Showing posts with label TATA JAGRITI YATRA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TATA JAGRITI YATRA. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

TATA JAGRITI YATRA, 2009

“For me the Journey continues…
I still feel somewhere deep inside my heart, that some part of my soul is still in that train, in the bathrooms, in those laughs with friends…hoping to reliving the experience, making friends from all across India ...hoping to have that kind of fun again and hoping to be yatri again...!

Yes, these were the words I said exactly one year before; these were the wishes I wished for too dearly...knowing very little at that time, that my journey really continued through the year. Through ups and downs, learning my way. Implementing things…maturing and living the dream again…! Yes, the dream to reliving the experience, making friends from all across India, having the fun of a lifetime---TATA JAGRITI YATRA.

I am very much obliged and thankful to TATA group and jagriti sewa sansthan for providing me an opportunity again, to be a part of this Journey and giving me a way to explore rich diversity that we have in India.

Those, who are still uninitiated to the world of yatris, here’s a sneak peak---
The Tata Jagriti Yatra aims to promote “Enterprise led Development” by galvanizing young minds. The Yatra is a 9000 km train journey that puts 20-25 year olds in direct contact with successful entrepreneurs who have created a significant impact in their community. By showcasing these role models, the Yatra seeks to demonstrate the power of enterprise in delivering social benefit, employment creation and raising standards of living. Moreover, through the personal stories of these role models, the Yatra intends to inspire the next generation to take up enterprise early in their career. During the Yatra, fifteen role models were visited who were unique in their approach, targeted impact and surroundings in which they place themselves and were studied by a group of at least 20 Yatris. The group was then asked to present its findings to Yatris in the train followed by a critique by the audience. Based on this critique and the experiences of other role models visited, the groups captured their observations.
Mumbai was the fist energetic place which kickstarted the journey in more ways than one. First glimpse of freshers, first station for waiting (amongst many), and first meeting with (whole new lot of) 400 yatris and then my core group from the Tata Jagriti Yatra team! Unlike last year, where I enjoyed every bit of being a yatri, being a participant; this year, I was going to work as a media co-coordinator with Partha Srinivasan; who was managing media on train. My brand new experience in media!! Thinking of that made my heart pump blood double the normal rate. After lunch came my first ever work assignment-preparing press kits. 1…2…3…150. *phew*. It took me three and half hours to prepare those 150 press kits and finally I took a break. Thought work was easy…
Ravindra natya mandir was the place where we gathered this time for the registration and induction programme, unlike last year’s IIT powai campus; that would be felt for some time to come. Since then it has been rather interactive with the real India – the wind, the nature, the people, the dust, the uncertainties of rain, and the variation in food provided on board, and the train rattling through various locations ascertained that this is in fact what real India is all about. The reality of Middle India!! From the tribal hinterland of Orissa to the desert town of Tiloniya; from the beautiful backwaters of Kerala, to Delhi, we had it all.
My work on board was better off, I was delegated for calling the local newspaper and electronic media people, tell them the details about TJY, hold a press conference with them the next day, when we reached the venue; i.e. our next destination enroute. It was fun. new experiences. sometimes down south language was a hurdle. But nevertheless, we communicated. Few yatris who knew Tamil, Malayalam were called to do the talking. Sometimes, I managed in Hindi, English n a bit of broken Tamil, Telegu words which I had learnt till then. Apart from this, I used to manage the breed, tell them their dos and don’ts (sometimes had to bully!!) Make announcements, arrange the presentations, look after dinner setups if we were having a buffet on platform etc. And many a times used to enjoy attention as well! (common, people used to call me ma’am!!!) It has been rightly described in this poem that when you set out on a travel, be prepared to face the unexpected.

When you set out on your journey to Ithaca,
Pray that the road is long,
Full of adventure, full of knowledge.
The lestrygonians and the Cyclops,
The angry Poseidon—does not fear them:
You will never find such as these on your path,
If your thoughts remain lofty, if a fine
Emotion touches your spirit and your body.
The lestrygonians and the Cyclops,
The fierce Poseidon you will never encounter,
If you do not carry them within your soul,
If your soul does not set them up before you.

Always keep Ithaca in your mind.
To arrive there is your ultimate goal.
But do not hurry the voyage at all.
It is better to let it last for many years;
And to anchor at the island when you are old,
Rich with all you have gained on the way,
Not expecting that Ithaca will offer you riches.
Ithaca has given you the beautiful voyage.
Without her you would have never set out on the road.
She has nothing more to give you.
And if you find her poor, Ithaca has not deceived you.
Wise as you have become, with so much experience.





