You have been called for an interview for your dream job. You have subjected yourself to being deep fried at the interviewer's mercy. Finally, you see signs of the interview coming to a close. They all look ready to call it a day. After you have finished answering the entire range of questions that the potential employers have asked, you are ready to run too. You silently wipe the invisible sweat off your brow and are getting ready to get up from the chair when the hiring manager asks you, "Do you have any questions?" That is an opportunity you could use to your advantage to help gather information that will help you decide whether or not this is the right role or organization for you.
A Sachet (pronounced Sa-Shay) was a small packet of perfumed powder placed in drawers to make clothes smell nice. It also refers to "a small sealed usually plastic envelope containing a small portion of a substance such as shampoo" says the Collins dictionary. In India the term has become synonymous with shampoos. These sachets contain upto 10-20ml of shampoo that can be a convenient and affordable option for people even at the Bottom of the Pyramid (BOP). The cola giants had Rs5 bottles of Coke and Pepsi primarily targeted at this range. Other consumer good companies - think FritoLay's packs of potato chips - have launched products in the magical five rupee zone. From shampoo to colas to cell phones, the sachet marketing option is attractive to an increasing number of consumers. The British Economist EF Schumacher blasted away at the traditional thinking of bigger is better in his work "Small Is Beautiful: Economics As If People Mattered" as long back as 1973. His idea was that for developing economies mass production needs to be replaced with "production by the masses".CavinKare made its shampoo (brandname Chik) available in a one rupee sachet since 1989. Ten years later they tried to dig deeper into the rural market by introducing a 4ml shampoo sachet for half a rupee. On 14 Decmber 1983 when Maruti Suzuki invited the Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to launch the first ten 800cc cars, the middle class of India soon made it their darling. It was small (as compared to the tank like Ambassador or the box like Fiat and perhaps a Standard Gazelle) and sleek. The sachet version of a car.
Who says Math nerds are cool? Stephen Baker's book turned even me into a raging fan of The Numerati - math nerds for the layperson. For many years I grew up being traumatised by Math and teachers of that dreaded subject. My relationship with that subject was pretty much like that of a fellow commuter riding the elevator during rush hour. You may stand in close proximity, but you never say hello to each other and certainly do not recognize each other at the supermarket as you trawl for discounts. In short I am the most unlikely contender to review a book on Math and Technology. So why am I recommending that you read The Numerati by Stephen Baker. The book makes Math an almost easy to understand and attractive subject. It made me wish I had paid more attention to Math and Stat in school and college. Stephen certainly makes the Math nerd look cool. The blurb promises the book to be "A captivating look at how a global math elite is predicting and altering our behavior -- at work, at the mall, and in bed." While doing the post on Predictive Analytics for HR Atanu had recommended that read this book and sent me the link on Businessweek on The Rise of The Numerati.
We inherit most employees at the workplace. We do not raise them in the strict sense that parents raise children. Parents lovingly will potty train their progeny, teach them language skills, values and give them unconditional love despite the pranks and bad report cards. They will willingly cart them around for soccer matches after school, suffer them through teenage tantrums and beyond. Is it even fair to expect managers to do somewhat similar stuff for their team members? For one the managers do not necessarily choose every one they need to manage. They hire some of them, some are inherited and some join teams as a result of the shifting sands of time. There is research that shows good schooling correlates particularly closely to higher I.Q.’s. One indication of the importance of school is that children’s I.Q.’s drop or stagnate over the summer months when they are on vacation (particularly for kids whose parents don’t inflict books or summer programs on them).
