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Today's topics:

* Life lessons from Narayana Murthy - 1 messages, 1 author
 
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/53d216de3a602cac?hl=en
* Releasing First Issue of BM's magazine: Bhumi - 1 messages, 1 author
 
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/8ca31c9c396fa588?hl=en

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TOPIC: Life lessons from Narayana Murthy
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/53d216de3a602cac?hl=en
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== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Thurs, May 31 2007 2:08 am 
From: vikram Bharat  



Life lessons from Narayana Murthy 

May 28, 2007 | 13:58 IST 

N R 
Narayana Murthy, chief mentor and chairman of the board, Infosys Technologies, 
delivered a pre-commencement lecture at the New York University (Stern School 
of 
Business) on May 9. It is a scintillating speech, Murthy speaks about?the 
lessons?he learnt from his life and career. We present it for our readers: 


Dean Cooley, faculty, staff, distinguished guests, and, most 
importantly, the graduating class of 2007, it is a great privilege to speak at 
your commencement ceremonies. 

I thank Dean Cooley and Prof Marti 
Subrahmanyam for their kind invitation. I am exhilarated to be part of such a 
joyous occasion. Congratulations to you, the class of 2007, on completing an 
important milestone in your life journey. 

After some thought, I have 
decided to share with you some of my life lessons. I learned these lessons in 
the context of my early career struggles, a life lived under the influence of 
sometimes unplanned events which were the crucibles that tempered my character 
and reshaped my future. 

I would like first to share some of these key 
life events with you, in the hope that these may help you understand my 
struggles and how chance events and unplanned encounters with influential 
persons shaped my life and career. 

Later, I will share the deeper life 
lessons that I have learned. My sincere hope is that this sharing will help you 
see your own trials and tribulations for the hidden blessings they can be. 


The first event occurred when I was a graduate student in Control Theory 
at IIT, Kanpur, in India. At breakfast on a bright Sunday morning in 1968, I 
had 
a chance encounter with a famous computer scientist on sabbatical from a 
well-known US university. 

He was discussing exciting new developments in 
the field of computer science with a large group of students and how such 
developments would alter our future. He was articulate, passionate and quite 
convincing. I was hooked. I went straight from breakfast to the library, read 
four or five papers he had suggested, and left the library determined to study 
computer science. 

Friends, when I look back today at that pivotal 
meeting, I marvel at how one role model can alter for the better the future of 
a 
young student. This experience taught me that valuable advice can sometimes 
come 
from an unexpected source, and chance events can sometimes open new doors. 


The next event that left an indelible mark on me occurred in 1974. The 
location: Nis, a border town between former Yugoslavia, now Serbia, and 
Bulgaria. I was hitchhiking from Paris back to Mysore, India, my home town. 


By the time a kind driver dropped me at Nis railway station at 9 p.m. on 
a Saturday night, the restaurant was closed. So was the bank the next morning, 
and I could not eat because I had no local money. I slept on the railway 
platform until 8.30 pm in the night when the Sofia Express pulled in. 


The only passengers in my compartment were a girl and a boy. I struck a 
conversation in French with the young girl. She talked about the travails of 
living in an iron curtain country, until we were roughly interrupted by some 
policemen who, I later gathered, were summoned by the young man who thought we 
were criticising the communist government of Bulgaria. 

The girl was led 
away; my backpack and sleeping bag were confiscated. I was dragged along the 
platform into a small 8x8 foot room with a cold stone floor and a hole in one 
corner by way of toilet facilities. I was held in that bitterly cold room 
without food or water for over 72 hours. 

I had lost all hope of ever 
seeing the outside world again, when the door opened. I was again dragged out 
unceremoniously, locked up in the guard's compartment on a departing freight 
train and told that I would be released 20 hours later upon reaching Istanbul. 
The guard's final words still ring in my ears ?-- ?"You are from a friendly 
country called India and that is why we are letting you go!" 

The journey 
to Istanbul was lonely, and I was starving. This long, lonely, cold journey 
forced me to deeply rethink my convictions about Communism. Early on a dark 
Thursday morning, after being hungry for 108 hours, I was purged of any last 
vestiges of affinity for the Left. 

