Recruitment of Executives in SBI

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Job title: Recruitment of Executives (Management/ Specialist Technical) in SBI July 2010  
Available Jobs: Bank, executives, Management Executive, SBI, Technical Executives  
Advertisement no: Crpd/sme & ste/2010-11/02 

On-Line Applications are invited from eligible Indian Citizens for appointment as Specialist Management Executives and Specialist Technical Executives in State Bank of India (SBI). Selected candidate are liable to be posted anywhere in India: 
Specialist Management Executives - 500 Vacancies, Post Code - SME 
Vacancies: SC-75, ST-37, OBC-135 and General-253 Total-500 8 vacancies for OH and 7 vacancies for VH category candidates. Reservation for OH and VH is horizontal and within the overall vacancies of 500. 
Eligibility criteria : 
Essential Academic Qualification: Post Graduate Degree/Diploma in Business Administration or CA or ICWA 
Minimum 60% (55% for SC/ ST/PWD) aggregate marks in class 10th AND 
Minimum 60% (55% for SC/ ST/PWD) aggregate marks in class 12th OR Minimum 60% aggregate marks in diploma course minimum two years duration after 10th Standard (55% for SC/ ST/PWD) AND 
Minimum 60% aggregate Marks (55% for SC/ ST/PWD) in Graduation AND 
CA or ICWA or Minimum 60% aggregate marks (55% for SC/ ST/PWD) in Post Graduate Degree / Diploma in Business Administration (The course should be with a minimum 2 years full time duration. Course completed through correspondence / part time are not eligible. The institute should be recognized / approved by Government / AICTE). In case of CA OR ICWA passing the relative professional examination is sufficient.
Specialist Technical Executives - 60 Vacancies, Post Code - STE 
Vacancies : SC-9, ST-4, OBC-17 and General-30 Total - 60 1 vacancy for OH category candidates. Reservation for OH is horizontal and within the overall vacancies of 60.
Eligibility criteria : 
Essential Academic Qualification: B.E./ B.Tech/ B.Sc.(Engineering) in Mechanical OR Chemical /Pharma / Bio Tech OR Electrical/ Electronics / IT OR Textile OR Food Technology OR Metallurgy 
Minimum 60% (55% for SC/ ST/PWD) aggregate marks in class 10th AND 
Minimum 60% (55% for SC/ ST/PWD) aggregate marks in class 12th OR Minimum 60% aggregate marks in diploma course (minimum two year duration) after 10th Standard (55% for SC/ ST/PWD) AND 
Minimum 60% aggregate marks (55% for SC/ ST/PWD) in B. E. / B. Tech / B.Sc (Engineering) in the following streams : Mechanical or Chemical / Pharma / Biotech or Electrical / Electronics / I T or Textile or Food Technology or Metallurgy only. 
Last Date Of Payment Of Fees/Postage : 28.08.2010 
Last date for registration of on-line applications : 31.08.2010
About State Bank of India:
State Bank of India welcomes you to explore the world of premier bank in India.  

In this section, you can access detailed information on Overview of the Bank, Technology Upgradation in the Bank, Board of Directors, Financial Results and Shareholder Info. 

The Bank is actively involved since 1973 in non-profit activity called Community Services Banking. All our branches and administrative offices throughout the country sponsor and participate in large number of welfare activities and social causes. Our business is more than banking because we touch the lives of people anywhere in many ways.  

Our commitment to nation-building is complete & comprehensive.
The origin of the State Bank of India goes back to the first decade of the nineteenth century with the establishment of the Bank of Calcutta in Calcutta on 2 June 1806. Three years later the bank received its charter and was re-designed as the Bank of Bengal (2 January 1809). A unique institution, it was the first joint-stock bank of British India sponsored by the Government of Bengal. The Bank of Bombay (15 April 1840) and the Bank of Madras (1 July 1843) followed the Bank of Bengal. These three banks remained at the apex of modern banking in India till their amalgamation as the Imperial Bank of India on 27 January 1921.  

Primarily Anglo-Indian creations, the three presidency banks came into existence either as a result of the compulsions of imperial finance or by the felt needs of local European commerce and were not imposed from outside in an arbitrary manner to modernise India's economy. Their evolution was, however, shaped by ideas culled from similar developments in Europe and England, and was influenced by changes occurring in the structure of both the local trading environment and those in the relations of the Indian economy to the economy of Europe and the global economic framework.

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