Friday, January 26, 2007

Somu

I see a lot of people who have signed up for the blog but there are no posts yet from them… I wanted to post immediately on sign up and here it goes…

I almost made it to Karthik’s outliers list in terms of people who have not changed their first job – I was working with Citi for 10 years before I jumped ship in Jul 2006 and have now moved to Yes Bank, a relatively small and growing bank (whenever I tell people that I am working for Yes Bank, they say “yes yes, but which bank are you working for?”). This is the closest that I can get to entrepreneurship and this is completely opposite to Citi in the sense that there really is no rigidity and bureaucracy in here… but I have figured out that sometimes (just sometimes) rigidity does help. But overall, it has been a good six months so far and hope that this will party will continue for some more time.

Got married to Smita 8 years back on this day (we celebrate our wedding anniversary today) and have two lovely children. I don’t know the experience of other parents, but when we had the first child, we were like – oh my god, there is so much work to do, more so because we are not in India where help is available, etc. etc. etc. And now that we have two and we see other parents with one child complaining, we feel as to why they are making such a fuss just for one child.

What next? As of now, the usual chase is on for material things – a bigger house is on right on top of this list. Lets see how things pan out in the coming years.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Chaitan


Hey ! Missed the reunion by a couple of days ... catching up on the khabar and on-goings from the blogs is fun - weird, but fun.


Its difficult to sum up 10 years in a couple of paragraphs since we've gone through a roller-coaster of emotions, events in the interim. Let me try and give you a super short summary.



Joined Burnett in 1996 - had no clue what I was getting into (feels the same way at times even now). Working on the P&G account, bunched in with Karthik, Saraff, Papa, Gunu in Mumbai.

Met my wife Mallika in '98 in Burnett and proposed to her really quickly - less time given to think is a good thing ! She's ex-TISS, ex- LSR Delhi. Done her Masters in Psychiatric and Social Work - both departments equipping her to deal with me. We met at the office, proposed over a cuppa (I did the kneel- schmeal ...the whole deal) and the story continues...



Got married in 2000.



Moved to Singapore in 2001 and love it here. Head the regional P&G business across ASEAN, Australia and India. Mallika is a regional marketing director for a creative school called Julia Gabriel and overlooks ASEAN, India and China. Strangely enough I've worked with the company for 10.5 years and still find myself interested enough to stay on.


10 years have been spent falling in love, travelling, setting up home and working our butts off. I exercise regularly and am losing weight (really - thats true if you were to use comparisons vs 3 yrs ago). Paint off and on... dabbling with photography. Mallika has a fantastic voice and she sings regularly. Being in Singapore, we are avoiding the national pastime of 'shopping' - so thats not listed as one of our hobbies. We watch a million movies.


Our latest health watchout is 'stress' - find that a common issue amongst my colleagues and friends.


I am rambling now so I'll stop.


Cheers

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Different strokes... (Atish)



hey

its been an exciting and a crazy decade since we moved out of campus - got married on dec 22 to manisha - completed 10 years of our co-existence - going thru the peaks and troughs of life in mumbai and loving every bit of the journey

started out being a dealer on the stock exchange, moved to set-up a retail chain, 2 shots at dotcom ventures, (tring tring !!! being one of them) a financial services BPO - all 5 within the first 6 years out of campus - and finally ICICI Bank - for over 4 years - my longest stint yet.. and been in 4 different role profiles - managing products, assets, liabilities and currently a CFO role within Rural and Agri Banking... and to think of it - I did not even apply to a banking job at campus!!! thoroughly enjoying my work - no kids yet - also into our 6th house in mumbai - this one we wrote a check on in 2003...

manisha was a fashion designer when we got married - and now is a solicitor practising securities law!!! - with our experiences the belief is only strengthened in - you really do not know what you become... thats been life in a nut-shell...

been around almost every nook and corner of our country, enjoying the natural and the man-made marvels that dot the the landscape... leh, rajasthan and kerala coming out tops of the list, not necessarily in that order... and looking forward to adding more unexplored destinations to the list

