How to Cash in on Trash

Page 1

JASon Fried Marketing without Marketing

Page 18

Tough Love:

The Magazine for Growing Companies

Waste Watch

a Lost Leadership art?

hoW to Cash

Page 16

in on trash Can these entrepreneurs build businesses from garbage?

Page 22

SecuriTy ALerT

War ready?

Case study

Why great product design is about smart solutions, not good looks Page 37 MARCH 2014 | `150 | Volume 05 | Issue 02 A 9.9 Media Publication | inc.com Facebook.com/Inc

What entrepreneurs must know about cyber security

@inc

in India Page 32





March 2014

contents

Cap lede here Regime roomsXML’s TextHiring tk dummy Ruchir and Anuj Bang never Modigna facinit hire from the travel industry. loreIt’s molorer a baggage they can do incipisit aditthe lorero without, brothers say. et, conse duis am

22 Memoirs of Garbage

With India generating 1,10,000 tonnes of garbage, the business opportunity in waste management is huge. Inc. India takes a look at the companies that are digging waste for wealth. by sonal khetarpal

32 War Ready?

If you aren’t, our cyber security report is must reading. The time to armour up against cyber attacks is now! by aman shukla

44 The Way I Work on the cover

photograph by Jiten gandhi

Alok Mittal (left), founder, A2Z Group and Dr P. Parthasarathy, founder, E-Parisaara Photograph by Subhojit Paul and Sri Vatsa. Cover design by Anil VK. Cover imaging by Peterson PJ.

This edition of Inc. magazine is published under license from Mansueto Ventures LLC, New York, New York. Editorial items appearing on pages 6,13-18, 42-43 were all originally published in the United States edition of Inc. magazine and are the copyright property of Mansueto Ventures, LLC, which reserves all rights. Copyright © 2009 and 2010 Mansueto Ventures, LLC. The following are trademarks of Mansueto Ventures, LLC: Inc., Inc. 500.

Brothers Ruchir and Anuj Bang have built roomsXML, their travel accomodation portal, into a company with nearly `150crore in sales. Their success combo is equal parts of brotherly rapport and vigilant discipline. as told to shreyasi singh

MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  3


contents

March 2014

15

18

20

37

08 Editor’s Letter

18 Get Real

A look at the companies that made Comic Con an epic success

By Jason Fried Lavishing love on current customers is more important than spending money to snag new ones. Another lesson well learnt.

13 Launch

20 Innovation

10 Behind the Scenes

Innovation guru Vivek Wadhwa sets out to find— Where are the women innovators? Why eating right is important to be a good leader The lost leadership art of tough love

4   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

The remote control for the future is this coin-sized Bluetooth device

48 Founders Forum

Why being his own boss is the best thing that has happened to Tapas Sarkar, founder of Mecgale Pneumatics

Strategy 37 Design Good design is good business. How some design tweaks can drastically change a product’s business result 40 social media Why Facebook’s new tool, Trends is not so trendy 42 leadership Take our quiz and find out your leadership style. You might get the wake up call that you need.



inc.com

Contents

Form IV

Statement of ownership and other particulars about the publication INC. as per Rule 8.

Inc.com/lead

Three Signs That You’re a Martyr, Not a Leader

Are you most comfortable when you’re feeling overwhelmed? You may be what Inc. columnist Les McKeown calls a martyr-leader. Here are three telltale signs.

