• Satya Narayana R, Founder, Careerlauncher
    “Most of the world believes that an IIM alumnus cannot be an ‘idiot’. If they come across one, he or she is seen as an exception”

    THE title of this article itself is clichéd and over-written. However, I guess it is almost like a love story. Every generation loves hearing and seeing a love story all over again with a fresh and contemporary perspective. Hence, I agreed to write this out by shaking off my own inertia!

    I entered a B-School a long ago (I stopped short of saying, ‘in the Paleolithic age’!) in 1991-93. I

    had squandered most of my teenage years trying to get into the Indian cricket team and managed to get nowhere closer there. So, my safety parachute turned out to be CAT or MBA entrance exams.

    In short, I reached an IIM with little knowledge but just one skill of cracking the Delhi University exams through the 10-year question paper solving route. What does that mean? I crawled through the first term to understand debit-credit, first chapter or two of Kotler for marketing etc., when the batch was running at the speed of a cheetah.

    At the end of the first term, my score card read ‘D’ against two of the easiest courses – Marketing and problem/ stats. And, I was already making my way to the top of the ranking list arranged in the reverse order!

    The journey was similarly traumatic despite my best efforts through the six arduous terms at IIM Bangalore. My best efforts got me a ‘C’ in my exams. By the end of two years, I managed to beat about 15 people in the ranking list – ranked around 150 in a batch of about 165!
    So, what were the things I learnt during my stay at the IIM?

    1.  I learnt a few fundamentals (or at least the jargon) in areas such as marketing, finance, strategy etc.

    2.  I learnt that I was in a large crowd of hugely competitive and gifted peers. My best efforts saw me on top at the bottom. Anything less would have gotten me evicted!

    3.  To my relief, I did learn that I do have a skill or two that were valuable in my world view and that I had it in fair measure… Thankfully, I believed in my own insight.

    To cut a long story short, my IIM experience provided me with knowledge that was relevant to appreciate management, business and a career in the corporate sector. Surely, what it gave was necessary for one to get started. Above all, it did give me the “thappa” (stamp) of being an IIM alumnus. Most of the world believes that an IIM alumnus cannot be an ‘idiot’. If they come across one, he or she is seen as an exception.

    What more does one need to be successful or happy in life? As mentioned, the management knowledge and skills that a B-School provides is necessary, for sure. However, it does not meet the criteria of sufficiency. There are a million or zillion things that are required to sail happily through one’s life. A few of them that I could list here are:

    • Self-belief: Quite sadly, the education system globally is built on a rather dubious scaffolding called ‘Relative Grading’. This works against adding to the self-belief. And, not many in a competitive B-School have the innate ability to work around this institutional conspiracy. I guess this is considered too difficult or unimportant by the gurus in the B-School.
       
    • Dreaming: It is considered an unthinkable part of the syllabus. Even two decades after I graduated, I have not found courses that allow youngsters to dream, to build fantasies of any kind, to imagine a world that they can build by not worrying about resources or limitations. Expediency, skills, ‘realistic assessments’ are put on a higher pedestal than dreaming.
       
    • Cooperation Vs. Competition: Successes in life are built around the word called ‘Cooperation’. Unfortunately, this is a non-existing and much loathed a term in a B-School system that is built on competition deep insider her DNA. Beating others to a game is a much celebrated attribute. The gifted horses get trained to do that and end up being champs in ‘gaming’ the whole field of performance. Looking for a Win-Win way of dealing with life remains a mere jargon learnt at B-School with neither imagination nor belief to practise it in real life.
       
    • Choosing your own path: Every happy or success story is an illustration of this truth. B-Schools do not look at themselves as ones who will facilitate this inside-out journey. Their allegiance to the courses and demands of the corporate sector are far higher than towards helping a youngster move towards realising his or her potential.

    In sum, each individual needs to look at his own way of discovering the million things that he or she needs beyond the 36 courses delivered by a B-School. While this is a piece in the context of a B-School, the handicaps of the system do not alter with other schools (higher education as well as K12) or with geographies (developed or developing economies). A new era of delivering education with allegiance towards the learner is waiting to happen.

    In the meantime, the jobs will be back on the B-School campuses and life goes on!  

    Satya Narayana R is Founder, Careerlauncher.