We! (birdie would not miss this one) completed the marathon last year... and would like to continue with it hopefully doing the number in cities across the globe; while i caught the shutter bug lately - picking up photography as a hobby and am learning to play the guitar amongst other things - manisha is majorly into painting and honing her vocal chords...

the reunion was an amazing time going back to campus and meeting everyone - thanks kapil, kalpana and atul who organised it and a host of people who pumped in their bit to ensure so many of us turned up - without which the party would have been incomplete...

kudos to Karthik for capturing so well the ethos of the reunion as well as the batch - pity it had to be that quinessential bell curve - like the 2 by 2 matrix - an unstinting reminder of bucketing everything that is life... but guess it is so, in true management style...

its the out-liers that inspire - the few who follow their dreams to the logical end - and hopefully by the next 10 years - we all will be outliers in one mode or the other - finding that one thing special that makes us passionate- cheerio

Monday, January 1, 2007

So far, So good ... [Manish S]


I am so addicted to expressing my thoughts with charts, pictures and short sentences on PowerPoint slides J that writing full sentences on this blog is a strange experience. However, having urged Karthik to get the ball rolling on the “catch-up” notes, it would simply be wrong on my part to view from the side-lines, so here it goes.

Sam Pitroda started it all. His success in getting the movement to connect India going inspired me to forego the idea of studying Economics at St. Stephens … it was clear that I had to pursue a career in the Telecommunication sector …. However, things were in disarray in the Telecom sector by the time I came out of school in 1993 – Sam’s legacy had not been built on, dull monolithic uninspiring PSUs were the only places where one could get a career in Telecom and so I tried the substitute … writing code for Telecom switches at Wipro for a year … but that turned out to be boring (de-bugging millions of lines of code instead of building new stuff) and I put my Telecom dreams in abeyance for an indefinite period, took the CAT and joined all of you.

Little did I guess that the MBA would lead me back to the Telecom industry. HCL Comnet gave me the Product Management experience for building and running satellite (VSAT) services and Wide Area Networks. But my mid 1997, I was looking for my next challenge as the product line became stable at HCL and boredom started setting in …. it was at that same time that Infosys lured me and packed me off to Singapore to run a team developing a Telecom product.

1997 was also the year when Sonika and I decided to tie the knot. While I will let Sonic write her “catch-up” note at her leisure, a lot of the story since 1997 is not my story but our story and I will take the liberty of narrating it on our behalf since I am making the 1st post at this blog.

All along I had never thought of leaving India but being in Singapore opened new vistas, infused new aspirations and it made Travel an intrinsic part of our life’s agenda. Singapore was an excellent jumping board to see different parts of the Orient. But by the end of 1998, we were ready for a taste of the Occidental way of life.

A concerted effort of a few days in the end of 1998 and Sonika had secured the passage to the West as she boarded the Ernst and Young ship in Canada. We came to Toronto in Jan 1999 hoping to be here for a couple of years before leaving for another continent. But surprisingly, the city grew on us, we dropped anchor, became Citizens and bought a house here and in 18 days, we will have been here for 8 years (it is unsettling that I feel so settled here).

Being in Canada has allowed us to fulfil our shared dreams to travel extensively (personally, Latin American destinations rank a little ahead of those in the US, Canada or Europe in terms of excitement). It also gave me the chance to work across a spectrum of roles (strategy, operations, product launches, technology & capabilities build and now sales) in the Telecommunication industry in the US and Canada. Currently, I lead IBM Canada’s efforts to work with Telecom carriers that are seeking to transform into service providers capable of providing multiple services (TV, voice, gaming, merchandising portals, Internet access ….).

What’s next? Who knows? If the fun at work or the pleasure of living in Toronto slackens even a wee bit or Sam calls ;) the bags get packed and we get to see the Sun rise in another city.

Review: Reunion - Day 0, Normal Curves and Outliers [Karthik]


I met Uncleji (Rohit Mohindra) on Dec 30th, on my return to Mumbai. Our wives were with us. They posed the question: "So, how was the reunion? Were there any surprises?". We looked at each other, looked back at them, and said "Not really" in chorus. On that note, let me take you through my recollection of it all.


