Showing posts with label iipm-publications. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iipm-publications. Show all posts

Monday, October 08, 2012

M & A The Perfect Corporate Crime

CEOs have ripped apart shareholders’ wealth globally under the guise of M&As; Indian firms more so! B&E’s Manish K. Pandey, Deepak R. Patra and Karan Mehrishi undertake the most radical analysis of the recent past and destroy age-old perceptions!

The pity is, Indians never learn! You’ll get the drift by the time you end the introduction. First, the dirt! The year 2000 was the eve of the glorious new century, and a boon for the Big-6 M&A consulting firms. And why not! For these global consulting proponents, an example like the year 2000 Vodafone-Mannesmann merger was god’s gift multiplied many times over. It was proclaimed to be the single largest deal in history. Sir Christopher Gent, then CEO, Vodafone paid a smashing $190 billion for Germany’s Mannesmann AG, making Vodafone the biggest operator in Europe. The combined entity was valued at $365 billion, making it the world’s fourth largest company overnight. What better a gift could the M&A brayers ask for? Wasn’t this M&A deal enough proof that M&As were/are the only dynamic and rapid solution forward to mammoth growth and that all those who had criticised M&As for the past so many years were nothing but dimwits?

If Gent’s strategy cup ran full of suicidal moves, Arun Sarin – who was on the Vodafone board since June 1999 (and was equally, if not more, to blame) and who took over from Gent in April 2000 – redefined the standard of how much shareholder value could ever be destroyed from a company. Eight years since the deal, the value of Vodafone in terms of market capitalisation stands at $161.4 billion (as on July 24, 2008), down by a sickening $203.6 billion, a fall of 53%! Arun Sarin ensured that in the last eight years since the merger, Vodafone has become the biggest loss making company ever in the history of mankind! The loss: $86 billion! Both Arun Sarin (who exited in June 2008) and Christopher Gent, apart from the other top management, retired multi-millionaires, a far cry from thousands of Vodafone pauper shareholders.

If that sounded absurd, Gary Foresee took on the infamy mantle with ease. Gary joined Sprint as CEO in the year 2003. Signing bonus amount: $6 odd million! Subsequent years’ pay: Between $1.5-6 million! Gary’s claim to (in)fame was ensuring Sprint’s spectacular merger with Nextel in 2004-05. He sold the deal on the fact that the combined telecom giant would have a subscriber base of 53.8 million in the US! What he sweetly left out was the disaster the deal could be. At the time of the deal, the Sprint Nextel common stock was trading at $26.9; it’s at a sickening $8.30 today! While many shareholders got wiped out Mr. Gary Foresee was kicked out at the end of 2007. His severance package? $40 million!

Charles Prince is an equal, if not better peer for these heroes. He, as the Chief Administrative Officer, engineered the utterly disastrous $140 billion merger of Citibank with Travelers Group ten years back. Then he ensured the company jumped into the mortgage black hole. Till date, Citigroup has been forced to write off almost $41 billion because of Prince’s royal exigencies! He was “eased out” in November 2007! Apart from his wholly owned $94 million vested stock holdings in Citi, he got $28 million further stock options, (not forgetting the $53 million during his last four years as Group CEO), plus a pension of $1.74 million; and this apart from a $10.4 million “bonus” that shareholders were made to pay him. [Citi has now recruited Vikram Pandit as the CEO, paying him a cannon ball destroying never before seen signing bonus of $241 million! Since he has arrived, Citi stock prices have tumbled by 25%!].

December 31, 2007, saw Richard Parsons resigning as the greatest CEO of Time-Warner. Greatest, because he joined the board in 1991 [became President in 1995] and oversaw the supernova of a merger between Time and AOL. The companies had a combined value of $247 billion during the deal. Today, the combined entity is worth a mind numbingly low $58 billion. Parsons earned on an average $10.64 million per year. By the way, he’s now the Chairman of the group!

