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NIRF, explained
by Chitranjan Jegadeesan
HomeBlog › 7 Reasons Colleges Lose NIRF Marks

7 Reasons Colleges Lose NIRF Marks

By Chitranjan Jegadeesan · NIRF 2026 methodology

Most lost marks come from avoidable mistakes, not weak performance. Fix these first — many cost almost nothing.

1. Empty sanctioned seats

Unfilled seats hurt you twice — Student Strength and the graduation denominator both use sanctioned intake. Fill seats or verify your sanction figure.

2. Faculty who don't count

Bachelor's-only or part-time faculty don't count for FSR/FQE. Hire/upskill qualified, full-time faculty — see FSR explained.

3. Wrong affiliations on papers

Papers with a mis-typed institution name are never credited by Scopus/WoS. Standardise the affiliation string and author IDs — pure free marks.

4. Reporting mean instead of median salary

NIRF uses median salary. A few big packages won't help; raising the middle student's salary does.

5. Weak documentation

Missing placement proofs, salary evidence or faculty records get discounted at verification. Capture evidence year-round, not at submission.

6. NIRF ↔ NAAC ↔ website mismatches

Different numbers in different places are flagged as a red flag. Keep one consistent data set across NIRF, AQAR and your website.

7. Fixing things too late

3-year-average metrics need a ~3-year runway. Start the slow levers early — see NIRF timeline.

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