The 10-year reunion


I confess! I cheated! I managed to achieve a prelude to a reunion and a reunion. The idea germinated from a 2004 Roorkee reunion experiment - that one was at Las Vegas, had no kids and spouses and yet, gave me a sense of what to expect at B'lore - the splinter groups, the mingling of families, the batch romances that became dream weddings - all of these were going to resurface and consume the two days before someone completed 'Cheers to the Batch of '96'!

And that's how it unfolded...too quickly...at least for me. I wanted every layer of interaction - G-Base of 1st yr, the F-G trippers of the 2nd yr, the Section C comics, mingling with the entrepreneurs (still hope to follow suit sooner or later), the bankers (a life that I wish to leave behind - have made 3 attempts at it), the ad/mktg spin-doctors, the tech leaders, the new fathers, the young mothers, the cute kiddos, Mumbaikars, the sambhar mafia, the returning NRI's, the tsepak players, the drinkers, the wild dancers, and every social circle that I could remotely relate to over 94-96 and 10 yrs thereafter.

So, how do you beat this mayhem. Do a preview day - yes, a Day 0 of sorts, with a smaller group. So, 6 of us managed to convince each other to buy into this idea (well, there was some arm-twisting). It was great fun and relaxing. Lunch, campus walk, 2X2 tsepak, Athik's, Amoeba, bowling, foosball, Sunny's, 2002 Chianti, Lakeview ice-creams and 4 hrs of incessant philosophy and flashbacks. Brunch the next morning at the refurbished Dosa Hut yonder, and back on campus to welcome 60 other alums over the next few hours. [This second grander event of an almost impossible nature, but yet remarkably contained and successful, was largely made possible by Kapil, Kalpana and Atul - and they deserve a round of applause.]

Phew! ...and all of the above was prior to the actual reunion. No wonder I still feel that my back's broken and my kneecap's gonna disengage - the latter two being the outcome of more tsepak and the dancing on 23rd evening - on concrete surfaces. My muscles, tendons and cartilage seem to have turned to mush, giving the bones no protection for rejoicing on stone. Well, its been a week and I sense hints of recovery.

btw, Happy New Year! (finishing the post on Jan 1, 2007). The reunion culminated a year of introspection for me. I also sensed that it was a dominant mood at the event itself. It was at first an instantaneous leap into the past, a leap that was permitted very simply through a pristine campus and the presence of 70+ classmates, all remarkably unchanged. Everyone has learnt to see themselves a little wider and grayer in the mirror and so, such physical changes in others didn't seem out of place, save a few outliers (more on 'outliers' later in the post). And it seemed that, from that point 10 years ago, everyone was picking up the pieces, counting off a year at a time, to see where they've arrived at, and in what shape and form, and how many miracles of life and death that emerged and dissipated in between, what's separated them from or kept them in the rat race, and what it meant as they moved to another decade under the influence of IIMB.

There were long spells of quiet glances, interrupted by a little one running into a water sprinkler, chased by the parent who stumbled out of his or her stupefied state. There were rare exchanges of visiting cards, more frequent ones of mobile numbers, transactions of a few hundred rupees over beer and teen patti, perfunctory hugs, mandatory hand-shakes, genuine smiles, nervous introductions to spouses and little kids who shuffled behind their parents' legs, repeated unwashed t-shirts, black or yellow limited edition reunion t-shirts (spot them in the photos), casual attires, smart evening jackets and warm shawls to stave off the chilly b'lore nights.

And then, of course, there were the elements of campus that people plugged into, as if it were a one-year reunion, and not a 10 year one.