About the Role Models
1. Dabbawallas
Manish Tripathi was energetic and provided the right fuel for the yatris to start thinking in terms of entrepreneurship! And he was loved by all. No exception!! His story is quite real and very doable. The Mumbai Dabbawallas address the basic need of providing healthy home cooked food to office going population of Mumbai, in the process uplifting the Maratha community through employment generation.
With an average academic qualification of 8th grade and whooping 85% of them being
Illiterate, they make 4, 00,000 transactions every single day with only 1 error per 1.6
Million transactions and are Six Sigma and ISO 9001 certified.

2. Techno Park
G. Vijayaraghavan, best known for starting Techno Park, India’s first IT Park, is a man who believes in action. He worked at C-DAC, Pune before conceptualizing the novel idea of setting up an IT park. His humility helps him to learn from everyone, starting from a common man to a successful Silicon Valley entrepreneur. Hence as an entrepreneur his advice to all of us is, “Whatever you want to do, do it fast.”

3. Braille without Borders
Sabriye, blind and from Germany, went to Tibet after hearing of the terrible
Circumstances in which visually challenged children lived. Sabriye felt stifled by the
Constraints on the visually-impaired in Germany and decided to work with others who
Were facing the same pressures but under much more extreme conditions. While
Germany did not encourage blind children to explore their capabilities, there was not
even Braille in Tibet. Sabriye met Paul while in Tibet. They became “dream partners” who together created Braille without Borders and IISE.

4. Aravind Eye Care
Aravind Eye Care was the brainchild of Dr. Govindappa Venkataswamy, popularly known as Dr. V, who had served as a commissioner in the Medical Corps of the Indian Army and later as the dean of the Madurai Medical College. It started off as an eleven bed hospital in 1976 that would grow to become one of the largest eye-care institutes in the world. In the due course of development, it has developed everything from cheap intra ocular lenses to a 20 minute-long cataract surgery that allows for a higher volume of surgeries at a lower cost.

5. Kuthambakkam village
Kuthambakkam village is an agricultural village located in Poonamallee Union,
Thiruvallur district of Tamil Nadu. The village, not very distinctive geographically from the millions of villages across the country boasts of this strong social enterprise pioneered by the mammoth efforts of Mr. Elango. It’s a village where a Brahmin lives side by side with a Dalit and where the children of each caste mix freely with each other. This is a village where a woman need not worry about domestic abuse or live through the hardships that go in hand with poverty. R. Elango’s model is now being replicated in
villages across the country to create a culture of equality and sustainability across the
country.
6. Agastya International Foundation
Agastya International Foundation is an initiative that incorporates fun learning alongside conventional science methods. The focus is on sparking curiosity among students through Innovative Science Education. Agastya was started by Ramji Raghavan, a banker practicing in London, who realized that there was a huge gap in science education between rural and urban children. The organization strives to provide practical science education to rural children through interesting experiments that make learning fun and easy to understand.

7. Industree Crafts Private Limited (ICPL)
Industree Crafts Private Limited (ICPL) is a Bangalore based social enterprise working with more than 3000 rural artisans. Industree through its Mother Earth retail stores is a one stop shop in the domain of fashion, food and home. Industree works to establish a link between artisans and market. Industree was established by Neelam Chibber, Poonam Kasturi and Gita Ram in 1994. It was completely a for profit venture then. In the year 2001 a non-profit wing Industree Crafts Foundation (ICF) was established.

8. Naandi Foundation.
Naandi Foundation is a non-profit social organization whose primary objective is to eradicate poverty. To achieve this, the foundation works on several critical themes
Including the creation of sustainable livelihoods, education, mid-day meals, safe drinking water and social research.

9. Gram Vikas
A group of students from Madras University formed Young Students Movement for Development (YSMD) to work for the underprivileged. In 1971, 400 student volunteers led by Joe Madiath set up relief camps for the refugees that came to India during independence of Bangladesh. After six months, on 30th October, 1971, a cyclone hit the coastal regions of Orissa. Over 40 volunteers led by Joe Madiath went to Orissa to work in the affected areas. This was the beginning of Joe Madiath’s journey of relief in Orissa. Later, Joe Madiath and his group were invited by the District collector of Ganjam to set up a dairy co-operative for the adivasis of the Kerandimal region. The Behrampur milk producer’s cooperative offered them land to set up the dairy. Joe later stayed in Orissa and worked on lot of areas to provide relief and help to the needy people of the Orissa.

