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Showing posts with label Leadership and Entrepreneurial Training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leadership and Entrepreneurial Training. Show all posts

Thursday 9 November 2023

Thriving in the Green Economy: Strategies for Building and Scaling Sustainable Businesses

Innovation & Startup IIC

 A sustainable business model refers to a way of conducting business that not only aims to generate profit but also seeks to have a positive impact on the environment, society, and sometimes even the economy. It's about finding a balance between financial success and contributing to a better world. 

Sustainable means something is able to be maintained or kept going over a long period of time. For example, a sustainable negotiation is an action or process that can be maintained.

  • The ability to use natural resources so that people in the future can continue to rely on them
  • A practice that sustains a given condition, such as economic growth or a human population, without destroying or depleting natural resources, or polluting the environment
  • The balance between the environment, equity, and economy

Wednesday 8 November 2023

Sustainable Business models - leading Indian brands and their strategies

The Sustainable business - a way of life, giving back to the environment.


The practical strategies and approaches that businesses can use to not only adopt sustainable practices but also succeed and grow in the rapidly evolving green economy. It's likely to capture the interest of business students and professionals looking to make a positive impact through sustainable entrepreneurship.




Wednesday 18 October 2023

Empowering Entrepreneurs: Tamil Nadu & India Government Schemes Unveiled!

Some of the prominent schemes available for entrepreneurs in India:



The Tamil Nadu government has implemented several schemes to support and encourage entrepreneurship. Please note that there might be new schemes introduced after my last update, so it's recommended to check with official sources or government websites for the most current information. Here are some of the prominent schemes:

Tuesday 18 July 2023

Angel Investment - VC Funding - Opportunity for Early stage entepreneurs

(Session pictures and videos at the end of the post) 

What is Angel Investment?

Angel investment refers to the early-stage investment made by individuals, known as angel investors or angel funders, into promising startup companies or ventures. These individuals typically invest their own personal funds, often in exchange for equity ownership or convertible debt in the startup.

Angel investors are typically high-net-worth individuals who possess both financial resources and expertise in specific industries or markets. They invest in startups during their early stages when these companies often face challenges in obtaining traditional financing from banks or venture capital firms. Angel investors play a crucial role in bridging the funding gap for startups and providing them with the necessary capital to develop and grow their businesses.

A poem on Angel Investors

 In the realm where startups take flight,

A guiding presence shines so bright.

With wings of wisdom and hearts that care,

They're known as angel investors, rare.

Monday 12 September 2022

DFAB How to identify the right niche? Is my niche correct?

What does it take to select the correct niche and be successful in it?

Follow the DFAB method

Entrepreneurship is Easy? How to be a successful Entrepreneur?

Is Entrepreneurship Easy? How to be a successful Entrepreneur?

This is a million dollar question and there are many living examples who are time tested testimonials....

He who blames others has a long way to go on his journey. He who blames himself is halfway there. He who blames no one has arrived.

Chinese proverb.


"It's ok if things don't always go as planned. There are many ways to reach the same destination."


Thursday 1 September 2022

Adaptability - Work Place adaptability Skills

 Adaptability - Work Place adaptability Skills

Link - 1

Link - 2

Conflict Resolution - My way or your way or the highway or noway?

 My way or your way or the highway or no-way?

Saturday 12 September 2020

Time Management - If you don't management your time then someone else will manage you.

 Do it right the first time every time.

One is one such resource that cannot be gained no matter what.










Saturday 27 June 2020

The wisdom and wit of C.N.Annadurai - former CM of Tamilnadu

Annadurai was Called as South India’s George Bernard Shaw

C. N. Annadurai was the prominent Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu State of India,

who was known for his proficiency in languages - particularly English and Tamil.

Quiet lengthy yet interesting. Hailing from South India, I use this lot many times to connect

with my audiences.



