• Azim Premji: "Take charge of your career destiny"
  • by Team Careers360
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    • THE funny thing about life is that you realize the value of something only when it begins to leave you. As my hair turned from black, to salt and pepper and finally salt without the pepper, I have begun to realise the enthusiasm and excitement of youth.

      At the same time, I have begun to truly appreciate some of the lessons I have learnt along the way. As you embark on your careers, I would like to share them with you. I am hoping that you will find them as useful as I have.

      The world you are entering is in many ways very different now from what it was when I began my career. It was the late sixties and India still depended on other countries for something as basic as food. We aroused sympathy, not admiration whenever we went overseas. Recently, someone told me, that when visitors came to India then, they came to see what they could do for India. Now, they come to see what India can do for them. As a hopeful Indian, I look at our country as one which is rich in ethnic and cultural diversity and one that has an effective, secular democracy which will help us build an enduring society.

      Lesson 1: Take charge
      This was the first thought that came to me, when over four decades ago, I stepped into Wipro factory at Amalner. I was 21 and had spent the last few years in Stanford University Engineering School at California. Many people advised me to take up a nice, cushy job rather than face the challenges of running a hydrogenated oil business. Looking back, I am glad I decided to take charge instead. Essentially, leadership begins from within. It is a small voice that tells you where to go when you feel lost. If you believe in that voice, you believe in yourself. When it comes to choosing your careers, you have to take charge of your own destiny.

      Lesson 2: Earn your happiness
      The second lesson I have learnt is that a rupee earned is of far more value than five found. In fact, what is gifted or inherited follows the old rule of come easy, go easy. I guess we only know the value of what we have if we have struggled to earn it.

      Lesson 3: Nothing succeeds like failure
      The third lesson I have learnt is no one bats a hundred every time. Life has many challenges. You win some and lose some. You must enjoy winning. But do not let it go to the head. The moment it does, you are already on your way to failure. And if you do encounter failure along the way, treat it as an equally natural phenomenon. The important thing is, when you lose, do not lose the lesson.

      Lesson 4: Nothing fails like success
      The fourth lesson I have learnt is the importance of humility. There is a thin line of difference between confidence and arrogance. Confident people are always open to learn. A recent survey of executives in Europe showed that the single most important quality needed for leadership success was the willingness to learn from any situation. Arrogance on the other hand stops learning. It comes with a feeling that one knows all that needs to be known and has done all that needs to be done.

      Lesson 5: There has to be a better way
      Partly as a corollary to what I have just said, we must remember that no matter how well we do something there has to be a better way! Excellence is not a destination but a journey. Creativity and innovation sometimes need inspiration from other disciplines. It is probably not a chance that Einstein’s interest in music was as much as his interest in Physics. Bertrand Russell was as much a mathematician as a philosopher. Excellence and creativity go hand in hand.

      Lesson 6: Respond, not react
      There is a world of difference between the two and in terms of success and failure. The difference is that the mind comes in between responding and reacting. When we respond, we evaluate with a calm mind and do whatever is most appropriate. We are in control of our actions. When we react, we are still doing what the other person wants us to do.

      Lesson 7: Remain physically active
      It is easy to take health for granted when you are young. I have found that exercise not only improves the quality of time but also reduces the time you need for sleep. The truth is that stress will only increase in a global world. You must have your own mechanism to deal with it.

      Lesson 8: Never compromise on your core values
      Mahatma Gandhiji often said that you must open the windows of your mind, but you must not be swept off your feet by the breeze. One must define what you stand for. This is not difficult. But values lie, not in the words used to describe them, as much as in the simple acts. And that is the hard part. Like someone said, “I could not hear what you said because what you did was coming out far too loud”.

      Lesson 9: Play to win
      Playing to win brings out the best in us and in our teams. It brings out the desire to stretch, to achieve that which seems beyond our grasp. However, it is not about winning at any cost. It is not about winning every time. It is not about winning at the expense of others. It is about innovating all the time. It is a continuous endeavour to do better than last time.

      Lesson 10: Give back to society
      All of us have a collective social responsibility towards doing our bit to address them. Of all the challenges, the key to me is education. We have a paradoxical situation, where on the one hand we have jobs chasing scarce talent and on the other, rampant unemployment and poverty. The only way to bridge these two ends of the pole is by providing quality education that is accessible by all. 

      The address was delivered by Azim Premji, Founder, Wipro, on August 12, 2006. 

