Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Wall Focus-130

(News collection for Management studies)
 
Volume: 02     Issue :130            28-December,2011 - Wednesday            Pages : 10

Slow down, India!


HARISH BIJOOR

We are too wound up, at work and home. The state of the nation adds to the stress. Take it easy and have a healthy 2012!
The year 2011 is wrapped up. All wrapped up on a cold December morning. Ready to be buried. It's time to take stock of what went into it in marketing terms. What, then, were the trends that defined the calendar year 2011 in marketing and brand terms?
Here goes.
Watch out! Activism is up: This is a trend that is going to define marketing and branding in the years to come. The Anna Hazare anti-corruption movement in India, and indeed across the Indian diaspora, has set a trend all in itself for the marketer to watch, and watch out for. Activism is in. At this moment, the activism is all about an anti-corruption movement aimed at the politician and bureaucrat class at large.
Watch it spread to every terrain there is. Activism and consumer watch movements will now spread to corporate governance and surveillance in terms of corporate corruption, and corporate greed.
Watch it spread even wider in coming years, then. Activism is a bug. A positive bug for sure. Watch it spread to the terrain of wealth. Watch it become a movement that questions big wealth in the hands of a few versus none in others. It will question the possession of big cars versus small. Activism in this space will question every bit of flaunting. Activism in this space will indulge in audits of the rich and what they wear, what they eat, what they use as accessories and what they spend on a single meal, even.
In the immediate year ahead, expect consumer activism movements to gain traction. The marketer better prepare for this with transparent mechanisms. You might as well expect an RTI kind of legislation in the space of the brands and businesses you run and manage. Ouch!
E-commerce is the silent market-maker: If in the year 2010, multi-level marketing firms such as Amway were the silent market-makers which gained big volumes and big acceptance in Indian homes, in the year 2011, it was the e-commerce outfit on the prowl.
Venture capital flowed into the field like vodka and whisky on New Year's Eve. Ideators and promoters of the e-commerce venture therefore went berserk burning money on the track to stardom. Big successes were noted with outfits in B2C commerce such as Flipkart, Home Shop 18, Yebhi, and their cousins in C2C commerce such as eBay try every trick in the marketing book to reach out to distant markets urban, rurban and rural alike.
Cash-on-delivery (COD) worked miracles for the category. The Indian who largely distrusts credit card payments found comfort in paying at the doorstep for orders placed on the Internet. It's a different matter that as much as 16 per cent of all such orders are rejected at the doorstep and the only entity that makes money on this entire transaction is the courier agency which makes money twice over.
At the end of all this e-commerce evangelism at play, one big trend has emerged. India is today a level playing field for all marketers. If you tie up with the right kind of e-commerce outfit, you will be able to reach distant markets, which you have ignored thus far. Distribution in the rural markets is not such a big issue today for relatively higher value products such as microwave ovens, mobile phones and even cosmetics. Just tie up with an e-commerce portal, and sit back and enjoy.
This space saw the proliferation of group-buying sites as well. Localised and globalised outfits even. Snapdeal, Taggle, SoSasta and 94 others to be precise. Many folded up as well. Quick exits, as the category has inherent inconsistencies, which are yet to be attended to.
Telecom confused: 2G to where ji? If there is one consumer category that looked totally confused this year, it was telecom. Most of the biggies were still battling boardroom, parliamentary-committee room and courtroom woes in the wake of the 2G spectrum allocation issues.
3G came in, but everything seemed tepid. Telecom service providers continued their advertising binges and splurged on creatives that kept the interest alive. Handset makers found themselves in a tizzy with market shares getting redefined drastically this year. The biggies were no longer the biggies. The smaller ones were struggling to make their bottom lines look good, even as their top lines boomed. The big issue at hand: Sustainability. Telecom Darwinism is round the corner. The big ones will win and the small ones will struggle to survive.
Mobile number portability came in, the DND register got activated, smart-phones were a rage, VAS gained traction, green-tech saw investments and rural mobility came into sharper focus. And despite it all, the category remained lackadaisical and trends in the category are a bit amorphous at the moment.
Brands nudge health: Brands continued to nudge the health bandwagon this year as well. Green tea became the biggest hit in political circles all over the country. Even government offices started offering green tea to visitors. And if it was a special visitor, the ‘Babu' offered honey with it as well, drawn out from the upper drawer of his desk. Wow!
Big opportunities were spotted by the product categories of tea, honey, oats and the services category of Yoga (of every avatar), meditation, gymnasiums and more. Wait for lots more of this in the years to come.
A de-branded India: India got de-branded badly this year. Despite the robust numbers on the GDP growth rates side of dynamics (which itself got scaled down dramatically) and despite the large consumer market we are, issues such as corruption catapulted the nation into the active mindset of a world audience. Noises of shifting investments to other parts of the world did their bit as well. Add to it a one-step-forward, one-step-backward attitude of the government at large, as witnessed on the FDI-in-retail issue, and India is a bit on the backfoot.
But, as I keep saying, India is an idea whose time has come. Nothing can stop it. So watch out as every sector booms despite all this de-branding.
In the face: Even as India as a country was a bit on the backfoot, Indians went places in the world scenario. Nineteen newly anointed CEOs of large-format global companies were Indians. Shah Rukh Khan roped in singer Akon for Chamak Challo, Lady Gaga was in India for the F1 show, Paris Hilton launched her bags in India, Tom Cruise came cruising for the Mission Impossible launch, Snoop Dogg was spotted with Akshay Kumar and Sunny Leone was a porn star Indians loved to watch on Bigg Boss. Bollywood went places.
India went viral as well as Kolaveri Di hit over 20 million YouTube downloads and Jalebi Bai replaced Shiela and Munni of 2010 with a raunchier visual than even Vidya Balan of The Dirty Picture fame.
And what do I see to be the one big trend for 2012?
I would wager a bet on the ‘Slow Down India' movement. Today, the working Indian is a bit too keyed up. There is just too much pressure in our living and working environment. Schools kids are pressurised to perform, college students are on a suicide spree, working adults are working their butts off.
The one big trend I would push for would be a campaign to slow down India. This trend will then have ‘slow food' outlets emerge in our metros where you eat slowly, and enjoy the value of every morsel. Companies can incorporate the ‘Slow Down India' movement in their brand themes as well. If Tata Tea's campaign of yore was all about Jaago India Jaago, with a more awake India today, Vodafone's 2012 campaign could be a ‘Slow Down India' campaign.
The slow down movement is essential for India as we emerge the world's capital for diabetes and hypertension, and are strong contenders to be cholesterol capital as well. As lifestyle diseases of every kind hit us and as Corporate India experiences it all first hand amidst its own employees, this is an idea whose time has come!
Royalties welcome for this idea.
A Happy New Marketing year 2012 then! Slow down, guys!

