RSS
 

Happy Diwali to All

17 Oct

25_10_2003_happy diwali

 
No Comments

Posted in Uncategorized

 

The Spirit of Entrepreneurship

27 Aug

From the book by Colin Turner, Ph.D. Lead to Succeed: Creating Entrepreneurial Organizations:

Why are we in business?  What are the reasons organizations are founded?  Which motivations cause some to become great while others less so?  How is it that some are successful despite poor planning, when others with good strategy are mediocre?

Irrespective of whether we are aware of it, all of us share a primary yearning to know that we count for something.  Each of us has a need to feel part of a worthwhile cause, to have a sense of purpose that gives our life and what we do meaning.  When life lacks meaning, or direction, our frustrations drive us more that our aspirations are able to motivate us.  We may recognize the importance of knowing what our core values and beliefs are.  But do we really live by them? Are we too busy making the right moves to be guided by what motivates us?

What are organizations?  They start out as legal documents.  What makes them live and breathe are the people who first create them.  Such people are not necessarily born leaders; have had great ideas; want to empire build; or make a fortune.  They are ordinary people that are motivated by a purpose.

What makes an organization grow is when it adheres to the original philosophy that lies behind its fundamental reason for existence.  If follows that the purpose of an organization is to realize its potential.  And the realizing of its potential lies in the strength of its purpose.  Though strategies may adapt accordingly with evolving market conditions, when purpose and core values prevail, the organization remains a great place to work and something people are proud to be a part of.

This may sound ideological, yet it is exactly how the lasting and really successful organizations of the past were built.  If we take the view that the best motive for growing an organization is to develop what it stands for, it changes our perspective on why we are in business and why we have organizations.

Why Entrepreneurial Organizations?

I have chosen the titles of warriors and worriers to make the distinction between the entrepreneurial-minded and the non-entrepreneurial-minded organization.  Because it is ultimately people’s beliefs, characteristics and thinking that make the difference in an organizational culture.  How they think and act reflects the organization.

“The purpose of an organization is to benefit people and improve society,” said an unwell, uneducated, unknown and unlikely warrior who created the world’s biggest organization, helped his country’s economic prosperity, started management practices now embraced by global organizations, donated huge fortunes to worthy causes, and served hundreds of millions of customers with innovative products that improved the quality of life.  This manager, Konosuke Matsushita, had a short and simple message to his organization, “Think like an entrepreneur, not a hired hand.”

Matsushita, as an entrepreneur, believed that the mission of management lay in satisfying human instinct for improving the quality of life.  Founding household names including Panasonic, Technics and National, the Matsushita Electric organization of Japan created an entrepreneurial climate that was conducive to seeking opportunity, advancing innovation, developing leadership and giving service.

Strength of Purpose

Similar to other great success stories that dramatically influenced the 20th century such as Ford, Citicorp, Sony and Pfizer, to name a few from different industries, none achieved success in a continuously upward direction.  All experienced peaks and troughs.  It was the volatile early part of that century that honed the entrepreneurial climate and characteristics that made them winning organizations.  With the continuing economic globalization, emerging competitive markets and increasing customer expectations, the next few decades will be no less volatile, though with different conditions and challenges.  To ignore such a view is tantamount to a refusal to acknowledge the fact that history repeats itself.  In the speed of thought economy over the next 50 years, customer is king and best practice will be measured by deed, not word.

Those organizations that do not move with agility will fall over themselves.  The leaders who do not develop others will have no followers.  The executive who does not think like an entrepreneur will lose.  The real winners will serve their businesses, clients, customers and communities while living the core values of the organization that they have chosen to be part of. Like the warriors of economic history, he or she will be willing to fight for a worthwhile purpose greater than themselves.

Credo and Spirit Versus Re-Engineering

Business is, and will remain, the great modern arena for individuals to express their vocation and develop their potential.  Strengths and talents will always be best cultivated in the framework of a worthwhile organizational purpose.  Ideally, when a company starts out it focuses on what it’s about, where it wants to go, how will it get there and what it needs to do so.  It utilizes its strengths and talents to grow without concern about competition.

Clearly, this ideal scenario is not always the case.  J. Willard Marriott did not set out to go into the hotel business.  He had a desire to go into business but as to which type he had no idea. Messrs. Hewlett and Packard started a company the purpose of which was to develop anything that people would buy, even an electric shock machine to induce weight loss.  The founder of Nordstrom started a shoe shop for something to do.

Today, even though their founders are no longer around, these organizations lead their industries.  Critically, however, all three have core ideologies that are set in stone.  Would the companies be where they are without the evolution of a credo to guide them?  Maybe.  Certainly they would not have developed the heights of influence that they did.  But, more importantly, would they have ever come into being without the spirit of entrepreneurship?  The answer is no. Ask yourself.  Would any of the organizations that you have been involved with have come to life without the existence, or influence of, an entrepreneurial spirit?

