-historical argument. The career runs across institutional museums (KNMA New Delhi under Roobina Karode, Kiran Nadar Museum of Art), independent non-profit spaces (KHOJ International Artists' Association in New Delhi under Pooja Sood), commercial gallery programmes (Gallery Espace, Chemould Prescott Road, Vadehra Art Gallery, Nature Morte), and biennale structures — most prominently the Kochi-Muziris Biennale, whose curatorial leadership (Anita Dube in 2018, Bose Krishnamachari as founding trustee) defines the highest-profile commission cycle in the subcontinent. Entry requires an MFA in Art History or a postgraduate curatorial diploma; fluency in contemporary critical theory, art-historical methodology, and essayistic writing is non-negotiable. Unlike Western markets, most Indian curators work across both institutional and independent registers — writing for journals (TAKE on Art, ArtAsiaPacific, e-flux), lecturing at art schools, and advising collectors simultaneously.