A manager's lexicon

M. Chandrasekaran
Words are funny things. They take on different meanings depending on the context and the person using them. A Mafia don uttering the words ‘I hope you continue to enjoy good health' means something very different from what someone close to us means when saying the same. A manager's lexicon is full of such utterances. A tongue-in-cheek look at some of them:
My doors are always open to you: Clearly music to an organisational innocent raising visions of a trusting and welcoming leader. More likely that the said door is open to perhaps ensure better ventilation. Most often the folks who make this statement have their hearts and minds permanently closed
I will get back to you: A positive approach that seems to imply a fair evaluation will be made of the merits of the case. Nothing can be farther from the truth - the reality is that a person's request will be either buried through the efflux of time or creative ways will be found to deny the person the thing that they seek.
We need to follow due process: This is a classic time-tested technique that seeks to imply that while the manager himself is open to saying yes, the organisation requires that things be done is a systematic manner and with due adherence to process. The real purpose is to transport any worthwhile idea on to a decision-making Mobius strip, thus ensuring its death by constant movement accompanied by zero probability of acceptance.

SPECIAL FOCUS :
NASA discovered the First Earth-size Planets Kepler-20e and Kepler-20f
(Collected by K.MOUNIKA, 09D61E0030)


NASA's Kepler mission on 20 December 2011 discovered the first Earth-size planets orbiting a sun-like star outside our solar system. The planets, calledKepler-20e and Kepler-20f, are too close to their star to be in the so-called habitable zone where liquid water could exist on a planet's surface, but they are the smallest exoplanets ever confirmed around a star like our sun.

The discovery marks the next important milestone in the ultimate search for planets like Earth. The new planets are thought to be rocky. Kepler-20e is slightly smaller than Venus, measuring 0.87 times the radius of Earth. Kepler-20f is a bit larger than Earth, measuring 1.03 times its radius. Both planets reside in a five-planet system called Kepler-20, approximately 1000 light-years away in the constellation Lyra.
The Kepler space telescope detects planets and planet candidates by measuring dips in the brightness of more than 150000 stars to search for planets crossing in front, or transiting, their stars. The Kepler science team requires at least three transits to verify a signal as a planet.

The Kepler science team uses ground-based telescopes and the Spitzer Space Telescope to review observations on planet candidates the spacecraft finds. The star field Kepler observes in the constellations Cygnus and Lyra can be seen only from ground-based observatories in spring through early fall. The data from these other observations help determine which candidates can be validated as planets.

To validate Kepler-20e and Kepler-20f, astronomers used a computer program called Blender, which runs simulations to help rule out other astrophysical phenomena masquerading as a planet. 

Kepler-20e orbits its parent star every 6.1 days and Kepler-20f every 19.6 days. These short orbital periods mean very hot, inhospitable worlds. Kepler-20f, at 800 degrees Fahrenheit, is similar to an average day on the planet Mercury. The surface temperature of Kepler-20e, at more than 1400 degrees Fahrenheit, would melt glass. The Kepler-20 system includes three other planets that are larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune. Kepler-20b, the closest planet, Kepler-20c, the third planet, and Kepler-20d, the fifth planet, orbit their star every 3.7, 10.9 and 77.6 days. All five planets have orbits lying roughly within Mercury's orbit in our solar system. The host star belongs to the same G-type class as our sun, although it is slightly smaller and cooler.