10. Tata Steel
The story of Tata Steel Company is a one that traverses beyond business plans, financial acumen and marketing prowess. It is a story about a man who taught the world the art of conducting Business with Conscience. A man who believed that it is not the size of a man in fight that matters, but the size of the fight in the man. The story of the man called Jamshetji Tata.



11. Goonj
During a fierce winter, a wander through old Delhi catalyzed the formation of Goonj. Journalist, humanitarian, and most importantly, compassionate citizen, Anshu Gupta, was deeply disturbed when seeing that many people died because lack of proper clothing led to hypothermia. Anshu learned that one man worked to collect the
Unclaimed dead bodies found in the streets. He also found that the man's daughter slept
With corpses just to keep their own small bodies warm. Leaving his corporate life, he
Found the Goonj movement in 1998.

12. Barefoot college
Bunker Roy was born in West Bengal and completed his schooling from elite Doon School in Dehradun and graduated in English majors from St. Stephens College, Delhi. It was after serving as a volunteer in drought-stricken Bihar that he realized the pain of rural India and made up his mind to initiate activities for social development He initiated the process by working as an unskilled laborer in the district of Ajmer. The person who taught him the work was from Tiloniya, who convinced him to direct his social efforts for the development of Tiloniya. The world started recognizing his efforts and he went on to win the Arab Gulf Fund for United Nations
(AGFUND) Award for promoting Volunteerism, World Technology Award for Social
Entrepreneurship, Schwab foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, NASDAQ Stock
Market Education Award and Tyler prize. Bunker Roy believed that rural India has lot of
Potential as it is a huge repository of raw materials. What is required is an enabling
Environment and investments to help them discover the latent talent and skill they
already possess.

13. Okhai
Okhai is a rural handicrafts development initiative spearheaded by the Tata Chemicals Society for Rural Development (TCSRD) in the Okhamandal region of the Kutch district of Gujarat. It is an organization built entirely of women, who are divided into Mandals or Self Help Groups (SHGs) engaged in different aspects of traditional handicraft design, displaying a unique synthesis of rural handiwork and modern ethos in their fabrics.

14. Cape Farewell
The artist David Buckland created Cape Farewell in 2001 to instigate a cultural response to climate change. A small team works alongside partners and collaborators at the centre of an ambitious programme of activity with climate science at its core.
Cape Farewell has brought together leading artists, writers, scientists, educators and
media for a series of expeditions into the challenging High Arctic. Together they have
mapped, measured and been inspired in this environment to challenge climate change.








ROLE MODEL- NAME OF THE INSTITUTION-PLACE

MANISH TRIPATHI-DABBAWALLA SYSTEM-MUMBAI

G.VIJAYRAGHAVAN -TECHNOPARK -TRIVANDRUM

SABRIYE TENBERKEN & PAUL KRONENBERG IISE,- BRAILLE WITHOUT BORDERS -TRIVANDRUM

DR. GOVINDAPPA VENKATASWAMY -ARAVIND EYE CARE SYSTEM -MADURAI

R.ELANGO- KUTHAMBAKKAM VILLAGE- CHENNAI

RAMJI RAGHAVAN -AGASTYA INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION-BANGLORE

NEELAM CHIBBER- INDUSTREE- BANGLORE

LEENA JOSEPH- NAANDI- HYDERABAD

JOE MADIATH -GRAM VIKAS -BHUBANESHWAR

TATA STEEL -TATA STEEL -JAMSHEDPUR

JAGRITI SEWA SANSTHAN -JAGRITI SEWA SANSTHAN -DEORIA

ANSHU GUPTA -GOONJ -DELHI

BUNKER ROY -BAREFOOT COLLEGE -TILONIA

OKHAI TATA CHEMICALS LIMITED- MITHAPUR


KEY THEMES IN THE EVOLUTION OF AN ENTERPRISE

Staying on track: Enterprise begins with an unwavering singular attention to a core
objective. In due course this objective may evolve in order to satisfy related community
needs. In other cases the enterprise attempts to find multiple approaches in completely
achieving the stated objective.
Exploring uncharted territory: New perspectives, both external and internal, are born
through the exploration of uncharted territories. This exploration provides a perspective that helps in visualization of potential solutions for the community needs.
Personalization – The Internal Journey: Experiencing a need first hand helps personalize the issues and creates a sense of internal dissonance. This results in a burning desire to bring about change which serves as a motivating factor through the difficult phases of setting up an enterprise (dark nights).
Sustainable Leadership: Leaders are able to look beyond the obvious. They understand their own limitations and develop others with complementary skills to become leaders in their own capacity. A leader encourages unconditional sharing of their ideas.
Teams – The Building Blocks: Initially people are attracted to a vision that seems to
address a shared need. Teams form when specific goals are identified to satisfy the vision. This complementary, non-hierarchical group directed by a common goal becomes the fundamental unit of performance.

