Thursday, December 15, 2005

Heart vs Head

Heart vs. Head

“But Calvin is no kind and loving god! He's one of the old gods! He demands sacrifice!”

Many a times I. feel I talk more from my heart than from my head . Today got into an argument with a person at a traffic crossing. It was right in front of Madhapur petrol pump and the full traffic was waiting for Chief Minister to pass by. The frenzied traffic cops were uttering some gibberish in Telugu and as expected most people(including myself) were not getting a clue as to what he was trying to say. After a while I got irritated and asked him why he was not talking in Hindi, to which an irate passenger dressed in all black, with naked foot and carrying the ‘pious’ mala replied as to what business was it mine which language the traffic cop uses. I replied by saying that just in case he is not aware, Hindi and Telugu is the official language of India. Must admit that I might have invited serious trouble for myself, knowing the volatile and capricious nature of the cop constables on the prowl.

I get this recurring feeling that more than anything else; it is this obstinacy to not learn anything common to the rest of the country, that keeps southern India still disconnected from mainstream India and hence the aptness of the term, “South Indian”.

Moving to something most ’Junta’ can connect to: Cricket. The way Ganguly has been left out of the team in spite of doing a ‘at-par’ performance speaks volumes about the reigning captain, Rahul Dravid. According to me, Sharad Pawar is the worst thing that has ever happened to Indian Cricket. Its like getting La’loo Prasad Yadav to head NASA. Tragic at best! People should start expecting Maharashtria-kars and mumbaikars to make it to . : clowns like Ajit Agarkar). The icing to the cake is that there are are characters like Raqj Singh Dungarpur and Bhishen Singh bedi who played mediocre, subsistence level cricket in their Hay-days deciding the fate and future of the most successful captain this country has ever had. The gluttony never Ends!

Thursday, September 08, 2005

TOP 25 Tech Consulting Firms

The 2005 prestige rankings of the top technology consulting firms have arrived! We selected a list of top technology consulting firms to take the 2005 Vault Tech Consulting Firms Survey. (Read our rankings methodology.)

Consulting Firms: 1 - 25

2005 RANK

FIRM

SCORE

2004 RANK

HEADQUARTERS

1

Booz Allen Hamilton

6.955

NR

McLean, VA

2

Deloitte Consulting LLP

6.736

2

New York, NY

3

IBM Global Services

6.452

1

Somers, NY

4

Accenture

6.331

3

New York, NY

5

BearingPoint

5.823

5

McLean, VA

6

Capgemini

5.752

4

New York, NY

7

HP Technology Solutions

5.351

NR

Palo Alto, CA

8

DiamondCluster International Inc.

5.232

13

Chicago, IL

9

Telcordia Technologies

5.218

NR

Piscataway, NJ

10

Keane

5.061

7

Boston, MA

11

Computer Sciences Corporation

5.026

10

El Segundo, CA

12

Sapient

5.000

8

Cambridge, MA

13

Unisys

4.969

NR

Blue Bell, PA

14

Infosys Technologies Ltd.

4.900

14

Bangalore, India

15

Electronic Data Systems

4.882

9

Plano, TX

16

Perot Systems

4.833

6

Dallas, TX

17

Wipro Ltd.

4.667

18

Bangalore, India

18

The Titan Corporation

4.49

20

San Diego, CA

19

Tata Consultancy Services (TCS)

4.228

19

Mumbai, India

20

CGI Group

4.089

25

Montreal, Canada

21

Fujitsu Consulting

4.035

25

Edison, NJ

22

LogicaCMG

4.032

11

London, UK

23

Atos Origin

4.030

24

Hoofddorp, Netherlands

24

Getronics

3.787

NR

Amsterdam, Netherlands

25

PA Consulting Group

3.703

16

London, UK

Source: Vault 2005 Technology Consulting Firms Survey

Mashelkar's convocation address

 

Following is the (truly inspiring) convocation address delivered by Dr.