South India’s George Bernard Shaw

Annadurai was Called as South India’s George Bernard Shaw, Annadurai was a prolific writer

Monday 11 May 2020

Career opportunities for bio sciences

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2982683/








Monday 23 July 2018

Advertisement withdrawal



Bankers slam Kalyan Jewellers ad starring Prabhu, call it 'derogatory'

The Tamil version of the ad features Amitabh Bachchan and Manju Warrier and weaves a plot around Kalyan Jeweller’s tagline "Nambikkai"

Advertisement Withdrawal

kalyan Jewellers latest ad "Trust" Featuring Prabhu in tamil & Amithab in Hindi & malayalam has raised concern among bank officials and they have objected to the ad and demanded an unconditional apology from Kalyan Jewellers:

The following is the response from Kalyan Jewellery








Courtesy:https://www.thenewsminute.com/article/kalyan-jewellers-apologises-bankers-amitabh-bachchan-trust-ad-withdraws-it-85222

Thursday 19 July 2018

Business Opportunities

FMCG

Every day / day-to-day consumables

Milk
Egg
Masala / seasonings / flavors
Rice / pulses / millets
Fruits / veggies

Desserts & Snacks
(Healthy & Natural)
Biscuits
Cakes
Snacks
Drinks

Domestic Services

Plumbing
Electrical
Masonry
Automobile servicing
Mobile servicing
Building construction services
Building construction materials supply
Planning & Designing
Laision

Education service
Para education
Crèche
Play School
Special education
Extra curricular activities
Music & Dance
Swimming
Games
Rhetorical

Cosmetics

Natural & Herbal

Costumes
Textile Wholesale & Retail
Embroidery
Tailoring
Fashion Designing

Software
Web design and Development
Application Development
Digital marketing
Social media marketing
Search engine optimization
E-business & E-commerce

Books & E-Books
E-publishing
Poetry
Short stories
Moral stories
Attitude & Character grooming building
Biography of role models

BFSI
Banking
Stocks
Insurance
Demat Account
Demat Trading
Bitcoins & Cryptocurrency

Miscellaneous
Logistics
NGOs & Public Services
Gadgets - wet / water vacuum device

Monday 9 July 2018

If you are not being updated with technology then you are out of business.

If you are not being updated with technology then you are out of business.

Let's look at history where technology has wiped off few business from the face of the earth.


Case Study on Business Strategies: Kodak’s Transition to Digital


Kodak is one of the oldest companies on the photography market, established more than 100 years ago. This was the iconic, American organization, always on the position of the leader. Its cameras and films have become know all over the world for its innovations. Kodak’s strength was it brand – one of the most recognizable and resources, that enabled creating new technologies. Since the formation of Kodak, the company has remained the world’s leading film provider with virtually no competitors. That is until the arrival of Fuji Photo Film, which now surpasses Kodak in earnings per share and is viewed as the industries number two. It is evident that there has been a significant shift from the use of traditional film cameras to a market fully fledged and saturated with modern and updated digital cameras and digital photographic tools.
However over the time, the situation started to change for Kodak, as it has underestimated the changes on the market. There has been a significant shift from the use of traditional film cameras to a market fully fledged and saturated with modern and updated digital cameras and digital photographic tools. The age of digital technologies were emerging. The core business of Kodak- the film business, started to decline and some areas of the business started to be less profitable and filled with many competitors, especially cheap ones from Asia. Also, the prices of the digital cameras were falling.
Eastman Kodak is divided into three major areas of production.
  1. Kodak’s Digital and Film Imaging Systems section produces digital and traditional film cameras for consumers, professional photographers, and the entertainment industry.
  2. Health Imaging caters to the health care market by creating health imaging products such as medical films, chemicals, and processing equipment.
  3. The Commercial Imaging group produces aerial, industrial, graphic, and micrographic films, inkjet printers, scanners, and digital printing equipment to target commercial and industrial printing, banking, and insurance markets.
Issues and Challenges
The main issue behind this case is the problems faced by the Eastman Kodak Company in the process of changing to Digital technology in printing. It failed to establish market share and market leadership in the Digital sector. It is threatened with either immediate or rapid diversification in technology. Kodak has been extremely successful over the last century in film sales and film development. Now the time has come for the Eastman Kodak to respond to the challenges of digital cameras and also contemplate other issues as follows:
  • Will the company’s current strengths and capabilities to make Kodak as ‘The Picture Company”?
  • How serious are the weakness and competitive deficiencies?
  • Does the company have attractive market opportunities that are well suited with Kodak’s resources? Does it have the internal resources to continue spending money investing in new technology?
  • What type of strategy should it use to enter the digital camera business and how will Kodak leverage its strategic resources?
  • Should it continue to research and produce digital camera technology alone, or look for partners?
  • How will it cope with their existing and new competitors and how will it build a strategic advantage over other companies? Can Kodak once again dominate the world market?
What went wrong at Kodak?