First Success: Original plans can go through much iteration before they crystallize into their final form. While the plans change, a resilient team takes shape, held together by the vision and their initial pains and they persevere towards a first success.
Serendipity: Serendipity is a result of connecting to people, being visible and making the work more visible. Often serendipity is a factor in turning around the fortune of an enterprise There are no predictors of Serendipity, except in all instances the role models had persisted with their ideas against severe pressure.
Breakthroughs within constraints: Initiated by constraints, innovation emerges from
searching for a solution that utilizes indigenous capabilities customized to meet specific local needs. It is typically need-driven and incremental and not necessarily transformational.

Panel Discussion-Women And Enterprises: Success And Role Models.
Venue: Kanyakumari – Vivekananda Kendra
Date: 28th December 2009
Synthesis: Historically entrepreneurship has been a male dominated pursuit, but many of today’s most inspirational entrepreneurs are women. While women’s entrepreneurship has been recognized during the last decade as an untapped source of economic growth, why is their participation low? Why is it neglected at large? How can women be incorporated in the enterprise-led development? What are the success stories out there?

Panel Discussion-Enabling Rural India To Prosperity.
Venue: Chennai
Date: 30th December, 2009
Synthesis: For time immortal, farming has remained the mainstay of livelihood in rural India. Enormous amount of effort has been devoted to increasing the farming output-whether looking for new ways to organize the farms, to generate higher yields, from the land, to increase animal productivity or reduce risks. However, globalization and liberalization combined with youth migration to cities have put renewed pressure on the viability of rural economies. There is a need to internally re-invigorate the rural economy. And to do this from within and directed towards inclusive growth.

Panel Discussion-Funding India’s Small Entrepreneurs
Venue: Hyderabad
Date: 2nd Jan, 2010
Synthesis: today India appears to be poised for phenomenal growth and the economy of India is considered as fertile ground for upcoming small entrepreneurs. How
can be capital made easily accessible to this growing band of entrepreneurs? What are the difficulties any entrepreneur face while seeking for funds? How can be it solved?

Panel Discussion-Renewable Energy: Opportunities And Challenges Venue: Jamshedpur
Date: 5th Jan, 2010
Synthesis: with climate change and market volatility of conventional sources, there seems to be tremendous interest in renewable energy and non-conventional energy generation. Where are we going with bio-fuels, solar panel efficiencies, wind and micro-hide projects to future fuels from algae and hydrogen, what opportunities and challenges lay for entrepreneurs ahead?

Panel Discussion-Entrepreneurship Education For 21st Century. Venue: Delhi
Date: 5th Jan, 2010
Synthesis: the 90s and the first decade of 2000 have seen an expansion of entrepreneurial talent in the country. But much more needs to be done to foster this. Discussion to explore what can be done by schools, parents, organizations and governments to unlock India’s entrepreneurial drive.

Panel Discussion-The Power Of One.
Venue: Mithapur
Date: 10th Jan, 2010
Synthesis: People Like Mahatma Gandhi, Kiran Bedi, Bunker Roy, E Sreedharan, Sam Pitroda, TN Seshan, and Narayanmurthy are but few of the people who had the guts and gumption to singly take on entire systems and governments to bring about positive change. Be it reforming India’s seemingly impossible election process or cleaning up the city of new Delhi. Be it sharing wealth with thousands of employees or building India’s first world class metro train system, it’s usually been a one man army. Complaining and whining about the “system” and how it can never be changed is India’s most popular spectator sport. But these few people took on impossible challenges and prove every naysayer wrong.


Kuch badal raha kuch badlenge
Tab badlega jab badlenge
Kuch dekha hai kuch dekhenge
Kuch likha hai kuch likhdenge
Yaaron chalo, badalne ki rut hai
Yaaron chalo, sawarne ki rut hai...