R.A.  Mashelkar, Director General, CSIR, at the 4th Convocation of our

institute on  20th August 2005.

 

 

             "India's Future: "IT" as in "Indian Talent"

 

1. Dr. Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, Hon.ble Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh,

Prof.  Rajeev Sangal, Director, International Institute of Information

Technology,  Hyderabad, proud graduates, their equally proud parents and

friends, all  members of the family of IIIT, distinguished guests, ladies

and gentlemen.

 

2. I consider it to be a great honour and a special privilege to have been

 invited to deliver the convocation address of IIIT.  In a short span of

time,  this institute has created a unique niche for itself.  The

institute has the  dream of becoming a global center of excellence in IT

education, research and  technology development. This dream that can be

converted into reality, if we  create the right .ambition. and the right

.ambience.. I see the presence of  both here.  I have no doubt, therefore,

that this dream will be fulfilled.

 

3. Let me begin by extending my wholehearted congratulations and my very

best  wishes to the young graduates. You are going to enter a new exciting

world,  which is changing rapidly. There are extra-ordinary opportunities

for those,  who are prepared to face the challenge of change.  Indeed,

only those of us  will survive and succeed, who will be able to anticipate

the change and also  exploit the change.  And those who do this will one

day lead the change.  We in  India should have the ambition of leading the

change and make things happen on  our own terms.

 

4. Speaking about change, there are several things that have undergone a

change  in recent times.  One of the most important one is the perception

about India.  Let me explain. I was reading Times magazine recently. I

browsed through the  interview of Peter Mandelson, who is Tony Blair.s

most valued adviser. I was  struck by what I read. He said .in the space

of a decade, China and India have  emerged as dramatic, dynamic

competitors. Over here and in America, there is a  sense that this has put

our jobs and livelihoods at stake.. Would you have ever  imagined a change

of perception of India from a poor and deprived country to a  challenger

to US & Europe?

 

5. Just about an year ago, I was having a dinner with the famous economist

 Jeffrey Sachs. We were discussing the Goldman Sachs report, which

predicts that  India along with China and USA will be the three top

economies of the world by  2050. Jeffrey Sachs said that he disagreed with

this report.  I wondered why. I  thought he meant that India could not

perhaps be the part of this privileged  pack.  I was surprised when he

said something quite to the contrary.  He said  that this could happen

sooner than 2050, and also that if India plays its card  right, it could

occupy even a higher position.

 

6. What factors cause a rapid turnaround for a country? The turnaround in

the  fortune of different countries at different points in their history

has been  attributed to different factors.  For USA, it was roads and

railways, which led  to the big spurt in its economic growth. For Britain,

the same factor was  textiles.  For Denmark, it was milk and milk

products. For Sweden, it was  timber and timber products. For Middle East,

it was oil.  What is the oil for  India in the 21st Century? I strongly

believe that it is IT.  And by that I do  not mean IT as in .Information

Technology. but IT as in .Indian talent..  It is  this talent that is

going to catapult India to great heights in the comity of  nations. Other

nations have already recognized the power of Indian talent.  Let  me share

my own experience with you.

 

7. As a member of Indo-German Consultative Committee, I remember attending

a  meeting in Bonn. There was a presentation by a senior German member. He

 expressed a concern that one third of Germany in the next 10 to 15 years

will  be more than 60 years old. A question was put to our German friend.

Germany and  Japan became economic powerhouses because they excelled in

technological  innovations.  But then innovation is the domain of the

young.  How could a  predominantly old Germany survive when it becomes

old? The reply came quickly  from our German friend. He asserted that in

the twenty first century, Germany  will be sourcing the innovations from a

country that is expected to lead in  innovation due to the quality of its

talent, namely, the Indian talent!