1. Place of publication

Nine Dot Nine Mediaworx (P) Ltd. A-262, Defence Colony, New Delhi-110 024

2. Periodicity of its publication

Monthly

3. Printer’s name Nationality (a) Whether a citizen of India? (b) If a foreigner, the country of origin Address

Anuradha Das Mathur Indian Yes N/A C-144 Sarvodya Enclave, New Delhi-110017

4. Publisher’s name Nationality (a) Whether a citizen of India? (b) If a foreigner, the country of origin Address

Anuradha Das Mathur Indian Yes N/A C-144 Sarvodya Enclave, New Delhi-110017

5. Editor’s name Anuradha Das Mathur Nationality Indian (a) Whether a citizen of India? Yes (b) If a foreigner, the country of origin N/A Address C-144 Sarvodya Enclave, New Delhi-110017 6. Names and addresses of individuals who own the newspaper and partners or shareholders holding more than one per cent of the total capital Pramath Raj Sinha N-154, Panchsheel park, New Delhi 110024 Vikas Gupta C-5/10 Safdarjung development Area, New Delhi-110016 Asheesh Kumar Gupta 103, Tower II, The Palms, South City-1, Gurgaon 122001 Anuradha Das Mathur C-144 Sarvodya Enclave, New Delhi-110017

1. You’re a bottleneck...and you secretly like it

Martyr-leaders have unfulfillable commitments, impossibly herculean to-do lists, and triple-booked schedules—all for the purpose of generating the warm, comforting glow of indispensability.

2. Your default mood is self-pity

Watch a martyr-leader as they go about their daily business and you’ll find two primary attitudes on display: poor me and head-shaking sigh.

Kanak Ranjan Ghosh BH-44, Sector-II, Salt lake City, Kolkata 700091 Hellion Venture Partners India II, LLC Les Cascades Building, Edith Cavell street, Port Louis, Mauritius TVS Shriram Growth Fund I JE JayaLakshmi Estate #29, Haddows Road, Nungambakkam, Chennai 600006 And others.

I, Anuradha Das Mathur, here by declare that the particulars given above are true to best of my knowledge.

3. You exude learned helplessness

Martyr-leaders live in the self-taught state of mind whereby nothing is ever truly fixable and everything is a mess—and expect the rest of us to feel the same.

6   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

Dated: 1st March, 2014

Sd/Signature of Publisher


. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .

QA &

WITH RICHIE CHAUHAN, SERIAL ENTREPRENEUR You’ve come a long way since starting your software technology company, Tekege, in 2004. You now own a digital marketing agency (award winning, might we add), a SAAS product by the name of Aavaz, and you continue to build new mobile apps like BuzzBeat and Wedding Guru. Where do you get your ideas and vision from? Organically. I started Tekege Solutions because I studied IT in Canada and the US. I got my first client right after school with the Motion Picture Association of America and realized- there is no way I can do this myself. With the road wide open for opportunities, I decided to source labor from India. I thought it was temporary- but I ended up finding more clients and decided to settle down here. Aavaz is a partnership with a client that I built call-center software for and the Mobile Apps are hobbies. When you’re in the tech field, you’re constantly innovating.

An inside look into growing your business, overcoming odds, and hurdling over unforeseen challenges. We speak to Richie Chauhan, CEO and President of Tekege Solutions, Ergo Agency, Aavaz and BuzzBeat app, Chief Technology Officer for Wedding Guru and innovator of e-Backpack. That’s a lot of names, a lot of business, a lot of history! We caught up with Richie to discuss business, marketing, wins and losses and what it takes to be a businessman in India today

What’s your biggest priority? Right now, it’s Ergo. My roots were in the technology field, and while I was getting business through Word of Mouth, I decided to start marketing my services in India. I discovered that unless I was trying to hire these multi-national behemoth companies (which I could never afford), I was stuck with sub-par talent claiming they knew digital. I am on a mission to start the digital agency that looks at a company’s entire business model, and uses the digital platform as the store-front and not just a website that is talking AT people. A functioning website, sound content marketing, engaging social media and best practices on SEO/SEM/Blogs is what works. Nobody is doing that as well as we are.

Why did you launch Ergo Agency? While building complex software systems for my clients, they’d often ask for design interfaces for them. So, we started hiring designers to help with that. That’s how Ergo was born. What started from design, needed development, which needed inbound marketing (SEO). The concept of usability and lead-capturing websites became popular and I hired a team of marketers (some from the US) to help me build the best damn agency in India. What sets you apart from the noise and all your competitors? I’ve always believed in honesty and integrity. I’m a fair person—in my business and in my personal life. There are too many people out there who are trying to rip people off. A testimony to that would be the number of word of mouth clients I get. People want to find trusted partners. I believe I’m one of the rare breed.

