This is not only my experience
This is not only my experience. This is something many people working with Arise in India have talked about, and many people will understand exactly what I’m saying.
People join with hope. We create accounts, clear assessments, complete ID verification, background checks, enroll in programs, receive training dates, and invest our time because we believe we are stepping into a real opportunity.
But after people give their time, effort, energy, and trust, what happens?
Enrollment gets completed. Training dates arrive. People prepare seriously. Some spend weeks or even months in unpaid training with the expectation that certification and hard work will finally lead to actual work.
Then suddenly people are removed. Or they are told there are not enough hours. Or after completing long training periods, they are shifted into another process and forced to start everything again — proficiency tests, verification, onboarding, waiting, uncertainty.
Do you understand what that does to people?
This is not a video game where you reset progress and press start again.
These are real people. People with responsibilities, bills, families, pressure, and expectations. People who wake up every day trying to build a future.
If you do not have enough work, enough hours, or enough opportunities, then say it honestly from the beginning.
Please stop treating people as if their time has no value.
If you want to do business in India, then respect Indian workers too. Stop expecting people to keep investing hope, time, and effort into a cycle of uncertainty.
We are not numbers on a dashboard. We are not disposable. And people's lives are not something to play with.
If others have experienced this too, speak up.
#WorkFromHome #RemoteJobs #WorkersRights #India #Arise




