More Pics From IIMI NASMEI Conference 2019

More pics-

 At the valedictory session.



 Inaugural session- Varsha Jain's (above, right in row 2)
book with Jag Sheth was released at this conference. Below, Phil Zerrillo speaks.


 Jag Sheth joined through a video (above) Varsha Jain at the podium.
Below, our volunteers. Anurag Jain, Deepti Gangle among others.


 Volvo- Eicher COO speaks (above). Satish Nargundkar recives a memento from Himanshu Rai, director, for a Keynote (below).


Deja Vu- IIMI NASMEI Conference 2019

Two years ago, we did a conference in collaboration with NASMEI. In 2004, I had collaborated with them at IIMK for the first time. Now, in 2019, we did the second edition from IIM Indore. Great experience, and met quite a few people from places as far away as Tirunelveli (M. Sundarnar University), PES University Bangalore (my former employer too), Narsee Monjee, Mumbai, and many more places across India.

There were invited speakers from several foreign universities, many U.S. based. We had Dr. Jag Sheth join on video in the Inaugural panel. A few distinguished speakers from XLRI, ISB and other IIMs spoke in special panels. We also had two book launches- mine was one, and Dr. Varsha Jain's was the other. All in all, a good time was had by the participants, and the people involved in conducting it.

 Above- a workshop was conducted on Meaningful Research by Satish Nargundkar from Georgia State University. Yes, he is my brother too.

Below, the launch of my book (Marketing Research, 4th edition, McGraw-Hill, 2019) with Sanjay Jain, Manju Ahuja, Phil Zerrillo, Giri Kumar Tayi and Bharat Bhasker. It was nice meeting people who said they used the book while teaching, or had read it before.

and the book itself..

lastly, me, doing my thing.. bringing it to a close.


Judgemental Hai Kya- Film Review

I liked the film. That does not mean you will like it. It's that kind of film (isn't all art?). It is quirky, with an uneven pace (probably deliberate, and may be because mental imbalance is one of the subjects it deals with through its main character), and is full of switches between the present and the past- flashbacks, if you will.

Still, I give it full marks for keeping the suspense going, and for interspersing the serious plot with comedy in the form of some of the supporting characters- Kangana's boyfriend (who is not sure of his status- ha, ha), the two cops (Satish Kaushik is one), and Jimmy Shergill, who is not into comedy, but is a refreshing add-on.

The idea of using characters from the Ramayana, is great, and the sets of the rehearsals for the Modern Ramayana were brilliant pieces of art. Weaving in Duniya mein logon ko (the song) is also a nice touch, and so is the intro to the art of dubbing for films-we rarely get a look at the post-production activities that go into film-making.

It has lots of good things, if you are not too judgemental!

Milestone 600000

That's 600,000 views for my blog, that started around 2009, and has spent a decade in the virtual world. 1968 posts in all so far. Thank you, readers.

From the July 27 Google Stats-

Pageviews yesterday
       99
Pageviews last month
 3,549
Pageviews all time history
 600,594
Pageviews today
  148

The Western Ghats- Pictorial Journey

The Western Ghats are a treasure, with amazing scenic routes all over. One such that we traversed recently was between Goa and Belgaum via Chorla. The pics speak for themselves-












Picnicking Around Indore

Picnic spots abound around Indore- not too far from here are many day-trips, which can be educational, fun or relaxing, or all three. One such spot and some pics. The waterfall is around 25 kms. from Indore via Mhow. A cute metre gauge railway line is an added attraction. The bhutta (corn, rosted) sellers can take care of small hunger pangs. The scenery is best viewed at this time (monsoons- July till September).









Baad Muddat...Ghazal

Baad muddat unhe dekh kar yun laga..jaise betaab dil ko qaraar aa gaya.
(Link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SA0ett8WVBc)

This lovely ghazal sung by Jagjit and Chitra Singh is very special, because two of my classmates at Bangalore sang it in an All India Radio program that our team presented. They sang it flawlessly (Gopal Bhat and Deepika Nath), and I remember that ghazal mainly because of them.

I compered the show, my first (and last) attempt at doing a show on air! I was interviewed once by a Nagpur channel about Management Education much later, but that was nothing compared to that earlier experience.

