Letter to the New MBA/PGDM Entrant
Congratulations!
Welcome on board. You are now a part of the family of new MBA entrants having sailed
through the rough seas of CAT/MAT/PGCET/KMAT/”X” AT (Any X Admission Test) and having
joined various B-schools across the country. This is a huge family of nearly 8
lakh + students across India. This is a family having common ambitions and
common problems. Unless you have secured a coveted seat in one of the High I M’s
, or the top 10-20 B-schools in India, you have a tough life ahead. Having been
a management student for 5 years in a tier 2 (as the pundits say) B-school, and
having gone through all the allotted ordeals, I decided to write this letter as
a word of advice (probably unsolicited but necessary).
The challenges you face are galore.
I don’t want to scare you. But I want to be factual. You are NOT on a level playing field. You have
a road that is mostly uphill, tardy, rough and bumpy. You will encounter
several speed breakers in this journey ahead. Please be mentally prepared. Barely 25% of your faculty members will meet
the standards you have set for them. Your college may not be great on the
infrastructure side. You may come across a library that seems ‘namesake’. You
may find that the placement data your college has put up on the
website/brochure is misleading/faulty/ factually incorrect. The placement department
in your college is actually non-existent and consisting of a person who also
doubles as your marketing faculty. But then, you can’t do much about it. Because,
it’s a man-age-ment decision. You college manedgement decided so. You may also
find that the peer group is not that great, because there is a seat sharing
ratio between government and your college management.
However, the good news is that there
are a several other things that you can do, and you should do. Let’s get
started. Since you have joined a management course, you will have to manage the
current situation. Here are a few pointers in this regard.
·
First, get additional reading material. There
are several things you need to know and are not taught in the classroom. Invest
in good books like, “The Google Story”, “Go Kiss the World”, “It happened India”,
“Rich dad, and Poor dad” and several other books. This is, apart from the text
books prescribed in your syllabus (which is most probably outdated by 5 yrs at
least) which you will have to read, whether you like it, or not! You can browse
for a list of must read business books and decide on reading 10 books at least every
semester. One important link in this regard is, http://eventualmillionaire.com/10books.
(Maybe you will end up reading 6, which
is still a good number.)
·
Build a network. Get in touch with the alumni.
Organize an alumni meet if your college already doesn’t have that on their calendar,
get the database and get in touch with them. Invite them to give guest
lectures, to judge events in your college and so on. Chances are that they may
not respond because they are miffed with your college. However, you will still
need to impress upon them and establish a connection. You may even organize
something like a informal meeting/ gyaan session/party in your dorm/canteen and
they may respond to this kind of an invitation.
·
Create common interest groups. It helps to have
people who share common interests like photography, entrepreneurship, print
advertising, training and development and so on. It good to hang out with all
kinds of people. But it’s better to hang out with the right kind of people. You
can also create forums/clubs in your college based on the specialization you
have chosen. There are other avenues to get into common interest groups outside
of your college. Meetup.com is one such great avenue to get into common
interest groups, learn , share and excel.
·
Get additional certifications in your area of
interest or career pursuits. For ex: Finance professionals could pursue NISM
certifications, HR professionals could pursue courses from SHRM/ISTD and IT enthusiasts
can get certified from NIIT. Keep your head out and look out for right certification
opportunities.
·
Also, ensure that you attend as many
conferences, seminars, training programs and workshops possible. This will take
you a long way in terms of skill development, an essential supplement to
knowledge.
·
Become student members of professional bodies
like NHRD/ISTD/NIPM/SHRM/AIMA etc. It doesn’t cost much (the annual membership),
but gives you an advantage over other students in terms of networking,
placement opportunities and industry exposure more importantly.
·
Organize management fests, events and activities
in your college and take leadership positions like cultural secretary,
placement secretary and so on. They give you a good simulation business
functions like planning, organizing, control and so on. Also, participate in
fests/ activities organized by other colleges/institutes. If all of this is not
happening at your college, request for all of this. Meet your director/dean/HOD
and demand all this. When you are proactive, they may at least be reactive. All
these activities are a great value add to your profile. If you don’t do all
this, your resume may end up looking like a bio-data, without anything great to
project/talk about
·
There are several free online courses available
which are run by prestigious universities like Course era, EdX etc. Go online,
check for relevant courses and get that edge over your classmates.
·
Utilize your faculty members: Ask them, question
them, plead with them and get the maximum value from your faculty members. If you
really find someone very impressive, approach them and request them for
research opportunities/tie-ups, and they may mentor you. So go the extra mile
in this regard to discover new destinations.
·
Be shameless. Make mistakes, and correct them. Take
feedback from your faculty and friends and improve upon your grey areas. Be it
communication skills, confidence, numerical aptitude or social skills. As a
future manager, you need everything!
EVEN AFTER ALL THIS YOU MAY NOT BE
PLACED IN A JOB YOU WANT.BUT YOU CAN CARVE A PATH FOR YOUR SELF. JUST KNOW THIS!
·
Between all this, don’t forget to have fun,
rejoice and be careful. Don’t get into relationships that may not last long. It
hurts at the end. Tread a measured path.
You have questions? You liked
this? You hated this? You want to add to this?
Wish you a happy Management Career
Ahead. Yours, Vijay G PadaguriJ
Comments
Anyways we successfully completed with flying colours..
So, the networking plays a very important role in MBA.. Students should be active enough on linkedin or any such networking websites..
I keep telling to the students all the time regarding the importance of networking..
Good one and students should become serious and act fast..
Anyways we successfully completed with flying colours..
So, the networking plays a very important role in MBA.. Students should be active enough on linkedin or any such networking websites..
I keep telling to the students all the time regarding the importance of networking..
Good one and students should become serious and act fast..
One request. ! write something for Post MBA`s… something about Corporate life.