dna's corner

My ramblings. My thoughts. Your feedback. Your thoughts. Simple.

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Location: San Francisco, California, United States

Out here to make a living, live a life and leave a mark.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Corporate types in NGOs.

The E-Street Entrepreneurs

An interesting article in Outlook India on the trend in very qualified professionals moving to the NGO. There are lots of bright people willing to work in the corporate world, not so many willing to work in the NGOs. So, people who opt to work for an NGO get far more responsibility than they could get in the corporate world. Also, the perceived cost of a wrong decision in an NGO is much less compared to that in an corporation. So, the NGOs are ready to take more risks, give more responsibilities to people with lesser experience and encourage out-of-the box wacky ideas. All terrific characteristics for a job. Except that the money is not great. But I am glad to see more people following their hearts rather than considering just the pay. Not that the pay is not important, but it should not be the only consideration. Interesting and fun jobs can be more easy on you, less strenuous, more enjoyable, more motivating. You would enjoy it more, find less need to spend money on distractions and entertainment to make up for the boring/irritating job. If you choose a job that pays less but is more fun, you would not be trying to buy fun with your extra money since the job will be so much fun and entertaining, you would not want to spend on fun and entertainment. Net result: You will have the same amount of money whether you are in a fun, low laying job or in a not so fun high paying job (I know I am stretching the logic a bit too much, but you get the drift.).

Some interesting snippets from the article (read these and you will get a summary of the linked article):

Recruited to run Pratham's operations in Gujarat, he ( Aditya Natraj, an MBA from the prestigious French management school, INSEAD, and a chartered accountant with seven years' corporate experience,) manages a team of 300 full-time staff and 3,000 volunteers that provides learning support to about 30,000 government schoolchildren in the state

Balaji Sampath, an IIT graduate with a doctorate in electrical engineering from the US, who runs AID India, an NGO that carries out science teaching and primary school programmes in 350 government schools in Tamil Nadu.

So, why are they doing it? This is social commitment defined by a strong dash of individualism. "A sense of adventure, and a desire for recognition, the need to be something more than a small fish in a corporate pond," says Rukmini Banerji of Pratham, herself a PhD in economics.

You have a freedom to experiment—and a chance to learn by failing.

A staff of two lakh, 32 districts, 202 blocks, 2,200 villages, 45,000 schools. No corporate job can give you this size, this scale, this complexity and these multiple levels of expectations.

Some, like Naandi CEO Manoj Kumar, are more than keen to attract corporate professionals. "Why are some of the best minds in the country selling soaps and shampoos?" he asks. Good question.

Blogs confused

"People everywhere confuse what they read in newspapers with news."
- AJ Liebling

What do people confuse what they read in blogs with?

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

How to dissuade yourself from becoming a blogger

Read this how to.
Tells you how to discourage yourself from starting a blog. Why am I pointing others to it? Less competition is good for me.

Well, if you are not convinced and decide you should start a blog, you might as well read this how to start a blog entry in WikiHow.

And as if there is'nt already enough info junk, learn how to start a conv. when you have nothing to talk about.

Enjoy WikiHow !!! Its very cool.

Friday, September 08, 2006

duh

I think the most effective solutions are "duh" ideas brought out at the right time at the right place for the right problem. People try to come up with all sorts of complicated solutions for the problem. To make a sweeping generalization statement, people dont take the time to understand the probem. They think the problem requires a complicated solution, assuming if there was a simple solution, someone would have already figured that out.

No. Solving something should not be about the solution It should be about the problem. Understand the problem. Trying existing simple solutions to fit the problem. See what existing techniques, tools, algorithms can bring to the table. The objective is to solve a problem. Not find a solution.

In fact, its my strong opinion that research is about finding problems, not finding solutions. Identify a clear problem and its easy to come up with a solution. Think about it. We come up with a solution and then discover that the solution does'nt work well. Why? Not because the solution is bad. Its because the solution dint fit the problem. There is probably a different problem that could have used this solution. So, what we did was went and found a solution to the wrong problem.

Thats why identifying and understanding the problem is so important. Discover problems. Finding solutions then becomes an easy task.

Inspired by http://headrush.typepad.com/creating_passionate_users/2006/09/why_duh_isnt.html

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

The Happy at Work Book

Check this book. Its available online and is about how you’d run your work life or your company based on happiness at work.

Sequels

Movie sequels in general are worse than the original. It is evident from the revenue generated comparison between the original and the sequels. (There could be other reasons as to why sequels perform worse - people losing interest in the story line, movie better options at that time, etc. Someother time on that.)

Yet, occasionally, there comes a movie that proves better than the original. The original was good. Very good in fact. The sequel bettered that. I am referring to Munna Bhai. Watched it yesterday and am writing to show my appreciation for a movie very well made.

Munna Bhai MBBS was very good. I enjoyed it a lot. I have a very poor impression about hindi movies and this movie showed not all Hindi movies have to depend on heavy action or ‘item numbers’. Then, along comes Lage Raho Munna Bhai. A movie about a gangster. Yet no fight sequence. No murder. It is an extremely well made movie, with very funny dialogues, terrific acting by Sunjay Dutt, some nice songs and a message for the people in a very entertaining manner. I am no movie critic but the people in the theater vouched for the movie through their claps. Yes. The audience explicitly showed their appreciation. Both during the interval break and after the movie ended. Not something you see often. The laughters from people of all ages in the very mixed audience showed how this movie appeals to all age groups.

Go ahead. Treat yourself. Watch Lage Raho Munna Bhai.