ERGO IS T A K I N G

new clients

Ergo Agency, 128-B, 3rd Floor Shahpur Jat Village, Near UCO Bank Landmark - Siri Fort Auditorium New Delhi - 110049, India +91 11 4315 5300

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . rchauhan@ergoagency.com www.ergoagency.com


editor’s letter

MANAGING DIRECTOR: Dr Pramath Raj Sinha Printer & Publisher: Anuradha Das Mathur Editorial managing Editor: shreyasi singh assistant editor: Sonal Khetarpal

Smarting from waste Our stories usually leave me feeling optimistic. Stories of gritty entreprenuership and dogged persistence—the foundation stone for building a successful business in India—are certainly booster shots of positivity. Yet, Memoirs of Garbage, the cover story my assitant editor Sonal Khetarpal has filed for this issue, veers from that trend. May be it’s why this was such an important story to be told. That waste management is a massive problem for India is obvious—a look at our big cities will show we stink (pun much intended!) at sorting our mess. Yet, driven companies such as A2Z Group, E-Parisaraa and Waste Ventures India, all of which work on different aspects of responsibly managing waste, are battling the uphill task of morphing cash from trash. Government policies and poor civic awareness has given these entreprenuers a strange combination of a business segment with several loopholes and “demand gaps” but no easy solutions in sight. Don’t miss their story on Page 22. We hope you will, as we do, root for them. India certainly needs their success. In other stories, do read our case study on product design. That good design is good business isn’t a truism many Indian companies fully appreciate. Design has far too long been relegated to pretty looks. The successful design evolution of Mobiliz, a low cost computer for rural users, demonstrates how design can transform business. Read about the makeover on Page 37.

DEsign Sr. Creative Director: Jayan K Narayanan Sr. Art Director: Anil VK Associate Art Director: Anil T Sr. Visualisers: Manav Sachdev Shigil Narayanan & Sristi Maurya Visualiser: NV Baiju Sr. Designers: Haridas Balan, Manoj Kumar VP Charu Dwivedi, Peterson PJ & Dinesh Devgan Designers: Pradeep G Nair & Vikas Sharma ONLINE & MARCOM DESIGN Associate Art Director: Shokeen Saifi Sr.Designer: Rahul Babu Web Designer: Om Prakash PHOTOGRAPHY Chief Photographer: Subhojit Paul Sr. Photographer: Jiten Gandhi Community Team Manager: Rajat Gupta Associate: Akarshan Sapra Sales & Marketing Vice president: NC Singh (+91 9901300772) National Manager (Print & Online) Rajesh Kandari (+91 98111 40424) National Manager (Special Projects) Arjun Sawhney (+91 95822 20507) Senior Manager (Business Development) Anshu Kumar (+91 95914 55661) Manager (Business Development) Sukhvinder Singh (+91 8802689684) Production & Logistics Sr. General manager (Operations): Shivshankar M Hiremath Manager Operations: Rakesh upadhyay Assistant Manager (Logistics): Vijay Menon Executive Logistics: Nilesh Shiravadekar Production Executive: Vilas Mhatre Logistics MP Singh, Mohd. Ansari OFFICE ADDRESS nine dot nine mediaworx Pvt Ltd A-262, Defence Colony, New Delhi–110 024 For any queries, please contact us at help@9dot9.in Published, Printed and Owned by Nine Dot Nine Mediaworx Private Limited. Published and printed on their behalf by Anuradha Das Mathur. Published at A-262, Defence Colony, New Delhi–110 024. printed at Tara Art Printers Pvt ltd. A-46-47, Sector-5, NOIDA (U.P.) 201301 Editor: Anuradha Das Mathur

