IBS Hyderabad organizes Alumni Meet ‘Nostalgia 2012′

To take a walk down the corridors of NOSTALGIA 2012, the Alumni Meet of IBS Business School was inaugurated on the evening of 1st December. The meet opened on a traditional note by the lighting of the lamp at 6:00 PM. This was followed by the welcome dance performed on Ganesh Vandana.

The event was graced by more than 300 alumni and their family, belonging to various batches from across the country. Speaking on the occassion, the Chief Guest of the evening, Mr.MV Krishna Rao, IPS, the former Director-General of Sashastra Seema Bal and former Hyderabad City Commissioner, very well underlined the emotions of the evening, the importance of yesteryears in forming the future. He congratulated the Alumni on their success and encouraged the young minds in walking on the footsteps of their seniors.

The event was also attended by Varun Agarwal, Film Director and writer, and also Shobharani Yasaswy, the President of the ICFAI Society. The evening witnessed a successful amalgamation of talent, creativity and entertainment. The Alumni were treated to a host of brilliant performances that included soulful renditions of songs, stellar group and solo dance performances, comedy show to tickle the funny bones, and a feat of rocking numbers of Diatribe, the rock-band of IBS.

All this was interspersed with clicking of pictures at the photobooth set up by Nazaria, for everyone to take a piece of memory back home. After the formal dinner, the courtyard was converted into a pulsating dance floor for everyone to shake a leg and head to the music of the DJ. The night came to an end around midnight.

Alumni expressed their pride in the superb team work done by their juniors on campus in organizing a glitzy event like this. As goodbyes were said ,to reliving the best two years of their life,the Alumni were sure that they would return again to the campus.

“Such a place as this will bring nostalgia to the depths of my heart.
Reminisce if I must, and I shall.
I guess this is what reunions are meant for,
because this was never meant to last like it has.
So long old friend…onward we go …..”

Are you ready to become a manager?

Now that the selection process and admission formalities are complete the path to MBA is almost clear. The aim of this post is to inform the latest batch of students regarding things they can expect from an MBA college and degree.

Mental preparation before a master’s degree is of utmost importance. This comprises of your personal goals/objectives as well as expectations from an MBA course. It is vital that a student is in the right frame of mind and well prepared before joining the course as MBA is known to be a grueling endeavour. However the reputation that precedes the course is mainly due to the sudden barrage of information and umpteen options available. If a student is mentally prepared regarding his own goals and what he expects from the course, these two hectic years could turn out to be a very pleasant affair.

Before starting the course it is advisable that every student maps out his objectives from the course and makes an action plan clearly stating where he sees himself after completing MBA, as well as 5 years down the line. An action plan like this will help guide a student during tough decisions like which specialization to choose and which companies to apply for during placements. This action plan need not be a detailed 50 page document, it can be as concise or elaborate as you see fit. The rationale for this exercise is that students are ill prepared while joining an MBA.

Preparation for entrance exams requires brushing up on various techniques and topics, whereas preparation for the MBA course deals with being aware of your needs and expectations from the course and those expectations being translated to your daily activities. Once the course is in full swing there is hardly any time to prioritize your activities or contemplate on any issue. Though the word ‘pressure’ is used freely, if a student is clear about his course of action he will not be burdened by this pressure.

Start by listing out your skills, hobbies, interests etc and how these can be transformed into a career. Focus is something that is lacking amongst the students and a few early steps can be very helpful in guiding your future decisions. Once you have listed down your personal interests and desires, map it against the course and see how you can avail maximum benefit from your course/college. In terms of resources and infrastructure there will never be a scarcity during MBA, however unless a student is clear about what he wants these resources will be underutilized. So take some time out for yourself and understand the implications of being a manager in two years time.

In terms of essentials that you will need for your hostel rooms, everything will be available on campus in IBS Hyderabad. Starting from mattresses, toiletries, curtains to snacks and beverages you will find everything on campus. So make good use of the time left before the course starts and good luck on your journey to becoming successful managers of the future!