 

8. We all thought that he was being nice to the Indian delegation. But

that is  not the case.  What he predicted is already happening. One

hundred and fifty  major companies from USA and Europe have set up their

research, design and  development centres in India in the last five years

and they are not small.  Some of them employ 2000 to 3000 employees. They

include big names such as  Boeing, Daimler Chrysler, Du Point, General

Electric, General Motors, Intel,  IBM, Microsoft, Siemens, Unilever and so

on. And more are coming every day. Why  is this happening?  As legendary

Jack Welch, the CEO of General Electric (GE)  said during the inauguration

of GE.s R&D Centre in Bangalore .India is a  developing country but it is

a developed country as far as its intellectual  capital is concerned. We

get the best intellectual capital per dollar here .  thanks to the amazing

quality of Indian talent..  I believe the key word in his  remarks is

.Indian talent..

 

9. What is so unique about Indian talent? The uniqueness of the Indian

mind has  been well accepted.  It was the Indian mind which recognised the

power of the  fusion of mind, body and spirit for the first time. The

products of Indian mind  have influenced the events of the twentieth

century. For example, we could not  talk about digital economy if binary

digits, comprising the numerals .zero. and  .one. did not exist.  But who

invented zero? We all know that it was the Indian  mind, which invented

the concept of .shunya. or the zero.

 

10. But then you would say here he is one more of those Indians gloating

about  the glory of our past. Let me assure you that this great journey of

Indian mind  continues unabated. For instance, we always worry about the

fact that in  Olympics after Olympics we hardly win any medals inspite of

being a country of  a billion. But I am proud to say that when it comes to

the Olympics of mind, we  win all the time.  Last year, in the Science

Olympiads for the school children,  we had sent 19 young Indian children.

There was a competition amongst eighty  nations.  Do you know how many of

them returned with medals?  All 19 of them.  So powerful was the quality

of those young minds.  And so is the case with the  quality of all the

minds, who have gathered here in this hall today.

 

11. It is the power of the Indian talent that has given the prestige to

Indian  IT industry like in no other industry. Infosys and Wipro have

caught the  imagination of the world. Around 600,000 software

professionals contribute to  20% of our exports, and their average age is

just around 27 years.  Can you  imagine 0.06 percent of Indian population

making such a difference?

 

12. This Indian talent has created great waves across the shores of India.

The  dominant position of Indian diaspora in the American IT industry is

legendary.  Whether it is Suhas Patil of Cirrus Logic or Gururaj Deshpande

of Sycamore  Networks or Vinod Khosla of Sun Microsystems, all of them

have been stars in  their own right.  And the Indian talent goes beyond

IT.  We are then reminded  of Victor Menezes of Citibank and Rajat Gupta

of McKinsey and Raghuram Rajan of  IMF and Rakesh Gangwal of US Airways

and Arun Netravali of Bell Laboratories.  The list goes on. They have all

done us proud.  But then you would say that I  am citing these examples of

Indians in USA.  What about India?  Would Patil,  Khosla, Gupta, Netravali

have succeeded in India? Let me respond to this  question by narrating an

anecdote again.

 

13. I was involved in the process of interview for the Chief Innovation

Officer  of National Innovation Foundation, which I chair. I found that

the individual  that we were interviewing had an experience in branding a

product. I said .I  want to brand my India. How would you do that?.  He

was puzzled.  He had  branded a soap, a refrigerator, but he wondered as

to how he could brand a  nation? I said .I will make it easy for you.  Let

me tell you as to how other  nations brand themselves. For instance, US

brands itself as a land of  opportunity!.  He immediately replied, .I will

brand India as a land of ideas..  Now here is the issue.  India is a land

of ideas but it is US that is a land of  opportunities. That is why our

young people with aspirations go to USA, which  provides them an

opportunity to reach their own potential. The challenge before  all

Indians, whether they are in India or abroad, is to make India the land of

 opportunity.

