Sunday, February 27, 2005

Finance seminar

From The Telegraph, Friday, February 18, 2005

Students of Xavier Labour Relations Institute (XLRI) got an opportunity to interact with USA-based alumni K.N. Venkatraman at a seminar “Careers in Forex, risk management and derivatives market”. The finance association of XLRI, Finax, organised the session. A distinguished alumnus of the 1990 batch, Venkatraman owns a consultancy firm in Delaware, USA. The interactive session was conducted through video-conferencing.

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Saturday, February 19, 2005

Politics D-graded by B-grads

From The Times of India, Feb 14, 2005


JAMSHEDPUR: There is some bad news for the Rabri Devis and Chautalas of the country. B-school grads are disillusioned with the political system in the country and some of them are all set to take the political bastion by storm - armed with a vision of "people management".
If this assembly election has seen more than two MBAs, both from foreign universities contesting against political veterans, Jharkhand can expect more management gurus in politics in future - if concern expressed by a student of the Xavier Institute of Labour relations (XLRI) for the country is any indication. Shashank Abhishek who hails from the mica town of Giridih has a sincere urge to weed out "the crop of politicians who are dividing the country on caste and community lines.
The first-year student of this management school, which dominates the human resource segment in Asia, visualises himself as a political leader in future but not before he establishes himself in the corporate world to earn some big money. "Both business and politics are about managing people and if I can manage my business with elan, why not politics?
However, a majority of students, who had just graduated into voters and gathered at the cafeteria on Sunday evening, preferred to remain aloof from politics and politicians and most of them did not have the urge to even exercise their franchise. "It's a waste really since my vote will neither change the system nor will it raise the poor voter turnout in the country," said Kaushik Venkatraman, who was registered as a voter in Chennai.

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Friday, February 18, 2005

Memorable Day

The Telegraph, Friday, February 11, 2005

It was a memorable day for the students of Xavier Labour Relations Institute as they got to meet US consul-general George N. Sibley.

Sibley, who paid a visit to the campus to address the management students at a function, spoke on Indo-US relations and rising business opportunities. He said the relation between the two nations has improved, paving the way for development. He stressed the importance of exchange programmes among students of the two countries.

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Friday, February 11, 2005

Crackling start

From The Financial Express, 10 Jan 2005


B-schools that took the placement plunge early this year have seen heady rewards

The recruiter’s verdict is the litmus test for any B-school’s talent pool. And in some non-IIMs, where this year’s placement has already happened, the mood is gung-ho.

Ghaziabad-based Institute of Management Technology (IMT) has every reason to smile this year. All its 165 final year students were placed on day one and its first batch of Human Resources Management students had multiple options. About 47 companies participated in the campus placement and quite a few had to leave empty-handed since a student can take only one offer as per the placement rules.

“This year our emphasis was on the service sector as it is doing very well,” says Nilanjan Chattopadhyay, chairman, placements at IMT. The average salary this year at IMT was Rs 6.5 lakh as against Rs 5.92 lakh last year. The biggest recruiters were Citigroup, Satyam Computer Services, Idea Cellular and Wipro Technologies. Among the first timers were Cadburys, Reebok, Marico, Citigroup, Kotak Mahindra Bank, State Bank of India, CARE, Wipro Technologies and Birla Soft.

Similarly, at Bhubaneswar-based Xavier Institute of Management, all 113 graduating students were placed on Day 1 with 60 companies participating. In fact, each student had two to five offers and 14 companies, including two overseas ones, had to return empty-handed. Some companies like Wipro Consumer Care and ICICI Prudential could not find a place in student preference.

“We emphasised on quality this time unlike last year when we were worried about the quantity. But this year we had the problem of plenty,” says Professor Mukti Mishra, placement coordinator, XIM.

The highest lateral offer was for Rs 9 lakh from Wipro Technologies, followed by Rs 7.4 lakh by HSBC. The highest overseas offer was for $84,000 per annum by US-based Sierra Atlantic. The average salary was Rs 5.24 lakh per annum compared to last year’s Rs 4.65 lakh.

