competent and creative leaders. They are groomed in a manner as to serve as agents of continuous improvement and change. It was in 1997 that XLRI recognized an unfulfilled need for formal management training at middle and senior levels of corporate strata. The result of that thought process was the General Management Programme, which has ever since, transformed several industry professionals into veritable leaders who reflect the standards and values of XLRI at various organizations. Recognized by AICTE
Words: 25500 - Pages: 102
Indian IT Services: Shaping Up for the Next Big Push Published: February 24, 2011 in India Knowledge@Wharton Earlier this month, newspaper headlines in India about US$5 billion worth of IT outsourcing orders expected from large U.S. banks brought cheer to the Indian IT services industry. In recent months, industry players have been expecting the return of good times, and this news reinforced their optimism. But experts say the US$60 billion industry needs to retool and reposition itself or it
Words: 3122 - Pages: 13
IT & ITeS April 2010 IT & ITeS April 2010 Contents Advantage India Market overview Industry Infrastructure Investments Policy and regulatory framework Opportunities Industry associations 2 ADVANTAGE INDIA IT & ITeS April 2010 Advantage India • Freight costs in India are 20 per cent less, with faster delivery, as compared to China. • Proximity to the EU and the Middle East and Asian (MEA) market • Cost advantage Every year, 675,000 technical graduates
Words: 4799 - Pages: 20
to Mr VinitBolinjkar, Head, Equity Research, Ventura Securities Ltd Dr. Sangeeta Wats 8 June 2013 Prepared by Vaibhav Jha (Roll No A028) Intern at Ventura Securities Ltd, Mumbai MBA Capital Markets 2012-14 batch Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies, Mumbai Preface The size of Indian IT Industry is $100 billion. The pace with which different IT companies have been growing vary to a great extent. Even in terms of future guidance, one company hovers around 6-10% vis-a-vis another
Words: 8190 - Pages: 33
annually since 1996, each year evaluating the extent to which the company lived up to its ambitious three-part mission of “linked prosperity” under which its product, economic performance, and social contribution were viewed as “interrelated.” tC Carlough took a moment to reflect on the dramatic change that had swept over the ice-cream company since she became its head of social mission in 2001. Since then the company had transitioned from a self-described quirky, independent-minded maker
Words: 8645 - Pages: 35
IOSR Journal of Business and Management (IOSRJBM) ISSN: 2278-487X Volume 3, Issue 5 (Sep,-Oct. 2012), PP 17-27 www.iosrjournals.org Corporate Social Responsibility: A Case Study Of TATA Group Amit Kumar Srivastava1, Gayatri Negi2, Vipul Mishra3, Shraddha Pandey4 ( 1,4 ( 2 ,3 Shri Ram Murti Smarak College of Engineering & Technology, Bareilly, U P/India ) Career Degree College, kakori, Lucknow /U P / University of Lucknow / India) Abstract: Starting from the times of barter system to today’s
Words: 6604 - Pages: 27
Leader op yo Melissa Richardson sat stunned in her office in Phoenix, Arizona, after a disastrous early July meeting with her boss, Beth Campbell. In March, Richardson had been the top Chicago salesperson and a high-potential candidate for management at ColorTech Greenhouses, Inc., a premium grower and distributor of annual and perennial flowers. Richardson remembered the call she had made to her mother, who still lived in her childhood home on the north side of Chicago. “Mom, I just got
Words: 5848 - Pages: 24
rP os t 9-406-010 REV: OCTOBER 16, 2006 THOMAS J. DELONG Infosys (A): Strategic Human Resource Management op yo How do you feel when you look around and realize that 80% of your colleagues have been in the company for less than 24 months? — an Infoscion On November 13, 2003, the HR leadership team led by Hema Ravichandar, head of human resources for Infosys Group, left the conference room with a mixture of excitement and apprehension; a feeling that, they decided dryly,
Words: 5709 - Pages: 23
Chapter 1: Suggested Answers to Application Problems . USAir was very busy analyzing the practices of its competitors-to-be, before it made the move to enter the low-cost commuter airline market. It looks like the efforts included attempts to measure the efficiency of operations and practices on these other airlines. To survive, USAir's MetroJet needs to adopt efficient practices, which will promote low costs. Of course, service must be of sufficient quality as well. The MetroJet team appeared
Words: 6382 - Pages: 26
rP os t HAR VA R D B U S I N E SS S C H O O L P R E SS op yo The End of Management? E xc e r p t e d fro m The Future of Management By Do No tC Gary Hamel with Bill Breen Harvard Business School Press Boston, Massachusetts ISBN-13: 978-1-4221-2509-0 2509BC This document is authorized for use only by Juan Pablo Pimiento at UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE BUCARAMANGA UNAB until August 2013. Copying or posting is an infringement of copyright. Permissions@hbsp.harvard
Words: 5621 - Pages: 23