The games people play: The several rounds of paintball, cricket and tsepak takraw - notable flashbacks included an exuberant Atul in the English soccer team's red, who helped put together the sports, a bold Bhabhe getting gung-ho without his mask at paintball and taking a facial wound below his eye from a rubber bullet, Papa-the-professor running from corner to corner of the tsepak court barefoot, and blistered by the end of it (that's a sure no-no for a U.Mich tenureship)

Footloose: 2 nights of partying (one half of the crowd was hurt retired after Day One though - me included). The first was a mingling with the PGP batch - that was a ear-opener. Twenty-somethings managed to have a handy step for the queerest of music - from a Rang De remix to the more shakeable Shakira to a subdued hip-hop number. With a fair smattering of the gora dudes and dudettes (exchange students by the dozen), the music and moves did threaten to outdo the '96 batch. That stirred up a resurgence - lightened the lead feet, threw up semi-arthritic arms, and bobble-heads surfaced. Yes, the alcoholic content in blood streams did play a part, but its the spirit that was supreme! The ba(t)chelors-by-design (who came without spouses) spiralled through wild bhangra beats and the toast of the dancing couples looked so-very-cute (yes, no better word to describe it) - Harsh/Mishty, Ramballs/Pooja , Divya/Roli and many more that I missed. Oh! Almost forgot - if you didn't know, we still have a healthy count of bachelors (yes, the unmarried variety). Some of them seem to have sweethearts tucked away but at least two - Akshay (of "the name's Kapoor; Akshay Kapoor" fame),and Charnail Singh (dacoit turned Infosyian) - were burning holes in the dance floor with those same twenty-somethings. Akshay focussed on the firangs, given his intent to integrate with London, or perhaps, New York life while Charnail applied his well-honed 10 year thesis on 'whom to target on a dance floor and come out successful' (we were given a verbal thesis extract earlier that evening - fascinating stuff!).

The second evening was at the newly groomed 'Whispering Teaks'. Yes - an erstwhile wooded area (in the general direction of the water tank) has been rejuvenated with teaks and a humble clearing for music and food - nice semi-formal lounge-like ambience accompanied by music more amenable to a 30-40 age group. This event rounded off the 2-day festivities.


Back to the basics
: How the organizers managed to hustle 40-50 classmates and their unknowing spouses into L-11 is a mystery, but the class followed the Pied Pipers. There were the usual few playing hookey and these naughty boys discovered the Cafe Coffee Day in the extended acad block. Operational 8-to-8, its priced for alums! The classroom discussion centered around 'giving' and what the class funds should and could be contributed to. After a delicious coffee and chocolate cake, I stumbled into the last 7 minutes of this GD, perplexed by what all the fuss was about and the scary thought of this being the general state of affairs in corporate boardrooms across India. It had the same effect as 2 years of IIMB classes. The spouses must've left a little more dazed than me, since they didn't have a benchmark - at least for me, it was a faint ghost that I had exorcised 10 years ago. One of the more profound questions from the participants was towards the end of this 1 hour ordeal, where Prabal Mitra took the mic to quench his thirst for knowledge 'Daru kahan hain?'

The other 'back to basics' experience was the food at the mess...err, the mess that was termed food. Relatively speaking, I thought our mess food was great then - something's gone seriously wrong in this department or the metallic linings of our young hostel-trained stomachs have gradually corroded. As with everything else in India, perhaps there's a BPO opportunity here (Mr.Batra, Mess Secy - are you listening?) In contrast, the Athik's counters serving maggi, chai, and toast omelette seemed like manna to a starving set of midnight snackers.

As far as reporting from the actual reunion goes, 'That's all Folks'!

Of Normal Curves and Outliers

Everyone who thought normal curves were a wasted statistical theory, or a measure to unfairly dole out A's and D's to students undeserving of both, should reconsider viewing and respecting it as a philosophy or a law of nature to put the world around us in perspective. What better to bracket the Class of '96 than the Normal Curve. Grades apart, its the only sane way of taking such a diverse bunch of personalities (though something called a CAT attempts to deem entry to a bunch of copyCATs) and yet finding that there is some well-preserved quirk, euphemestically attributed to 'individuality', intact in each and every one of us. Yet, there is also the comfort of finding that we are not freaks or superheroes, that there is someone similar on each one of those quirks or behavioural attributes, whether positive or negative. So, draw the curve, mark the 1, 2 and 3 std deviation lines and you will find your place; and the "outliers". And in each of those 'behavioural' normal curves, between each set of the standard deviation lines, you'll find yourself in different company - that, I suppose, is the magic of life.