I concluded that entrepreneurship, 
resulting in large-scale job creation, was the only viable mechanism for 
eradicating poverty in societies. 

Deep in my heart, I always thank the 
Bulgarian guards for transforming me from a confused Leftist into a determined, 
compassionate capitalist! Inevitably, this sequence of events led to the 
eventual founding of Infosys in 1981. 

While these first two events were 
rather fortuitous, the next two, both concerning the Infosys journey, were more 
planned and profoundly influenced my career trajectory. 

On a chilly 
Saturday morning in winter 1990, five of the seven founders of Infosys met in 
our small office in a leafy Bangalore suburb. The decision at hand was the 
possible sale of Infosys for the enticing sum of $1 million. After nine years 
of 
toil in the then business-unfriendly India, we were quite happy at the prospect 
of seeing at least some money. 

ALSO READ: The amazing success story of 
Infosys 

I let my younger colleagues talk about their future plans. 
Discussions about the travails of our journey thus far and our future 
challenges 
went on for about four hours. I had not yet spoken a word. 

Finally, it 
was my turn. I spoke about our journey from a small Mumbai apartment in 1981 
that had been beset with many challenges, but also of how I believed we were at 
the darkest hour before the dawn. I then took an audacious step. If they were 
all bent upon selling the company, I said, I would buy out all my colleagues, 
though I did not have a cent in my pocket. 


There was a stunned 
silence in the room. My colleagues wondered aloud about my foolhardiness. But I 
remained silent. However, after an hour of my arguments, my colleagues changed 
their minds to my way of thinking. I urged them that if we wanted to create a 
great company, we should be optimistic and confident. They have more than lived 
up to their promise of that day. 

In the seventeen years since that day, 
Infosys has grown to revenues in excess of $3.0 billion, a net income of more 
than $800 million and a market capitalisation of more than $28 billion, 28,000 
times richer than the offer of $1 million on that day. 

In the process, 
Infosys has created more than 70,000 well-paying jobs, 2,000-plus dollar- 
millionaires and 20,000-plus rupee millionaires. 

A final story: On a hot 
summer morning in 1995, a Fortune-10 corporation had sequestered all their 
Indian software vendors, including Infosys, in different rooms at the Taj 
Residency hotel in Bangalore so that the vendors could not communicate with one 
another. This customer's propensity for tough negotiations was well-known. Our 
team was very nervous. 

First of all, with revenues of only around $5 
million, we were minnows compared to the customer. 

Second, this customer 
contributed fully 25% of our revenues. The loss of this business would 
potentially devastate our recently-listed company. 

Third, the customer's 
negotiation style was very aggressive. The customer team would go from room to 
room, get the best terms out of each vendor and then pit one vendor against the 
other. This went on for several rounds. Our various arguments why a fair price 
?-- ?one that allowed us to invest in good people, R&D, infrastructure, 
technology and training -- was actually in their interest failed to cut any ice 
with the customer. 

By 5 p.m. on the last day, we had to make a decision 
right on the spot whether to accept the customer's terms or to walk out. 


All eyes were on me as I mulled over the decision. I closed my eyes, and 
reflected upon our journey until then. Through many a tough call, we had always 
thought about the long-term interests of Infosys. I communicated clearly to the 
customer team that we could not accept their terms, since it could well lead us 
to letting them down later. But I promised a smooth, professional transition to 
a vendor of customer's choice. 

This was a turning point for Infosys. 


Subsequently, we created a Risk Mitigation Council which ensured that we 
would never again depend too much on any one client, technology, country, 
application area or key employee. The crisis was a blessing in disguise. Today, 
Infosys has a sound de-risking strategy that has stabilised its revenues and 
profits. 

I want to share with you, next, the life lessons these events 
have taught me. 

1. I will begin with the importance of learning from 
experience. It is less important, I believe, where you start. It is more 
important how and what you learn. If the quality of the learning is high, the 
development gradient is steep, and, given time, you can find yourself in a 
previously unattainable place. I believe the Infosys story is living proof of 
this. 

Learning from experience, however, can be complicated. It can be 
much more difficult to learn from success than from failure. If we fail, we 
think carefully about the precise cause. Success can indiscriminately reinforce 
all our prior actions. 