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    • Published on: January 05, 2010
    • 26 Comments
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    • Olga | Nov 22, 2012

    • You said you wonder “if outocursing is turning into insourcing in the USA.” Outsourcing, as it was originated by Ross Perot and EDS several decades ago, took place only in the USA. And there are many outocursing firms located and thriving here. Outsourcing evolved less than a decade ago to include – sometimes, but not always – offshore resources. “Insourcing” is (like the words “outocursing” and “offshoring”) sometimes mistakenly used. “Insourcing” often refers to the contracting model, rather than outocursing. In an outocursing context, “insourcing” refers to an outocursing customer bringing its previously outsourced work back in house, and that isn’t the situation with the university freelancers on the Lance e-marketplace. The students on the Lance e-marketplace are using the outocursing model of “onshore outocursing,” which has been in place for decades (but doing so on a freelance basis). “Onshore” outocursing refers to outocursing work to companies/individuals in the same country. Quite a few American outocursing firms are now hiring university students as well as rural workers to provide local talent pools that are more cost-effective. Offshore outocursing firms, especially the giants in India and South America, are also hiring university students as well as rural workers for the US service centers they are establishing to support their U.S. clients’ work. And that’s a win-win-win in my opinion.
    • Shalini | Feb 24, 2012

    • really inspiring......
    • shyam das | Oct 04, 2011

    • It is really excellent.
    • sanjeev kumar | Sep 02, 2011

    • inspiring speech by mr. azim premji, one of the best enterprenuar in india and abroad, taking indian market to this height. i think he is the rolemodel for many technical students.
    • dipti.d.shringare | May 28, 2011

    • wow amazing article .i m lucky to read this article because when i was totally frustrated i got to read this article .it feels better now .
    • dipti.d.shringare | May 28, 2011

    • wow amazing article .i m lucky to read this article because when i was totally frustrated i got to read this article .it feels better now .
    • dipti.d.shringare | May 28, 2011

    • wow amazing article .i m lucky to read this article because when i was totally frustrated i got to read this article .it feels better now .
    • sai | May 26, 2011

    • they speak high but they are not so for example see ratan tata he was involved in 2g scam but he is escaping from it because of our weak politics stupid corporate people.dont ever take them as an inspiration, inspire from some one like gandhi and mother teresa not from these parasites under cover of a cow.
    • sai | May 26, 2011

    • ajim premji is a beaf because he likes to eat beaf.these ccorporate people are making people work horses and using them like animals stupid fellows and nonsense creatures.
    • Benny | May 18, 2011

    • Really inspiring! I loved the most,the very first sentence! "THE funny thing about life is that you realize the value of something only when it begins to leave you".
    • Hrishikesh | Apr 30, 2011

    • these 10 lessons can change the life of any person and make dat person best of all... I always wanted to be the best..So i am going to follow these lessons of Sir Azim Premji.... I would also like to tell all my friends to follows these..
    • shiwani | Apr 24, 2011

    • this was truly inspiring! well said and its worth a billions if one can imply it on their lives..... hats off to you sir!
    • sanjaylingala | Apr 15, 2011

    • May god help me in implementing those 10 rules in my life and as well as all indian youth.
    • Vinod | Apr 14, 2011

    • Bhai sahab koi job hai kya aapke pass?
    • tushar | Oct 06, 2010

    • after 5 yrs a premji is the biggest man in the world i predict
    • santhosh | Jul 06, 2010

    • it is very useful information to all furture engineers and past engineers
    • madev | May 27, 2010

    • we should not react but react. that is what i liked in the speech. We should have control over our actions rather than doing the other persons want us to do. Creating thirst may be their duty. But searching for water is our duty.
    • Atul | Mar 08, 2010

    • All these words inspire for a time being. rather we need continuous motivation lessons to Stand India As Numero Uno. It the youth of our country who needs to implementing such lessons in lives. Can we have more programmes to develop our Nation. It is the responsibilty to the stronger to develop the weeker one. who??.
    • manoj | Feb 03, 2010

    • thank you for the great article, Azim Premji has given a complete motivation/guide package, feel soo gratefull to him, i loved it on the feb issue too, the presentation was jus superb.. thank you
    • ipsita siddhanta | Jan 25, 2010

    • Thanks for the valuable inputs to the youth & aspiring careesists by Mr.Azim Premji. We always tend to ignore these core values in the quest for success.
    • RSK Chakravarthy | Jan 24, 2010

    • Azim Premji gives the youth the message,which we often dont learn........ I am inspired by the Success and Failure part. Salute to you, sir.....
    • pooja mishra | Jan 15, 2010

    • Useful article! nicely worded and rightly said!
    • Vikram | Jan 11, 2010

    • Thanks for getting this wonderful speech to us.This speech tells us a lot about the individual himself and the way he lived his life.The most inspiring lesson was of earning happiness.
    • Sumit Arora | Jan 07, 2010

    • Lesson 10: Giving back to society really stayed with me. I hope the drive towards fulfilling my social responsibility remains and I act upon it in 2010.
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