The curve and its influence on our batch of 180 or so,
- we still have 10 bachelors, by choice - Mathrani, Punde, Akshay, Charnail, Pankaj (Bagri), Bhabhe, Nattu, Mr.Wagle etc. - on the other end of the curve, we have people for whom it was not the right time to get married.

- we still have about 10 people or so who haven't moved from their first job - Bhatta (TAS), Chaitan Rao (Leo Burnett) come to mind. The outlier will emerge in the next 10 - someone like Bhatta will probably yet be at TAS. On the other end, we probably have 10 or more people on their 6th and 7th gigs (Sammy Nair, Ajay Mathrani & Atish share this honor with a few other - for crying out loud, I just took my 6th!)

- Too early to find outliers in the 'kids' section - most, if not all, seem to be at the 0,'Work-in-Progress', 1, or 2 mark (outliers - pls post a family photo on the blog as proof) - this is called a FAT Normal Curve.

- I'm sure the normal curve fits well in terms of net worth as well. Even here, Hitesh has staked his claim as an outlier. In the next 10, others may catch up, with someone else crowned the new outlier.

- Weight changes will probably form the best Normal Curve with some of the sexiest outliers being more Curvy and the laziest ones being more rounded (its after all, a simple matter of concave or convex, interchangeable, based on whose perspective its seen from).

- Even the excuses for being absent fit the curve well: pregnancies, holidays, birthdays, family visits, delivery of their new homes, and Anurag Saboo (from the IIMB neighbourhood) takes the award for the most innovative one i.e. the outlier. He forgot! Asked by someone on 24th evening as to why he wasn't in Mumbai for the pan-IIT meet, he told them it was because he preferred to be at the IIMB reunion - oops, hasn't that been in progress for 36 hours ?! He rushed to campus for the last few hours.

- Professions, geography, transitions, designations, graying, balding and the list can go on - same story, similar patterns, similar curves.
> Some who have stayed in one city all through and some in 6.
> Some who've returned to India after 7,8 and 9 years (me, Arvind and Aruna respectively) while some who are moving out now (Pavan Sachdeva).
> Still haven't heard of someone working in Spain or South America (we have/had 2 in Japan, 3 still in Amsterdam, 1 in Africa whom we sadly lost to a cruel fate).
> We yet don't have a politician, a real estate moghul, a Fortune 500 CEO in our midst but we have Professors (Papa & Ballu - those aren't their Professorial nicknames please; part-time ones in Stu and Puro, perhaps a couple more on the way), we have respectable large co. CxO's (Divya, Hitesh), we have entrepreneurs everywhere (Srini, Uncleji, Sathya, Saraff, PauChau, Ritesh etc.).
> We also have friends who've simply resigned, from their 9-to-5's, to find their country, the planet, themselves, whatever it maybe that's worth searching for - Puro is the most visible example.
> We had people from Atlanta, Ann Arbor, Amsterdam, Singapore, and European cities and had people missing from JayaNagar and J.P.Nagar.

Here's toasting to 180 of us, each an outlier in their own way today, each on the verge of finding themselves an outlier in some other respect next year....here's toasting to the batch - in the hope that amongst all batches from Bangalore and beyond, we find ourselves to be an outlier. Let's keep comparing notes, finding delectable secrets....and we'll celebrate again in 2016.


