XYZ degree/diploma: has been chosen as the (this is what gets your attention) TOUGHEST course among all d courses including B COM (yes, they even bothered to include it in the list of the 'TOUGHEST' courses ever),CA,IAS,IPS n MBBS; by d (holy shit!) Guinness Book of World Records, on (this is what makes it sound authentic maxx) 18Aug2011. It has 58 university exams+ 130 series exams + 174 assignments (that's why you love your degree so much no?) within 4......years (max 750 workings days) - (obviously you slogged out for all those 750 working days).
All random dudes post dis on ur wall 4 at least 2hrs (perhaps they ran some complex simulation program, being the recipients of the TOUGHEST degree ever, to come to this number of 2hrs) & b proud to be a spammer!.. :) finally someone realized our pain n effort! ;-) (encore.)
if you ever posted this, please note: i do sympathize, sometimes.
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Monday, April 11, 2011
share trading is not entrepreneurial
Recently some team members in IIT Madras' e-cell suggested that we start an online share trading platform. Might get us back on track with events.
It used to surprise me in my second year that not a single e-cell in India actually focuses on product development. Including the e-cells of all the IITs. Most of us have got into the rut of business plan competitions and then almost every year somebody (these-a-days more than some) comes ahead with the above idea.
Sure most of us might feel that entrepreneurship is very MBAish and since we often talk about funding and investors hence commodities trading and futures are the next logical extensions.
They really are not.
Entrepreneurship is about the thrill of starting a new company. Identifying a problem, an opportunity and then working towards solving it. And it's not all social either. Most of the companies are indeed aimed towards generating more revenues. And that is what a e-cell should try and work on. Any event which focuses on idea generation, product development, market analysis, customer identification, selling (read: selling your product. not derivatives), structuring a young company, expansion, bootstrapping etc. should be encouraged.
All of the above points involve you as an entrepreneur sweating it out for something you made or believed in. Not living of somebody else's work.
I do not personally have anything against share trading and some such. It is required that you understand it if you are investing in the market. Hell today one would be stupid to not spend some time learning that. But, that it not what entrepreneurship is about. We should not be educating institute students about something which has no relation with them being entrepreneurial. In fact a person who does not believe in creating something and rather enjoys building money from money should ideally never opt to become an entrepreneur.
I ideally should not be talking about this, since I am still no entrepreneur. But hearing the same stuff year after year, I wanted to put my thoughts down. And most of the actual entrepreneurs are way too busy to write down about such mundane stuff anyways :)
Let's leave such interesting events and initiatives for more interested orgs in our institutes, shall we?
It used to surprise me in my second year that not a single e-cell in India actually focuses on product development. Including the e-cells of all the IITs. Most of us have got into the rut of business plan competitions and then almost every year somebody (these-a-days more than some) comes ahead with the above idea.
Sure most of us might feel that entrepreneurship is very MBAish and since we often talk about funding and investors hence commodities trading and futures are the next logical extensions.
They really are not.
Entrepreneurship is about the thrill of starting a new company. Identifying a problem, an opportunity and then working towards solving it. And it's not all social either. Most of the companies are indeed aimed towards generating more revenues. And that is what a e-cell should try and work on. Any event which focuses on idea generation, product development, market analysis, customer identification, selling (read: selling your product. not derivatives), structuring a young company, expansion, bootstrapping etc. should be encouraged.
All of the above points involve you as an entrepreneur sweating it out for something you made or believed in. Not living of somebody else's work.
I do not personally have anything against share trading and some such. It is required that you understand it if you are investing in the market. Hell today one would be stupid to not spend some time learning that. But, that it not what entrepreneurship is about. We should not be educating institute students about something which has no relation with them being entrepreneurial. In fact a person who does not believe in creating something and rather enjoys building money from money should ideally never opt to become an entrepreneur.
I ideally should not be talking about this, since I am still no entrepreneur. But hearing the same stuff year after year, I wanted to put my thoughts down. And most of the actual entrepreneurs are way too busy to write down about such mundane stuff anyways :)
Let's leave such interesting events and initiatives for more interested orgs in our institutes, shall we?
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