-Wildheartbeats

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

TATA JAGRITI YATRA



It gives me an immense pleasure to share my experiences that I had with TATA JAGRITI YATRA 2008, a social Drive with a Noble cause By Jagriti Seva Sansthan.
This event is one of the many Corporate Social Responsibilities initiatives that TATA group had taken to “Awaken the entrepreneurial spirit”
As we all are aware that TATA, being the largest Conglomerate in world, have always shown their sincerity, vision, integrity towards our nation.
I am very much obliged and thankful to TATA group for providing me an opportunity to be a part of this Journey and giving me a way to explore rich diversity that we had in India.
I also pay my sincere thanks to TATA Group for sponsoring me for the journey.




TATA JAGRITI YATRA – “yaaron chalo…”
As the Chinese proverb says “the faintest ink is stronger than the strongest memory”, I am penning down my thoughts of the unforgettable journey of my life time.

The journey actually began from Bombay central, 12 in the midnight on the eve of christmas doubling the excitement running through my body. Ready to unfurl another exciting phase of my life…when I said exciting, I had no clue to what extent it was gonna be exhilarating, and thrilling. and hence it was most awaited journey of my life. the 18 day train journey which was one of its kind, showed us various cultural as well as scenic beauty of india.
I am so thankful to god, for giving me such an opportunity, maybe my luck in that too; for I fortunately turned eighteen on October ‘08(the age range was between 18yrs to 25yrs). Then the yatra which was gonna be in May 2008, for some reasons got postponed to December 2008. And I got selected from over ten thousand applications all over the country, which they had chosen meticulously. With me were other 350 youths, extremely talented, from all across the country, some were intercontinental participants and from all walks of life- teachers, engineers, medicos, social workers, some people working in NGOs, C.As, enterprisers, and what not! The train was the perfect venue for cultural blend as well as consideration of 350 different views. incase you are wondering what on earth i am talking about, lemme enlighten you more on this...




The TATA JAGRITI YATRA was an event orchestrated by Jagriti Sewa Sansthan and supported by the TATA group to promote enterprise led development in India.

Its motto was ‘awakening the entrepreneurial spirit.’ The journey and event was based on a similar event organised by the management of Jagriti Sewa Sansthan in 1997. This time journey aimed to impart an experiential learning opportunity to 350 selected youths on board. Projecting the event through press and media sources, televised debates around the event, the message of enterprise led development- a model where the seeding and scaling up of enterprises can create sustainable development in emerging economies like India, will gradually be multiplied through individual influences.

Who would have thought that you would be discussing, reflecting your thoughts, meeting role models and making presentations on case studies, listening to the radio station ’bindaas bol’ which two yatris had started on train...from taking baths in shaky cubicles constructed or in the waiting room at 3 in the morning on a station in Trivandrum called Kocchuvelli?! We did it all. And that’s not it. From buffets arranged on platforms, to sleeping in the dead of the night at Bhubaneshwar station like beggars, and then too discussing on the up lift of them…these were experiences to cherish. I guess this little poem can consolidate what I mean to say…here it goes…

I step out of the train, not knowing what lies ahead,
trusting my fellow buddies, I accompany them.
The station seems unfamiliar, but I don't have any fear,
there's anxiety, there's curiousness, there's also eagerness.
Life’s strange, and a mystery I tell you,
let it be like that, no fun in predicting fate.
Life’s good, experience the happiness,
because we have to move from sadness.
We ate, we slept, we sung, we hymned,
We bathed, we roamed, we yelled, we roared.
The station was our home I felt,
never ever had I dreamt.
The fun we had cannot be described
chatting with friends, opening up...soaking in
the essence of the show, the camaraderie and the glow
the innocence of it all, the discomfiture of them all.
With thrill we looked at our destiny,
our time, patience and life were under scrutiny
those speechless times...our words uttered in silence.
It was life of "I" till time
now, I understood its "WE"...
joy of life in eternity!
 
So there we were, doing all sorts of unimagined things…but it was pure joy. Getting up in the morning to the tune of our jagriti song ‘yaaron chalo’, trying to catch up with the breakfast. Or sometimes just enjoying the breathtaking views on the beaches in kerala or just standing at the peak of vivekananda rock and silently enjoy the "mindblowing" wind, filled with so much of
energy...or watching the indian culture blossom at tiloniya through "small wonders" or sitting in one of the lavish hotels in india-the TAJ PALACE-DELHI...
Apart from having a total blast on board, we did stick to our basic purpose of meeting role models and sought to understand how they have built their social or economic enterprises and learnt business expertise as how they faced their dark nights. The absolute essence of any enterprise is the clear identification of need, which may be internal or external and followed by the personal conviction and dedication to service this right up to the end. Remember-enterprise is a necessity, not luxury.