{Note: All characters in this post are NOT fictional and truly reflect recollection of actual events, discounted to the extent of premature Alzheimer's}

Friday, December 29, 2006

Of cabbages and kings .... [Stuthi V.]

from the back of beyond bus rides in east andheri to the hip and happening east village, its been quite a ride.

spent a very quick 6 mths with nambi in cadburys, where i largely remember us drowning our sorrows in drink and being amused by him missing yet another flight or train. a quick run through advertising, ibm and a marriage, left me fleeing the country to the wondrous city of pittsburgh. before i knew it i was riding the economic downturn in New York City, living out of a suitcase, dedicating my body and soul at the altar of mckinsey. a great time though, since it taught me a lot about what i really valued in life, let me spend 7 gorgeous months in tanzania and crystallized my interest in international development.

after a short stint in a non profit consulting startup with some ex-mckinsey folk, sold right back to the corporate sector last year. work as as senior director of corporate strategy at lexisnexis (and i swear i cant get u discounts on the cars), one of two people looking after global strategy reporting to the CEO. well in reality, completely being the CEOs bitch as he figures out what his thought for the day is ! and this is when i confess that i work on m&a deals for the company, and for anyone who ever saw me in a fin class...shhh....

spend a lot of time working with non profits, providing planning support to two very interesting ones in India (GiveIndia and Parliamentary Research Services) that I would love to get on my soap box to anyone who is interested. also work on a couple of boards in NYC specifically dealing with dance and domestic violence..

on the personal front, its been a blast, will have to leave it at "what happens in NYC stays in NYC :)"

the numbers that matters
hiking 2/7 summits, (the easiest ones) kilimanjaro and mt.mckinley
travelling to 30+ countries on 5 continents
living on 250 bucks a mth for 7 mths in tanzania
speaking 2 more languages than i used to (spanish and swahili)
having 19 yr olds look at me like i am really old, teaching marketing classes at wharton and nyu
650 muscles that hurt after taking up odissi 15 yrs after my last dance class

heres hoping the next 10 yrs will bring
work with/ start an innovative intl devlpt venture
take a round the world trip for a yr or two or more..
find and buy a beach shack i can escape to every weekend

...and whether pigs have wings?

Thursday, December 28, 2006

Rashmi Das



Hi,

Its great to have this forum and really fun to read all the postings...just to recap on the last 10 yrs of my life...

am in Jersey, near Princeton, and have been here for the last 6 years...i got married in '98 - pretty much an "arranged" marriage to Thiyagarajan..(he goes by Raj) and lived in mumbai for 2 years working with IBM before I decided to put my accent to good use and move to the US :-)) (according to Viggy, i now have a very Tamilian accent in US compared to the American accent that i used to have in India !!)

both of us came with jobs and really lousy timing to be in the US in 2000 when the economy crashed...then had a baby in 2001 - Thriaksh Rajan (who is now 5 years old) ...9/11 happened ...and pretty much roughed it out for the next few years...

we had our 2nd boy - shreshth rajan in 2004 ...bought a house in 2005 near princeton,NJ ....and life has been a roller coaster ride ....lots of fun and lots of hard work....done some fun stuff like the typical US family travelling domestically to vegas, disney, sea world, Hawaii, smokey mountains etc...Make atleast 2 trips to india every year , either on work or personal.....its really good to have some of the batchmates nearby whom we try and meet often like sumi/kush, suneetha and kanja....

am currently with Genpact in a BD role and am hoping to see some of you on my next trip to India which should be in the next couple of months....

cheers

rash.

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Its been a while.....[V Kaul]




Awesome job on the reunion - given all the enthusiasm it has generated (though I think the number of posts are still lower than the discussion on the whiskey-rajma issue). Congrats to Kapil, Kalpana and everyone else who made this possible.

Its been 10 years since graduation (since I joined ABN AMRO, thanks to some awesome work by Karthik) and in some sense, I have recently come a full circle - recently joining another European bank (DB), though having cycled through a MBA at NYU and a few years each at UBS and Merrill (seems like my next stop will have to be ICICI because there aren't too many other banks left).

I graduated in 2001 from business school and joined telecom investment banking at UBS (that has to take the cake in terms of bad timing). Moved to Merrill in 2004 to improve my transaction experience after a few dry years and moved to DB when Merrill gave me too much transaction experience.