The system has an unexpected arrangement. In our solar system, small, rocky worlds orbit close to the sun and large, gaseous worlds orbit farther out. In comparison, the planets of Kepler-20 are organized in alternating size: large, small, large, small and large.

Women Empowerment : Laws relating to Equality
Contributed by :   K.MOUNIKA, (Reg. No. 09D61E0030)       

In today’s liberalised scenario, women form an indispensable part of the Indian workforce. In such an environment, the quality of women’s employment is very important and depends upon several factors. The foremost being equal access to education and other opportunities for skill development. This requires empowerment of women as well as creation of awareness among them about their legal rights and duties. In order to ensure this, the Government of India has taken several steps.

It has been implementing many programmes which aim at providing access to education and vocational training to women. The most important being, the ‘Women’s Vocational Training Programme‘ launched under the Directorate General of Employment & Training (DGE&T) in the Ministry of Labour. The programme attempts to promote the women employment in industry (mainly organised sector) as semi-skilled, skilled and highly skilled workers by increasing their participation in skill training facilities. Under this programme, a separate ‘Women’s Training Wing’ has been set up at DGE&T Headquarters, which is responsible for designing and pursuing long term policies related to providing vocational training to women in the country. Also, as part of the programme, in the Central Sector, one National and ten Regional Vocational Training Institutes have been set up in different parts of the country. While, in the State Sector, a network of exclusive ‘Women Industrial Training Institutes (WITIs)‘ have been set up under the administrative control of the State Governments. These institutes provide basic skill training to women.

Also, the Government has been making efforts for creating a congenial work environment for women workers. For this purpose, a separate ‘Cell for Women Labour’ has been set up in the Ministry to focus attention on the condition of working women and bring about an improvement therein. The Cell has the following functions:-

Formulation and coordination of policies and programmes for the female labour force within the framework of national manpower and economic policies.

Maintaining liaison with other Government agencies to secure effective implementation of the programmes in respect of women workers.

Monitoring the implementation of the Equal Remuneration Act,1976.

Setting up of an Advisory Committee under the Equal Remuneration Act, 1976.

Giving grants-in-aid to Non-Governmental Organisations/ Voluntary Organisations to formulate and execute action oriented projects for women workers.

Moreover, a number of protective provisions have been incorporated in the various laws enacted for equality and empowerment of women, the proper enforcement of which will create an enabling environment for women workers.
 

DAY FOCUS :
Japan help sought to build 46 agro-processing zones
India on Wednesday sought Japanese investments and expertise in infrastructure, electronic hardware and agriculture-related sectors, especially in the setting up of 46 agro-processing zones in the country.

Speaking at a luncheon meeting in the presence of the visiting Japanese Prime Minister Mr Yoshihiko Noda, the Commerce, Industry and Textiles Minister Mr Anand Sharma said, “We are focusing on agriculture, agro-processing and food-processing to build an entire integrated value chain. We will be developing 46 fully-equipped agro-processing zones or parks (in India). This is one area where Japanese technology, knowledge and experience could be of much help.”
Pointing out that the projected investment in India’s infrastructure sector (including ports, airports and power projects) in the coming Five Year Plan (2013-17) is over $1 trillion, he said it will be another area of opportunity for Japanese companies.
India also needs Japanese partnership in electronic hardware, Mr Sharma said. “Though India is a leader in IT and ITeS, it is in electronic hardware where India is going to invest. That is an ambition as we accelerate our efforts in (boosting) manufacturing. We request Japan to be a partner in achieving this,” he said.
Meanwhile, Mr Noda said both the countries are strengthening their ties including on issues of economic, political, security and regional cooperation.

Speaking at the luncheon meeting organised by Indian industry bodies CII, Ficci and Assocham, Mr Noda said India and Japan should capitalise on mutual complementarities, adding that the bilateral Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement will enhance the trade and investment relationship between the nations. He pointed out that around 420 Japanese companies located in India have helped generate more than 1.5 lakh jobs in India. Mr Noda is accompanied by a team of top officials from leading Japanese companies such as Mitsubishi, Hitachi, Sumitomo Chemical, Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, Daiichi Sankyo, Toshiba, the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ and NYK Line.
Mr Sharma said the current global economic uncertainty has made it imperative for India and Japan to work closely together for mutual benefit and to address the global challenges.

He said both the countries are “very much on course” to achieve the bilateral trade target of $25 billion by 2014. Mr Sharma added that the Japanese government has committed $4.5 billion for the implementation of the $90 billion Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC) project. Japanese companies have decided to invest in six smart cities coming up along the DMIC, he said, adding that the Centre had earlier decided to allocate Rs 18,500 crore for financing the DMIC’s trunk infrastructure.
Japan also has another huge opportunity in the recently announced National Manufacturing Policy which envisages encouragement of green technologies and to bring up integrated industrial townships for high-end manufacturing, Mr Sharma said. He wanted Indian healthcare and pharma industry, especially the generics sector, to access the Japanese market.

