Individual career counselling is personally rewarding and financially viable. But the ceiling on individual practice is set by hours in the day and clients' ability to pay out of pocket.
Corporate career coaching breaks through that ceiling.
A single corporate outplacement contract can generate ₹5–15 lakh. A year-long retainer with an IT company for career development support for 50 high-potential employees can generate ₹20–40 lakh. A day-long workshop for a 20-person leadership team pays ₹1–3 lakh.
This is not a small addition to a career counselling practice — for many practitioners, corporate work becomes the economic engine that funds everything else and provides the financial stability to also do meaningful lower-priced work with individual students and early-career professionals.
The Four Corporate Career Coaching Market Segments
1. Outplacement Services
When companies make employees redundant — through layoffs, restructuring, role elimination, or performance-based exits — they often provide outplacement support to help affected employees find new positions.
This is legally not mandated in India but is increasingly standard practice among:
- Multinational corporations (following global HR standards)
- Listed Indian companies with active ESG commitments
- Technology companies where employer brand matters enormously in talent acquisition
- Professional services firms where alumni networks are valuable
What outplacement involves:
- Career assessment and clarity sessions
- CV and LinkedIn profile development
- Interview coaching
- Job search strategy
- Networking skills
- Emotional transition support
Commercial model:
- Individual outplacement packages: ₹50,000–3,00,000 per employee (based on seniority and duration)
- Typically 3–6 months per employee
- Contracted at a per-head rate through HR procurement
Entry pathway: Connect with HR Directors at companies known for structured HR practices. Present a clear outplacement methodology and reference any prior experience with career transitions.
2. Leadership Career Transitions
New managers, new directors, and executives stepping into significantly larger roles often benefit from structured career coaching during the transition period. This is distinct from general leadership coaching — it focuses on the career navigation aspects of the transition.
What it involves:
- Clarifying the new role's success criteria
- Identifying skills gaps and development priorities
- Managing upward (establishing relationships with new stakeholders)
- Career positioning within the new level (how to build reputation strategically)
- Handling the emotional dimension of stepping up
Commercial model:
- Typically 6–12 sessions over 3–6 months
- ₹10,000–25,000 per session for senior leaders
- Often packaged at ₹1–3 lakh for a full programme
- Contracted through L&D, HRBP, or OD function
3. Career Development for High-Potential Employees
Progressive companies invest in career development support for their identified high-potential (HiPo) talent pools — typically 5–15% of the workforce. Losing a high-potential employee is estimated to cost 1.5–2x their annual salary in recruiting and ramp-up costs. Career coaching is a retention investment.
What it involves:
- Career aspiration mapping
- Skills gap analysis relative to target roles
- Internal mobility planning
- Sponsor and mentor relationship development
- Long-range career planning (3–5 year horizon)
Commercial model:
- Group career development programmes: ₹1,50,000–5,00,000 for a cohort of 15–20 HiPos
- Individual coaching tracks: ₹6,000–15,000 per session, typically 6–8 sessions per employee
- Workshop components: ₹75,000–2,50,000 per workshop day
4. Team Career Planning Workshops
Some organisations run career development workshops for entire teams or departments — particularly in flat organisations where vertical promotion is limited and lateral career development is the main growth opportunity.
What it involves:
- Group career exploration (values, strengths, interests)
- Career pathway mapping within the organisation
- Skills development planning
- Building a career development culture
Commercial model:
- Half-day workshops: ₹75,000–1,50,000
- Full-day workshops: ₹1,50,000–3,00,000
- Workshop series (3–4 sessions over a quarter): ₹2–5 lakh
Understanding Who Buys Corporate Career Coaching
The buying decision in corporate career coaching is almost never made by a single person. Understanding the buying committee is essential.
Primary buyers:
L&D Head (Learning & Development): Manages the budget for employee development programmes. Focuses on ROI — measurable improvements in performance, engagement, or retention. Is the most common primary buyer for career development programmes and HiPo initiatives.
HRBP (HR Business Partner): Works alongside business units, often initiates coaching requests when managing high-potential employees or navigating transitions. Often the relationship entry point even if not the budget holder.
HR Director/CHRO: Signs off on large contracts, outplacement programmes, and strategic people initiatives. Difficult to reach cold but responds to referrals.
OD Manager (Organisational Development): Less common title but present in mature HR functions. Focused on systemic talent and culture initiatives where career development fits naturally.
CFO/Finance: Relevant for very large contracts where ROI framing is critical. Finance leaders respond to data — retention cost savings, productivity improvement, reduced time-to-performance for new hires.