Shreyasi Singh shreyasi.singh@9dot9.in

8   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014



BEHIND THE SCENES

Travel and accomodation AABEE Resorts and Travels were responsible for ensuring David Lloyd, the popular British comic artist, and John Layman, a Marvel comics writer reached the Comic Con in Delhi as per schedule. This Delhi-based travel agency booked the flight tickets and accomodation for all the comic maestros attending this event. Started in 1999 by Dushyant Bhalla, AABEE has expanded its business to include holiday packages, and other travel services including getting Forex and international SIM cards. Their three offices in Delhi have taken care of travelling needs of Samsung, MTS India and Delco Automotive.

Exhibition set-up The entire set up for Comic Con, which has become an annual jamboree for the city’s comic enthusiasts, at the Thyagaraj Sports Complex in Delhi was done by Concepts Brand Support Services. Founded by Gautam Sardana, this threeyear-old company has been associated with Comic Con since its inception in 2010. They provide on-ground support for events and exhibitions—from setting up of exhibition booths and venue, printing branded content and event execution. With 30 permanent employees and another 50 temporary ones, this Delhi-based company has done events for Accor Hospitality and Expedia.co.in.

10   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

Companies at the Heart of Everyday Life


Comic Con, Delhi

09.02.2014, 3:00 P.M.

Social media The answer to how to create buzz around an event is social media. The company that formed the social media plan for Comic Con is the web agency, Webcontxt. It was founded in 2010 by Gautam Seth and Siddharth Shah. This 26-people company organised two Twitter contests prior to the event to build excitement for this comic convention. During the three-day event, their team of five people were continuously tweeting updates and posting live commentary on Twitter and uploading candid photos on Instagram. Webcontxt has also handled social media for Nestle and Jaipur Literature Festival from their three offices in Delhi, Mumbai and Jaipur.

photograph by Subhojit Paul

reported bY Sonal Khetarpal



News, Ideas & Trends in Brief

launch

photos.com

Where Are The Women Innovators? Good question. Here’s how one Silicon Valley insider is trying to find the answer Male academics don’t inspire female innovators. Female innovators inspire female innovators. So when Vivek Wadhwa sought to highlight women’s struggles and achievements in the innovation economy, he teamed with journalist Farai Chideya to solicit stories from women around the world. Wadhwa, whose CV includes Stanford, Duke, and Singularity University, took a break from editing the book to discuss the project with editor-at-large Leigh Buchanan.

W

hy this topic?

After coming to Silicon Valley from North Carolina a few years ago, my wife made me realise something strange. You don’t see women here at tech conferences. You don’t see women on the boards of tech companies. You don’t see women CTOs. When it comes to the workplace, women aren’t there. It’s like the Twilight Zone. So I started researching the causes of the problem and speaking out about it. And the more I spoke, the more attacks I endured from the Silicon

Valley elite. I said, Aha! This is the root of the problem. Why did you decide to crowdsource the book?

I started a major research project at Stanford (on women and technology), which we are wrapping up right now. But academic papers have to be boring. I said, Let’s do a book about this issue where I can express all the opinions I want. But it doesn’t make sense for a guy to tell women how to fix their problems. I used my private mailing list, hoping I would get women to help me spread the MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  13


launch

word. My goal was to get 30 to 50 women to tell their stories. I ended up with more than 500. I also crowdfunded this, so it wouldn’t be just my project. I wanted to raise $40,000. I got $96,000. Which stories impressed you?

The stories are all amazing. You see how from the time they are young, women are not encouraged to take on hard mathematical tasks or to do world-changing innovation. They are discouraged in school and then in college and then they join the work force and find they are the only female engineer in the department or the whole company. And they get treated differently. Every woman who contributed told us about a hardship and how she got over it. In your experience, do men and women innovate differently?