Blossoming Backyard

International Placements: These two words can cause a lot of excitement in any student aspiring for an MBA degree. The chance to secure a job in a foreign country and start a life there is a very attractive proposition while job-hunting. Starting from higher salaries, better standard of living, opportunity to travel etc there are many reasons why people choose a job offer abroad.

Brain Drain was a serious concern for a country like India but recent statistics reveal a slightly different story. The Indians who have gone abroad in the past few decades and started families are slowly moving back to India. This phenomenon is attributed to the various opportunities that are sprouting up in our country. Gone are the days when people used to move to the ‘land of opportunity’ and try to realize their own version of the ‘American dream’. India, along with few other nations has announced its arrival to the developed world. With Indian firms consistently usurping their global competition, the time has come to realize the potential of a country like ours.

Ironic as it may seem, while hoards of entrepreneurs flock to India looking for an opportunity to start something big, our very own students are more worried about international placements. As a market, the potential for growth in India is extraordinary. The mindsets of our students however are almost ordinary. Moving to a developed country and working a 9 to 5 job was a good option two decades ago. The infrastructure and growth potential of our nation was mediocre at that point of time. Presently India is touted to become a superpower in the next couple of decades! The reason why NRI’s and their children are moving back to India is because in terms of opportunity, we are scaling great heights as a nation. A booming economy with diverse cultures in each state along with a population to match is our USP right now.

As long as students are concerned, there are the ones who don’t want to leave their homeland and there are the others who are aching to go elsewhere and seek fortunes. This article is meant for the latter bunch and all I intend to say is that, if its fortunes you are after, no better place to start than your own blossoming backyard.

What’s in a ranking? It is just a lack of Clarity of Thought!

- By Abhinav Kanagat. Abhinav is an alumnus, class of 2012 (IBS Hyderabad). He has just started with his first job. Abhinav is a budding musician and was part of the band, Diatribe. He was also the President of the Sport Club – V.A.P.S at IBS Hyderabad.

Education should never be thought of as a one-sided affair; teachers teaching and students learning. That never happens. Even at school, it is the students who are driven and focused, who score well and make something of themselves. Clarity of thought has to exist to enable learning and application. Without clarity of thought, we’re simply no-good.

There is this lack of clarity that I have seen among our generation. I dare not generalize it, albeit I have seen it, so I know it exists, and in a large chunk of the population. I have met students during my time as an MBA pursuant, who had absolutely no clue as to why they jumped to an MBA right after their under-graduation.

This trend is increasing, and thus is becoming a cause for concern for not just other students, but also managements of various b-schools spread across the country. What doesn’t help is the lack of career counselors in the country or the lack of will of the so-called torch bearers of education to do something about it.

It could still have been easy to tackle had the quality of education being provided to these young impressionable minds been of certain standards. This however has become the Achilles’ heel for the higher education system in India, as more than 2000 institutes have sprouted up for MBA alone, with no set principles on quality education to hold them back.

We have regulatory bodies in place who are probably (and hopefully) working overtime to ensure that certain standards and parameters are met or the colleges which do not meet the requirements are either forced to meet them or are closed down (like many in the recent past). But even they become helpless when students start enrolling into colleges, based on the rankings given by the various consultancies, magazines etc.

What are these ratings/rankings based on? The placements, infrastructure, faculty pool and student pool in general, right? But then how is the rating done? How are the benchmarks set? Who defines what is good or bad, if the benchmarks are worth being benchmarks or not?

I ask these questions because there are many institutes in India which, though not recognized by the governing bodies, still manage crazy placements. These however, won’t even get a mention in the rankings! Why? The answer lies in what the target audience wants to see.

I say this with so much confidence because of the comments people post on the online versions of these ratings and rankings. Wherever one feels the ranking/rating is not up to one’s expectation, it becomes easy to claim bias.

If this is the case, and everybody knows it at the back of their minds, why do people still check rankings before enrolling into institutes? It is simply because the ‘system’ has become as such.