Building Your Corporate Pipeline: A Practical Approach
Phase 1: Research and Targeting (Month 1–2)
Create a target list of 20–30 companies in your city or sector that:
- Have 200+ employees (minimum threshold for outplacement spend)
- Are growing, restructuring, or in active talent competition
- Have visible L&D or HR Heads on LinkedIn
Sectors particularly active in career coaching spend:
- Information Technology and IT-enabled Services
- Financial Services (banking, insurance, fintech)
- Consulting firms (Big Four, boutique strategy firms)
- Pharmaceutical and healthcare MNCs
- Consumer goods companies with large sales forces
Phase 2: Warm Outreach Strategy
Cold emails rarely generate corporate coaching conversations. Warm pathways work far better:
LinkedIn strategy: Publish one article per week on career development topics relevant to corporate audiences. This positions you as a thought leader before the cold outreach, so by the time you send a connection request, the buyer has seen your content.
Association networking: HR conferences (NHRDN, SHRM India), L&D forums, and HR tech conferences are where buyers congregate. Attending as a participant and contributing as a speaker (even in small breakout sessions) dramatically accelerates relationship building.
Referral networks: Career coaches who have completed corporate work are your best referrers for the next contract. Build genuine peer relationships — a referral from a trusted peer is worth more than any marketing.
Executive coaching crossover: Executive coaches who do not specifically offer career coaching often encounter clients who need it. Build relationships with executive coaches who can refer.
Phase 3: The Corporate Conversation
When you get a meeting, the framework is:
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Listen first: Ask what challenges they are managing around talent retention, employee development, or transition support. Do not lead with your services.
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Diagnose, do not prescribe: Identify whether their need is primarily outplacement, HiPo development, transition coaching, or team career planning.
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Present in ROI language: "Based on what you've described, a structured career development programme for your HiPo cohort could reduce voluntary attrition in that group by 20–30%. Given that replacing one senior employee costs approximately 1.5x their annual salary, retaining even 2 employees from a cohort of 15 would generate ₹15–30 lakh in cost savings against a programme investment of ₹4 lakh."
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Propose a pilot: A full 12-month contract is hard to sign without proof of concept. Propose a 3-session pilot with 3–5 employees for ₹1.5–3 lakh. The pilot almost always converts to a full programme.
Pricing Corporate Career Coaching
The most common mistake new corporate career coaches make is pricing their corporate work at their individual client rates. Corporate buyers expect (and budget for) significantly higher rates.
Benchmarks for India (2026):
| Service | Mid-Market Companies | Large MNCs | |---|---|---| | Individual coaching session | ₹8,000–15,000 | ₹15,000–30,000 | | 6-session individual programme | ₹45,000–80,000 | ₹80,000–1,50,000 | | Outplacement per head (junior) | ₹50,000–1,00,000 | ₹1,00,000–2,00,000 | | Outplacement per head (senior) | ₹1,50,000–3,00,000 | ₹3,00,000–6,00,000 | | Group workshop (half day) | ₹75,000–1,50,000 | ₹1,50,000–3,00,000 | | Group workshop (full day) | ₹1,50,000–2,50,000 | ₹2,50,000–5,00,000 | | HiPo programme (15 employees, 6 months) | ₹3,00,000–6,00,000 | ₹6,00,000–15,00,000 |
Add GST at 18% to all fees. Include administration and materials costs in quoted prices.
Group Coaching Economics
Group coaching is the highest-leverage model in corporate career coaching. A group of 8 professionals working together on career development:
- You deliver one session (3 hours), not eight
- You charge ₹40,000–1,20,000 for the session (corporate rate)
- Equivalent individual session revenue would require 8 x ₹5,000–15,000 = ₹40,000–1,20,000
- But you have done it in 3 hours rather than 8 separate hours
Well-designed group programmes for career development deliver peer learning benefits that often exceed individual coaching — clients learn from each other's challenges and experience the normalising effect of realising that others share their uncertainties.
A 6-session group career programme for a 10-person cohort can generate ₹3–8 lakh over 3 months while requiring only 18–24 hours of your delivery time.
Case Study: Building a Corporate Practice from Individual Practice
Year 1: Build individual practice (10–15 clients per week). Develop credibility and case studies.
Year 2: Begin writing for LinkedIn on corporate career development themes. Attend one NHRDN or SHRM event. Request informational meeting from a known contact at one target company. Land first pilot engagement (₹2 lakh).
Year 3: Convert pilot to ongoing relationship. Get referred to second company. Begin offering group programmes. Corporate revenue: ₹15–25 lakh. Individual practice maintained as 40% of time.
Year 4–5: 3–5 active corporate relationships. Begin hiring associate coaches for delivery scale. Revenue: ₹40–80 lakh. Individual practice reduced to premium/selective clients.
Dheya as Your Bridge to Corporate Work
Dheya's mentor ecosystem includes practitioners working in corporate settings who have navigated this transition. The Dheya certification programme includes modules on corporate practice development, and the Dheya network provides peer connections with experienced corporate practitioners.
More directly, organisations purchasing Dheya's enterprise platform for employee career development create demand for Dheya-certified mentors — creating a structured pipeline of corporate engagements without the full business development burden.
[Join Dheya as a Mentor →] to access India's fastest-growing career counselling platform and begin building your corporate practice.