No stimulus package for exporters: Khullar

In a dampener to the export sector, the Commerce Secretary, Mr Rahul Khullar, on Thursday said that the rising fiscal deficit does not offer the possibility of any stimulus package for exporters.
“We don't have the money to throw at this point of time,” he said at an Assocham function.
Indicating that India's traditional export markets such as the US and Europe — hit by financial crisis — are unlikely to recover soon, he asked Indian exporters to diversify to African and Latin American markets to meet the target of $450 billion by 2013-14.
Mr Khullar said exporters should diversify their product basket and invest in research and development to infuse innovation in manufacturing processes. He added that Indian exporters should reduce the cost of doing business to gain competitiveness.
“The external environment is not good – especially in the European Union and the United States. The next two years are going to be difficult. There are going to be cutbacks in government expenditure, exchange rate fluctuations and financial sector problems,” he said while releasing an Assocham strategy paper on exports.
However, he said it is within the realm of possibility to reach the export target of $300 billion this fiscal.
Mr Khullar said, “India is negotiating free trade agreements with the European Union, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia and Thailand. This will reduce tariff levels and provide access to new markets. We should create industrial clusters and upgrade infrastructure to boost exports as rising imports could create serious balance of trade problem.”
Meanwhile, the Assocham President, Mr Dilip Modi, called for procedural rationalisation and measures to enhance market access. He said the right incentives will help reach the trade target with Association of South East Asian Nations of $70-100 billion over the next two years, up 30 per cent from $50 billion in 2010-11.

ISB: Future-ready @ 10

The new campus at Mohali is not the only thing on the agenda for the Indian School of Business.
The Indian School of Business' (ISB) tenth anniversary celebrations started on December 18 last year, in Hyderabad. After events in San Jose, Philadelphia, London, Chicago, New York, Bangalore, Chennai, Delhi and Singapore, December 17 saw a finale in Hyderabad. The year-long celebrations are reflective of the spread of its 3,800 alumni across 25 countries.
Started with a student base of 128, the Hyderabad-based premier business school has 570 students today. This number will go up to 780 when its second campus in Mohali opens in April 2012.
For many captains of industry, including ISB's Chairman Adi Godrej, the success of the school is reflected in factors beyond the numbers it churns out. The next 10 years would mark a different phase of evolution for the B-school that has made its mark on the industry in its very first decade.
The New Manager caught up with Ajit Rangnekar, Dean, on the next laps in the race for excellence. Excerpts:
Of late, ISB has been talking about increasing its research endeavours. What will be the focus areas?
Research at our school is two-pronged. The faculty members engage themselves in individual research projects in the areas they think relevant. We will encourage them to continue doing so.
At a broader level, ISB has identified some areas of research, which we believe are of importance to India and emerging markets. For instance, various aspects pertaining to small and medium enterprises, such as their connectivity to and use of information technology, funding aspects and global competitiveness.
Low-cost but high-impact entrepreneurial models are another area of focus, along with business innovations for developing markets. For example, there has been concern among the pharma companies about the high cost of product development. This can be addressed by innovation.
At the Mohali campus, research would be carried out in infrastructure, manufacturing, healthcare and public policy.
Are you working on new alliances or collaborations for academic programmes?
Our DNA is one of collaborations. Of course, I don't know whether we have any bid collaboration to be forged soon. Whenever we think some institute has good expertise, there will be no hesitation to collaborate.
At present, ISB has academic alliances with the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, London Business School, MIT Sloan School of Management and The Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy, Tufts University.
Now that ISB has completed 10 years, what kind of new direction do you wish to take?
Right now, we are in the process of a complete review of our curriculum. This is a complex process; it may be completed in the next two years. On the other hand, the ISB curriculum has been a dynamic one ever since its inception.
What, according to you, will be the top three trends in the global business scenario in the next two to three years?
There is going to be more emphasis on values and ethics. Inclusive growth is also becoming a buzz word. From a purely management perspective, the focus would be on managing in uncertain times and conditions.
What are your faculty expansion plans?
We have around 50 faculty members currently. Ideally, we may add six to ten faculty members every year depending on the availability of talent.
It is becoming increasingly tough to get quality resources. The business schools in Singapore and China are recruiting faculty in large numbers. They can also afford to pay more. However, we plan to leverage our brand value (and attract faculty). The faculty strength may touch 100 in the next 10 years.
Any plans to increase the fees?
We are facing pressure with the depreciation of rupee and inflation. About 50 per cent of my teachers are from abroad; they deliver guest lectures. The cost on this front has gone up by about 20 per cent. But, this year's fee has already been announced and we cannot increase it mid-term.
Focus – Day Tip
Secrecy is the secret of Administration.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Wall Focus -129

 

(News collection for Management studies)

Volume: 02     Issue :129            21-December,2011 - Wednesday            Pages : 10

Needed: ‘Action tanks', not ‘think tanks'

N.R. Narayana Murthy, Chairman Emeritus, Infosys — K. Murali Kumar

There are some inspirational leaders you simply don't tire of. Infosys Chief Mentor N.R. Narayana Murthy's A S Deshpande Memorial Lecture at the Institute of Banking Personnel Selection in Mumbai last week was a tour de force on leadership attributes. Technology, said the man who is often referred to as the face of India's software revolution, is only an instrument.