Kodak started facing difficulties in 1984, when the Japanese firm Fuji Photo Film Co. invaded on Kodak’s market share as customers switched to their products after launching a 400-speed color film that was 20% cheaper than Kodak’s. Secondly, during 1980s the company failed to recognize the change in the environment and instead followed and sticked to a business model that was no longer valid for the post-digital age. After the management realized the change and react accordingly but it was too late.
Kodak’s strength
Kodak’s strength can take several forms as follows:
  • Will the company’s current strengths and capabilities to make Kodak as ‘The Picture Company”?
  • How serious are the weakness and competitive deficiencies?
  • Does the company have attractive market opportunities that are well suited with Kodak’s resources? Does it have the internal resources to continue spending money investing in new technology?
  • What type of strategy should it use to enter the digital camera business and how will Kodak leverage its strategic resources?
  • Should it continue to research and produce digital camera technology alone, or look for partners?
  • How will it cope with their existing and new competitors and how will it build a strategic advantage over other companies? Can Kodak once again dominate the world market?
What went wrong at Kodak?
Kodak started facing difficulties in 1984, when the Japanese firm Fuji Photo Film Co. invaded on Kodak’s market share as customers switched to their products after launching a 400-speed color film that was 20% cheaper than Kodak’s. Secondly, during 1980s the company failed to recognize the change in the environment and instead followed and sticked to a business model that was no longer valid for the post-digital age. After the management realized the change and react accordingly but it was too late.
Kodak’s strength
Kodak’s strength can take several forms as follows:
  • Valuable intangible assets: Kodak’s strengths were its brand equity and distribution presence. After almost a century of global leadership in the photographic industry, Kodak possessed brand recognition and worldwide distribution. Kodak could bring new products to consumers’ attention and to support these products with one of the world’s best known and most widely respected brand names as a huge advantage in the market where technological change created uncertainty for consumers. Kodak’s brand reputation was supported by its massive. , worldwide distribution presence – primarily through retail photography stores, film processors, and professional photographers.
  • Competitive Capabilities: Prior to 1990s Kodak had invested huge in R&D. Moreover, its century of innovation and development of photographic images gave Kodak tremendous depth of understanding of recording and processing images. Central to Kodak’s imaging capability was its color management capability. In the digitizing color and transferring digital images to paper, Kodak possessed a powerful set of complementary technologies in sensing, color management and thermal printing.
  • Market advantage: Through its wider distribution network, it has been able to maintain a huge market coverage and accessibility. It had worldwide distribution presence – primarily through retail photography stores, film processors, and professional photographers.
Company’s competence and Competitive capabilities
  • Competency: Eastman Kodak has been Leveraging competencies in film and paper media, color management. It has been known for the best quality films and cameras worldwide. Its journey of more than 100 years has helped to gain the experience and excel in its Endeavour. The organizational changes like decentralization and accountability that George Fisher made helped increase speed of manufacturing and product development .i.e short product development cycles. Secondly, a strength could be also considered Kodak’s favorable corporate image (and implicitly a significant brand equity) that results from the values which are said to lead the staff’s behaviors (“respect for the dignity of the individual, integrity, trust, credibility, continuous improvement and personal renewal, recognition and celebration”), a transparent management which allows shareholders to have a realistic and up-to-date image of the operations performed, strong Human Resources policies and commitment to the community.
  • Core Competency: Eastman Kodak was a highly integrated company that did its own R&D and manufactured its own parts. Changing global markets and cost pressures in the 1980s and 1990s threatened the way of doing business. So the knowledge, company’s intellectual capital are also affected and repercussion is proficiency in its core competency started diminish.  George Fisher, CEO in 1993, refocused the company on core competencies and joined the trend of outsourcing with close relationships to suppliers and announced a new explicit social contract as part of the restructuring effort. By 1997, the company could not grow out of its competitiveness problems like major price competition from its biggest international competitor, Fuji, which was engaged in a major price-cutting campaign aimed at increasing its market share internationally and particularly in U.S. markets. In response, Kodak made more significant changes designed to reduce its costs and to recapture market share in the company’s core products. But all these attempts only lead to decrease market share and declining profit.
  • Distinctive Competency: Firstly, the brand image of the company that has been built since century is the distinctive competency for Kodak. Before the digital age, its distinctive competencies were film and Cameras and its sister concern for its chemical technology.
Strategies of Eastman Kodak
  • Vertical integration combined with continuous innovation and product development. Speed is also required cutting cycle times in manufacturing and product development.
  • To systematize and accelerate product development and improve product-launch, quality, Kodak introduced a new product development methodology called “Manufacturing Assurance Process”(MAP).
  • Joint venture with HP, Microsoft to introduce new products that required in the market. Collaborate with expert to enhance the competency.
  • Digital strategy was to create greater coherence among Kodak’s multiple digital projects.
  • Previously they had diversification strategy but later Fisher focus in Imaging business.
Source: Scribd.com