Very surprisingly, all the exciting stuff I did has been before starting work here - proposing to my fiancee' (now wife) in running shorts/40F weather after running the Chicago marathon, going to the UK to watch cricket in the summers (incl an England/Aussie women game where I was prob 1 of 100 spectators at Lords), running a marathon near the arctic circle at midnight, watching an entire season of 24 in a day non-stop etc.

Still no kids (and no car, not sure what people might find more important). Live in Jersey and work in NYC (and hence try to pass myself off as being a New Yorker, even though I am not).

Have attached a pic of my wife (Sonia) and myself. She was born in Kanpur and I was taking her on a "reunion" trip to Agra and Kanpur (not a good idea to go to Kanpur).

Two wise observations at this stage - there is no point of having a plan in life and Chakra's predictions based on reading my hand have been way too accurate (Chakra - there is still time to extract your fair market share from Ajmeri Baba).

Cheers

P.S. As I write this England is getting crushed, SL is toying with NZ and we are all praying for Tendulkar against SA

A decade under the influence.....[B Karthik, aka Karthik Reddy]



Hello

As promised, and as reminded by M.Singh, I shall launch the recap section.

I did what the rest of the bachelors did in Mumbai from 1996-99 - trudged along the locals from Andheri to C'gate, hopped onto share-a-cabs to N.Point and slogged my butt off for somewhere between 2-4 lakh rupees (different matter that the headlines in pink dailies today scream out salaries of 2 lakh $). All three years were diligently spent at American Express Bank (my campus offer). KD and Charnail were my partners-in-crime but I consider myself fortunate to be in Mumbai as opposed to their far off postings! :-)

Somewhere in 1998, I wanted to get out to S'pore/HK - to get moving on structuring and trading fancy derivatives - what my job in Mumbai introduced me to but never delivered on. The Asian crisis had other ideas for me and left me itching to get out and see the world - the tech route was not an option and, thus, began the 2nd-MBA exodus. I was in the first group that did it in '99 along with Kaul, Papa and Harini (though the latter two were for a nobler Ph.D). [That was also the last time I was on campus - to get recos from Sundi]. I think 10 others followed to the US and Europe. 2 years at U.Penn (Wharton). More importantly, I met my wife - Aditi - at the U.Penn campus. She was there for the same 2 years completing her Masters in Fine Arts (easier to spell out - in every conversation that I mention it, they hear it as a 'Masters in FINANCE'!!!! Imagine that). Well, she's an artist i.e. paints and draws, professionally (her studio is now in Mumbai - moved back to India with me after 12-13 yrs in the US). She's working towards her shows in the next year and if there are shows in cities where batchmates are, I'll be sure to send invites.

(btw, no kids....yet...and the glam photo above is from my brother's wedding this August)

Graduated in the Mother-of-all-Bust years - 2001 (some contend that '02 was worse in the US). Moved to San Francisco to ABN AMRO Tech Banking. The division was let go months after 9/11. Moved back east to DC - 6 months at a start-up - and finally to my home of 3+ years - New York - in late 2002. Bumped into many batchmates here. All of that time was spent in Proj Mgmt and Biz Dev at Instinet (a Reuters co that was spliced and diced by a PE shop and sold to NASDAQ and Nomura). I had been contemplating moving back to India to pursue media/telecom opportunities for a year by then and the sale provided the catalyst. 6 months later - media jobs didn't work out - but came back to run Media/Telecom at SSKI I-Banking in Mar '06. Got hired by one of my clients as recently as last month - Deccan Chronicle (www.deccan.com) - and will continue to work here in Mumbai. My card says SVP - Strategic Planning - and who better than MBA's to know what that really means ;-)

Anything more interesting? Hmmm....well, I've bungy-jumped in Bali, started an indie film streaming site and put it on the back-burner (for now), have seen the Alhambra in Granada (its magical at night), snorkelled in Jamaica and Mauritius, wooed my wife over La Boheme (the opera) in Philly, had season tix to the Philharmonic, proposed to her in her studio, got married in Lucknow over 4th sem spring break, had a sword as an accompaniment (imagine this Chennai-bred, Andhra-born dude doing the Rajput thingey) to my wedding attire, trekked in the Lake District in England, walked the entire Left bank of Paris........hope the next 10 years are more fun.