With $37 billion involved, Dieter Zetsche, then on the Daimler Benz board, squeezed through the merger with Chrysler. In 2007, CEO Zetsche made Daimler Chrysler part ways with a deal worth only 21.5% ($7.4 billion) of the total acquisition value! Millionaire Patricia Russo, CEO Alcatel-Lucent, has a history of destroying shareholder wealth. At the time of the merger of Alcatel and Lucent, the entity had a share price of $15.4 (March 31, 2006). July 24, 2008, the price is $6.09 (62% fall). CEO Meg Whitman, who ensured eBay bought off Skype, also ensured eBay’s price fell from close to $40 (September 9, 2005), to $25 (July 24, 2008). Shareholders be damned; she donated $30 million of her personal wealth to Princeton in 2007 to start the Whitman College!

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Source : IIPM Editorial, 2012.

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IIPM : The B-School with a Human Face

Monday, August 13, 2012

Lessons from the past

The rotational chief minister system was experimented with by the BJP and the BSP in 1998 in Uttar Pradesh where a deal was stuck under which Mayawati was to be chief minister for the first six months of the coalition government following which the BJP’s chief minster nominate would have taken over. BJP got the posts of deputy chief minister and leader and deputy chairman of the Legislative Council. However, merely 28 days after her six months got over and Kalyan Singh became the CM, Mayawati did a volte face and withdrew support.

When the Congress and PDP formed a coalition government in Jammu and Kashmir after the 2002 elections, they had decided to share the post of the chief minister for three years each. They had shared power accordingly starting with PDP chief minister Mufti Muhammad Sayeed at the helm. The transfer of power was smooth and Ghulam Nabi Azad took over after three years. However, the PDP never came to terms with the reality and a section of it never actually wanted Azad. In short, they were looking for an opportunity to withdraw support. 


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Friday, August 10, 2012

WHAT CAN BRING THE COST OF CAPITAL DOWN TO AFFORDABLE LEVELS?

Further, foreign direct investment (FDI) in the real estate sector should not be subjected to the condition of minimum three year lock-in period for repatriation of the original foreign investment. This shall ensure availability of greater capital and liquidity for developers to fund their existing projects and growth. Government should also grant industry status to the real estate sector. This will certainly help the players raise the much needed construction capital at low cost domestically. In fact, this has been a long pending demand from the sector.

Stamp duty rates on property transactions too need to be rationalised or brought down and should be made uniform across all states. Moreover, an upward revision to tax exemption to the extent of Rs.3 lakh against the existing limit of Rs.1.50 lakh should be made available on housing loan interest payment under section 24(b) of IT Act. This will help boost demand for residential units in the country.

I also feel that the real estate regulator should be set up with an intention to make the system transparent, efficient and competitive and to protect the interests of consumers. It should serve as a platform wherein, if the developers have issues with local bodies, the regulator should assist them in addressing these issues. All these changes will certainly contribute towards the sector’s growth in the long run.


Friday, July 27, 2012

Prof. Jim Heskett, Baker Foundation Professor, Emeritus, at Harvard Business School

The Word Profit has Provoked a Wide Range of Issues and Emotions among Respondents & Businesses around The World. It also Launched Debates, and many readers Argued for Measures of Success other than Profit, writes Prof. Jim Heskett, Baker Foundation Professor, Emeritus, at Harvard Business School.

Charles Green (founder and CEO of Trusted Advisor Associates) continues the discussion by suggesting, “The really interesting question raised is: if profitability is higher when pursued as a by-product than when it is pursued directly, why then do managers (irrationally) choose to pursue profit directly rather than indirectly? I think the answer is to be found more in psychology than in economics.” Does that account for the increasing interest in the field of behavioural economics? What do you think? H. L. Hencken once said, “For every problem there is a solution that is simple, direct... and wrong.” This brings to mind experiences with leaders of the most profitable organisations that I have observed. Almost to a person, they treat profit as a by-product of other things to which they devote most of their attention, things such as a focused strategy that delivers results to carefully-selected customers while pursuing policies and practices that leverage results over costs, hiring people with the right attitude (one that fits with the organisation’s culture), and proper training and organisation (often in teams). Financial targets are given no more or less emphasis than targets associated with employee and customer engagement, often by means of some kind of balanced scorecard. Rewards and recognition – whether based on the performance of the entire company, teams, or individuals – reflect this philosophy. The idea is to create what my colleague, Michael Beer, calls a “high commitment, high performance” (HCHP) organisation.