STRUGGLING WITH DISRUPTIVE CHANGE – RIM


Image result for rim blackberry



The BlackBerry smartphone maker (RIM) is in deep trouble – but Apple was once in even worse trouble with even less time to fix it. Steve Jobs did bring Apple back from the edge of bankruptcy and today it is one of the most valuable companies in the world, but the speed of innovation is ever-faster. A company that’s fallen behind might never catch up. Will RIM (Blackbarry) catch up?
The company had been steadily selling phones up until late 2010 or early 2011, until its shipments began dropping steeply.
The sad fact is that all of this could have been avoided. The company was slow to act in the wake of Apple’s smartphone bombshell back in 2007, believing that consumers would always want a hardware keyboard.
Blackberry - Struggling with business disruption

STRUGGLING WITH DISRUPTIVE CHANGE – NOKIA



RIM it’s not the only company in trouble – Nokia is seeing similar drops in shipments.
Nokia phones were once a consumer favorite, but no longer. Other devices, including the Apple iPhone and Samsung Galaxy S smartphone, among many others, have captured consumers’ imagination. Consumers stuck around in support of Nokia for a while, but after they realized that the company wasn’t reacting very adroitly, they left, and they might not come back.
There was a time when they could count on the company to deliver the latest and greatest platform on the market. But over the last several years, it has been slow to react, and when it did offer products, they failed to appeal to the new customer. Now,consumers don’t know if they can trust Nokia’s claims that it will change all that in the coming years. That alone will be a difficult issue for Nokia to overcome.
Nokia Stock Price - Struggling with business disruption
There are many unflattering comparisons to make regarding Nokia’s current market capitalization. The struggling handset maker’s market cap is now lower than the $8.5 billion Microsoft Corp. paid for IP-telephony company Skype Ltd. last year. Nokia is valued at roughly seven times what Facebook paid for Instagram, and slightly more than half of Apple Inc.’s latest quarterly net profit.

