Showing posts with label Bill Gates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Gates. Show all posts

February 6, 2014

Hearty Congrats Satya Nadella!

I like meeting famous people. And successful people. Like Satya Nadella. I met him at his father's residence which is getting pounded by OB Vans and mediapersons like some thunderbolt created a lava in their home in Hyderabad. I find the media attention and references to his alma mater quite banal and predictable, a typical Indian way of extolling the man or woman from all the beginnings  - this is where he studied, that is where he   played marbles, this is where he bought his eighteenth pair of glasses, that is where he used to hung out for vegetable cutlet and chicken biryani. What's the point? Precisely. Thats what I am asking. What's the point? It is an archaic way, an Indian way of praising the result and forgetting the effort. We cannot accept that any overnight success takes an investment of more than a handful of individuals, besides family members and institutions into the making of that individual including contribution by self. We need to talk it up like a 30-second facebook movie so it sounds dramatic - we have to say "HPS" or "Manipal University" and undermine the role of his parents, well-wishers, peers, mentors, associates, customers and even competition or for God's sake even Bill Gates into what brought him to this stage. We keep doing this everytime an Indian makes it to the apogee on world stage. We did it when Indian origin scientists won Nobel Prizes. We did it when Manoj Syamalan made it to the list of  Hollywood greats. We did it when Anshu Jain or Vikram Pandit leapfrogged to the top positions in MNC Banks a few years ago.  When success comes, we hunt it down to the schools and city connection. When failure stares an individual as in the case of Rajat Gupta, we blame it on the individual. Wrong way of projection. 

From the coverage, it is clear we are not talking about the Microsoft culture which thrives on meritocracy and leadership. We are not talking about the business systems and the work ethic about the Americans here. We are not talking about the killer instinct of an Indian who made it to the top post by relentless hardwork, innovation and focus. Nobody is talking much about the rigorous framework of performance appraisals spread over two performance cycles over so many years in Microsoft which weeds out the inefficient people by ruthless bottom-scraping. And no, nobody talked about the importance of value-systems or parenting or the dining table conversations that the family of Nadellas used to have everyday before Satya packed off to the US. It is not just about adrenalin and alma mater or being born to an IAS officer and being married to your school sweetheart in a poetic fashion. It's about  digging for a story that is not a headline story. 

Everytime an Indian makes it big outside of India, we should stop looking for singularities that will make "breaking news" headlines. The way Satya Nadella got covered, many will forget his or his family's efforts sooner than making a beeline to collect tokens at HPS or Manipal University. Thats where we Indians are erring in delineating the obvious while missing the wood for the trees. The Americans, the Jews, the Mexicans, the Chinese, the british, the Latin Americans, the Africans or even the Icelanders  do not go overboard as much as Indians do in celebrating individual successes and then forgetting the "DNA by design" principles that can spawn more successes. 

The way TDP is canvassing Satya's success or the puerile way in which local papers cover his ascent is quite hilarious and average. No, Satya's climb to the position does not mean Gachibowli Center will become the biggest employer in AP for our unemployed youth. No, Satya's success will not mean that the school he studied from is the go-to school in India. No, Satya's position in Microsoft doesn't say anything about whether more Indians will be employed in Redmond. It is business as usual and it is meritocracy which will drive measurements of performance. 

For Microsoft which has been under a cloud (pun unintended) for a while, it is still a 400-metres dash whether they will leapfrog into the huge divide that exists in the chatrooms about which are the four companies that will rule the new world, whether Microsoft will join  the likes of Amazon, Google, Samsung dominating the planet or whether it will become a monolith like IBM, Cisco, Yahoo and Nokia (now part of Microsoft). Microsoft has been a company that not just made software products but changed the world of workplace that we all grew up and do. It believed in making people more productive so they could achieve their highest potential. It may have lost a lot of momentum in giving way to competition stealing a march with products that were popping out of the cubicles of Microsoftians years before - social networking, search engines, tablets, smartphones, all were thought before but dropped because of sub-optimalities that could not be finessed. But what the helll, Microsoft still generates close to $80 billion in revenues and makes an obscene cash profits that will continue even if they shelve their workforce to near zero. 
It's time to recognise that culture, that ecosystem, the vision of the man Bill Gates who saw just beyond what Steve Ballmer may have typically seen like a CEO - numbers, competition and products. Its time to talk about the parenting approach of Mr BN Yugandhar and his wife - their emphasis on reading, honesty, integrity, community sharing, kindness yet incredible focus. 

I met Satya for half-hour when he was visiting his parents a few years back. I didn't know he was coming. His father and I have been book-friends since 1996. It was my turn to give Naipaul's book "Letters between a father and a son" to Mr Yugandhar as he was unable to get it. I gave him the book and then he called his son and introduced me. We spoke about Hyderabad, his classmates (one of his classmates was my former boss too), Microsoft@Hyderabad, Markets, and Banks (even as I was uncomfortably weaning him away from the last topic). He was slightly over-weight but confident and convivial. He has a hearty and accentuated laughter like his father. He had his own charishma and not the slightest gait of an IAS Officer's son or a budding CEO at a company soaking him in paydirt of central bank proportions. He has since that meeting taken to ways of fitness, now heard even runs marathons and looks a generation younger and fitter than even founding fathers like Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer. Its good to see an Indian like him do so well - it brings a lot of Indians out of poverty for a few days and even airlifts the cynical civil society, businesspeople, politicians, working class and glitterati into an atmosphere of patriotic groundswell. But thats not enough to sustain us to consistent glory. Especially if we are talking about points not making up the story. I wish Satya Nadella a grand debut as a CEO and all Indians at Microsoft an opportunity to play catalytic roles in future. But let all Indians take a deeper look  - what do we need to do to have more Satya Nadellas in our midst thrive on a mass-scale?