2. A second theme concerns the power of chance 
events. As I think across a wide variety of settings in my life, I am struck by 
the incredible role played by the interplay of chance events with intentional 
choices. While the turning points themselves are indeed often fortuitous, how 
we 
respond to them is anything but so. It is this very quality of how we respond 
systematically to chance events that is crucial. 

3. Of course, the 
mindset one works with is also quite critical. As recent work by the 
psychologist, Carol Dweck, has shown, it matters greatly whether one believes 
in 
ability as inherent or that it can be developed. Put simply, the former view, a 
fixed mindset, creates a tendency to avoid challenges, to ignore useful 
negative 
feedback and leads such people to plateau early and not achieve their full 
potential. 

The latter view, a growth mindset, leads to a tendency to 
embrace challenges, to learn from criticism and such people reach ever higher 
levels of achievement (Krakovsky, 2007: page 48). 

4. The fourth theme is 
a cornerstone of the Indian spiritual tradition: self-knowledge. Indeed, the 
highest form of knowledge, it is said, is self- knowledge. I believe this 
greater awareness and knowledge of oneself is what ultimately helps develop a 
more grounded belief in oneself, courage, determination, and, above all, 
humility, all qualities which enable one to wear one's success with dignity and 
grace. 

Based on my life experiences, I can assert that it is this belief 
in learning from experience, a growth mindset, the power of chance events, and 
self- reflection that have helped me grow to the present. 

Back in the 
1960s, the odds of my being in front of you today would have been zero. Yet 
here 
I stand before you! With every successive step, the odds kept changing in my 
favour, and it is these life lessons that made all the difference. 

My 
young friends, I would like to end with some words of advice. Do you believe 
that your future is pre-ordained, and is already set? Or, do you believe that 
your future is yet to be written and that it will depend upon the sometimes 
fortuitous events? 

Do you believe that these events can provide turning 
points to which you will respond with your energy and enthusiasm? Do you 
believe 
that you will learn from these events and that you will reflect on your 
setbacks? Do you believe that you will examine your successes with even greater 
care? 

I hope you believe that the future will be shaped by several 
turning points with great learning opportunities. In fact, this is the path I 
have walked to much advantage. 

A final word: When, one day, you have 
made your mark on the world, remember that, in the ultimate analysis, we are 
all 
mere temporary custodians of the wealth we generate, whether it be financial, 
intellectual, or emotional. The best use of all your wealth is to share it with 
those less fortunate. 

I believe that we have all at some time eaten the 
fruit from trees that we did not plant. In the fullness of time, when it is our 
turn to give, it behooves us in turn to plant gardens that we may never eat the 
fruit of, which will largely benefit generations to come. I believe this is our 
sacred responsibility, one that I hope you will shoulder in time. 

Thank 
you for your patience. Go forth and embrace your future with open arms, and 
pursue enthusiastically your own life journey of discovery! 


       
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TOPIC: Releasing First Issue of BM's magazine: Bhumi
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/8ca31c9c396fa588?hl=en
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== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Thurs, May 31 2007 1:28 pm 
From: "Bharat Uday Mission - National Executive"  


Dear Volunteers of the mission,

Please join hands with the National Executive, in congratulating the
recently formed Magazine team in releasing the first issue of the Monthly
magazine of the mission, titled "Bhumi". (File attached to email and
uploaded on main yahoo group [EMAIL PROTECTED] It will be
uploaded on the website soon)

The magazine was one of the most awaited things by everyone in the Mission,
and I'm sure this magazine will go a long way in bridging the communication
within the mission.

The members of the team, mentioned below, under the able coordination of
Santosh ji, have made this wonderful beginning and deserve our appreciation.


Santosh Nargund - Editor   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Krishanu - Jt-Editor
Abhinav V - internal Reporter [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Prasad S - External Reporter
Arun V - External Reporter
Rupesh G - Consultant
Dattatray T - Consultant
Vishnu S - Consultant

With best wishes,
Abhijit Meenakshi
Secretary(Organization), BM national executive.

-- 
"We have only one Passion, The Rise of a Great Nation."

www.bharatudaymission.org
 



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