IIM-C Feb 12
Easy availability of loans has increased the consumerism of materialistic society. This is affecting the morale of the youth, in longer terms. What are your views on I wrote something like this: India has paved the way the increase in demand goods and services amongst the citizens of the country. Bank loans are readily available, which is increasing the liquid money in hand and hence the demand and consumption increases.
Pros: Good for e-commerce giants, that they are able to grow and compete the global market, so Indian economy is increasing because of the revenue generated by them. Also, the resources are easily accessible to the youth, which can help them to complete the task within a time.
Cons: Due to easy loan availability, and non-productive consumption of the resources, the current debt to equity ratio is increasing and has already reached to 0.52 which is bad for the Indian economy. Resources are not getting optimally utilised. The extra liquid money has instead increased the amount of black money, and illegal betting. Youth is getting lazy day by day. That is why we can see the difference in the health and the kind of consumption of resources in today’s generation and our forefathers.
In a country like India, which is remembered for its culture, history and tradition, values matter more than everything. Movements like startup scheme are in the direction of developing the nation, so they should be used in a positive way and the kind of startups should be such that it adds up value to the prevailing system. Awareness to be created for the same. Hence, Technology is good for the society but at the same time, we must ensure that we do not become to technology.
(I know, it could have been better)
—————————————————————————————————-Interview panel D-1 (3 male , Morning slot, #6, 20 mins):
P1: Shubham, so I see you brought executive file. Can you tell me the executives of this
Me: Sir, the file contains my CAT scorecard, application form, the certificates for my academic and and . In , it defines who I am today and what have I been till now.
P1: So, tell us who are
Me: Sir, I am Shubham, from Udaipur, Rajasthan. I graduated from IIT Gandhinagar in electrical engineering back in 2013. During my final year, I went to for a research internship. Then, I worked with Cognizant for 2.5 years. Now, I am with since last 4 months. My hobbies are to play table tennis, do mathematics problems and puzzles and guide my juniors in their career preparation like IIT-JEE examinations. (I wanted them to go to Maths)
P2(a young techy guy): So, you are interested in Mathematics. Which area of the
Me: ummm.. Sir, everything.
P2: Okay, so you have 3 circles. How many common tangents can you draw to them
Me: Sir, you mean Direct common
P2: You can assume that.
Me: max. 2 if they are planar. Else, it can even have 0,1. So, anything from 0-2. Explained them by making the figures.
P2: What they are non-planar
Me: Still, the same. (Now, I think it should be infinite, in case of non-planar)
P2: You have 2 n*n matrices. When you multiply them. How many multiplications are actually
Me: The final matrix will also be of n*n. Now, for each element, we have multiplication because row of matrix gets by column of matrix to give element of my output matrix. So, n^2 times
(But, it should be n^3 I think now. Since every element will also implicit multiplications.)
P2: can you try to think of a converging sequence, which is converging but the corresponding sequence is diverging.
Me: 1/n. Since as n tends to infinity it tends to 0, but 1+1/2+… –>infinity. It can be proved by comparing this series with 1+ 1/2 + (1/4+1/4) + (1/8+1/8+1/8+1/8)+…
P2: By the way, what is the rank of Rajasthan in terms of
Me: Sir, one: It is the largest in terms of area.
P2: And
Me: (A wild guess, while trying to visualize the map tongue emoticon ) Maharashtra (Maharashtra is third in actual, a slightly less than MP)
P1: So, if I did not hear you wrong, you did a foreign internship. Where was
Me: yeah sir, at of Notre Dame.
P1: What did you do
Me: Developed a web application which uses the concept of probability and collaborative filtering to predict the future disease a patient can have, given his past disease’s history coded in ICD-10.
P1: So, did you roam anywhere
Me: Sir, not much. But, I had been to Six Flags
P1: Ohh, that’s the roller coaster ride. (Smiling)
Me: Yeah sir (Smiling)
P1: Anywhere else you have been to in or outside
Me: Not exactly sir.(I could sense he has some question on geography coming up in his mind, which I am not good at.)
P1: So, can I say you do not like travelling
Me: Sir, I have not explored much of the places. But as you can see, I am from Rajasthan, graduated in Gujarat, interned at , worked at Kolkata and currently at Gurgaon.
P1: (Smiling) But that’s for the job purpose. Anyways, what difference did you find in the US’s university and IIT-Gandhinagar’s educational system?
Me: Sir, since our was the second batch of the college. We actually got the chance to pick up the things from its roots and then establish them. We had the freedom to go and explore anything we wish to. There were only 3 core branches, but still I managed to get an internship in CS. So, it is very versatile in the college. But then at university, I was assigned a project on which a student was already working. I was not much asked my choice. The topic was also fixed. So, this is one difference. Rest, people are very much friendly there. The city is very clean with no traffic and
P3: So, what is your role at ?
Me: Sir, my job is to interact with the floor’s staff at fulfillment centres and get to know the problems they are facing in the process of picking, packing, shipping. And then, using these requirements, we build the apps and for them.
P3: But isn’t this irrelevant to your work at Cognizant. From a company like that why
Me: Not exactly sir. I was working commerce sector even at Cognizant. Now, an has 2 sectors: OMS and WMS. I had worked for 2.5 years in OMS. So, wanted to further explore the sector. Hence, joined the WMS department at .
P3: But then, you already have the skills and are working in the area where our people after graduating works.
Me: No sir. I want to learn management and I have an inclination towards MBA in Finance. My long-term goal is to start a venture of my own.
P3: (interrupting): But, to start a company, you do not need an MBA. , we guys do not even teach you that. See, Dhiru Bhai Ambani. He is not an MBA.
Me: Yeah, that’s true sir. But then again, my management will help me gain the structured knowledge, learn about the business model, and how to sustain in the competitive markets.
P3: But that you can even without an MBA.
Me: Sir, to make any company successful, the underlying principle is to minimize risk and maximise the revenue. And, an MBA in Finance will help me get that feeling.
P1, P3: See but you already know that principle.
Me: But, I will also be competing amongst the best minds of the country, so we can then share the skillset and I may get the useful resources for my future goal. And sir, the COO of my company: Bhavesh is also an MBA in Fin from IIM-C
P1: Anyways, these days people say that e-commerce is not having a bright future. It runs only on giving lucrative offers and discounts on the things. And once, discounts are gone, the company will fall off.
Me: But this is just the one side of the story. While this is true that our -giants are currently incurring losses, like , Snapdeal, but in the longer run say 5-10 years down the line, these will grow. These will develop that credibility and reliability for the to work even without discounts. Say, for Uber, OLA, and TFS, TFS is a relatively new brand and is giving so many discount coupons these days. We do use them, but now if a wants to travel , or I want to reach to urgently say in next 1 hour, I’ll prefer Uber over others. that is because the services have developed the credibility amongst the customers by now.
P3: Okay. Any other call you
Me: Sir,
P3: Not
Me: Sir, my sectionals in Verbal were not that though the overall was. So…
P3: Okay Shubham, That’s all from our side…