Super 30 - Film Review

Disclaimer: As a general principle, I am against coaching classes of all kinds. But these are a way of life (like the internet based media) that you cannot wish away..

There are a few good things about this film. And a couple of questions that I had. First, the good things.

The acting is good. Hrithik Roshan, the kids, Pankaj Tripathi and whoever played the Excellent Coaching boss. The guy who played Hrithik's dad was very good too. Even the female love interest of Hrithik's, though she had little to do after the first twenty minutes.

The film makes a very good point for social justice in education, and the fact that the right kind of education can transform a family's future...logically, though, every university should strive to provide this transformational education, and not just a handful of IITs. Something to think about? Of course, State governments are responsible for the state universities. And promoters, for the private ones, which are yet to match the Central government institutions in quality (in India).

The villainy is over-dramatised, I thought, and the positives take a back-seat during those scenes.

Academicians and academics do get their due through the central character- education is the winner.

A question that I had- why was Hrithik looking unwashed in the second half of the film?

Worth seeing the film. Certainly beats the current alternatives by a few marks. :)


Story of My Books

I have written a few books- pic below. So how did that come about?

Well, the first urge to write happened around 2000, when I was in Kirloskar Institute of Advanced Management Studies, Harihar. I taught Marketing Research there, and felt unhappy with the choice of books then. My librarian Manjunath (who went to TAPMI later) put me in touch with Tapas Maji at Tata McGraw-Hill, and I gave them a proposal. It went through after some changes suggested by them, and the book was completed with help from some staff and students who contributed cases to it out of their course projects. By the time it was published in 2002, I was at IIM Lucknow.  It is now in its 4th edition (just released in 2019), having become popular over the years. The latest edition has a lot of cases contributed by IIM Indore students. The Indian cases are a big draw (thanks to student contributors), along with the down-to-earth explanation of statistical techniques, according to feedback I have received from readers-many in person.



I have also written Services Marketing (3 editions), International Marketing, and a book on Brand Management (limited edition, with Bhagyalakshmi Venkatesh). Then, the bug to write an autobiography came over me, and I penned My Experiments With Half-truths, which I self-published with pothi, which had just started the trend of Print-on-demand (POD) in India-coincidentally, Jaya Jha, its founder, was an alum of IIM Lucknow. (Jaya appears with Sharu Rangnekar in the pic at Crossword below- the first pic is a launch of Digital Marketing Cases from India at IIM Indore with Subin Sudhir, Rishikesha Krishnan and my co-editor Romi)




Last year, along with Romi Sainy, I co-edited a book on Digital Marketing Cases with contributions from former students of IMT Nagpur, Jaipuria and IIM Indore, among others. Ambition? Maybe to compile one on Tourism or Services Marketing Cases. Any takers who wish to contribute?

Remembering Sanjeev Kumar

This hero was unlike any other. He acted much beyond his age, and also played heroes who were older, like in Aandhi (with Suchitra Sen, with some great songs penned by Gulzar and tuned by R.D. Burman), and in younger roles, romanced Hema Malini (Seeta aur Geeta) and Leena Chandavarkar (Manchali was a delight).

Comedy? Angoor was a classic, with two Sanjeevs and two Deven Vermas. Tragedy? Khilona, where he played a tragically ill man. Nine roles? No problem- Naya Din Nayi Raat was the film.

Father of the hero? Trishul... of the Heroine? Parichay. College kid? Devata (this film had the song Chal baithen church ke peechey). Dashing inspector and then the village thakur who is the centrepiece of the blockbuster Sholay.

Manoranjan was another delightful film where he played a cop who tries to rescue a prostitute because he is in love with her- a remake of Irma La Douce.

Another memorable film of his was Koshish, where he and Jaya Bhaduri played a deaf and dumb couple.

Dos and Donts

Life has several people giving you a list of Dos and Don'ts. But what we have to do is make our own list, because it's our life! Even well-meaning lists can be flawed. Anyway, I am resisting the temptation to give you a list- only recounting pics from a recent do- a wedding in our alumni batch family. Met lots of friends/batchmates there, some after long and some not.


In between, an old one from my wedding (1988), which had some of these guys..





And the big bunch of us on stage..
 and off..