 

14. Is India becoming a land of opportunity?  I believe it is.  Look at

the of  Indian industry today. It is beginning to realize that if they do

not innovate,  they will perish. Indian drugs and pharmaceutical industry

survived so far by  copying known molecules. Now at least ten Indian

companies are inventing their  own new molecules by getting into discovery

research. I spoke to several pharma  industry leaders. Collectively, they

are looking to employ now hundreds of  bright young Ph.D.s.  In fact, they

are complaining about the shortage of  suitably skilled Ph.D.s. in India!

 

15. There are other sectors where magical changes are taking place. In

auto  industry, the wheel has turned the full circle.  Fifty years ago, it

was  British Morris Oxford, which was sold as Indian Ambassador on Indian

roads.  Today, it is Indian Indica that is being sold as City Rover on

London roads!  Why did this happen? It happened because Indian talent was

given an opportunity  due to a vision of a leader and because of a

conducive policy of the  Government.

 

16. In March 1978, JRD Tata had said .If Telco was allowed to make a car,

we  would have been as good in it as we were in trucks..  But he was not

allowed to  make the Tata car. Why? Because India was a closed economy. It

had not opened  up.  It had policies which killed competition.  In 1991,

the then Finance  Minister and the present Prime Minister opened this

economy up.  Ratan Tata was  allowed to make the cars.  He had the courage

to give this challenge to 700  engineers, who had never done an

auto-design in their life.  He invested Rs.  1760 crores, the highest that

have been invested in backing up an indigenously  designed, developed and

manufactured product. What was the result. The result  was a world class

car, namely Indica.  What is the lesson in this?  The .Indian  Talent. of

700 engineers found an expression only when the Government policies

allowed competition and a visionary leader, who trusted the .Indian

Talent.  baited on them.  The winner was India.

 

17. We lament the loss of the best Indian Talent to the western world. But

as  we make India as a .land of opportunity., more talent will return to

India.  This is already beginning to happen. I spoke to the Chairman of

NASSCOM, Dr.  Kiran Karnik, recently.  NASSCOM have done research on

returning Indian  professionals. He told me that during the last two years

over 20,000  professionals have returned. I went to Jack Welch R&D Centre

in Bangalore a few  months ago. They have 2400 professionals working

there. They told me that 700  of them were young Indians, who had returned

in the last 3 to 4 years.  I met  someone from Intel last month.  He told

me that in their Indian R&D Centre,  they are having 2600 professionals.

400 of them have come back from USA over  the last 3 to 4 years.

Admittedly, this is a trickle of Indian talent in  returning. It is not a

torrent yet.  But it is heartening to see the change.

 

18. The challenge before us is to convert this trickle into a torrent.

Government can do a lot in this. I am happy to see some recent initiatives

 taken by the Government of India through its Department of Science &

Technology. One of the notable initiatives is Ramanujan Fellowship.  Any

young  outstanding Indian scientist, who wants to return to India, will be

given a  monthly remuneration of Rs. 50,000 with Rs. 5.00 lakh per year

for contingency  to help him in his research. This Fellowship will be

available upto 5 years.  There is no upper limit on the number of such

Fellows. Hopefully, such Fellows  will find a challenging opportunity in

an institution or industry.  We need  many more such initiatives.

 

19. I have talked about getting the Indian talent back that was lost to

us. But  what about spotting talent and nurturing it in India? We need to

.catch them  young., as they say and then mentor them. Let me give an

example of what my own  CSIR is doing.

 

20. CSIR has set up the CSIR Diamond Jubilee Invention Award for school

children. The objectives of this to spot creativity and innovativeness

amongst  children and create interest and awareness for intellectual

property amongst  the children. Any Indian student enrolled in an Indian

school below the age of  18 years can compete in this award competition.

We have run this competition  for three years.  We have received thousands

of enteries. It was amazing to see  the power of Indian talent.  The age

group of these young inventors ranged  between 11-18 and from class six to

twelve.

