Monday, January 24, 2011

TEDxVIT 2011 – Miles to go before I sleep....

Thanks to Archana Raghuram who spread the word about TEDx events (http://archanaraghuram.wordpress.com/2010/11/21/tedxyouth-lyric-engineering-to-making-india-trash-free/).

I made it this time by attending the TEDxVIT yesterday at Chettinad Health city, Kelambakkam and it was worth all the drive!

In this blog I talk about the TEDxVIT speakers who shared with us life lessons from their own personal experiences which ideally is the essence of TED events.

It was Sukumar Rajagopal's (SVP, CIO & Head of Innovation at Cognizant)first TEDx talk and he spoke on the topic “Microsuccess – Success for the rest of us”. The topic not only applied for the student community but for all of us who aspire to become successful.

  • He attributes his success to being at the right time at the right place, his team mates and colleagues, friends and wife. As is his trademark next was a video with the message “If you do not fail you do not live.” (Life = Risk)
  • From the Black Swan book he quoted that only about 1 – 5 % of people are extremis tans who take high risk while the mediocristans are the rest with lesser risk quotient. Based on his own experience he derives that” Success = Risk factor * func(talent or nature + training or nurturing)”
  • Also consoled us (!) with the fact that the concept of A/B/C players (A being a player like Bill Gates or Sachin) is not really to be believed and anyone can really become successful if we put in our efforts and do it with passion.
  • He traced his life path from how being a 15th rank holder in class in 10th board exams, he put in more efforts based on his father’s words in 12th standard and got a seat for Engineering, learnt on passion for doing the job from one of his friends in college, at work learnt the art of empowering people keeping in mind their growth and now in a position of powerlessness (in his words!) gets it done through influence and change management. Hope we get to see his presentation online which describes it best.

His parting thoughts were

  • Can you spot mediocristan parts of extremistan careers
  • For the entrepreneurs on how to evolve a model for the microentrepreneurs like Farmers, Mechanics, Kiranas etc and make them profitable and lead a decent living.

The other speaker of the day who spoke on life lessons was Kirubshankar(CEO of business blogging(www.businessblogging.org)). Again it was his first TEDx talk. It was just after lunch and he gave a warm up for the crowd of atleast 300 with SriSri Ravishankar’s yoga mixed with slapping the person to the extreme that the right hand can go to ! followed with a chikubukku train of students from the last rows to fill up the front rows. Real Innovative and that was enough to get everyone awake and attentive. He correlated this TEDx talk of his to the Last Lecture by Randy Pausch.(Do not miss this in you tube).

His life lessons

  • Whatever is our expertise knowledge we should give it away for free
  • One must have a mentor. Mentors make one feel comfortable and make us do what we should and not just what we like.
  • Before doing a task to think of 3 reasons why we want to do something. He correlated this to a stool which can stand only if it has three legs.
  • He quoted the “Power of taking time off” by Stefan Sagmeister ( Upon a google this article describes the essence of it - http://www.lifeoptimizer.org/2010/03/01/way-to-recharge-your-life/)
  • Meet people from other fields and you will see that you evolve better in your own field.
  • To go beyond and not be a well frog.

At a TEDx conference I imagined there will be more white hairs from whom we can derive knowledge but it was actually the millennial presenters who were more!

If you want to laugh your heart out do not miss Nitin Gupta’s talks. He was the last speaker and all you could hear from the crowd was a nonstop “HA HA HA “

To get the complete list of speakers please visit http://tedxvit.org/speakers.html

Overall I felt there was “Miles to go before I sleep”

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Launch of Third Eye Trust - Vision without Boundaries

It was a great way to start the New Year by participating in the Launch of the Third Eye Charitable Trust at the Anna centenary Library yesterday Jan 4th 2011. Kudos to Mahua Seth ,Vishnupriya Duvvru and Mohan Ganesh from the IT Industry for having taken this noble initiative with so much of commitment.

Launch of Third Eye Charitable Trust(Few moments captured):
The event started with an emotional welcome speech by Mahua Seth, Trustee with Third Eye who dedicated this trust as a Gurudakshina to her visually impaired music teacher of her school. Invocation was by Padmashri Dr.Gayathri Sankaran (visually challenged)who started with the touching “Kurai Onrum Illai song”.

This was followed with a great speech by Mr.S.S Jawahar IAS who manages the Department of Welfare for DifferentlyAbled Persons also as one of his portfolio among others. Some excerpts

  • UN has advocated that the visually impaired are given complete support based on rights based approach instead of charity based.
  • Employment quota with Govt is only 3 % and hence private sectors should step in to create more job opportunities for visually challenged people
  • It is a paradigm shift from "Survival of the fittest" in the world to "Survival of the fastest" and the 3 factors that account for this are 1.Critical Thinking 2. Communication and 3. Collaboration. From a “Command and control “ we are moving on to a collaborative world.(In IT industry same is called moving from a Hierarchical organisation to a cloud based organisation :) )

Gandhi Kannadhasan, Proprietor, Kannadhasan Padhipagam who has been instrumental in conducting the Chennai book fair for the past 31 years promised that once we ramp up the publication to atleast 100 to 150 books we could arrange for stalls at the book fair and create more awareness and thereby get more sponsors for this noble cause.

Next was address by Shanthi Bhattacharya, Co Founder with Chetana Charitable Trust who spoke about the importance of non academic books for visually challenged.She insisted that books should actually provide an easy and pleasant means to explore the world instead of scaring them with only academic materials !

This was followed by distribution of Braille books to the visually challenged students and they were pretty excited to receive it and even started to touch and feel them once back at their seats.



What we can do for Third Eye:(Based on Vishnu Priya's inputs):
  • Corporates can help provide sponsorship for the creation of the material in the various formats such as Braille, audio, e text, large print etc.
  • CSR arms from Corporates across India can help distribute Third Eye's non academic materials and spread the awareness.
  • Help Collaborate and introduce them to publishers who are willing to give permission to publish their list of publications in above format
Please visit their website http://www.third-eye.org/ to know more about them