Just who is the Net Generation? If you are between 11 and 31 this year, this is the label that describes you. The web2.0 developments describe what this group wants. They want to collaborate, exchange ideas, opinions (and music), wants to multi task all the time and thinks TV is for the older humans. This gen spends money on texting friends. The technology that grows up as a response to this generation reflects these themes - social networking tools, individual expression and sharing stuff about their lives digitally that would make their parents blush. The generation that started using MySpace and Facebook when the previous gen believed MySpace refered to the messy corner of the house where the teenagers chucked their socks and underwear that would someday be washed.Lesson for organizations: Learn to use the social networking sites to build your company's presence on the net. Whether you like it or not others are already saying things about you and your organization - some of it is available on the net for you to see. You might as well get there and shape the opinion actively. If you want to be an employer of choice for them think whether your employer brand is attractive enough to attract the top 1% of the eligible workforce. Do you know what your net profile looks like? Do you have a page on Facebook or fan club on Orkut? Do any of your top leaders blog? Do your employees make fun videos on their phones and post it on youtube for the world to see? If you are still thinking that we are a serious company and work with serious people and all this Facebook page stuff is all fluff then think again. You will never be able to talk to the brightest NetGen employees and even if you manage to hire them you won't be able to retain them or engage them long enough. Does your company's Staffing team understand digital marketing at all? Here is a recruitment video made to attract teachers to New York city's inner schools which have traditionally had difficulty attracting the best teachers. I love the tag " I teach NYC because every day it teaches me"While you do not HAVE to be chronologically between 11 and 31 years old to be considered the Net Gen, let me put a small question to you. What do you use the phone for? To talk to my friends/ colleagues etc. you say. Ask the net gen this question and they will say the phone is used to tell the time, take pictures, listen to music, watch clips, text their friends and receive call from parents to tell them that they will be late. Let us try question two. If you have a deadline that you need to meet for your project submission will you lock yourself in a room where you are away from the sound of the television or music that someone is playing at home? Or will you put on the computer, switch on some music, keep the phone handy to text your friends, receive instant messenger alerts from your online friends, quickly check on your facebook friends, sneak a glance at the music video on TV and tweeter your current status in 140 words and yeah... all this while you keep working on the project. If the latter describes the Net Gen's definition of multitasking. Work and fun are all deeply intertwined. Nothing holds their attention span for long. A TV commercial of 30 seconds could be too long to hold their attention if the story is not told in an engaging manner. Books are read by flipping through for some nuggets and key ideas and not necessarily read page by page and certainly not line by line! There is a change in the way information is obtained and shared.Lesson for organizations: Does your organization not have enough opportunities for people to vent and share opinions about what they don't like about the organization. Do you still believe that conformance and managing by terror is the way Human Resources needs to set the tone of the org culture? Then all that will change with the NetGen in the office. If you don't give them opportunities to share their unvarnished opinion then they will form communities and blogs anyway where they will share their point of view. It is commonplace today that as soon as the employers finish doing the college rounds and hand out internships and job offers, there are communities that will spring up on the social networking sites where to be employees trade info, gossip and research about their possible manager. It is all about two way communication, seeking opinions, collaborating and a non hierarchical work environment. If you think just because you let the newbie call you by first name you are non hierarchical, think again.Implications for Managers: Make the work interesting. You will get a lot more out of the NetGen if they are actively engaged. This is a generation that has grown up getting a lot of attention and appreciation from their parents. Doting parents have hugged them and applauded them for doing stuff all toddlers have done across generations without even being acknowledged. The 11-31 year old will automatically look up to the manager to receive frequent doses of appreciation for accomplishing anything in the workplace. The NetGen is used to the limelight being on themselves. This is the iPod generation which has the ability to tune out the world around them by simply plugging in to their earphones. Give clear guidelines and share clearly consequences of non compliance but don't look over the shoulders to see if they are still preening their status on Facebook.Check out this brilliant eight part series by Don Tapscott in Businessweek
The experience of growing up online will profoundly shape the workplace expectations of “Generation F” – the Facebook Generation says Gary Hamel - the management guru. Very clearly if you are one of those who believes that you are now with it because you now know how to use email, you do not belong to the Facebook Generation. Dear Gary, you will be happy to know that I am no stranger to Facebook. As someone recently mentioned that you have to be on Facebook (which I am even if it is really tough) to be considered cool. Many teenagers continue to express deep angst at the enhanced age generation who have now taken over as Facebook users. When a website has like two or even three generations using it simultaneously, it clearly is a message to the youngest of the family to move on and seek online shelter for the homeless someplace else. The young and the young at heart cannot necessarily share the same cool hangout spots.Despite all the developments on the net, none of the social networking sites have found an answer to the Three E-mail Challenge. Put simply it means, with friends it is tough to exchange more than three emails on a subject without running out of steam. Let me explain what this is