At SP Jain Institute of Management and Research in Mumbai, there’s been a 50% rise in the number of participating companies. “This has been one of the best years for placement for the institute in the last five years,” says Abbasali Gabula, chairperson, external relations, SPJIMR.

The advantage was that many students had the opportunity to chose from five job offers each this year. The salary offered at campus interviews has also doubled this year compared to last year. The companies which approached the institute included IBM, Accenture, KPMG, Infosys, Cadburys and Citibank.

Similarly, in its first year of placements after becoming a deemed university, Mumbai-based Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies (NMIMS) has witnessed 100% placements on day one itself.

Says NMIMS vice-chancellor, NM Kondap, “Last year, we had seen 100% placements in three days. Placements this year, show the acceptability by corporates to our deemed university status. Our 240 students that were placed this time, include 50 laterals and 25 plus pre-placement offers. We had to actually convey to some companies that all students have been already placed.”

NMIMS saw over 350 corporates, both Indian and MNCs, across sectors like IT and related industries, FMCG, consulting, financial services, media, auto and pharma, visiting its campus. The highest salary package offered was Rs eight lakh per annum, while the average package was Rs 5.5 lakh.

At XLRI Jamshedpur, though the final placement will take place on March 5, the campus is abuzz with news trickling in of big lateral offers. Though the placement committee is tight-lipped about the companies participating this year, the grapevine has it that quite a number of new consultancies, including the Boston Consulting Group, have shown interest in XLRI.

Marketing, telecom, banks and FMCG companies have in the past always shown interest in this B-School. The trend is likely to continue, with indications being that the IT sector is looking at large numbers this time.

“XLRI is looking forward to a successful placement season; the trend projected by the lateral placement process has been encouraging and is expected to continue in the final placement,” is the official line at this point of time.

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Wednesday, February 09, 2005

XLRI kid wows world - Kumar Anand wins laurels at global managers’ meet

Excerpts from The Telegraph, Monday, February 07, 2005

His paper on “intellectual capital and innovation” was adjudged “the most thought-provoking” one in the 26th MacMaster World Congress held in Canada. The sole delegate from India, his vision drew plaudits from no less a person than the former deputy Prime Minister and federal finance minister of Canada John Manley.

Meet Kumar Anand, a second-year business management student of Xavier Labour Relations Institute, who has returned to the city after winning laurels in the international circuit. “It is a great feeling. I am proud that my efforts have been rewarded,” said Anand.

The McMaster World Congress, a forum that brings management brains from across the globe together, was organised by the DeGroote School of Business, Canada, in association with the Management of Innovation and New Technology Research Centre (Canada) and the Taiwan Intellectual Capital Research Centre. The three-day conference was held from January 19 at Hamilton in Canada. Students from 70 universities across the world, including the University of Missouri, USA, Technical University of Lisbon, Portugal, and University of Basilicata, Italy, took part in the meet.

Anand's paper titled — “Managing Intellectual Capital in Growth Organisations in New Knowledge Economy” suggested a framework for organisations to manage their intellectual capital in the present hyper-competitive global economy.

Wednesday, February 02, 2005

India, China could become the tail that wagged global IT dog’

Excerpts from The Financial Express, National Edition, Feb 2, 2005

JAMSHEDPUR, FEB 1: The share of India and China in the global IT industry would go up in the near future as per Nik Dholakia.

Giving his views on the business process outsourcing (BPO) scenario the world over, especially in the Indian and the US context, Prof Dholakia said the momentum was definitely tilted towards China and India.
The global IT industry is currently estimated to comprise an electronics goods market worth $300 billion, a computers and software market worth $1,000 billion and a $1,300 billion telecom market.
Speaking at XLRI campus here on IT-enabled globalisation of what he described as his “aerial view” of India, Prof Dholakia said even though the numbers were very small and India’s contribution was not even a drop in the bucket, yet in the global IT industry, India and China (the latter because of its hardware base) could become the tail that wagged the global dog.

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