Sunday, April 27, 2008

Bits and pieces of ADMIS and LSE and London !

Its indeed been a long time since I have bothered putting up a post. Well at this time of the year, I should be studying for my exams. But I find myself absolutely incapable of studying any further for the next few hours. So well why not.. lets update my long forgotten blog.

ADMIS. Short for Analysis Design and Management of Information Sytems. In other words, the programme which gave my a different persepctive of life. My experiences with ADMIS were many and not all of them were good. But then, such is life.

I came to London with a fair idea (or rather what i thought was fair ;) ) of what to expect, as in I knew that this course was not the usual "technical" course. It would provide me with different social perspectives of technology and systems. I had done my fair bit of homework on this, or so i thought. However little did I realise that with the systemic way in which I have been educated in India, I would never be able to comprehend social reasoning the way it is taught at the LSE- and that was before I joined ADMIS. Today I am glad to announce that I have been converted and today boads to being an Angellist ( followers of Prof Ian Angell, http://ianangell.blogspot.com).

A few days before the course officially kicked off,I had the good fortune to meetsome of the ex-ADMISseniors (Jalaj , Prashant, Vinnie, Gagan and Vineeth). They introduced me to Dr. Ashutosh Khanna - my friend, philosopher and guide and my journey starts from that moment.

Its been an inspiring year and my understanding has been broadend to say the least. I do understand that I am hopeless in the literary front. But then I realise that I have a few other capabilities that I wouldnt have known otherwise. All thanks to ADMIS and in particular Prof Ian and Dr. Ashutosh (Ash to me)

This year is claimed to be a year of turmoil. The credit crisis has led to a slowdown (depression would be a politically incorrect term ). But to me, this has been a year of learning and comprehension.

To begin with, the first few months were spent understanding the decaying job market. I was (many say lucky) to have got a interview calls from 6 companies before December. It started with Deutsche Bank in december followed by Merrill Lynch, Deloitte, Lehman Brothers, E&Y and Barclays to name those companies whose interviews that I attended. I would attribute this to 2 reasons - well written applications , good and well structured resume with relevant achievements and experiences.

Good fortune or good preparation, I got an offer from all the companies that called me for an interview. Lesson learnt: Good preparation leads to good fortune. It seldom is the other way around. My understanding of the strategy towards cracking the interviews - good analytical skills, good set of experiences ( i wouldnt qualify experience as purely work experience category alone, by experience I mean your understanding of how you would deal with situtaions and how have you dealt with situations in your life), and tonnes of confidence . What you need to have is a good perspective of who and what you are capable of. I applied for a graduate role in the technology dept for Lehman Brothers. After my final interview, I had a brief chat with my interviewrs regarding my perspective of what the industry needs - a new lease of life. It needs to be bled dry of the old blood and be pumped up with fresh new perspectives. It was then that they asked me if I would be interested to join the Corporate Geenralist programme as they felt that I had a good vision and was better off in strategy than just pure technology. Lesson learnt: Speak your mind. Be confident ! You never know where that would take you. I would have ended up as a technologist, but just beause I was able to speak my mind (intelligently) I got an opportunity to work with the corporate strat team for Lehman Brothers.

My good friends. Again this is something that has helped me get through difficult times. Priyanka, Seena, Rupali, Gautam, Nurit, Martin, my good doctor friends at Birmingham, my aunt and uncle, Vineetha chechi and Dav, Ashutosh , Prof Ian, Prashant, Richard , Aditi , Riddhi Sonal to name a few. Some stray thoughts that come to my mind are -
1) the long walks with Ash discussing everything from capitalism , monetisation , philosophy , markets and everything else under the sun.
2) Seena, my darling friend with whom I have spent a lot of time talking about all the nuances of my life
3) Priyanka - my good luck charm. You are truly one of the nicest people I have met
4) Nurit - my brother. A gem of a person, the optimist that kept a hopeless pessimist like me going...
5) The long arguements with Prashant ! Hard core techie vs hard core bullshit (me)
6) Richard - the way you break my arguement - into a million pieces.
7) Friends and family at B'ham: the wonderful food and love kept me going !
8) Aditi and Riddhi - Bhain Club ... and now with Waqas - Crazzy 4 ... lol... thanks to you I study !
9) Sonal ! the only person who finds me funny :D
10) Vineetha chechi - who taught me the art of conversation ! and much more !


I was pretty miserable at first. Not knowing what to do with the sudden credit crisis and news of job cuts puts one off (understandably ,at this point in time, all i was bothered about was getting a job) . My friends have really inspired me every single day. I owe you guys a lot!


My Passion: Cooking and Travelling and Photography :D
I guess these are the only 2 things that I can claim I am not too bad at ! I have enjoyed every moment in UK taking photographs of all my lovely friends. I have fond memories of all the wonderful trips that we have gone for. I guess my flickr album justifies all the fun that I claim.
Cooking has been wonderful. The wonderful meal with Priyanka and Seena ! those cookouts with Sonal, Aditi and Riddhi ! yummmmmm

My learning !
The power of Networks!!! Hang on to every word I say. This is what Prof Ian and Ash taught me. "The wealth of networks" . I started out as a "node" connecting through Ash and Ian to many others in the industry. Ian and Ash are my "bridges" to the wealth of their network. Thanks to them ,I have been able to meet several people from various industries - Financial Services to consultancies, lawyers to vendors.

This network helped me tremendously understand the market and look at the world through various perspectives; I learnt to ask intelligent questions and make interesting conversations. Slowly, I learnt to become a bridge adding to the network, people from the Financial serivce industries, strategists from Indian consultancies and Angel Investors and VC's from London. (I would recommend LinkedIn to one and all). Ash's words keep reverberating in my head "Stop being a node.. take over as a bridge"

Lesson Learnt: Invest in your network. It will reap huge rewards sooner (than) later.

My Dream! From the day I left Chennai, I always used to nurture the dream to start my own company. Someday, became someday soon. And now it looks more or less like a reality. Thanks to the Business Innovation class, I have been able to write up a business plan that has got a few big investors interested. The experience has been exhillarating. Hopefully after my exam, I would be able to take this forward.
Lesson Learnt: As Dr. Kalam says: Dream Dream... Dreams transform into thoughts and thoughts into action. And as Ayn Rand puts it ... capitalism is the way forward ;)

My perspectives of London: I guess my perspective of the situation in London is very different from that of many. I see a lot of hope and lots more excitement in the coming days. News of jobcuts and slowdown does make the situation look pretty bleak. But then if you are prepared to see this through, I honestly believe that life would be very exciting.

The entire financial service industry in restructuring itself. London is an amazing city with a will to survive. Nothing would bring this city to its knees. This is not something that any other city can boast of !
Lesson learnt: Keep your eyes and ears open. Look out for opportunities, have your own perspectives and be well read.

Add to Technorati Favorites

2 comments:

sirisha said...

nice blog....pretty informative n useful...

Kapil Samant said...

great blog ... Very inspiring