June 29, 2012

Book Review: The Bilderberg Conspiracy-Inside the World's Most Powerful Secret Society by H.Paul Jeffers

When it comes to conspiracy theories, nobody brings out better books than American Writers be it Naomi Klein, Noam Chomsky, John Perkins ("The Confessions of an Economic Hit Man"). There is a voyeur in me that seeks out more such books. My latest find and I must recommend this whole-heartedly is a book by H Paul Jeffers - "The Bilderberg Conspiracy". The Bilderberg is today considered the world's most secret society and also its most powerful comprising the most well-known and famous politicians, businessmen and businesswomen, media owners, celebrities, heads of state, His and Her Holinesses and other Royalty.








As the theory goes, this group called the Bilderberg group has been growing in membership (albeit restrictive to accomodate only the most powerful clique on the planet) ever since the group first met in 1954. The book explains, in spine-chilling detail almost all the major meetings ever convened by the group, at the hotel(s) during the two day retreats at select frequency (annual). What does the group want? Secrecy and Access by its members to the world's resources, permits, and corridors of decision-making to push the group's common and indwividual interests- both political, social and economical. Much of the headline-making events after the World War-II - the Bretton Woods agreement, the UN and the Security Council composition, the Cuban Missile crisis, the Vietnam war, the rumblings of currrency regimes changing from sterling pound to Gold standard, gold standard to dollar, the creation of the "Euro", the oil crisis of the 1970s, the battering of the pound in 1997 and the over-throwing of the Margaret Thatcher government, the list goes on...all these are engineered by the Bilderberg Group. This has had its toll on the stability of world governments, the banking system and the overall functioning of the world capital markets as we see now.


Who are the current members of this group? Henry Kissinger, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Melinda Gates (wife of Bill Gates), David Rockfeller (yes son of John D Rockfeller), Paul Wolfowitz (thats right, World Bank), Donald Rumsfeld, Tony Blair...You will be surprised the list now includes me and more influential men and women - Ben Bernanke, (Fed Chairman) Thomas Friedman (world's richest journalist? and also the most idiotic!), Paul Volcker (Ex-Fed Chairman), George Soros (quite believable, because he treks the entire world on specious lecture tours which benefit him more than his society), Walter Wriston (Citigroup Ex-Chairman). So, you see, the elite Bilderberg group virtually leaves out few men and women who move the world and this group, according to well-documented research by the author has met 56 times after 1954 almost every year. The last time they met was in June 2008 - in the aftermath of the banking crisis and the decisions taken are well-noted by now. The author has brought out the pulsating sense of what usually goes on in most meetings and the expanse of the stuff that gets discussed which is itself an agenda that topples governments, eases out presidents, and rankles cabinets of sovereign republics.


To be fair, this is breath-takingly revealing and damning of what goes on in world and foreign affairs today and you get the feeling its all true and happening. You will definitely feel there's more you like to know and get informed about this secretive society which is not ritualistic like Freemasons or racisti like Klux Klux Klan. Paul Jeffers has done painstaking research, scenting the trails left by legendary trackers of Bilderberg group like Daniel Estulin, Jim Tucker, Conrad Black, and Tony Gosling. Your world view changes after reading this book and the iconic society because the decisions taken seem to be pushing the personal agenda of this group of all-powerful people under the veils of democracy, open society, free trade and free press, and a vigilant judciary. Seventreen chapters, two hundred and thirty two pages long, racy details pop out per page that is both intense and credible, this book will not allow you to sleep well because the details unearthed are both disturbing and annoying. Would you like to hear that The Economist survey is borne out of a Bilderberg activist? That Richard Nixon was sacked as President not by Watergate Scandal but because the Bilderberg club wanted Nixon out so that "their" man - Gerald Ford can be in. That Berlin Wall was broken down out of this club's resolve. That the agenda of media is aligned to few elite members' interests - US News, Washington Post, etc. That the idea of joining Greece and Portugal and Spain into European Union was "on" since 1957. That Margaret Thatcher was overthrown because she didn't allow UK to join the European Union.


As per the author, the main goal of this group is to create a new world government controlled by a wealthy elite and officials of global corporations (like BP) - to have a world bank, a global currency, centralized political control, world wide free trade and so on. Reading this book so finely investigated and penned will make you read more into the actions of the "elite" who make headlines. For example, why did Hillary Clinton go to Myanmar? What is the real agenda of Melinda Gates who administers free vaccines through Bill Gates and Melinda Foundation? Why does Henry Kissinger who is so anti-India waxing so eloquently on China nowadays? My point is, if Bilderberg conspiracy is true, then there should be more transparency to the group's meetings and its proceedings because it concerns all of us. I now know most answers to why some events really happened - and you will also find out why - even if you don't agree fully, if you read this book.

The Bilderberg Conspiracy by H.Paul Jeffers published by Citadel Press Kensington, pp.234.

"Jailor" (Telugu/Tamil) Movie Review: Electrifying!

        "Jailer" is an electrifying entertainer in commercial format by Nelson who always builds a complex web of crime and police...