The following ten themes are extrapolated from the individual case studies that were assembled from each of 18 role model visit. These themes unanimously agree that there were certain common principles and strategies applied by the role models in building their respective institutions. The key take aways are:-

DEFINED BY NEED, ALIGNED WITH PASSION, DRIVEN BY DISCIPLINE:
Each of the enterprises targeted a need which was localized and often immediate. The enterprise carefully planned their endeavors and there was strict adherence to the vision and mission through execution. For e.g. : Arvind eye care was among the best ophthalmologic teams in India at its inception, completely focused on eye care with much required gentle but firm focus on financial stability.

SERVICE IS A CHOICE, NOT SACRIFICE:
It was repeatedly emphasized that each entrepreneur made a conscious choice in his life to do the work he does. They chose to make social change their priority. Role model like Joe Madiath made a willful choice to work in social sector with a sense of ambition to foster social transformation. Even if the organization was as highly structured as Tata steel or doing integrated development in a village like gram vikas, it was founded with a simple philosophy of harnessing social impact while building and scaling enterprises.

FOCUS ON SOLVING THE WHOLE PROBLRM (VERTICAL INTEGRATION):
Solving one or two components does not necessarily solve the entire problem, which is crucial to the success of many enterprises. Arvind eye care went through the exercise of setting up aurolab as a production arm to make eye care more affordable for the providing free eye care to the poor. Even SELCO, solved the perception problem, the repair and maintenance network problem, as well as
The financing problem to make solar energy a success in rural areas.

RESOURCE MANAGEMENT TO CREATE SUSTAINABLE ENTERPRISE:
This has focus on development through optimum and optimal use of resources. While goonj reuses old cloth to create sanitary pads, groups of women from thanal reuse coconut shells, waste paper and cloth to create beautiful jewellery and other products. Arvind eye care has revolutionized eye care by establishing an efficient and improved process using the existing resources as optimally as possible.

PEOPLE MATTER:
The people, the community, the populace have formed the base of each organization and this essential forms the crux of all decision-making and practices.
STRONG COLLABORATION GENE WITH STAKEHOLDERS:
Enterprises have chosen to collaborate successfully with stakeholders as well as external agencies. Techno Park takes this concept forward by collaborating with its customers. Auroville, responsible community building formed the base of institution. TIDE collaborates with its partners to permit local resources and building local capacity.

PERSONAL CONVICTION AND STAYING POWER:
Most of the enterprises are built on the ability of the founders and owners to inspire leadership through their own personal commitment to their project. We need marathon runners, not sprinters. Without janagraha’s innate dedication, the jaagore campaign would have never been the inspirational success that it is. Enterprises require grittiness to face daily adversity and challenges and it is only long term pledge that can ensure success.

NEED OF ZEAL, VALUES OR INNER UNKNOWN:

One intangible, but consistently visible characteristic among many successful enterprises was a zeal that came from the values and core mission of shri mahila gram udyog lijjat papad, or from a quiet but deep sense of spirituality of auroville. The impact of such determination in an organization is hard to measure, yet impossible to ignore when evaluating success. This ethereal quality of Indian enterprises which leads them to have an inbuilt value system was felt in more than one instance. It is defining feature that often determines the success of Indian enterprises the world over.

PROCESSES AND SCALE:
India is a country of variegated aspects. Organizing critical tasks into processes is important as it allows for replicable, methodical, and optimized utilization of available resources. Scale is crucial especially in the enterprises where the need is immense and target markets are very price sensitive. Both scale and process are demonstrated by success stories like the Naandi Foundation and Lijjat Papad.