My Childhood

This is my blog post number 1960, which is my birth year. To celebrate, I am presenting a chapter -the first- from my autobiography.


Chapter 1: Childhood

 

I used to suck my thumb. All children do. At least, when I was growing up, they did. And when I grew up and had children, they also did. I played games like marbles, jhaad bunder (monkey on a tree)- where you have to jump on a stick placed strategically under a tree, from a branch above if you don’t want to get “out”- and many of the usual ones like hide and seek (only sometimes it was called Ice Pais, maybe named after ‘I spy’ played in some western countries).

I also vaguely remember collecting tons of mangoes in buckets on stormy nights in a big yard in a big house in a small town in A.P. There were four or five mango trees in the yard. I also watered some plants- I mean with a hosepipe in our front yard. I rode the bicycle very often, when I was old enough to do so. The club (run by the company where my parents worked) was another place I frequented. Badminton, Table Tennis were games that all the kids played, and so did I.

The small town school that I went to was not unique in any way, but it must have been doing something right. For, I did pretty well academically, and managed to grow up without an accent. That may not sound like a big deal, but I was to find out later in life that the early damage that an accent can inflict on you is tough to erase- it’s inscribed on your tongue, so to speak. I felt this most strongly about the ‘mallu’ accent, but many others are equally strong, I guess.

Movies were a strong influence. In a small town and minus television, any Hindi movie that was released (usually months later than its Bombay release) was a must-see. My first distinct memory is of a Rajesh Khanna blockbuster-Aradhana, with its superhit songs and a handsome R.K. in a double role. Another a little later was Anand, with its unique blend of philosophy of life and comedy. Many other movies of the day – Mere Humdum Mere Dost, Shikaar (Dharmendra), Anjaana, Jhuk Gaya Asman (Rajendra Kumar), Prince, Tumse Achcha Kaun Hai (Shammi Kapoor), Jigri Dost, Aulad, Humjoli (Jeetendra), and Jewel Thief, Guide (Dev Anand) followed, along with a lot of others in between.

This interest was to remain with me lifelong. Hindi movie music, captured in its prime by Radio Ceylon and Binaca Geet Mala, a weekly countdown show compered by the incomparable RJ Ameen Sayani, really fired our imagination. His skill with words, his silken voice, and the music…it was a heady combo- subhanallah!

Kishore Kumar with his divine voice was another youth icon that I instantly fell in love with. His songs, many of them tuned by the genius called R.D. Burman, became a rage. From Aandhi and Amar Prem to Kati Patang was a virtual feast for music lovers, and I soaked in every one of those masterpieces. Later, I came to appreciate the more serious numbers, though at the time, growing up, the more exuberant and romantic songs were my favourites- Tum Bin Jaoon Kahan, Nadiya Se Dariya, Yeh Shaam Mastani, Yeh Jo Mohabbat hai, Yeh Jawani Hai Diwani, and so on. There were some good songs from other music composers as well, but the R.D. Burman tunes seemed a class apart. Some other popular Kishore Kumar songs were from the movies Dushman, Blackmail, and Julie.

Bobby was a cult movie of those days. I was as besotted with the lovely 18 year old Dimple Kapadia as anyone else during that time. Many years later, as I was leaving for the U.S. to get a Ph.D., another Dimple movie, Saagar, was to be my last before my departure. She was probably 30 then, but as sensuous as in the Bobby days.

Another interest was cricket. I chose to play cricket in school (HPS, Ramanthapur) at Hyderabad. I was an opening bat, and we played without helmets in those days. We played league cricket matches every Sunday in season, and everybody in the cricket team was treated like a hero whether we won or lost. We had a very enterprising fast bowler in our team, Pritipal Singh Gandhi. His favourite trick was to get the runner out when he started walking out to take a run, before the ball was bowled. This technique was perfected by Vinoo Mankad, and some people referred to the runner as being ‘Mankaded’ when he got out that way.

I fielded in the slips, and one of the horrors of that position I remember was dropping Saad Bin Jung (Tiger Pataudi’s nephew) who played against us in an inter-school match. But I had a few good catches to which I held on too. Harsha Bhogle who is now a famous commentator was also in my rival team in school. Later, we both studied at Osmania University engineering college, and went on to do our MBAs from different IIMs- he to A, I to B.

