Sukshma

Entries categorized as ‘Rochester’

Should I get an MBA?

November 22, 2007 · 4 Comments

Is the $100,000 branded MBA worth it? If this is going through your head, I strongly recommend reading this essay aptly titled “The End of the MBA”.

I am considering starting the local chapter of the NoBS (New Order Business School) described in this article. After spending two years with those who would make it to a branded school, I have a fair idea of who should get in. Just last week I reviewed over 10 essays from I.S.B. applicants and often get several such requests for many other schools. I think NoBS would be a great way to get future entrepreneurs together. Any takers for my plan?

Having got an MBA from Wharton, I feel rather strange endorsing this essay. The ironical part is that I recently gave similar advice to a large group of entrepreneurs at the TiE-ISB conference last week. The MBA gets you credibility points while hiring your first few employees and while talking to VCs (but those points can be earned by getting revenue or real customers too).

An MBA is not required for entrepreneurship. A close mentor of mine makes the point well. An MBA would teach you to manage risk. And entrepreneurship is all about taking very big risks or very big bets (depends on how you look at them).

I wish I had read the essay before speaking at the conference. Quoting Seth, ask people who are thriving in today’s economy to name five things that helped them succeed, and they’ll probably come up with a list like this one.

1. Finding, hiring, and managing supergreat people

2. Embracing change and moving quickly

3. Understanding and excelling at business development and at making deals with other companies

4. Prioritizing tasks in a job that changes every day

5. Selling — to people, to companies, and to markets

I waited four years to start doing these. If you still have a choice, don’t wait.

Warning: A branded MBA is a fantastic platform for many well defined career paths. This post applies only to those debating between launching a startup and getting an MBA.

Categories: Anjali · MBA · TiE · academic · business · startup
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Be your personal best.

July 2, 2006 · 2 Comments

To a dear friend,

I hope things are going well with your undergraduate studies in the city. As I watched the rains come down disrupting life I was most perturbed by the disruption and chaos in your life.

It must be an exciting time for you and your friends in the Senior year. For the first time you can catch the whiff of a real job and money. With the arrival of the monsoons the corporations in and around the city will descend on campuses with presentations, interviews and offer letters. Hiring is big business when all the investors care about is head counts and growth.

For your own college, this time of the year is a critical one. Placements with the top-notch companies guarantee that the campus will continue to attract the best students. Colleges safeguard their reputations (of 100% placements) by religiously following one single rule - if you have a written offer from a corporate that visited campus, you can no longer continue to apply for other campus interviews.

Things had worked out very simply for me. Of the twelve companies that visited my campus in 1999, I was very sure of the one I wanted. I researched the company through my seniors, attended their preplacement talk and only then did I turn in my application. Then began the gruelling process of tough tests and personal interviews. The morning after, I still did not have an offer letter. On that very day, a major services company were also hiring on campus. Unsure of where I was placed, I decided that they would be the next best thing. Mid way through the test I was told that my preferred company had made an offer for me and so I would have to give up on my application with the major corporate.

I gladly left the test area - I had made it with the best company on my list. My later experience with the company was greatly sweetened by the detail of my research into the organization, the high quality of the interviews and of course, by the fact that I truly believed that it was the best company to have visited my campus.

My own experience aside, in the depths your mind I am sure you prefer at least one of the following, to either enter the rat race or to stay out of it. If you were to stay out of the rat race, you could continue to be a student and decide to not create any value in the strict economical sense. If that is true for you, I believe you would not be too worried about getting hired on campus.

Unfortunately, you and your friends like you appear to be afraid. Watching the others send in their job applications with the big brand names seems to have weakened your resolve. It appears as if the entire class has submitted an application for every company planning to visit the campus!

I am sure that corporates are aware of this herd effect and covet the first interview slot on your campus. I also suspect that that slot carries a premium. Coincidentally, the same services company that could not have me, have booked the first slot on your campus. On day one of campus placements they had the best look at the top students. As the top ten students were being interviewed, you awaited your turn patiently. I was surprised to hear that the college then announced to those waiting that your preferred company would visit the campus in a weeks time. It no longer made any sense to sit through the current interviews. Subsequently, some of your friends deliberately failed the interview (some cleared inadvertently and were made offers).