SERVICING GOVERNMENT:
The government has programs as well as resources that provide ample opportunity for enterprises. It has established networks and has database of information required. To waste away these resources is a tremendous loss of opportunity for business. Having a collaborative effort with government for funds and geographical access has been a productive strategy. Public-private partnerships have also been a dominant model to achieve commercial diplomacy and working around the limitations that a government partnership brought. Techno Park, Naandi Foundation and Janagraha are an excellent example of commercial diplomacy involving the bureaucracy to build superlative infrastructure.
We had CNBC panel discussions at various places as follows:

Panel Discussion - YES WE CAN! Replicating national success stories.
Venue : Kanyakumari – Vivekananda Kendra
Date : 28th December 2008
Panellists: Dr R A Mashelkar , Mr Kishor Chukar
Synthesis: There is a fashionable view amongst India's chattering classes that the problems of India cannot be solved under a liberal democratic regime. The arguments range from the ubiquitous ness of corruption and lack of political integrity to citizen apathy and the fact that we're a poor country. This range of arguments seems to explain everything from why we have potholes on our best roads to why we struggle to win a single medal at the Olympics. Yet in this self same system we have people who have proved time and again that change is possible and possible within the so called "confines" of a liberal democratic system. Examples of people who have brought about radical transformations abound all around us. The Konkan Railway, The Mumbai-Pune Expressway, The Self assessment property tax system in Patna, The Indian Election Commission, The Amul Project, The work done by CSIR in geographic patents, ISRO, Reliance, Infosys and the Tata Nano are but a few examples of how spectacular results can be achieved within our legislative and administrative framework. However experience shows us that while positive change is possible within the system, its certainly not easy. Corruption and bad governance aside, the biggest stumbling block seems to be the continuous cynicism and negativity that we as a country seem to have internalized. How then can we approach the next 40 years of our democracy differently? How can we create a generation of Indians who believe in the idea of "Yes We Can"?

Panel Discussion – From Poverty to Self-help
Venue : Chennai – Chinmoya Centre Auditorium
Date : 30th December 2008
Panellists: Mr Ramaswamy Elango, Dr Priyadarshini Karve, Mr Paul Basil, Mr Sean Balqscedt
Synthesis: Fighting Poverty has been on top of the Government’s agenda ever since independence. Indeed, fighting poverty is a challenge not just for the government, but for every Indian citizen. Experience has shown us that populist measures, subsidies and industrial sector reservations have had at best, a mixed impact on poverty alleviation. The green revolution was a watershed event in the history of modern India. The Green revolution showed how governmental action combined with scientific advances can actually lead the nation from a cycle of poverty and victim hood to one of empowerment and self help. It literally sowed the seeds of entrepreneurial action in the minds of India’s agrarian community. The next big thrust in this direction was sadly, not to come for another 25 long years.
Economic Liberalization that started in the early 90s continues to this day and is probably the most effective weapon against poverty. Critics would argue that 20 years of liberalization
has made the rich richer and the poor poorer. But there’s no denying that the reforms that unleashed India’s potential also opened the floodgates for India’s entrepreneurial talent. From rural telephony to e-choupals to drip irrigation to easy access to capital, advances in science, financial engineering, logistics and communication have dramatically improved the lot of India’s poor and middle class. But many questions remain?