This idea has been addressed at length in a new book, Obliquity, by British economist John Kay. You might guess that Kay thinks profit as a “direct goal” is overrated, otherwise he wouldn’t have much substance for a book on the subject. Kay argues that business problems cannot be solved by drawing a straight line between cause and long-term effect because they are so complex, a manager’s information so incomplete, the competitive environment so complicated, analytic techniques so inadequate, and the number of things over which a manager has control so limited, that it is impossible to make the connection with any assurance. As Kay puts it, “The mistake is to make inferences about the relationships between outcomes and processes when we cannot observe and do not understand the processes themselves.” The argument is that those things that contribute to long-term shareholder value will be revealed and achieved by realising intermediate goals or through some kind of overarching mission and vision that helps an organisation achieve long-term shareholder value as well. Of course, it assumes that we know what those things (missions, visions, intermediate goals) are and that we have some understanding of how they contribute ultimately to shareholder value.

There is some empirical evidence to support Kay’s thesis. For example, Fortune’s 100 Best Places to Work regularly produce more profit than a matched set of competitors. Kay’s response to this would probably be, “What does that prove?”
If it can be demonstrated that this approach yields more profit, why doesn’t the leadership of more organisations pursue profit through “indirect” means? Or is it, as Kay might ask, as simple as this? Can this philosophy be carried too far? Is it compatible with the need in a public company to “make the numbers” every quarter? Is it dangerous or misleading to give too much emphasis to the idea that profits are a by-product of many other policies and practices? Is it wise to communicate this concept to all levels of an organisation? If so, how is this best done without confusing people?

Is profit as a “direct goal” overrated? And if it is, why then is it so frequently found among goals?
Coordinated by: Steven Philip Warner


Tuesday, August 02, 2011

May the force be with Indian fashion!

He’s responsible for taking Indian fashion to the global ramp. Sumeet plans to take the Indian fashion fraternity to the next level, as he reveals to Angshuman Paul

Sumeet Nair
MD, Incube Fashion

Sumeet Nair belongs to that extraordinary class of people, who believe in creating a different path and in trying something new. So it’s not surprising that, this alumnus of Stanford University started his corporate endeavor with the furnishing business and later forayed the fashion fraternity. Christened as Black Eye Design, his first venture of furnishing business won him leading global fashion clients like Donna Karen, Calvin Klein and French Connection. But Sumeet’s claim to fame comes from somewhere else – while undertaking his business, Sumeet actively became involved in the setting up of a fashion council, an endeavour that finally gave rise to the iconic Fashion Design Council of India (FDCI) which gave India its first Fashion Week.

Framing the concept of the Fashion Week and giving it a global feel was not easy way back in 1997, particularly when the Indian fashion industry was at a nascent stage and very unstructured. The biggest hurdle was to bring all the designers under one roof; and managing creative people was surely not an easy task. But with his never-say-die attitude and instinctive managerial skills, Sumeet accomplished this feat and gave India its unique series of gala fashion events – firstly, the Lakme India Fashion week, and then, the Wills Lifestyle Fashion Week.

Along with changing the landscape of Indian fashion, Sumeet was also credit with making it more financially viable. When FDCI was having a financial deficit, Sumeet was automatically appointed as the ‘doctor’, and more often than not, he would resolve it effectively. After leaving FDCI, Sumeet dabbled in various areas, till he set up Incube Fashion Private Ltd, an endeavour to take the fashion industry into the next level.