There are hundreds of ‘coaching centers’ across India which declare they know the tricks to crack competitive examinations. Some, no doubt add a lot of value in terms of the new approach they set their students on, but many others are just in it for the money – which mind you is HUGE!

The whole shebang of “watch out for the rankings” starts here. I’m not saying that the system is wrong and should be done away with. I’m saying we need more forums for students to express the kind of a value addition the institute has provided to them since they joined it. What has been their experience, and in their view, if a) they are now clear about what an MBA stands for and b) if they think that the learning were worth it. This, to not discount how the institute treated them, rather to open up to future students a platform in order to provide them a better insight and understanding in order to set their expectations right from the word “go”. For it is only the ones who have gone through the grind of an MBA degree course who know and truly understand if they were right in taking the plunge right after their under-graduation or not.

Such interactions promise to provide confused young adults with some sort of clarity on what an MBA actually is all about and whether or not it is better to learn the ropes of the corporate world first before jumping on the bandwagon and storming into b-schools. There is a reason why ‘freshers’ are not allowed to enroll in well established b-schools abroad. The is a sense of certain maturity that the course demands, and such maturity comes only after one has been responsible for earning his/her own bread for a while.

Nothing changes over-night for sure, but we do have institutes in India too which follow the same principle. B-schools like ISB Hyderabad are held in such high repute because they take in students who are aware of themselves and their surroundings. This not only helps the employers when they come for campus placements, but the students as well; as their expectations are more or less set based on the market environment and based on their experience.

All I’m trying to say through these examples is that we are in dire need of educational reforms in the country. The fact our society is dependent in nature still, just presses the need more.

When a student joins an institute, s/he picks the best option not just as per them, but also as per the exposure and the opinion others have about it. When a fresher joins an institute, until and unless s/he has an inherent talent to lead, s/he cannot expect packages in the millions. There is always a learning curve involved. Sure most will get into the millions a few years down the line, but that will only happen once they prove their worth to the organization(s) they work for.

Imagine yourself as a recruiter who goes to any campus for recruitment, will you pick a person who has no experience, solely on the basis of his/her grade point average? No. You will want to know if s/he can fit into the work ethic of your company. Agreed it is a little easier to mold freshers into the working environment of most businesses, but it is relatively smarter to hire ones with work experience, because they will bring an aura of maturity along with them to the organization.

Experience teaches one how to live and survive in the toughest of conditions. It is this experience that most MBA pursuants and graduates lack. There have been many comments from CEOs of top Indian and Multi-National companies that the standard of Managers being churned out from the thousands of B-Schools across the country has gone down considerably. This has a bull whip effect on campus placements, and preferences and priorities change.

It is therefore ESSENTIAL that one asks oneself why s/he wants to do an MBA. If the answer to this question is simply to make more money, then I request such individuals to reconsider. Even the best of the best b-schools don’t promise millions of rupees to freshers. It is up to the individual to prove their worth.

If one is so naïve as to think that just because s/he joins an IIM or an FMS, that one’s placement with a 7 figure starting salary is guaranteed, one could not be more wrong. Which brings us back to the first point made in this Blog – Teaching can never be one way traffic.

While deciding which college to enroll for, if one knows their reasons for pursuing MBA and has set practical expectations, I guess it becomes immaterial what the college one is joining is ranked, for even a college ranked 100th on the list has recruiters coming to them. If the aspirant is worth it, s/he will get what s/he deserves.

The only consideration one should have during the admission process is whether or not the institute one is joining, is going to add value to him/her or not. If the aspirant is confused about the answer, it is best s/he look elsewhere.

Ratings may be a guideline that most aspirants go by, but it should not become the sole directive for joining a b-school.

If you know what you want from life, apart from things not under your control, nothing can stop you from achieving your goals. The going may be tougher in some places, but all experience is good experience, as you will then hold an edge over others who have always had a smooth sailing and are put in a tough spot. Going through tough situations makes one sharper and smarter. It opens one’s mind to new ideas.