all about. In the pre-email era, the probability of meeting someone from school or college was remote. You met a couple of them at the airport or maybe if you missed your flight, the way I met Pingy after years. A freak snow storm had left me stranded in a remote town and that's when I met Pingala Reddy, my class mate from school. While he wasn't my best friend then, I must confess I really enjoyed meeting him after so many years. Right after I got back I wrote him an email (email no 1) thanking him for his hospitality and how much I had enjoyed meeting Pingy and his family. That I would love to host him and his family when he would visit my part of the woods next. Pingy wrote back instantly (email no 2) saying he will take me up on my offer for sure. I wrote back (email no 3) that he was welcome to do so any time and that my family would love to meet the Reddy family. This email was followed by silence. The point being that with friends who you meet after years it is impossible to have an email exchange beyond the three. Facebook doesn't have a solution either. After many years Pingy wrote another mail (enclosing photo of family vacationing in Spain) and asked me if I was planning another trip to visit him? This was email no 1 of this exchange. In email 2, I responded that a family vacation in US would break the bank and hence not on the cards unless he offered to fund the trip. Pingy sent a cryptic smiley :) in email 3 as a response. We haven't corresponded since.I met Rascal Rusty at Dubai airport last December. He was running to catch a flight but managed to convince me to sign up on Facebook before he rushed off. All the blokes of our class were evidently getting buttonholed into joining this social networking site that all the college kids had discovered a while back. I signed up and promptly added Rusty to my list of friends. I trawled the site to look for more classmates. Slowly I found Joy and Gur there as well. I now had 3 friends on Facebook. The community was growing. The only thing was that I did not quite know what to do after that. One day I learnt how to write on the facebook wall. Spray can in hand I went and wrote a bold "What's up?" on all three walls. Joy ignored me. Gur replied "Nothing" and Rusty said that he was traveling for the next 2 weeks to Venezuela and will respond after he is back. The three email challenge has been replaced by the Facebook version of it.Meanwhile I got a friend request from a person who I could not remember ever having met in my life. I accepted it simply because of the compulsion to not be seen as a boor who would not say hi to a stranger. That's how Josh became my friend. He had 462 friends on facebook. He was clearly a popular beast. He could well be the next President with such a large number of friends to support him. By now I had discovered how to peek into his photo albums and heck, was I scandalized by some of them. Since he is a friend I will not share with you what I saw beyond gently hinting that Josh has the lifestyle of a rock star if the photos were anything to go by. The next morning I found that he had thrown a sheep at me. Thrown a sheep? Whoa !! What's that all about. What was I supposed to do at this act of unprovoked violence? Should I throw a knife back to show that I was not to be taken lightly. I thought of asking Rusty, Joy or Gur for advice. Then I remembered that in most murder mysteries lesson no 1 is if someone threatens you, do not broadcast it. So I decided to be discreet. The next morning I found Josh had sent me a patch of green earth. The fellow is finally coming to his senses I thought and wants to make peace. I have decided to keep quiet and see if this fellow is serious about gifting me real estate. With the falling prices of real estate this fellow probably thinks it a bargain to pacify me with a nice 4 acre plot. Hmmm... I wonder if I should forgive him by accepting the "patch" as he likes to call the plot. I changed my mind. I maintained a cool aloof silence which got Josh to send me a poke on Facebook. How does a poke get delivered? Maybe someone comes home, rings the bell and without exchanging even a hello, pokes you and goes off. I am really ticklish and hence I stayed home without answering the doorbell for a day. I was wildly successful in throwing the "poke delivery person" off track. They could not find me. I have since then been discovering one new surprise everyday. There is a quiz which lets you learn what you were in your previous life or scary ones that discover how low your IQ is. Today I checked my Facebook account. I think Josh is crazy. He sent me a party hat. He is mistaken if he thinks I will forgive him so easily for throwing a sheep at me and that too when I had done nothing to provoke him.
When is the new year celebrated in India? Tough question to answer my friend. The answer is really "that depends". There is a spate of new year celebrations happening in different parts of India of late. The Sikhs celebrated the new year on 14 March to mark the first day of Chet - the first month of the year. The Parsis celebrated Jamshedi Navroz on 21st March 09. The Kashmiri new year Navreh was celebrated on 25 March '09. Two days later the the people from Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka celebrated Ugadi to ring in the new year.
Human Resources has long been looked at as a touchy-feely business. The stereotype of its practitioners is that they give warm and fuzzy answers to most business queries. A lot has been said to malign them. But with HR professionals increasingly turning to use Predictive Analytics all that is set to change. The wikipedia says Predictive Analysis uses different techniques that will analyze historical and current data to make predictions about the future behavior.
The "Mistry" in question is Pranav Mistry, Research Assistant and PhD candidate at the MIT Media Lab. What do you get when you combine a Web cam, a projector and a mirror, all connected wirelessly to a Bluetooth smartphone. You get Sixth Sense. Access to information that exists somewhere can give you an advantage. Hey look what having a search engine can do to the way you retrieve information. The constraint is that you pretty much need to have a cell phone or a portable computer which will give you access to the database. The When connected to the internet, the huge database of real time data can create a game changing device like sixth sense. You can watch the demo at Ted.com TED is short for Technology Entertainment and Design. That is one of the places you go to find out what is cool. And if that peer group gives you a standing ovation, you know that you are on to something big.