“The primary ingredient for progress is innovation through the power of the human mind,” he added.

Courage is the most important leadership attribute, he said, requiring difficult decisions that often run opposed to popular opinion.

He also urged his hosts to work on a set of tests (using computer simulation) to evaluate the ‘courage' of candidates for leadership positions.

More NRN-speak:

Speed: You will need to act as if there is no tomorrow. You need a sense of urgency. Jawaharlal Nehru established half-a-dozen IITs, IIMs, the atomic energy establishment, the Planning Commission, dams, and other public institutions in a span of a decade from 1951. He was a man who acted with a sense of urgency. “Some decisions will go wrong. But that is okay. The media may criticise you; but if you get eight out of 10 decisions correct, that is a fine record.”

Innovation, among equals: Ask yourself three questions:

Can I do the job faster than yesterday (at the same level of excellence)?

Can I do it cheaper?

Can I do it at better levels of excellence?

That is all innovation is.

Executives must spend time with people across the organisation to get the best ideas about innovation. At the same time, don't talk down — talk as equals. It is not difficult to implement. Leadership is about creating a vision and enthusiasm so that others also feel they can ‘catch the rainbow'.

Execution excellence: We Indians think articulation is accomplishment. I had a recent conversation with an American CEO in Boston. The talk veered to ‘think tanks' in New Delhi. The CEO interrupted me to say that what India needs now is not more think tanks but ‘action tanks'. We need to quickly move from idea to action.

Openness to new ideas, fostering pride:I had an associate who was in charge of keeping the board room clean. I would make it a point to introduce this person to all our VIP guests to the Infosys campus, including the likes of Vladimir Putin. This gave the employee a sense of pride, which ensured that the room was always kept sparkling. Leaders need to create an environment where everyone can give ideas.

Living by values: Leaders must try and encourage the practice of values such as integrity, hard work, courage, and commitment to excellence among their colleagues. And leaders need to live by these attributes.
Spreading wings in the Valley

WFSNaheed Soz, Managing Director of State Women Development Corporation, Jammu & Kashmir.


Kashmiri women discover the power of economic independence.
At one of the many offices in Srinagar's Old Civil Secretariat building, a queue of women — some elderly, some young — grows longer by the hour. They are waiting to meet Naheed Soz, Managing Director of the State Women Development Corporation (SWDC), who makes sure she meets nearly every woman who knocks on her office door.
Set up as recently as 2005, SWDC aims to promote economic independence among the region's women, especially those hit by the ongoing strife in the Valley. When Naheed took over the job, little did she know it would completely transform her life — both as a person and, especially, as a woman.
“If you had met me four years ago, you would have come across a fairly well-educated and regular government official who worked to support her family. However, that is not the case today. After being promoted as managing director and working for women in Kashmir, my priorities and outlook on life have drastically changed. It has made me realise that economic independence of a woman is of utmost significance — not just for her but her entire family,” she says.
The women she meets come from varied backgrounds. Many are widows, destitute or orphans, and almost all of them need financial assistance. She has several success stories to narrate too, of once helpless and largely uneducated women becoming self-sufficient entrepreneurs and generating employment in their turn.
Right from setting the women on the right professional track to imparting skills and facilitating subsidised loans for enterprises, SWDC is involved all the way.
Personal transformation is the key here and Naheed, through her achievements, has herself come to represent the changing face of Kashmiri women.
Educated and sought-after
This change is visible across generations. There are many bright, articulate and educated women emerging from colleges and universities, and making their presence felt in the workplace. Waseema Shafi, 23, is a network engineer from the Valley who recently passed the highest level of CISCO certifications before becoming a CISCO trainer at an academy in Delhi.

Until this lucrative job offer arrived at her doorstep, she had never stepped out of Kashmir. After her Bachelors degree in Technology from Kashmir University, she had taken up additional network engineering courses and passed them with a high rank. This small-town girl who once dreamt of a nine-to-five job now trains IT professionals from leading companies.
“In Delhi I found myself in a whole new world. I had never stayed away from my family. Initially, when this job offer came, my father and others in the family were not that supportive of my taking it up. But soon they realised that my career could get a major fillip if I moved out of Kashmir,” she says.
Waseema happened to be the only girl in her batch who took up network engineering, which promised a bright career. She says, “Till date, no female student in Kashmir has appeared in CISCO-accredited top certification examinations. Since the Valley did not have a job market for this qualification, I chose to try my luck outside the State and luck has been on my side.”