Incube Fashion’s basic objective is to generate more business and finance for Indian designers. As of today, Incube Fashion works as a financial consultant, provides licensing, and even assists in getting corporate brands to tie up with the country’s ace designers. Rohit Bal’s recent tie up with the Outlander Signature Collection from Mitsubushi was conceptulaised and finalized by Sumeet’s Incube Fashion. Even the Tarun Tahiliani-Timex agreement is being credited to Sumeet. As this is slated for a pre-Diwali launch, Sumeet refused to divulge any further detail to us. When we meet him now, he explains further, “I want to create a Calvin Klein and a Giorgio Armani from the Indian fashion industry and we at Incube Fashion are doing brand building at those levels.”

For more articles, Click on IIPM Article.

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2011.

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

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IIPM Best B School India
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IIPM Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri on Internet Hooliganism
Arindam Chaudhuri: We need Hazare's leadership
Professor Arindam Chaudhuri - A Man For The Society....
IIPM: Indian Institute of Planning and Management

Monday, September 22, 2008

A (c)ash rich proposition

GCIP acquisition gives sustainability but also substantially increases the risk profile for TCL

Tatas are on the rampage again! This time, it’s the less talked about Tata Chemicals Ltd. (TCL) that has created the buzz. The company announced a big ticket billion dollar mega acquisition of the US-based natural soda ash maker – General Chemicals Industrial Products (GCIP) on January 31. The acquisition (100% stake through a mix of debt & equity) will not only make TCL the 2nd largest soda ash maker in the world, but also help it command over 14% (over 5.5 million tonnes) of the world’s total soda ash capacity. However, it’s the choice of the target that deserves the real applause! Once the acquisition is complete, over 50% of TCL’s capacity would be through the natural route. This means both sustainability and natural hedge against the commodity cycle. “Since GCIP is using trona natural mineral, which can be converted into soda ash and is more cost effective (as production cost of natural soda ash is 40-45% cheaper than the cost of producing synthetic soda), it means increased profitability for TCL”, avers Rohit Nagraj, Sr. Research Analyst, Angel Broking. A Tata Chemicals spokesperson confirmed to B&E that “by 2009 and 2010, we will have more such overseas acquisitions as we believe Tata Chemicals has not yet utilised its full potential”.

The acquisition will not only enable the company to increase its capacity, but will also, in long term, give access to markets in North America, Latin America as well as Far East. Well, the sustainability is there to stay! (GCIP has natural soda ash mines expected to last for next 100 years). But then there are many who question the move on the backdrop of the US slowdown! “As many chemical manufacturers in the US are facing challenges, so will TCL,” says Paresh Nautiyal, analyst with Arihant Capital.

Moreover, TCL will undoubtedly face integration challenges with the unlisted US firm. Complicating matters further is the size and operating profile of GCIP (Moody). The transaction and the resulting financial & operating profile is still not amply clear. “Exchange rate is another challenge that stands in front of TCL”, Nagraj adds.

Well, the plan looks picturesque perfect. However, the road for TCL as well as the Tata group isn’t an expressway. Tata Group of late has raised lot of debts in financing its elephantine acquisitions and servicing, which might be a problem. There’s a maddening race at Tata Group companies to leverage in-organic growth. Tata Steel acquired Corus for $13.7 billion and another group company Tata Motors is also in talks with Ford to acquire Jaguar & Land Rover for $2 billion apart from many multi–million dollar acquisitions done by TCS, Tata Tea & other group companies in the recent past. And as most of these acquisitions have significantly increased its exposure to the American & European economies, sluggishness in there two markets could place Tata’s plans in jeopardy for quite some time to come.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008

An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

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Saturday, September 20, 2008

Does this mean you are not sure when Gujarat will be finally called a developed state?
The day a person says all work is done, that day the development of that state will stop. Development is an ongoing process. We must keep upgrading ourselves always.

Today, more and more politicians are making personal remarks. Even you have made fun of Sonia Gandhi? Why is this happening?

If I have passed single personal comment on Sonia Bhen, I request your magazine to criticise me as much as it wants.

Do you think that the national media is biased against you?

I do not like to criticise anyone or the media. Media has to decide now whether what it was doing was correct or not. I feel that the media is capable enough of doing its own introspection. It does not need my suggestions.

