Dynamic Staffing Services (DSS) proudly participated in the recent India–Cyprus Summit organised by the High Commission of India in Cyprus, reaffirming its commitment to advancing structured, ethical and performance-driven workforce mobility between India and Cyprus.

Bringing together policymakers, senior business leaders, and institutional stakeholders, the Summit marked an important step in accelerating bilateral cooperation from longstanding goodwill toward a partnership defined by strategic intent and measurable outcomes. Across sessions, a clear message emerged: the next phase of India–Cyprus collaboration will be driven by execution built on the strong intergovernmental foundation already in place.

Human capital featured prominently in the Summit’s agenda. Samir Khosla, Chairman of DSS, participated in Panel Discussion 4: Human Capital and Talent, moderated by Philokypros Roussounides, Secretary General of the Cyprus Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KEVE). Fellow panellists included: Valentinos Polycarpou, Chairman of the Board at Techisland; Prabhat Jha, Group Managing Director and CEO at MSC Shipmanagement Ltd; Nicos Chimarides, former President of ICPAC (SELK). The discussion explored maritime workforce development, technology talent gaps and the regulatory frameworks shaping cross-border mobility.

During the discussion, DSS Chairman Khosla emphasised that global workforce solutions are undergoing a structural shift. The focus is moving beyond simply filling vacancies toward delivering measurable productivity, higher standards and long-term value creation.

During the panel, Chairman Khosla noted that tightening labour markets and rising employer expectations are reshaping cross-border hiring, with organisations increasingly prioritising verified capability, performance accountability and long-term retention over simply meeting headcount targets. “Global workforce solutions are shifting from filling vacancies to delivering measurable productivity and long-term value,” he said.

Khosla also expressed appreciation to the High Commission of India in Cyprus for convening timely, practical dialogue and enabling tangible business engagement. He noted that sustained institutional leadership is essential to converting bilateral goodwill into structured economic cooperation.

Highlighting the opportunities for India–Cyprus talent collaboration, Chairman Khosla pointed to the example of MSC Shipmanagement. Fellow panellist, Group Managing Director and CEO of MSC, Prabhat Jha, noted that approximately 50 per cent of MSC’s global workforce is of Indian origin, underscoring how a Cyprus-based organisation has scaled globally by leveraging the skilled Indian talent pool.

Beyond maritime, Khosla underlined the strength of India’s blue and grey collar talent, particularly in infrastructure delivery, technical trades and skilled professions; capabilities that can support Cyprus’ GDP growth trajectory and productivity. He added that, while Cyprus is already building momentum in fintech, digital systems and emerging technologies, deeper collaboration with India’s talent and innovation ecosystem can further accelerate the country’s economic evolution.

Positioning Cyprus within the wider geopolitical and business landscape, Khosla described the country as an increasingly compelling gateway for Indian companies seeking structured entry into the European Union, supported by Cyprus’ regulatory clarity, credibility and strategic location.

Addressing ethical and sustainable international recruitment, Chairman Khosla noted that his company DSS facilitates workforce mobility to approximately 30 countries worldwide, deploying around 16,000 professionals annually and contributing to nearly half a million placements globally. He stressed that ethical compliance and protection of both workers and employers form the foundation of the company’s operating model. He emphasized the need for standardisation across international recruitment processes, including salary benchmarking, rigorous skill verification and a focus on delivering best-in-class talent, the “cream of the crop”. Raising experience standards and ensuring performance accountability, he stated, are essential to building high-trust talent corridors.

Addressing ethical and sustainable international recruitment, Khosla noted that DSS facilitates workforce mobility across approximately 30 destination countries, deploying around 16,000 foreign workers annually, and having enabled nearly half a million placements globally over the company’s history. He stressed that ethical compliance and the protection of both workers and employers are foundational to DSS’ operating model. He called for greater standardisation across international recruitment, including salary benchmarking, rigorous skill verification and consistent performance accountability, to ensure talent corridors are built on trust, transparency, and measurable outcomes.

Transparency, he added, is central to maintaining that trust. DSS’ model includes legally compliant contracts, end to end digitisation of the recruitment lifecycle, measurable KPIs, defined retention standards, and comprehensive on ground support. “We are not shipping a package; we are dealing with human lives,” Khosla said, underscoring DSS’ after placement support designed to promote long-term integration and success for both employers and employees. He also noted DSS’ investment in language training, cultural integration programmes, and ethical recruitment safeguards aligned with international best practices.

A defining theme of the Summit was the complementarity of the two nations. India brings scale, speed, and depth of talent, alongside growing influence across global supply chains. Cyprus contributes EU credibility, regulatory clarity and a strategic geographic position at the crossroads of Europe, Asia and the Eastern Mediterranean. Together, these strengths create a strong platform for a partnership that is increasingly strategic, structured and measurable.

As India and Cyprus enter this new phase of institutional alignment and execution, Dynamic Staffing Services leaves the Summit confident in the trajectory ahead. DSS remains committed to serving as a responsible, long term partner in building a high trust, performance driven talent corridor that supports sustainable growth and shared prosperity for both countries.