  • Published on: March 03, 2010
  • 13 Comments
  • TOSIF Mansoori | May 03, 2010

  • this is pretty nice stuff here by Mr. Satya unlike in Chetan bhagat's tone. nice way of expressing difficult things in a vry viable way. this is wht is needed this time amongst every student of any study or of any institute. there is an invisible curtain that has created this all big illusion and that is the education and career along with competition that makes no sense. in clear words 'if one is so intelligent and sure enough that he can compete with all his peers than why not he compete with himslf' in my words 'we all are equally intelligent an top in our area'
  • Beena | May 01, 2010

  • Hi, Sathya's remarks about IIMs or any structured course and curriculum cannot be fully right. Education is just a guideline or a path for your future career. How you make use of education depends largely on the opportunities that you find or which bounce on you at the right time. I have few questions?? How will we decide which students can be given admission to IIMs without an entrance test How would we study in a college where there is no structured curriculum. How would we manage our teacher's timing if you can be allowed to ask for classes at your timings How would we develop ourselves if we do not interact with competing class room environments. See IIM class rooms are opportunities for you. how you use that is your personal decision. Through out in the world every university use some aspect of grading to make admission decisions. If they take it off how can decisions be made as to who will be admitted. where is fairness and justice of universities are allowed to take in students as they like/ regards Beena
  • Philip Panicker | Apr 22, 2010

  • Good, but honestly speaking, I myself was a tutor for two years teaching computer courses. I am not a graduate and I am earning 5 figure salary, working in a MNC company. But really the education system in India is not that efficient. See boss, I am not completly against the system but there has to be a management which understand the students needs. Almost every universaties doesn't care about the student query, and this is the case with many of Distance Learning University. IGNOU can be ranked one of the biggest among it. Toll-free number given is mostly not attended and the local instructor doesn't instruct properly. I have lossed my hard earned money for a dream of getting myself graduated. Anyways this is what life is all about, but still life goes on...
  • AJ | Apr 21, 2010

  • Good stuff, Satya. More people out there need to know the truth. :)
  • Trailokya | Apr 08, 2010

  • I am not that knowledgeable to contradict with you, yet I would say that preferring an institute offering better compensation package is not unjustified. I feel, in this era of cut-throat competition where, if it is speculated, most of the institutes are offering similar standard of management education, then the difference lies in the placement or package. As such there is no point in not preferring an institute that offers a student with better placement or package. Therefore, I would like to add with you that, a student while choosing an institution should definitely look for quality of education, environment alongwith better placement and package and should join a course of his/her interest to garner knowledge, acquire skill and develop level of competency. Getting off track, I would like to ask honourable Singh Sir that “Government of India is investing huge amount of money to enhance and impart quality management education through establishing huge number of institutes or universities but in return Government is rarely taking service of these management graduates” Do you think it to be justified?
  • Anurag mishra | Apr 05, 2010

  • hi, i'm also a student of MBA course.....i think so believe in ur self, wht tips sir said is good....... real world is different from the institute world.
  • a_reader | Apr 05, 2010

  • @Abhisek Nag Dude when you have high fever, you need to take medicine. That doesn't mean you love to take medicine. Mr. Satya Narayana went to IIM because the brand name of the institute promises a highly paid job for many of the students. Those who don't take job, get better chance of getting loan or VC money (due to 'IIM' brand) to setup a business. He setup Careerlauncher because there is a business opportunity. So, what is wrong in this? At least he has the guts to tell the truth. Thanks to Mr. Satya Narayana for the good article. I would like to meet Mr. Satya Narayana some day.
  • anish kumar | Mar 29, 2010

  • i want 2 know about BIFM i.e. BLB institute of finance
  • Abhisek Nag | Mar 23, 2010

  • An IIM Alumnus, typically the owner of a company that teaches how to get into IIMS is saying that IIMs are crap. It can't be more ridiculuous. The problem lies the same,what people say they don't practice in reality.
  • Amit Dwivedi | Mar 17, 2010

  • So, whats next? The new era is waiting and not going to happen, at least the “thappa” is helping you to make money.
  • Manish Shankar Singh | Mar 17, 2010

  • Sorry but your franchisee centres are cheating us - perenially. Permanently. They sell us to b-schools for referral money Manish KIET, Ghaziabad. Final Yr ( BTech - ECE ) PIN 2010 student, CL Ghaziabad
  • jay | Mar 15, 2010

  • dat gr8. i jst wanna know more diffrent views of successful people regardin education in india,...........
  • arpit goel | Mar 05, 2010

  • i totally iagree with you,.. This is the same problem i am facing in my egg college
  • Post a comment
  • Name *
  • Email address *
  • Comments *
  •       
  • Topic