Some pundits and analysts are saying that while the Modi model may have worked in Gujarat, it will not work in any other state in India. First, Modi is not a model. Second, if they feel that providing electricity to 18,000 villages like we did in the state of Gujarat is not possible in any other state, I feel sorry for them.

What they mean is that there is too much caste-based politics in other Indian states.

One has to decide whether you want to work for the country or play politics. Once you decide that, it is possible to work in any part of the country. I believe every Indian believes in development. One should never blame the people.

There is a tendency in the BJP that whenever a politician becomes powerful, his/her relation with the party suffers a lot. No one has tried to keep me away from the party. I am also not going away from my party. I do not see a reason or any possibility of this.

Do you think that your aggressive Hindutva image will be accepted by the various NDA allies?

First of all, I do not waste my time or life on image building. I use my power, energy and time to build an image for Gujarat. I want my Gujarat to be the best.

How do you look at the prospects of NDA and UPA during the 2009 elections?

I got opportunity to travel around, and wherever I went, I felt that the country feels that there is a vacuum and desperately needs a Prime Minister. In the present atmosphere, one feels that India doesn’t have a Prime Minister. I feel people are desperately looking for a change. No one is ready to accept the UPA.

You use the slogan ‘Jai Gujarat’ more often than ‘Jai Bharat Maa’. I start my speech with ‘Jai Bharat Maa’. During the elections, ‘Jitega Gujarat’ was our party’s slogan that is why we used it more often. But my government’s motto, and we are repeating this since the last six years, is ‘Bharat key vikas key liye Gujarat ka vikas zaroori hai’.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

Top Articles on IIPM:-
'This is one of Big B's best performances'
IIPM to come up at Rajarhat
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The Hindu Business Line : IIPM placements hit a high of over 2000 jobs
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IIPM Delhi - Indian Institute of Planning and Management New Delhi ...domain-b.com : IIPM ranked ahead of IIMs

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

The fort that lives...

... is dying. B&E visits Jaisalmer’s golden bastion and finds an epic and a relic.
In the chilling cold of Delhi, in the middle of a busy workday (watching others slog), the thought of a sunny Jaisalmer trip full of adventure and intriguing cultural revealing was rendering dreamy smirks on my face. The 22-hour long journey was tiresome on occasions when I watched the train halt at as many as 40 almost stranded stations and looked at a travel partner whose agenda seemed no less than setting a world record in sleeping the longest (as well as the loudest). But as soon as I stepped at the Jaisalmer station, energy gushed in. Looking at its low-ceiling construction with wonderfully designed pillars, I handed over myself to the royal city. As I turned around, the Punjabi Jat lad seemed to have done the same too, though in a manner typical to him, stretching out wide (and loud) at the very centre of the railway station, in full public view.

“The construction of the Jaisalmer Fort was started by the Rajput king, Maharawal Jaisal in 1156 A.D. atop the Meru mountain and the construction continued over generations,” said Chander Bhan, our man Friday for all things Jaisalmer. As we walked along, he continued, “It is the only fort in the world which has close to 5,000 persons living in it, along with 40 odd hotels and 15 restaurants.”

The magnificent fort is made in sandstone that fetches it a golden sheen. And, such is the beauty of the fort that it looks well maintained, even after 800 years of its construction. The high walled tawny fort of 99 bastions, shelters about 500 houses in the lanes that branch out further into other lanes full of houses. “People in the fort have been living for generations in eight mohallas (colonies) purely on the basis of a once rigid caste and class system. Some of the mohallas that have been popular since the olden days are those of the Brahmins, Sonars (goldsmith), Kshatriyas (soldiers), Hazuris (courtiers who were kings’ children from relationships outside marriage) and Mochis (cobblers),” the guide explained as if emitting out language from memorised contents in a viva voce.

While we walked through the lanes and bylanes, filled more with sellers than buyers, raving about the fort, its history and people who made it happen, we landed at 8th July, a restaurant chosen purely on the basis of its interesting name and little else.