Panel Discussion – Making healthcare affordable to every Indian
Venue : Hyderabad -
Date : 05th January 2009
Panellists: Mr R Gopalkrishan, Dr Ashwin Naik, Dr Karkala Subba Rao, Dr N Prasad,
Mr Venkat Changavalli
Synthesis: Health care is the perfect sector for social entrepreneurship. In what other area can you do social good and yet make a profit from doing it? Healthcare in India has a long way to go. And clearly it is not a task for the government to do alone. While the government is a key player in formulating strategy and delivering affordable healthcare, experience has shown us that private enterprise has delivered the most effective healthcare across the country. We are a country that’s massively under insured, that needs a dramatic revolution in the quality and quantity of healthcare and a country that’s tasting economic success for the first time. Opportunities for health care entrepreneurs abound in every piece of the health value chain. From manufacturing cheaper drugs, to community insurance to health maintenance organizations to delivering health care to the over 6 lac villages in India, there are innumerable business propositions.
Panel Discussion – India’s civic challenges, Solution that work!
Venue : Jamshedpur – Roosy Mooy Centre
Date : 07th January 2009
Panellists: Mr Partho Sengupta, Mr Madanmohan Rao, Mr M B Nirmal
Synthesis: The end of garbage, bad roads, urban poverty, water shortages… For 60 years now we have been wringing our hands in desperation and blaming the government for failing us.
Two possible models have shown us that private enterprises can engage with government to solve some of these problems – the PPP approach like Sulabh Shauchalaya, Janagraha, Exnora or the for profit private companies such Onyx in Chennai. The key is to create an approach that is sustainable and cost effective. While the PPP approach is built on the back of demonstrable innovations, there are challenges of scalability and cost effectiveness. The for‐profit approach on the other hand may appear cost effective on the face of the approach, but the sustainability is open challenged by the profit motive of the private enterprises.
However when it comes to action, be it voting or participating in the process of civic administration, we citizens of India’s cities are open found wanting. What is the way forward for India? Which model delivers best value and results for us the citizen?
Panel Discussion – The Power of one
Venue : New Delhi – Hotel Taj Palace
Date : 08th January 2009
Panellists: Mr Bindeshwar Pathak, Mr Arbind Singh, Mr Rajdeep Sardesai
Synthesis: The story of India’s development, industrially, culturally, technologically and socially hasn’t been a smooth upward curve. It has been characterized by long flat periods with sudden unpredictable spikes. Behind these spikes of development, there’s usually one man or woman with an incredible level of commitment, vision and passion. People like Mahatma Gandhi, Kiran Bedi, Bunker Roy, E Sreedharan, PV Narasimha Rao, Sam Pitroda, TN Seshan, Narayanamurthy and Sheila Dixit. These are but few of the people who had the guts and gumption to singly take on entire systems and governments to bring about positive change. Be it reforming India’s seemingly impossible election process or cleaning up the city of New Delhi. Be it sharing wealth with thousand of your employees or building India’s first world class metro train system… its usually been a one woman/man effort against a system. Complaining and whining about the “system” and how it can never be changed is India’s most popular spectator sport. But these few people took on impossible challenges and proved every naysayer wrong.
Panel Discussion – Unleashing India’s Entrepreneurs
Venue : Anand – Sardar Vallabhai Memorial Trust Auditorium - Karmsad
Date : 10th January 2009
Panellists: Mr Homi Khusrokhan, Mr Suhel Seth, Mr Navin Thanhaiah
Synthesis: In the 70s and part of the 80s India's entrepreneurs were actually punished for being successful! With peak tax rates hovering around 90% of incomes, incentives for entrepreneurs to fail were greater than those for success. Twenty years later, things have changed dramatically. India's entrepreneurs were like caged tigers for a large part Independent India's history. The fury and vigour with which they have gone on to conquer the world. Who would have imagined 30 years ago that Indians would be buying a company like Corus Steel? It would have ridiculous to even suggest such an idea. And yet it has happened. But many would argue that India's entrepreneurs succeed in spite of the government, not because of it. It seems that government after government is trying to stifle entrepreneurship instead of seeing it grow. Be it an Infosys or Bajaj, it seems that entrepreneurs have to battle an army of bureaucrats and politicians, navigate through a maze of archaic laws and then face flak from all around for bending the law to set up a business. Combine this with the traditional Indian belief that a job is always "better" and that being an entrepreneur is too risky. The result could be a stifling of thousands of potential entrepreneurs
The post liberalization era is seeing Indian entrepreneurship explode on the global scene. This has brought with it massive employment, foreign exchange, GDP growth and exposure opportunities. But it has also brought with it calls for protectionism, labour unionism and price controls.

These were the basic findings which I consolidated from 18days of learning. I tried to make the article as short as I can but don’t think I succeeded in doing that. It’s just not possible to merge all 18 days experience in this much short article specially when you have done so many of things back to back.
The yatra had a tremendous effect on me actually. It has enriched my life with knowledge and experience. Interactions with so many people from small towns to urban area have taught me about different cultures and customs prevailing in India as well as outside India. It has changed my personality in all. Now I wake up in the morning hoping to listen yaaron chalo while having my breakfast. frankly speaking I am still in the feel of yatra…its 8'o' clock in the morning and pat comes IIT Powai campus in front of me from where it all started…350 people, strangers but now like a family. I am missing all that...I am missing those "bhaiyya chai" yellings and variety of food... and also the tym i spent in those AC chair cars at wee hours trying to understand what my future will be like or just dancing the night on the last day of yatra.
I told my friends, my relatives about our experience, our fun. But when I see the expressions on their face...I know they can't feel like what we felt...it was all different in the train, no worries, no pain...I felt as if I am somewhere else from this world, laughs everywhere, joy in every eye...and a sense of belongingness...now when I am back to my routine, into this world moving with it, trying to know what all happened with satyam and how is the stock market going, I still feel somewhere deep inside my heart, that some part of my soul is still in that train, in the bathrooms, in those laughs with friends…hoping to reliving the experience, making friends from all across India ...hoping to have that kind of fun again and hoping to be yatri again...!

For me the Journey continues…







-Wildheartbeats