Confident tweets

For the women of Kashmir, not only do unconventional jobs provide a whole new definition of what it means to be independent, they also enable them to feel far more confident of expressing themselves in public.
Shehla Rasheed Shora, an IT engineer and social activist, is popular in cyberspace thanks to her smart and bold tweets that have hundreds of followers on Twitter.
She tweets on issues ranging from Srinagar politics to Delhi traffic jams and Bollywood gossip. But what sets her apart from the rest of the tweeples is the change she has been able to make through her tweets.
From ensuring a fair trial for inmates of Srinagar jail to raising awareness on the need to protect the world-famous Dal Lake, her tweets reflect her social activism. A recent tweet, for instance, read: “Communal sentiments always fall prey to political opportunists. Education can change that. Among Hindus and among Muslims and all other sects.” It became a rage on Twitter.
During her student days at the National Institute of Technology (NIT), Srinagar, Shehla used to be an active member of a local youth organisation — One Young Kashmir (OYK) — that hosted workshops and awareness campaigns aimed at youth development. She promoted the workshops on Twitter to attract the young crowd active on social networking sites. “I mostly use Twitter for activism and to stay updated. You get to hear the Government version of events, the media coverage and the people's perspective — all on your own timeline. It is much better than being the fence-sitter that I've always been! In a place where the political space for women is non-existent, Twitter is a good start,” she observes.

Free to ride

While Shehla kick-starts her day with a tweet, Mehnaz, 19, a student at the Government College for Women, in Srinagar, begins hers by kicking to life her two-wheeler and riding joyously to college. She was one of the first few girls in her college to commute on a two-wheeler two years ago; today many more young girls in the Valley can be seen on the city streets riding scooters.
Today, it is difficult to imagine that just a few years ago Kashmiri society was not open to the idea of girls riding two-wheelers. It is girls like Mehnaz who made that first extraordinary leap and helped usher a change in popular attitudes. As Mehnaz puts it, “Earlier, it was just me and a few friends who had scooters. Later, as many more college and schoolgirls thought of commuting on their own, they took to riding two-wheelers. Now there are so many of us that nobody can forbid us from commuting this way!”
For many women, something as simple as riding a scooter or pursuing a social campaign on Twitter may not seem a big deal, but in a violence-torn and distressed region like the Kashmir Valley, these little things spell a tryst with independence.
© Women's Feature Service

SPECIAL FOCUS :
Challenges faced in Indian Rural Marketing.
 ( Contributed by P.Rajesh Reddy, 11D61E0015, 1-Sem., MBA)

The concept of Rural Marketing has been evolving continuously over the years and can be classified into three major phases – pre 1960s when it was synonymous with agricultural marketing; 1960s-1990s which saw the growth in the marketing of non-farm rural products; and post 1990s, where the prime focus of the companies is to market FMCG and consumer durable goods in rural areas as a result of rise in income levels as well as the number of middle class families.

With about 60% of the Indian population living in rural areas and representing half of the country’s buying potential even today, the Indian economy can be developed by improving the living conditions in rural areas. Rural illiteracy is the prime area of concern and various projects have been undertaken time and again to improve the rural conditions. A recent study by NCAER (National Council for Applied Economic Research) reveals that the number of middle/ highincome households in rural India is expected to grow from 130 Million to 172 Million by the end of 2012 as compared to nearly 71 million of urban India.

Despite the fact that India is unarguably one of the largest consumer markets in the world, it is difficult to tap the market. Various marketing theories and concepts have been directly implemented in India, but have met minimal success. This is due to wide variations in size and potential of different segments owing to various parameters like income levels, diversity in language & religion, geographical diversity etc. Even, a company like Kellogg’s had to face the consequences of the unpredictability of the Indian market. The sales of cereals were abysmally low and forced the company to introduce new eating habits in the country. However, in the meantime, a major chunk of the already existing cereal market (which was small in size), was taken away by imitators who introduced local cereal flavors at much lower prices. As a result, Kellogg’s had to realign their marketing strategies and introduce inexpensive biscuits meant for breakfast. It is therefore essential for the marketer to look beyond time tested concepts and reevaluate the entire approach. In order to tap the rural market adequately, the traditional marketing concepts should be modified. This is when the importance of Packaging, Retailer, Education and Empowerment comes into picture.
A rural consumer is always a budget seeking consumer. It is essential to first match a product’s expectations and its pricing structures. It is to be noted that most of the rural population comprises of daily wage workers who tend to have minimal stock of money. Depending on her daily income, she fixes a budget for the purchase and makes a decision after taking other parameters like after sales service, warranty period etc into picture. Thus, the products in the rural market should be able to meet the basic needs of the consumer, as a rural consumer shall not be willing to pay additionally for extra benefits. This makes pack sizes and price points all the more important. For instance, a rural consumer would prefer buying a shampoo sachet to a large bottle which could be used for over a month. Packaging should also be done accordingly in smaller units and lesser priced packs, thereby making them affordable.
Physical distribution becomes arduous due to high costs involved and the non availability of retail outlets. Melas & Haats, and Rural Marketing Vehicles (RMVs) could prove to be better means of distribution as the rural consumers prefer ‘touch and feel’ experience.
In rural markets, a consumer’s buying behavior is widely influenced by social customs and traditions. Higher levels of illiteracy and lack of exposure to traditional media practices further add to the problems. Hence, the advertising mix should be customized and contain other alternative forms like street plays, wall painting, posters etc.