It was a small rooftop joint where Rama Bhatia, a well spoken middle-aged lady took our order while our guide greeted her. Driven by habit and curiosity, we struck an informal rapport with Rama. She had been running the restaurant inside the fort with her husband (who named it after his birth date) for 10 years. Her husband, an old eloquent gentleman from the region who had seen the desert and the city evolve, joined us. Recollecting his memories, he started telling us how Jaisalmer, despite being Asia’s biggest district, wasn’t well known even in other parts of Rajasthan. It was only when the Indira Gandhi Canal was built in the year 1987 that a lot of changes took place. Tourism blossomed and the world’s only ‘living fort’ attracted thousands of people every year. He continued, “The population inside the fort has risen over the years and all are dependent on tourism either in entirety or in part.” With fear and anguish, he mentioned how due to water clogging and other sewage related problems, the ASI is insisting on the evacuation of the fort.
For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

Top Articles on IIPM:-
IIPM to come up at Rajarhat
IIPM awards four Bengali novelists
IIPM makes business education truly global-Education-The Times of ...
The Hindu : Education Plus : Honour for IIPM
IIPM ranked No.1 B-School in India, Management News - By ...
IIPM Ranked No1 B-School in India
Moneycontrol >> News >> Press- News >> IIPM ranked No1 B-School in ...
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The Hindu Business Line : IIPM placements hit a high of over 2000 jobs
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IIPM Delhi - Indian Institute of Planning and Management New Delhi ...domain-b.com : IIPM ranked ahead of IIMs

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Presidents too wanna have fun!

Undeterred by moral & societal considerations, Sarkozy courts Carla
Nicholas Sarkozy, the playboy president has transformed the presidency. Instead of transforming the economic situation as expected, Unlike his predecessors, he has let the media write & speculate on his personal life.

His divorce with Cécilia, a former model, had grabbed the media attention as it was the first incident in modern French history that a serving president was divorcing his wife. Soon after the election, he was attacked by the opposition for spending holidays on French millionaire Vincent Bollore’s luxury yacht.The latest in the series is his relationship with former supermodel Carla Bruni.

Nero fiddled when Rome burnt, so goes a proverb. Sarkozy borrowed a private jet from Bollore and flew in to the banks of the Nile along with Bruni to celebrate Christmas, when the workers unions were busy devising new strategies to deal with the government. The opposition has a reason to worry. “When the president is the personal friend of men and women who own newspapers, TV stations, who he makes pay for his holidays, who can say for sure that there aren’t paybacks?” asks socialist MP Benoit Hamon. Sarkozy, however, remains unconcerned of the allegations. “Despite the obstacles, despite the difficulties, I will do what I said I would,” said the president in his New Year address. The labour unions have been given the January 15 deadline to reach a consensual agreement with the government.

If the unions fail to reach a deal, his government would legislate the proposals, says Sarkozy. Is it as easy as celebrating holidays with his girlfriend in the Egyptian valleys? If he fails to swing the public mood in favour of his reform project, he would, to his utter discomfort, know the answer to that one.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

Top Articles on IIPM:-
IIPM makes business education truly global-Education-The Times of ...
The Hindu : Education Plus : Honour for IIPM
IIPM ranked No.1 B-School in India, Management News - By ...
IIPM Ranked No1 B-School in India
Moneycontrol >> News >> Press- News >> IIPM ranked No1 B-School in ...
IIPM ranked No. 1 B-school in India- Zee Business Survey ...
IIPM ranked No1 B-School in India :: Education, Careers ...
The Hindu Business Line : IIPM placements hit a high of over 2000 jobs
Deccan Herald - IIPM ranked as top B-School in India
India eNews - IIPM Ranked No1 B-School in India
IIPM Delhi - Indian Institute of Planning and Management New Delhi ...
domain-b.com : IIPM ranked ahead of IIMs

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Will Middle-East conflicts end?

