Thursday, June 21, 2007

Morality ? anyone ?

Saw Thank you for Smoking - intelligent & funny, that is a rare combination to have.

The protagonist believes that a properly constructed argument is more important for winning than the content of the argument. He demonstrates the tricks of the trade to his son over a debate on chocolate vs. vanilla ice cream -
Firstly you must push your opponent to make a claim - the more extreme the better for you.
Then you must offer evidence that brings this claim under question.
This makes the audience disbelieve your opponent,and so without proving your own stand to be correct you have proved the opponent to be incorrect.

Of course if your intention is to convince your opponent then maybe instead of an argument you should try a discussion.

All this just lead me to think about the moral ambiguities of day to day life. Some things believed to be a certain way are totally another thing in a different aspect, and therefor arguable.

Like drinking - in Europe & surely in France having a glass of wine or pint of beer with lunch is absolutely fine. In India though a drink in the afternoon especially a work week is totally reprehensible - drinking on the job is morally, professionally & socially wrong.
Similarly when an American friend of mine started working in India she was perplexed. Now the way she worked in the US was to never commit anything that she could not deliver & when she committed something it was sacrosanct.
Indians on the other hand will readily commit to sending you to the moon, tomorrow!
Here saying no to a client or a person in authority is just not done.

Last week over a chat with the INSEAD career services - a strange fact came up. Apparently the low figures for placements in Japan were because in the past the few who did manage to work there, quit in less than a year citing cultural difference or rather culture shock.
My husband told me of a trip his colleagues took to Japan. They went there to meet a client & were shocked to see that people actually kept their pets in office & most in fact lived in their offices - sleeping under the desk, showering & working again.
The Indian team felt v guilty to walk out of office at 11:00 pm as the office was still buzzing with activity.

So some amount of moral flexibility (another phrase from the movie) might just be a good thing. Maybe soon it'll be fashionable to take a centrist position on the moral crossroads....who knows but suddenly I'm buying into this whole diversity aspect of the b school.
My position on it was ambiguous, I mean it helped my own application but I wasn't sure how it was supposed to translate into an asset on the work field.If its such an asset then how come the big b schools from America aren't embracing it so whole heartedly but lately i think it would be really important to have a varied exposure in your work life - just makes you more well rounded & maybe even a bit 'irreplaceable'
Also given that the world keeps changing so fast, adaptability might be the new personality trait recruiters look for?

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Dialogue baazi






"You are analog players in a digital world"
Oceans 13



"By pretending to be a man in love, he became a man in love"
Paris Je t'aime

A few additions to the classic one liner pantheon...

p;s: can you tell I'm not doing any work anymore

Coffee, tea or Politics?

Inspired by D.T.L.F and with ample of time to kill I have now come to realize that I am a leftist liberal...damn, what am i going to B school for?

To figure out where you stand in the quagmire of politics - check it here

My score, if anyone wants to compare

Economic Left/Right: -3.38
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -5.23

Thursday, June 14, 2007

My work

Just one of the projects I recently produced...no its not the best of my producer's capabilities but what the heck, its a 'buzz' creating film so the clients happy


Wednesday, June 13, 2007

1 more reason to LOL


I got Aid....scholarship ahoy!!!
This is the best news I've heard (post of course the admit decision)....so totally awesome! Rather generous too ; )
Not just a big relief but honestly the biggest motivator..I'm feeling so loved up by the universe right now, its unbelievable. Just the sign (rather a big billboard) to let me know I'm so totally going to be OK...
btw this post comes from my brand new mac & the first email it opened was the scholarship decision...talk about being lucky!

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

INSEAD Class of '08

The Insead bloggers for J'08 is growing everyday. At last count we are 9, if we count neha in as an Insead spouse. Cool...now to see how many of us remain in the fray post our 10 months.
Welcome to new ones, lets rock!

Friday, June 01, 2007

The new pecking order


After a rather long wait, INSEAD finally released it's Career Report 2006. Just in time to intice the next round of initiates, even the website has undergone cosmetic changes. I like the effort put in to entrap us and make us salivate.
Around this time last year, the brochures, career reports, websites all seemed to paint this fantsyland with its gates firmly shut. It was all we could dream of, gaining entry to never neverland :) So its tres bizzare to be sort of at the halfway house...not yet in but waiting in line with an assured place. This blog has already started getting queries from 2009 applicants, I'm feeling old.... a definitive heirarchy is in place -new applicants, halfway house bloggers now with clear loyalties to schools we are attending & the current batch of students who we all revver for the inside gup
Should I change status now from applicant to student?

Another interesting titbit - there's a lot of noise around about Indians coming back home, the NRI coming back to roots, India offering the best oppertunities etc etc,... The Career Report though showed that only 18% of all Indians at INSEAD in 2006 came back to homeland. The lowest figure from all the other nationalites... anyone want to analyse the trend?