Such is the kind of managers the world wants, people who can literally think beyond the boundaries of the books, and become visionaries of the future. If average is what one wants to be, then there is no help anywhere for you.

There is another thing that I would like to mention here; once you have made a decision in life, STICK TO IT. There is no point cribbing about what could have been if this or that had happened. You took a decision based on the circumstances you were in, and now is the time to back yourself. Cribbing is very easy, facing difficulties is tough, but true winners and leaders are not born out of easy lives. Strive always to get the best out of wherever you are and add value to yourself.

There is no turning back in life, and there should never be the need to turn back. If you believe in yourself, that is all that the world cares about and respects.

So when you decide to get a post graduate degree in management, be selfish and think! No matter where you go, keep adding value to yourself and your future shall be bright. Laziness has no place in the 21st century.

MBA – a closer look

Life is made up of choices.

Every day we need to make different choices.

Getting into an MBA is such a choice that will shape how you spend next 1 or 2 years of your life.

Here is what you can expect when you get into an MBA program.

  • You can expect meeting new people.
  • Expose your brain to new challenges.
  • Get you ready for a job or an entrepreneurial career.

The rigour and quality of these inputs may vary depending on the institution you choose.

But you will find them to some degree in most of the programs.

If you spend your time well while in campus – you can expect a bright future ahead.

Now companies – mostly in private sector but also in public sector, though to a lesser degree – hire MBAs.

The opportunities for all professionals (including MBAs) are on the rise. This is because many multinational corporations – enthused by positive sentiments for BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) are now entering India. Many are already here. They want to use large Indian middle class which is getting richer by day – to keep their growth going, as most of the

So opportunities are there. But do not think of MBA as a golden ticket to heaven.

Think of an MBA as a boot-camp for life which will give you a chance to broaden your horizon and get you ready to make a mark but you need to spend your time wisely, work hard, be consistent and stick to a plan.

You can get an MBA degree or diploma with lesser effort also but if you want to create a solid foundation for life then – be ready to exert yourself.

Take up leadership activities while you are at campus. Do not wait for somebody’s permission to do right things. Do what feels right. You may end up making some mistakes, but will come out richer with experience.

If you aim to work outside India then spend time honing your foreign language skills. All good institutions offer such classes for students who want to learn them.

Join extra-curricular activities. Play sports so that you remain focussed and energetic.

Academics

On the academic side, a business administration program is designed to develop competencies in people to handle business, resources, and activities – to work collectively towards a certain outcome – like increasing revenue or profitability.

The idea is that people who study in an MBA come out equipped with skill sets and knowledge – to help businesses stay competitive in ever changing business environment.

With the expansion of business and industry, there are a wide variety of career options available these days. Many departments / functions have come into being which were absent till recent years. People nowadays play specific roles in the workplace rather than handling almost everything.

Individuals now have more choices and one can choose a specialisation according to their liking, which results in increased job satisfaction and faster growth. Some of the general careers options available include the following-

Marketing and Sales: This function is about reaching out to your audiences with your offering. The end result is more revenue for the organisation. Here there are varied functions like promotions, advertising, selling, public relations etc.

Human Resource Development: The human resources functions involves every activity right from recruiting / hiring people to retaining them, tracking their performance, training them and to ensuring their well being / satisfaction.

Operations: The professionals working in this function ensure that business operations (production, services etc) happen efficiently. However the function entails different responsibilities in different industries. In retail the operations manager might mean the head of a store or the entire business, same is true for hospitality. In production specific industries, the operations manager oversees the quality of output and ensures compliance.

Finance: The take care of the numbers and track the inflow and outflow of money, do budgeting and track the spending of various departments.

Besides all these you may also be working in production, client servicing, liaising and other specialised functions which are industry specific.

An MBA provides you with the right skills to perform in the workplace.

Hope this post shared some insights.

If you have some questions please feel free to ask in comments.