Solution lies in their interests, not only in peace conferences
Middle-East, though continues to geo-politically important, also has been instrumental in generating maximum complexities to the world affairs. Surprisingly, there has also been reluctance in global initiatives and participation, in resolving its conflicts. Though, Mr. Bush has finally succeeded to sponsor Annapolis peace conference in his last year of presidency and has also succeeded in leaving some positive implications. Instances of sympathy, empathy and donations from many donor countries and organisations in the Paris conference, held just after Annapolis conference, are some examples.

Israel had captured Gaza strip and West Bank during Arab-Israel war in 1967, occupied Golan Heights, then annexed it in 1981. Abbas’s inability to fight for peace and justice has kept the continent in pandemonium. Last few decades have witnessed failure of Israel’s, Palestine’s, even Arab’s call for peace. These remained theatrics, mere exercise of photo, handshakes sessions. Annapolis was also expected to be same. But it is drawing global attention and sympathy. Over 90 countries and international organisations have pledged $7.4 billion to save Palestine from bankruptcy in the Paris conference. However, the trend seems positive but long term resolutions remains cynical. The aid can only save the country from bankruptcy, but is not the solution for the moribund Palestine economy. The last decade of Bush’s Middle East journey is enough to witness America’s self-interest. Thus the solution is not in hand of the US alone, proactive participation by responsible world powers e.g. Russia, Germany, French and the UK is urgent and only option now. But will they realise full potential of their accountability?

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

Top Articles on IIPM:-
IIPM makes business education truly global-Education-The Times of ...
The Hindu : Education Plus : Honour for IIPM
IIPM ranked No.1 B-School in India, Management News - By ...
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Monday, August 25, 2008

You game? Tis’ no child’s play

A bright new millennium lies in wait for Indian game developers. Biggies, watch out for the Indian wave
“Except Indians, almost everyone – right from a 10-year-old kid to people as old as my father goes into the video-gaming room of my hotel and enjoy big time,” says Abhinesh Sikka, a 26-year old software professional working with US-based Trilogy Software Inc. while explaining how gaming is still not very popular in India. Indeed, a typical talk from a GenNext individual who realises the force behind the global gaming industry, which as per PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) is forecasted to grow at a Compounded Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 9.1%, escalating to $48.9 billion in 2011 from the current $37.5 billion (estimated for FY2007). So is Sikka right about Indians not loving video-games?

It was found that the rising influence of broadband, combined with gaming consoles & mobile gaming, was driving the phenomenon into Indian lands too, unlike what Sikka felt. No wonder Nasscom too forecasted that the Indian gaming market would touch $300 million by FY2009 at a CAGR of 78%!

And what makes India special? Well, in the face of a slowing growth in the American market (all set to touch $12.5 billion by 2011 at a modest CAGR of 6.7%; as per PwC) and with the growth predicted for India being much higher than the average for the Asia (touching $18.8 billion with a CAGR of 10%), the Indian market appears more lucrative for game developers who are optimistic about their fortunes in the sub-continent. While speaking exclusively to B&E, Atindriya Bose, Country Head – India, Sony Computer Entertainment claims, “Gaming has become an acceptable entertainment mode in Indian culture and there is a natural positive momentum amongst consumers towards gaming. Ever since the launch of PS3 in India, we have received a phenomenal response from the Indian market.”

With India already having made a mark on global tracks, by even outshining key destinations like Taiwan & South Korea, the potential is there for the taking. And despite the fact that we still can’t talk in order of billions of dollars, there are some Davids – like Dhruva Interactive, DQ Entertainment and many others – mushrooming in the hinterland too, vying to make a mark in the domestic gaming space.

However, there are challenges waiting for the aspirants as well. Rupee appreciation will pose as a major challenge as 75%-80% of total revenues for the Indian video game developers come from foreign markets as per ACNielsen. Besides it, rationalisation of prices and provision of India-centric contents also pose challenges as Atindriya professes, “Indianised content is something we have to focus on… We would like the consumers to be exposed to the true gaming environment.” Surely, for now, it’s game on in India too!

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative
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