Women are more sensible in the businesses they start. They are not going to ask for a gazillion dollars from a venture capitalist for some harebrained scheme to do yet another photo-sharing app. They focus on the practical. Which also means their companies are initially smaller than the guys’ companies. Which is OK. They have lower failure rates. I like those companies better. Much of innovation involves teamwork. Does that help women—because they are naturally more collaborative—or hurt them, because the men in the group may be more assertive?

Women benefit from being more collaborative. They generally talk a lot more about their partners and the support that they got and mentorship. They value teamwork more than the guys do. But the guys can hold them back.

You Lead as You Eat A healthy diet is an important part of being a good leader. Just how important, you might be surprised. For entrepreneurs, eating isn’t just about satisfying hunger. So say the growing ranks of nutrition experts who specialise in fine-tuning the metabolic performance of business leaders. “You’re like an athlete in the workplace,” says Richard Chaifetz, CEO of ComPsych, a Chicago-based provider of corporate wellness and employee-assistance programmes. “So you should eat like an athlete.” At the very least, that means lots of lean protein, fruits and vegetables, and complex carbohydrates; no processed foods; and minimal white flour and sugar. But when you spend all day confronting challenging mental tasks, the brain’s nutritional demands are greater. For example, have you ever worked so hard that it felt as though your brain were on fire? It sort of was, says Patti Milligan, director of nutrition at Tignum, a consultancy that helps businesses boost employee performance through holistic wellness programmes. “You produce lots of oxidants in the brain when you’re working,” she says. “Foods that are high in antioxidant— berries, beans, apples, tea—act like flame retardants.” And don’t forget water. “The brain is 70 to 80 per cent water,” Milligan says. “When it’s metabolically active 10 to 12 hours a day, removing metabolic waste from the brain requires optimal hydration.” She suggests “super-hydrating” with two cups at the beginning of the day and avoiding “dehydrators,” like processed sugary foods, high doses of caffeine, and soda. And watch out for

Breakfast: To start your brain and ensure longlasting energy

What do you hope female readers will take from these stories?

Women face the same problems everywhere, but they think they are alone. Reading the stories of how other women surmounted their difficulties is going to provide inspiration. I have no doubt about that. What about male readers?

I think the majority of readers will be women. 14   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

Eat to Win A meal plan for leaders

EAT Egg-white omelet, breakfast burrito on whole-grain tortilla, steel-cut oatmeal with fruit, smoked salmon on whole grain bread, high-fiber muesli with nuts, fruit, and yogurt


launch

Brain Food Drink Water A 2011 study in the British Journal of Nutrition found that even mild dehydration in men reduced vigilance and memory and increased tension, anxiety, and fatigue. Put Down The French Fry A 2009 Cambridge University study found that high-fat diets made laboratory rats not just slower but dumber. Sugar = Bad A recent UCLA study found that a diet high in fructose slows the brain, hampering memory and learning. Omega-3 fatty acids—found in salmon, walnuts, and flaxseed—can counteract the disruption.

photos.com

Lunch: Fill up without bogging down EAT Salad with meat or fish, a wrap with vegetables, Sushi, veggies and grains are packed with antioxidants to fight fatigue.

found an almost immediate boost in productivity. “A couple of weeks ago, I let this slide, and it was a stark reminder,” DiMichele says. “Not only was I sleepy and un-attentive all afternoon, but I was in a miserable mood.” Science bears this out. According to a Cambridge University study, after five days on a high-fat diet, the treadmill performance of lab rats declined by half. Moreover, the rats eating fatty chow began to falter on a maze test they had been trained on—finding only five treats before making a mistake. The healthier rats were able to find six or more treats. And as any entrepreneur knows, it’s all about finding the treats. —Adam Bluestein

Snacks: Sustain energy and focus

Dinner: Lay the foundation for a good night’s sleep

EAT Nuts and berries boost omega-3s and antioxidants. For something sweet, stick with citrus fruits. They contain pectin fiber, which helps you use the plant sugars slowly—compared with the sugar rush you get from candy.