A retailer’s importance should be clearly understood because he plays a vital role in influencing the customer’s decision making process. A rural consumer frequents the same shop in order to buy as per her daily requirements. As a result of the lack of brand awareness among the rural population, the amount of purchases is positively correlated with the extent to which a retailer pushes the product belonging to a particular brand. Effective incentive schemes and trade promotion activities should be developed to maintain a long lasting relation with the retailer.

The levels of unemployment are very high in the rural areas. Hence, any marketing strategy which involves the scope of income generation would be more preferable. The success of “Self Help Groups”, which helps in generating income apart from operating like direct to home distributors, is a reflection of this viewpoint.

The concept of “e-choupals” introduced by ITC is noteworthy in the context of Indian Rural Marketing. The presence of these e-choupals is increasing at a rapid rate. It helps in raising the income levels of farmers by providing better prices for their produce in comparison with auctions. These also provide high quality seeds and online advice on various agricultural practices. These practices enable the farmers to increase the consumption levels of the products and services offered by ITC.

A clear understanding of the “Value for Money” concept in the rural areas shall be the major differentiating factor between a successful brand and its competitors. This has been proved by HLL (Hindustan Lever Ltd). HLL discovered that Indians in the rural areas used soaps for multiple purposes. This resulted in the design of all-in-one soaps which was a huge success

How Will You Measure Your Life?


Harvard Business School's Christensen teaches aspiring MBAs how to apply management and innovation theories to build stronger companies. But he also believes that these models can help people lead better lives. In this article, he explains how, exploring questions everyone needs to ask: How can I be happy in my career? How can I be sure that my relationship with my family is an enduring source of happiness? And how can I live my life with integrity? The answer to the first question comes from Fr... Read More » Contributed by : K.MOUNIKA, (Reg. No. 09D61E0030) 

Harvard Business School's Christensen teaches aspiring MBAs how to apply management and innovation theories to build stronger companies. But he also believes that these models can help people lead better lives. In this article, he explains how, exploring questions everyone needs to ask: How can I be happy in my career? How can I be sure that my relationship with my family is an enduring source of happiness? And how can I live my life with integrity? The answer to the first question comes from Frederick Herzberg's assertion that the most powerful motivator isn't money; it's the opportunity to learn, grow in responsibilities, contribute, and be recognized. That's why management, if practiced well, can be the noblest of occupations; no others offer as many ways to help people find those opportunities. It isn't about buying, selling, and investing in companies, as many think. The principles of resource allocation can help people attain happiness at home. If not managed masterfully, what emerges from a firm's resource allocation process can be very different from the strategy management intended to follow. That's true in life too: If you're not guided by a clear sense of purpose, you're likely to fritter away your time and energy on obtaining the most tangible, short-term signs of achievement, not what's really important to you. And just as a focus on marginal costs can cause bad corporate decisions, it can lead people astray. The marginal cost of doing something wrong "just this once" always seems alluringly low. You don't see the end result to which that path leads. The key is to define what you stand for and draw the line in a safe place.


DAY FOCUS :


Inflation above comfort level; govt concerned: Pranab
The government on Tuesday said inflation, which is above comfort level, is a matter of concern and steps are being taken to address the price situation.

”...inflation has been above comfort level and is a matter of concern,” Finance Minister Mr Pranab Mukherjee told the Rajya Sabha in a written reply.

He, however, expressed satisfaction that inflation has started to decline.

The headline inflation declined to 9.11 per cent in November against 9.73 per cent in the previous month.

Similarly, food inflation eased to a nearly four-year low of 4.35 per cent for the week ended December 3.

Mr Mukherjee said both the government and Reserve Bank were taking steps to contain inflation.

Steps taken by government include, reducing import duties on pulses and edible oil to zero and banning export of certain edible oil and pulses. Besides, the government has reduced customs duty on crude oil.

The RBI on its part has adopted a tight monetary policy since March 2010 in its bid to tame inflation.

When asked if increasing interest rates was the only option in the monetary policy to contain inflation, Mukherjee said RBI has multiple monetary policy instruments at its command. However “the use of each instrument is situation specific“.

Mr Mukherjee further said high inflation and some of the efforts to control liquidity “has detrimental” effect on growth in the short term.