Love to hear more interesting stories.

Pic from a small reunion in Singapore 4 years back [M.Singh]


Hi,

The blog is a good idea and I am waiting for Karthik to start the catch-up series.

Meanwhile, I decided to post - yeah, it took me 4 years to do so - a picture of a mini re-union of the folks in Singapore who got together when we were travelling through the city - Rambolls, Bokker, Popli and family, Apu, Sonic and I.

Cheers

Manish

btw, in the photo.....

There were a few people who couldn't make it to the photo shoot....and we'll just have to wait for the official photo (which will be bigger and better) - in the interim, here's the who's who of the photo (click on the photo on the blog page - it enlarges fairly well)

Kneeling/Sitting (L to R, or some approximation of it): Manoj Navalkar, Srini, Doc (Suman Ghose), Prabal, Pervez, Atish, Kalpana, Roli, Jolly, Veeru (Virmani)

Standing (L to R, or some approximation of it): Birdie, Nuj, Rajnish Prasad, Kapil, Alok, Bhabhe, Milind, Susanta, Maggu (Manish Gupta), Satish Jain, Jarvis (only hair), Anurag Bhatnagar, Bhatta, Charnalia, Batra, Pavan Sachdeva, Harsh Raut, Akshay Kapoor, N.Shanx, Saraff, Ritesh, Muthu, Aruna, Mathrani, Ramballs, Bhatwadekar, Dibba (Divya Sehgal), Uncleji (Rohit Mohindra), Karthik, D.Singh, R.Shankar, Puro (with large forehead, expounding wisdom), Punde, Ashu Garg, Sammy Nair, Sabu Gopinath, Vyas, Pankaj Bagri, Sathya, Vivekanand, Atul Nath.

Someone wrote back that he found junta unrecognizable (though I think he was mistaken) - hope this helps.

Introducing the batch blog



To everyone in the IIMB Batch of '96:

I know that the newsgroups is an effective medium for everyone in the batch to communicate on specific issues and events. Over the reunion, it was quite clear though that a blog would complete the experience....of the reunion, of events, of issues, of personal lives, of the moments that every person feels like sharing with the rest of the batch - A means of announcing something and not having to engage in a dialogue, a means of staying in touch though one hasn't seen the other for 10 years (...and counting, in some cases).

As Kapil pointed out and as Smiley and I discussed, there were many questions on persons missing at the event, many spouses and children absent amongst several attendees and I would encourage everyone in the batch to share these details with the rest of the batch. It would bring a sense of completeness to this past 10-year reunion and people could keep posting on every event around themselves or a batchmate (e.g. Hitesh's success with Naukri going public - which only validated an already successful personal journey for him).

This would've been a perfect momentum-builder for the reunion. There was an attempt as well I think. Someone created the blog - but it was followed by silence. As for me doing this, my excuse was that I was between jobs, just 6 months after relocating to India...let's say things were a little crazy. As you can see, I have some spare time now before it gets crazy with the new job in Jan.

Blog authors are restricted to the batch and the blog can be viewed by the public - for now. Blog access can be restricted to authors but that makes it cumbersome for spouses etc. to sign on everytime. Obviously, everyone will exercise restraint while posting and stick to relevance and decency.

At the least, I would encourage a photo of each person's little family - whether you're single (yes - still 10 bachelors or so in the batch!!) or a family of 4 (most recent one pls.) - and some details of what one's done with their last 10 years. While some of this was achieved on 24th evening, there are obviously gaps with guys and gals who didn't attend.

I'll probably start the thread, by example, and I hope to see 150 entries in a few days. That would be fascinating, won't it! I would invite Ramballs (for much required humor) and some of the more eloquent and passionate reunion attendees to start penning their 2-day experiences - the rest of the batch is dying to know what we 70+ batchmates did (and THOUGHT!)

Cheers
Karthik