Just read this on Businessweek[1]...and I don't know what to say.

Kiran

[1] http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/dec2009/id2009121_864965.htm

India's Next Global Export: Innovation
By Reena Jana

Called jugaad, India's improvisational style of invention focuses on
being fast and cheap—attributes just right for these times

On a November afternoon, a dozen executives from companies including
investment banks Rothschild and Goldman Sachs (GS) and tech research
firm Gartner (IT) ringed a conference table in a brownstone on New
York's Upper East Side. They were there to learn how U.S. businesses
could develop products more cheaply and quickly by borrowing
strategies from India. Speaker Navi Radjou, who heads the recently
formed Centre for India & Global Business at England's Cambridge
University, summed up his advice in one word: jugaad.

A Hindi slang word, jugaad (pronounced "joo-gaardh") translates to an
improvisational style of innovation that's driven by scarce resources
and attention to a customer's immediate needs, not their lifestyle
wants. It captures how Tata Group, Infosys Technologies (INFY), and
other Indian corporations have gained international stature. The term
seems likely to enter the lexicon of management consultants, mingling
with Six Sigma, total quality, lean, and kaizen, the Japanese term for
continuous improvement.

Like previous management concepts, Indian-style innovation could be a
fad. Moreover, because jugaad essentially means inexpensive invention
on the fly, it can imply cutting corners, disregarding safety, or
providing shoddy service. "Jugaad means 'Somehow, get it done,' even
if it involves corruption," cautions M.S. Krishnan, a Ross business
school professor. "Companies have to be careful. They have to pursue
jugaad with regulations and ethics in mind."

More than a Fad?
The rise of jugaad raises another question: Do companies really need
to pay someone to tell them something that's as elementary as keep it
simple? "Having a consulting industry built around jugaad is almost
anathema to the word itself," says Robert C. Wolcott, executive
director of Northwestern University's Kellogg Innovation Network. "I'm
not sure how this is different from old-fashioned Yankee ingenuity."

Nonetheless, jugaad seems aligned with the times. Recession-slammed
corporations no longer have money to burn on research and development.
Likewise, U.S. consumers are trading down to good-enough products and
services. Meantime, the Indian economy continues to plow ahead despite
the global recession—it grew at a 7.9% clip in the third
quarter—suggesting its executives have a winning strategy.

Already, companies as varied as Best Buy (BBY), Cisco Systems (CSCO) ,
and Oracle (ORCL) are employing jugaad as they create products and
services that are more economical both for supplier and consumer. "In
today's challenging times, American companies are forced to learn to
operate with Plan Bs," notes Radjou. "But Indian engineers have long
known how to invent with a whole alphabet soup of options that work,
are cheap, and can be rolled out instantly. That is jugaad."

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