 

21. The Braille developed by Madhav Pathak from a Jabalpur school received

the  first CSIR Diamond Jubilee Award. Madhav Pathak improved a

conventional Braille  slate to make writing easier for the blind.  It was

very tedious for a blind  child to memorize more than 300 combinations,

since reading and writing is done  in the opposite way for a conventional

Braille slate. Madhav.s innovation makes  it possible to read and write

from left to right. This invention later received  international prizes

too.

 

22. But CSIR does not stop at just spotting the talent.  It nurtures it

too.  CSIR applied for patents in the name of Madhav.  Further, the model

developed  by Madhav was improved by one of CSIR.s laboratory, namely,

Central Scientific  Instruments Organization (CSIO) in Chandigarh. A

prototype was developed by  CSIO and was evaluated at a blind school in

Chandigarh. The new prototype is an  improved pocket version providing

more space to read and write both for  conventional Braille writers and

the new Braille writers.  We will take  Madhav.s innovation forward now.

Who knows what difference the product coming  out from this young Indian

talent can make to the blind of the world?

 

23. I do strongly believe that we need to do much more to spot and nurture

 young talent all around the country. This process has to begin from the

level  of school children itself. And this cannot just be the

responsibility of the  Government. The corporate world must contribute it

in a big way.  In this  context, I am happy to see the efforts by leading

corporates, such as Tatas,  Birals, Reliance, Mahindras, WIPRO, etc.

Interestingly even multinational  companies such as Microsoft, INTEL,

BASF, Dupont are also searching and  recognizing young Indian talent.

 

24.  A timely spotting and supporting of talent can make a huge

difference. Let  me tell you my own story. I was born in a very poor

family. My father died when  I was six. My mother, who was uneducated, did

menial work to bring me up. I  went barefoot till I was twelve. I studied

under streetlights. I remember that  after my Secondary School Certificate

Examination in 1960, although I had  secured eleventh rank among 135,000

students in the state, I was about to leave  the school, because my mother

could not fund my college education. And I  remember Sir Dorab Tata Trust

coming in with a scholarship of 60 rupees per  month. This Trust by Tatas

supported me until my graduation. That 60 rupees  added so much value to

my life but it did not subtract any value from the  Tatas.

 

25. I would say that every Indian, whether in India or abroad must help

the  cause. On 3rd July this year, I addressed 3,000 NRIs in Atlanta in

USA. At the  end of my talk I gave an idea. Apparently, there are 300,000

professionals in  Silicon Valley whose average income is more than 200,000

USA dollars. This  makes it an annual income of 60 billion dollars.

Supposing they would be able  to spare one cent out of 10 dollars in

supporting and nurturing young Indian  talent, we would have 300 crores in

Indian rupees.  If we assume that a total  support to a single student

will need Rs. 10,000 per year, we are talking in  terms of helping 3 lakh

students.  The central point I made is that the loss of  one cent out of

10 dollars will not make any difference to them.  But it will  add so much

to the Indian talent pool.  The idea was received with great  enthusiasm.

That convinced me that you can take an .Indian out of India. but  not

.India out of an Indian..  Therein lies our hope.

 

26. I have, by now, developed the reputation of being a .dangerous

optimist.  about the great future of India. The reason I earned this

reputation is  attributed by some to the address that I delivered to the

gathering of 5000  scientists at the Science Congress in the year 2000 in

Pune. I had said .The  next century will belong to India, which will

become a unique intellectual and  economic power to reckon with,

recapturing all its glory, which it had in the  millennia gone by..  This

confidence comes to me because of the demonstrated  power of this great

Indians talent, to which I have made a repeated reference  today.

 

27. Finally, I would like to again congratulate IIIT. Let IIIT assume the

reputation of become .Indian Institute of Innovative Talent., well known

not  only for capturing and nurturing talent but building the innovative

capacity in  this talent to create world beating products, process and

services that will  catapult this nation to great heights. I wish all the

IIIT family the very best  in its journey up the limitless ladder of

excellence.