STRUGGLING WITH DISRUPTIVE CHANGE – MICROSOFT




Once upon a time, Microsoft dominated the tech industry – indeed, it was the wealthiest corporation in the world. But since 2000, as Apple, Google, and Facebook whizzed by, it has fallen flat in every arena it entered: e-books, music, search, social networking, etc., etc.
The story of Microsoft’s lost decade could serve as a business-school case study on the pitfalls of success. For what began as a lean competition machine led by young visionaries of unparalleled talent has mutated into something bloated and bureaucracy-laden, with an internal culture that unintentionally rewards managers who strangle innovative ideas that might threaten the established order of things.
They used to point their finger at IBM and laugh – Now they’ve become the thing they despised – Bill Hill, a former Microsoft manager
Microsoft have now announced the Surface tablet. It seems nice. But in making the Surface, Microsoft played it safe and chose to compete, not disrupt.
The Microsoft iPad competes with ultra-thin notebooks and full blown PCs with a traditional keyboard and desktop OS, it competes against the Apple iPad, Android tablets, Amazon’s Kindles etc.
In choosing to compete, Microsoft blew it’s chance to create a stand-out tablet device that could challenge the iPad. And it’s a little too late.
Courtesy: http://www.torbenrick.eu/t/r/mur
STD - ISD - PCO Booth
Image result for STD - ISD - PCO Booth


Video Cassette Player & Cassette Rental
Related image




Image result for cassette rental


Pager
Image result for pager in india




Telegram

Image result for telegram in india





http://www.indianphilately.net/indiantelegraph.html 

please add other business or services that you think have become extinct due to no adaptability to technology.

Abilene Paradox - Was there a conflict in the first place?

What is The Abilene Paradox ?




Context : Corporate World.

On a birthday, a family decided to go out for dinner. Husband asked wife, where to go?

Thinking that he likes Gujarati food, she said: “Let’s go to Agashiye - The Terrace Restaurant!”

His son and daughter nodded in agreement.

Tuesday 3 July 2018

Tata SuMo - A tribute to an exemplary employee

Should be eye opener for many CEOs today.👇

Every day top executives of Tata Motors used to take lunch together but from some days, Sumant Moolgaokar used to take his car and go out during Lunch Hours and come back as soon as the Lunch Break was over. There was a grapevine that he is offered lunch at a Five Star Hotel by some dealers of Tata. One day when some executives followed him during Lunch Break, they were surprised to see that he stopped his car at one Highway Dhaba, ordered food for him and sat with the drivers of trucks who were eating food at that dhaba. He discussed with them what was good and what was bad in a Tata Truck, jotted down and came back to his office. He used to improve upon the experiences of drivers. Such was Sumant Moolgaokar's zeal for improving the Tata Vehicles. Tata Sumo is the biggest corporate tribute paid by any company to it's executive. Su stands for Sumant and Mo stands for Moolgaokar in this brand name.

Image result for tata sumo

The Tata Sumo is India's first indigenously designed sport-utility vehicle. Produced by India's largest automotive company,[1] Tata Motors, the Sumo pioneered rural, off-road, and military transportation across the country.
The Sumo was launched in 1994 as a ten-seater jeep primarily designed for military use and off-road transport.[2] It saw great sales success, and more than 100,000 Sumo vehicles were sold prior to 1997.[3] The vehicle was India's first four-wheel-drive SUV, and proved to be especially popular in rural environments lacking paved roads. The Sumo is based on Tata Motors' pick-up platform and thus shared most of its other mechanics with other Tata vehicles like the Tata Sierra, Tata Estate. The Tata Sumo originally came with a 1948cc normally aspirated diesel engine. Later, an option of a turbocharged version of the same engine was also offered. The vehicle is a competitor for the Toyota Qualis (which is narrower) and Mahindra Commander.


Related image

The Sumo's success spawned the development of several related vehicles, both from Tata (Spacio and Victa) as well as from other companies (Toyota Qualis and Mahindra Scorpio). It was sold alongside the Tata Spacio between 2000 and 2004, when both vehicles were replaced by the more modern Tata Victa.
The Sumo name comes from Sumant Moolgaokar, a former MD of Tata Motors.