Madrasi in the UK

Friday, June 24, 2005

India trip

June 25th is the day I am leaving to India for a short break. This would be a nice intended break and I hope to sort out a few things as well. Apart from that the plans for the trip are to do a computer course, practice a bit of driving, catch up with friends and family and all the other usual stuff. Hope the weather treats me nice as I don't want to be in the midst of 40 plus centigrade. My next blog mostly would be on Anniyan, the tamil movie as I am planning to watch it in India with friends. Sunshine, rain, lightning, thunder....nothing's going to stop me blogging. Can't say the same about tsunami.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

What no B-school can teach you

Vineet Nayar is president, HCL Technologies. He graduated from XLRI in 1985. The following excerpt is taken from rediff.com.

"Experience is a hard teacher because she gives the test first and the lesson afterwards." -- Vernon Sanders Law.

These lines summarise the basic difference between a B-school and what life teaches you at work. B-schools teach you models, case studies, strategies, best practices and so on. But success has rules which are far beyond the books. To win, one has to master some 'X-factors' that define the line between the ordinary and the extraordinary.

Pride: Let's face it, we're alive for only a limited period of time and we'll spend most of our lives working. That being the case, I believe the number one priority is to do whatever we do as well as we can, and take pride in that. This pride comes from the belief that whatever we are doing is making a difference to the world. In the technology industry, it might translate into competitive advantage for some of the biggest corporations in the world. One thing is for sure. If we are not proud of what we are doing, there is a vital piece missing. A note of caution: pride is not an inheritance or a legacy. It has to be earned.
Passion: A philosopher said, "We may affirm that nothing great in the world has ever been accomplished without passion." If we take pride in what we do, passion is in how we do it. Again, passion cannot be taught -- it is inherent. It gives you an inspired energy towards realising your dreams. No wonder the best athletes in the world are the ones who are passionate and do not treat the game as just a sport. Every time they walk out of the door, they know where they are going, why they are going, and they are already focused on that special place. Passion causes a chain reaction of positive thoughts, events and outcomes.
Results: This differentiates a hero from an also-ran and separates efforts from achievements. Most of the time we tend to complicate our lives and forget what is important and what is not. We tend to mistake movement for achievement and focus on activities instead of results. It's crucial to align our actions more closely with pre-defined objectives and understand the relevance of our actions -- for us and for others. I believe that thinking through clearly and focussing on a singular objective is the most important ingredient for achieving results.
No management book or B-school can teach you that.

Sunday, June 05, 2005

Life's lessons

It was a sports stadium. Eight Children were standing on the track to participate in the running event.
* Ready!* Steady!* Bang!!!
With the sound of Toy pistol, all eight girls started running. Hardly have they covered ten to fifteen steps, one of the smaller girls slipped and fell down, due to bruises and pain she started crying.When other seven girls heard this sound, stopped running, stood for a while and turned back, they all ran back to the place where the girl fell down.
One among them bent, picked and kissed the girl gently and enquired "Now pain must have reduced".All seven girls lifted the fallen girl, pacified her, two of them held the girl firmly and they all seven joined hands together and walked together and reached the winning post.Officials were shocked. Clapping of thousands of spectators filled the stadium.
Yes, this happened in Hyderabad, recently!The sport was conducted by National Institute of Mental Health. All these special girls had come to participate in this event and they are spastic children.Yes, they were mentally challenged.
What did they teach this world?
* Teamwork
* Humanity
* Equality among all
"Successful people help others in learning so that they are not left far behind"