What really baked my noodle though is what would the top ten students have done had they heard the same announcement, would they have preempted their own interviews? It only gets better. Within the first three days about 70% of your class had already been recruited and were eliminated. So what is your preferred company to do - they go ahead and cancel their campus visit. Your decision to wait for your choice of employer has now left you stranded. Who gets to decide what your future will look like? Why is it that the current answer appeals the least to me?

I encourage you to renew your faith in yourself. If you have decided you wish to stay out of the rat race, stand by your decision. If you later decide to change your mind, you can definitely apply around your campus placement office. Our current economy and job market only increases the probability that you will be placed with an employer of your choice. Do not be discouraged by the facade of tough interviews, long waits and other mental hurdles. Realise that you are unique. Search the right place for yourself, a place where you won’t have to change.

Be your personal best.

Categories: India · academic · interviews

Computer Science course books for sale

February 16, 2006 · 3 Comments

Update: I no longer have these books on me.

The following C.S. course-books:

1. Code complete. Steve McConnell. First Edition. $3.
2. J2EE Anti-Patterns. Wiley Publishers. $5.
3. Java NIO, Ron Hitchens, O’Reilly. $5.
4. Introduction to Algorithms, Cormen, Rivest, and Lieserson. Second Edition. $7.
5. Computer Architecture - a quantitative approach. Hannessey and Patterson. Second Edition. $3.
6. Data Mining. Jiawei Han and Michelle Kember. $5.
7. Distributed Systems Concepts. $5.
8. Computer Networks, Third Edition. Aaron Tanenbaum. $5.
9. Data Structures in C and C++. Aaron Tanenbaum. $5.
10. Lisp, 3rd Edition, Winston & Horn. $5.
11. The practice of programming. Kernighan & Pike. $6.
12. Java 2. Third Edition. Naughton and Schildt. $2.
13. Database System Concepts. Korth. $3.
14. Operating Systems. Milenkovic. $5.
15. Introduction to Languages and the Theory of Computation, John C. Martin, Second Edition. $2.
16. Distributed Systems Concepts and Design, Coulouris, Dollimore. Third Edition. $5.
17. Test your C++ Skills, Yashvant Kanetkar. $4.
18. Computer Networking, Kurose and Ross. $5.

All books are low-price asian editions, paperback. They have been used/marked with notes. Nothing else wrong with the books. If your interested, please send me an e-mail. I am only willing to accept cash.

Categories: academic · programming

KDD 2004

August 23, 2004 · No Comments

Yesterday, I relived my life as a graduate student after 4 weeks of professional work. I found to my chagrin and disbelief, that I actually loved the sudden change.

I had a short 20 minute window to talk about a paper I worked on with other folks from RIT at KDD 2004. I spent a good portion of Saturday and Sunday working on this, with little regret.

Interesting KDD 2004 statistics:
01. The longest amount of time a speaker rambled on - 1 hour 30 minutes
02. The average duration of time for any talk - 15 minutes
03. Pretty women in the conference - 5
04. Stares they invited - 100+ per minute
05. Surfboarders at the conference - 3
06. People schmoozing upto the awards committee - 200+
07. Powerpoint slides displayed on the first day - 10^3
08. Slides that were original - 9
10. Attendees - easily 300+
11. People who had $300 to throw away - 100+
12. People who actually published in KDD - Significant attendees
01. Joshua Goodman & Geoff Hulten (MSN.com)
02. Ronn Feldman (Clearforest)
03. Jafar Adibi
04. Usama Fayyed
05. Soumen Chakraborti
06. Ankur Teredesai (my Master’s thesis advisor)
07. Jiawei Han (Winner of the innovations award for KDD-’04)
08. Ronny Kohavi (Amazon.com)
09. Heiki Mannilla
10. Mohammed Zaki (RPI.edu & Vineet’s new advisor)

Categories: Seattle · academic

Link KDD 2004

August 9, 2004 · No Comments

Finally, some information on how and where some of our work will appear. The paper was written over the Summer, summarising a few experiments with Social Networks. Link KDD 2004 is the forum for the talk!

August 22nd, Sunday:
11:10 to 11:30 Extracting Social Networks from Instant Messaging Populations

Categories: Seattle · academic · programming

Santosh Dawara M.S.

July 19, 2004 · No Comments

I am now almost Santosh Dawara M.S. All that remains is to have the thesis bound!

Categories: academic