Since March 2010, the RBI has cumulatively raised the cash reserve ratio (CRR) by 100 basis points, and hiked the policy rate (repo rate) 13 times by 375 basis points.

However, in its latest mid-quarter review, the RBI refrained from raising interest rates.


IIFCL makes infrastructure loans cheap, easy
Infrastructure project developers can now get cheaper loans through IIFCL's takeout finance scheme. The State-owned company has come up with major modifications to its takeout finance scheme so as to match the demands of various stakeholders including the banks and developers.

A significant change is IIFCL's decision to go in for a transparent and competitive pricing for its takeout finance so that everybody gets a fair treatment on the pricing front. Earlier, all interest rates on takeout finance were negotiable with project developers. Now, it would depend on the ratings of the project and the interest rates would be spelt out on the company's Web site.

Also, now borrowers can directly approach India Infrastructure Finance Company Ltd (IIFCL) for takeout finance. Hitherto, only lenders could refer cases to IIFCL.

“The main objective of the recent changes is to ensure that pricing is non-discretionary and non-discriminatory. All developers whether they belong to big groups or small group will now get the same treatment from IIFCL depending on the rating of the project. They will get discounts ranging from 75 basis points to 200 basis points on the present rate paid to lenders,” Mr S.K. Goel, Chairman and Managing Director, IIFCL, told reporters here on Monday.

Under takeout financing, loans made by banks to infrastructure firms are sold to IIFCL so that banks recover their much-needed funds ahead of the payment schedule under the loan agreement. IIFCL is the sole institution in the country that provides takeout finance scheme. The advantage of takeout is that it corrects the asset-liability mismatch of banks. While borrowers can get more money from banks, the latter can also provide more loans to infrastructure projects without having limitations on exposure norms. With interest rates linked to rating of projects, IIFCL's interest rate for loans to projects with highest rating would range from 9.90 per cent to 10.4 per cent. For projects with lowest ratings, the interest range would be 10.65 to 11.15 per cent. As most projects fall under BBB rating category, the interest rates on loans for them would range 10.45 to 10.95 per cent.

“Compared to the 13-14 per cent charged by banks, this rate offered by IIFCL is low and affordable,” Mr Goel said.

Infosys BPO to buy Australia's Portland Group

Infosys BPO has signed an agreement to acquire all of the outstanding share capital in Australia-based Portland Group. Infosys expects the acquisition, which will cost Australian $37 million (around Rs 195.6 crore), to be completed by early January 2012.

Portland Group, which was founded in 1999, is headquartered in Sydney and has offices in Melbourne, Brisbane, and Perth. The company, which has around 113 employees, reported revenue of approximately Australian $31.3 million (around Rs 165.5 crore) for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2011.

Mr Swaminathan D, Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director, Infosys BPO, said, “This acquisition would significantly deepen our capabilities and domain expertise in our sourcing and procurement practice."

Mr Gavin Solsky, Chief Executive Officer, Portland Group, said, “We believe the combination of Portland Group and Infosys will provide our clients with a highly compelling proposition that does not currently exist in the sourcing and procurement services market in Australia.”

Call centre Bill introduced in US, targets overseas job market

A bipartisan Bill has been tabled in the US House of Representatives to make companies that move call centres overseas ineligible for grants or guaranteed loans from the federal government, a move aimed at stemming the tide of jobs heading to nations such as India.

Introduced by Rep Mr Tim Bishop and Rep Mr David McKinley, the US Call Center Worker and Consumer Protection Act would also put some aggressive mandates on call-centre operations. “Outsourcing is one of the scourges of our economy and why we are struggling so to knock down the unemployment rate,” said Mr Bishop.

Under the protectionist legislation, not only would customer service representatives working overseas for US corporations have to disclose their locations upon request, they would also have to offer callers the option of being transferred to call centres back in America, the Huffington Post reported.

Besides, the proposed legislation requires the Secretary of Labour to maintain a list of employers that locate call centres overseas. The companies also require to provide 120-day advance notification before moving a call centre overseas. The call-centre Bill has strong backing from the Communications Workers of America (CWA), a union which represents 1. lakh call centre workers in the US.

In a report, issued recently by the CWA, the union alleged that outsourced call centres, including some based in India, pose a serious security threat as there are insufficient safeguards in place to deter fraud.

The report titled ‘Why Shipping Call Center Jobs Overseas Hurts Us Back Home' cited several examples of security breaches involving outsourced call centres, including in India.  Owing to the insufficient protections in place, it is impossible to deter this type of fraud, the report said.

Some call centre operators, particularly those in rural areas, are trying hard to compete with overseas call centres — and some rural call centre operators say they are seeing a trend toward companies moving call centres back to the US.

The ability of home-based workers to use a broadband connection to conduct call centre duties has helped fuel that trend. Reverse' call centre outsourcing — driven by broadband — could create one lakh US jobs. If passed, the proposed call centre legislation would likely further fuel a move of call centre jobs back to the US.

Focus – Day Tip
Men are more important than all the wealth in the world.