Apr 24: WorkIndia, India’s leading platform for blue and grey collar recruitment, has released new insights revealing that while the Indian Premier League (IPL) drives an estimated ₹6,000 crore advertising economy, it has little to no measurable impact on blue collar job creation across host cities.
Based on an analysis of job postings across seven major cities, Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolkata, and Mumbai, the study compares hiring trends during the pre-IPL period from January 20 to March 21 with the IPL window from March 22 to May 25 across 2024 and 2025. The findings challenge the widely held perception that large sporting events like IPL generate widespread employment opportunities on the ground.
In 2024, total blue–collar job postings across these cities declined by 1.52% during the IPL window compared to the pre-IPL period. While 2025 recorded a 5.37% increase, this growth mirrors broader market momentum rather than any IPL-specific effect, a period that also saw white-collar hiring rise 38% year-on-year nationally, suggesting the tide lifted all boats rather than IPL driving blue–collar demand specifically. Categories typically expected to benefit from match day activity, such as security, hospitality, and delivery, showed no consistent or sustained hiring patterns across the two years. Security roles, for instance, grew by 12.4% during IPL 2024 but slowed sharply to 1.7% in 2025, while travel and hospitality moved from a 12.7% decline in 2024 to a 4.5% increase in 2025. Similarly, delivery and driving roles rose by 19.2% in 2024 but dipped marginally by 0.5% the following year. When the same categories move in opposite directions across consecutive years, the data does not support a causal link to the event.
This stands in sharp contrast to the white-collar economy, where IPL continues to act as a major catalyst. The sectors that directly benefit from IPL‘s advertising engine, digital marketing, content creation, and media planning, saw sustained activity during this period, with IPL ad rates increasing by an estimated 10 to 15 percent and connected TV formats witnessing a 30% jump, alongside an estimated ₹550 crore being deployed in influencer-led campaigns. The economic upside of IPL, therefore, remains concentrated within marketing, media, and digital ecosystems.
Even the largest blue–collar employment category by volume, sales roles, which account for over 1,200 to 1,400 job postings across these cities in any given period, did not reflect any IPL-led demand surge. Sales job postings declined by 8% during IPL 2024 and saw only a modest recovery of 2.9% in 2025. At a city level, trends varied sharply and remained inconsistent, further weakening the case for IPL-driven hiring. While Delhi recorded steady growth across both years, Chennai and Hyderabad, both established IPL venues, continued to see flat or declining job posting activity during the tournament window across both years.
Instead, the data indicate that blue–collar hiring in India is driven by deeper structural factors rather than seasonal events. Categories such as domestic work, teaching, and labour roles showed consistent and significant growth across both years, reflecting demand linked to household needs, academic cycles, and infrastructure development rather than sporting calendars.
Commenting on the findings, Nilesh Dungarwal, Co-founder and CEO, WorkIndia, said, “India spends an estimated ₹6,000 crore activating IPL for brand managers and marketers, but our data shows this does not translate into meaningful job creation for the workers on the ground. The security guard at the gate, the delivery partner, or the hospitality worker does not see a corresponding increase in opportunities during this period. Blue collar hiring in India continues to be shaped by long term economic drivers, not seasonal events like IPL.”
The insights reinforce an important nuance in India’s employment story. While IPL remains one of the country’s most powerful economic and cultural platforms, its impact is not evenly distributed across the workforce. At the same time, the data underscores a positive trend; India’s blue–collar job market continues to grow steadily, driven by structural demand and long-term economic expansion, independent of event-led spikes.
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