One of my vivid memories of the cricket outings is when we won the prestigious Pentangular Trophy (this tournament was played between the Public Schools and the Kendriya Vidyalayas). We got treated by the school to a lunch and a movie- Lawrence of Arabia, at Sangeet cinema.

Our cricket coach in school was Mr. Habib Khan- a tall, imposing, focused but friendly guy who coached us all very sincerely, particularly in the basics. I sometimes wonder looking at the Indian cricket team, if they had only learnt batting and bowling from him…..

We had in our hostel a geography teacher we used to call Dracula- I have even forgotten what his actual name was. He was, unlike the name we had given him, very friendly, and used to let us make tea in his room late nights when we were studying for our exams. That was really helpful for some of us “maggus”.

I had been one of the first to join the new branch of the Hyderabad Public School at Ramanthapur when it started in 1972. Some of the friends made there kept popping up in later life. Ram Seshu, who became an advertising whiz kid with MAA Bozell, and Praveen Gottipalli, my friend and competitor for the first rank, who went off to the U.S. and now has a foot in India and another there. Some others, I never saw again.

There was a guy in the hostel, Mohiddin Khwaja, with whom I made good friends. His dad was in Air India posted in Saudi Arabia, and he seemed to get a lot of exotic stuff like perfumes from abroad, which was a novelty in those days. Another guy, Uttam Kumar, became an entrepreneur in Hyderabad with his granite company, but we never met after school. I did meet Srinivas Rao, a roommate who became a homeopathic doctor, and was the son of the owner of the best homeo store in Hyderabad called Ramakrishna Homeo stores on Bank Street. We also had the son of G. Pulla Reddy Sweets’ owner in my class, and the son of a cloth shop owner, Nadir Sadruddin, who always stood out in his terricot uniform.

A lot of teachers in school were very close, as we lived together in boarding school. The Physics teacher, Mr. Chandrashekhar, was a really sweet guy. The English teacher, Mr. Anjaneya Sastry, was at his eloquent best when he taught us Keats and Shelley’s poetry. I can still remember him describing the “little birdie” while teaching us Ode to a Nightingale. He was also famous for certain words that he pronounced in a funny way- for instance, England for him was “Englaand” and his Hindi was also anglicized! We had a very strict guy, Mr. Mathan, for P.T., and his gaze was enough to get everyone **** scared. Mr. Venkiah, the bio teacher, was famous for his long winded sentences, which he expected us to write down (copy) verbatim.

The school days were mostly fun, though I also liked the vacations when one could relax and play some other games at the club, or meet boys and girls (especially girls, as I was in a boys’ school) from other families back home. We had two friends, Manoj and Subodh, with whom we played a lot of Bridge (the card game) during the holidays. My brother and I were the others in the foursome. We played for hours, usually taking breaks only for lunch. It was an excellent way to pass the holidays in a hot and dusty small town. I still miss those Bridge sessions.

My parents also had a lot of Bridge-playing sessions with their friends at home, and I sat and watched these. A lot of the families were good friends, like the Tilaks, the Kenjales, the Kaushiks and the Talpallikars, and we, the next generation, also met a lot of times later, in India and abroad.

A lasting memory of the 1975 summer was seeing Sholay in 70 mm. in the grand old theatre called Ramakrishna (owned by the film star N.T. Rama Rao). The stereophonic sound effects, and the movie itself, were really awesome, and the only comparisons that came to mind were some grand Hollywood movies like Mackenna’s Gold, or Where Eagles Dare, in terms of the impact they had on me.

My childhood was spent in the coal belt of Andhra, in towns like Kothagudem, Bellampalli and Ramagundam. The distinguishing feature of these places was the heat, but there were compensations like the club, good company of other kids, and some scenic rivers- Godavari, in particular, which ran close to most of these places. There was also a picnic spot on the river Kinnersani close to Kothagudem, where the club arranged day-long picnics regularly. I even remember a couple of moonlight picnics, which were a lot of fun.

Rain Pictures IIM Indore

Some pics from today from the IIM Indore campus, just before the afternoon rain.










Some Meetings are Just Too Good

 Ok, one such meetup happened yesterday, with old friends, Prachi Jain and Pratishtha Batra, of IIM Indore fame. There was a new member too ...

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