In memory of the 'one side of a sandwich' served to Annual Day participants backstage at Sindhi High School between 1993 and 2002.
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Who needs a life here?
Now that I’ve relocated to Chennai, I must not have any problems with the food here, right? There’s dosas and idlies and pongal and gallons of filter coffee available; I just need to wave my arms to get it. But instead, I choose to have rajmah, black dal, cauliflower and rice for breakfast AND lunch. I prefer oats, banana and milk for dinner. I’m serious. It’s like when you’re growing up in India in your twenties, you’re thinking of blonds and bikinis. And after that second year in Amsterdam in your early thirties, you are thinking of gold and silk saris.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
The great big Indian Wedding just got smaller
I think I’ve got some news. The times are changing. An average Indian Wedding would have around 500 to 600 guests. But an average wedding in the west would have only a few dozen people. Doesn’t the difference seem striking? May be the roots go back to our ‘joint family’ system, where an average family consisted at least 10 members. So, assuming that the guy’s family and the girl’s family each had 10 people, that makes it 20 in the first circle. These two families had 5 other extended families with an average of 10 in each. That means, about 100 in the second circle. Let us say that each person in the initial 20 knew 20 others (friends, acquaintances etc.) That makes it a straight 400. Btw, these numbers are rather conservative in south India. So, 600 people at a wedding is really no big deal.
You may be going, “What’s the frequency, Kenneth?” I’ll tell you what the frequency is.In twenty years time (at max), Indian weddings will have only a few dozen guests just like their Western counterparts. I got an e-mail invite this morning from a distant friend. Now, I know what that means: I am on her guest list; but I am not worth the pain and trouble of a phone call or a personal invite because we don’t know each other well enough. And so, I won’t show up at the wedding because I know she really doesn’t want me there. Extend this to the hundreds of people that have received her e-mail invite. I’d be shocked if anyone turns up.
In this way, we keep playing this game of invites through e-mails, blogs and worse still, orkut and facebook posts. Slowly, down the line, the numbers at Indian weddings will keep reducing. My generation is far less attached to its second circle of family than my mother’s generation anyways. I have first cousins whose name I don’t know. Extrapolate this over 10, 15 and 20 years. I think my assumption is safe. Weddings will cost far lesser; and we’ll manage to keep the noise out.
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Why Steve Jobs' $1 salary means little
There’s a table calendar on my colleague’s desk. The month of January has on it the photo of a man with curly, ruffled hair holding up two wall clocks on his shoulders; one clock shows 9 and the other clock shows 5. The punch line reads: “Success cannot come from a 40-hour week”. I love the illustration for the simplicity with which it conveys a very powerful message. Hidden into it is also the idiosyncrasy of being displayed on a guy’s desk who clocks 40 hours per week.
But the elephant in the room is easy to spot. I went up to this guy and asked him how he interpreted the line “Success cannot come from a 40-hour week” He looked at me with a “Duh!” and continued “It could mean one of two things: A) is that success cannot come from putting in just 40 hours per week at my job or, B) I need to be more efficient with the 40 hours that I put in to be more successful.” Maybe that’s how you would interpret it too.
But let me tell you how a man who takes home 1 dollar a year as salary would view the statement. The 40-hour week is representative of a job (or in other words something that the great majority is involved in). To be in position to take home a dollar in pay check, the guy would not have to depend on his pay check for food. And that means, his net worth/ passive stream of income would make his paycheck irrelevant. Again, that implies he keeps his job as head of Apple not because he has to (for Goodness sake), but because he chooses to. As popularly misunderstood, a 1$ paycheck to a CEO of a company who holds equity in it means nothing. However, a CEO with no equity in his company is never going to see a 1$ pay check. He’ll be well taken care off (or at least, that’s how it’s made to look).
A friend said this over lunch: “If you borrow 3 lakhs from a bank, the bank owns you. If you borrow 3 crores from a bank, you own the bank.” I’d say “If your company pays you a 100, 000 a year, the company owns you. If it pays you one dollar a year, you own it.”
Wish you a speedy recovery, Mr. Jobs.