Such spirit, or courage when coupled together with a credo, or raison d’etre, seems to be the vital ingredient that is fundamental to building great organizations, partnerships and institutions that last.  The reality, however, for most established organizations is that such spirit or credo is ignored particularly when times are good.  An impending crisis may cause a revisit to them, in the same way that all of us silently call for guidance when our world seems to be falling in, but usually crises are passed to legal departments.

When Perrier’s bottled water was tampered with, they did not take the same action that the medical organization Johnson & Johnson took when they met with a similar crisis.  Guided by their ‘set in stone credo,” that begins with: “our first responsibility is to the doctors, nurses, hospitals, mothers and all others who use our products” immediately they knew of the threat that cyanide had been introduced to one of their products, Tylenol, Johnson & Johnson responded decisively.  The threat seemed isolated to one city; however, since the product was available throughout the U.S., they removed all of it, at an estimated cost of $100 million.  At the same time, they mounted a mammoth communication program to advice the public.  Public confidence in Johnson & Johnson never even faltered; moreover, it was strengthened as the public viewed the organization as one that always protected them, regardless of cost.

Where Johnson & Johnson clearly responded, Perrier reacted.  Though the threat related to a foreign body in the bottle that could induce cancer, Perrier appeared to the public to be playing down the seriousness of it.  The public was told that even if you consumed an enormous amount of their product you would still be safe.  The organization withdrew the bottles from the affected areas and mounted a huge advertising campaign to indicate that Perrier was good for you.  This did not bring back public confidence in the measure that was hoped for, and many competing brands benefited. When it comes to anything life threatening, customers don’t want words, they want action.  Johnson & Johnson’s credo led to the appropriate action, an example of the power of the entrepreneurial spirit.

 
No Comments

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Killing the killer

06 Aug

story.computer.virus

Last week I had a ODG virus at my PC. It was a knowledge increasing fight, first of all it took away my camera, then My computer was gone. Then on reboot my DCOM server was down giving me the following error:

Dcom server process launcher service terminated unexpectedly

And then after sometime system restarts automatically. I thought of starting and repairing it in SAFE MODE but not a lot was different except the VGA mode.

I searched the net on my linux box and found that there is a Anti-Malware Software MalwareByte’s AntiMalware

It can be downloaded from CNET

I downlaod it, but how to install as system gets restarted automatically before even I start the scan. I tried the old trick of running shutdown -a but it didn’t work. Then I created a batch file calling shutdown -a again and again within a loop indefinately.

Wooh, that was it I had hit the jackpot. It stopped all the shutdowns attempted by the virus and the software found the bad files and removed them with a restart. FInally I got my Windows PC back from ODG.

 
1 Comment

Posted in Uncategorized

 

My first owned car

01 Aug

29072009(001)

Maruti Zen 2003 Model with A/C

 
1 Comment

Posted in Uncategorized

 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY APNABILL

15 Jun

ApnaBill Happy Birthday

HAPPY BIRTHDAY APNABILL

Maku’s Post

About 1 year ago we three entered to make an unbeatable alliance called FourFractions and 15 June was the day when we launched our first venture “ApnaBill”. We all have learned a lot from it, we have constantly worked togather to make it better every day.

Once again Happy Birthday to ApnaBill; & 3 cheers to our team working hard fo it.

Hurray…………… ;)

 
No Comments

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Sipping Java on linux powered by C#.NET

10 Jun

lnux

It was quite a fun to create the .NET code to make it run on linux that could be used by Java.

Problem 1: How the hell is a .NET component gonna work in Linux?

Solution 1: Mono is the answer; I ported my code from Windows to linux in just 2 mins. All the supporting libraries, assemblies and setting are taken care by Mr. Mono.  Only you have to be careful about accessing filesystem as in linux there is no C: or D: , there is / or /home/user

Problem 2: Now my code has been compiled to linux architecture successfully; but how will Java component use it?

Solution 2: It took me some time to find the answer to this question; First of all JNI (Java Native Interface) provides support to load this library to Java project and use its functions. For more info see this CodeProject tutorial JNI Basis – I by Irfan Dawood ; its good. The second solution is to create an executable file of individual functions and call them from within Java prog.

Problem 3: How will Java Prog run a executable?

Solution 3: By using Runtime.getRuntime().exec() A more explained approach here: Running external system commands in Java applications

Thatz it problem resolved…….. Ten tran………..

 
No Comments

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Remebering my college dudes and dudis

20 May

http://picasaweb.google.com/sandythefire/Manali

 
 

Hello web world!

20 May

This is my first post after such a long time; from now on I promise myself to put more than a post everyday.

Long way Ahead

Long way Ahead