Well Well
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Opinion/Davos_goes_nowhere/articleshow/4072530.cms
Happy Day
Monday, February 2, 2009
Our Leaders are on Drugs
Here
As a by-stander, I am disappointed. Beyond re-iterating the existing gloom and sad stories, I can’t quite see an action plan in place. Platforms for discussions like the prestigious one in Davos tend to pride more on the fact that world leaders, diplomats and religious leaders made an appearance. Little is understood as to why they did it.
The message from the Annual Meeting is that leaders must continue to develop a swift and coordinated policy response to the most serious global recession since the 1930s: global challenges demand global solutions.
Honestly, did we need 4 of the heads of G8 counties to tell us that? What next?
Does the WEF have any follow up programme? How are we doing on the agendas that were set in the WEF 2005 (say) to tackle hunger in Africa? Or trafficking in Cambodia?
The greatest outcome of the Annual Meeting 2009 was that, despite the economic turbulence, people chose to come together in record numbers from industry, government and civil society to reflect on the seriousness of the global challenges we face and to connect and respond to such challenges.
Goodness! Is this the kind of conclusions that you would expect from history makers at a time in history like this?
The bottom line question is: Will the effort that went into staging the WEF this year pull the world out of recession? I doubt so. A lot will be achieved on the periphery.
In case you suspect, I am not a critic of the World Economic Forum. On the contrary, I am a keen follower of the event with the hope that something might get done that could improve the well-being of an old lady in the Andes, or a twenty five year old in the heart of India’s Silicon Valley.
Friday, January 30, 2009
Look who's talking
How do I know this? I ride up and down five floors each day looking at assets. We are men, and that’s how we are wired.
* * *
“I think she should start hanging out with single men more often”, I thought to myself, as I stood in the lift.
Her hands were folded, shoulders slightly stooped and the hair tucked behind the ears suggested that the she had been complimented on her ear rings earlier in the day. Her glance was fixed to the floor and the corner of my eyes was fixed on her.
“But you know girls. They like committed men.” my alter ego said.
“Yeah, but what good is that? If she gave single guys a chance, it would be good for all 4 of us.”, I couldn’t help but think to myself.
“Who four?”
“Herself, that guy, his wife and the single men. It’s such a win-win-win-win situation if she only decides”
The lift reached the ground floor and we all moved out.
* * *
I like Mel Gibson’s movie What Women Want. In the movie, by a stroke of circumstance, he gets the ability to hear what a woman is thinking. I visualize a device that can give each of us the power to do this; and I don’t mean masculine and feminine. I mean everybody can hear what every other person is thinking.
Here’s the catch: This device will work only inside lifts.
I wonder what she must have thought had she heard what I was thinking inside that lift. Probably something like, “Jerk!”
But the device is still an idea. Until lifts are equipped with this ‘thought hearing device’, I still maintain that she needs to give single men a chance.
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
WEF kicks off
• 250 public figures, including 41 heads of state or government, 60 ministers, 30 heads or senior officials of international organizations and 10 ambassadors
• More than 510 participants from civil society, including 50 heads or representatives of non-governmental organizations, 225 media leaders, 215 leaders from academic institutions and think tanks, 10 religious leaders of different faiths and 10 trade union leaders. [Source: www.weforum.org]
The co-chairs of this year’s meet, as in every other year, is a handful of some of the world’s most influential names: Kofi Annan, Stephen Green of HSBC Holdings, Anand Mahindra of Mahindra and Mahindra, Rupert Murdoch of News Corp, Maria Ramos (Transnet Ltd., South Africa), Jeroen van der Veer (Chief o Royal Dutch Shell) and Werner Wenning of Bayer, Germany.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is expected to pitch Russia’s Economic Vision at the opening address (00:15, IST) that is expected to set the tone of the debate over the course of the forum. Union Minister of Commerce and Industry Kamal Nath is leading the Indian congregation.
It will be interesting to note how Klaus Schwab’s stage will shape up discussions (and solutions, hopefully). With all the doom and gloom expected for much of 2009, this could very well be a place for the top brass to put matters into perspective. As it is already being said, this is the most important edition of the WEF in forty years.
A familiar face at WEF, Bill Gates, seems absent. The Obama administration is sending only one senior adviser. Another section to watch out this WEF: The Young Global Leaders.