EAT Have a healthful snack before bed—low glucose levels interfere with sleep. So does alcohol. A better bet: chamomile tea, which helps induce sleep as the body cools after drinking. MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  15

Source: SHL Global Leadership Study

“brain fog,” which can be evidence that you need to hydrate. Speaking of caffeine, “coffee depletes serotonin, which contributes to a sense of well-being,” says Barbara Mendez, a New York City nutrition consultant who works with many business clients. “If you have it on an empty stomach, that quick delivery to the bloodstream leads to more anxiety and stress.” So save the coffee for mid-afternoon, when your hormonal and neural connections often need the boost. If you do just one thing, cut out fatty foods. Andrew DiMichele, chief technical officer of Omada Health, an online diabetesprevention programme, gave up fries and chips at lunch and


launch

The Lost Leadership Art of Tough Love Some founders still manage the old school way. The trick: striking a balance between tough and love. His eyes glaze over when he hears the word empowerment. He’s still trying to figure out what work-life balance means. He is not a motivator in chief. Or a chief happiness officer. Stevens, the founder of the Rye Brook, New York-based branding firm MSCO, is the boss. Plain and simple. Remember the boss? He or she seems to be a dying breed. Rather than touting the structure and discipline of their companies, founders these days seem more interested in flaunting their quirks and perks. But there still are CEOs like Stevens, who fires whiners; encourages confrontation; imposes high, unyielding standards; and manages with the understanding that his word is law. “You can’t be soft in a tough world,” he says. “You’ll never make it.” Stevens, 56, founded the 46-employee company in 1995 and serves customers such as AIG and Wolfgang Puck. In fact, research shows that tough love can be an effective form of leadership— provided one strikes the proper balance between tough and love. One 2011 study out of Cornell University, the University of Notre Dame, and the University of Western Ontario found that disagreeable leaders had higher salaries and were considered more formidable managers than agreeable ones were. The challenge is to set high demands while still being supportive. “When you build a relationship on trust, then the majority of people are OK with tough love,” says Christine Porath, a professor at Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business. “They’ll rise to the occasion; some thrive on it.” That’s been the experience of Frank Poore. The founder of CommerceHub, a cloud-based fulfillment system for retailers,

16   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

Photos.com

Mark Stevens does not want to be loved.


launch

Poore admits that he rips apart drafts of employees’ presentations—just to see if they will push back. “That might be discouraging to some people,” Poore says, “but I want people to come in with their ideas fully baked and be able to defend themselves.” At the same time, however, Poore is careful never to make his criticisms personal, a lesson he learnt from an overly cruel drill sergeant he met in the Army. “If you attack people personally, as opposed to attacking their ideas, you’ve poisoned the well,” he says. In fact, studies have shown that being belittled actually does have a negative effect on cognitive function, says Porath. “You never want to use fear as your primary motivator,” she says. “Even if it makes employees want to perform better, they can’t.” Indeed, managers who exert too much toughness and not enough love might discover some unintended consequences. That’s what Judah Schiff saw in the early days of JMAC Supply, the security-systems company he launched in 2009. Schiff is only 24, but he runs his company like someone three times older. He insists that employees clock in and out, even for lunch. He fires so-called clock watchers and people he catches switching screens on their computer when he walks by. In 2012, that resulted in such intense churn that 24 people were fired or quit, on a team of just 14. Schiff hasn’t changed, though he spends more time in the interview phase making sure potential hires can handle the pressure. The company still loses about 12 employees a year, but to Schiff, it’s worth it if it means gaining two valuable staff members. —Issie Lapowsky

How Tough Is Too Tough?

There’s a fine line between being tough and being a jerk. Cross it at your peril.

Badass-Boss Hall of Fame

A gallery of uncompromising, and wildly successful, leaders Steve Jobs: The Perfectionist Gave employees a higher purpose but was unsparing about their shortcomings.

George Steinbrenner: The competitor Core belief: “Winning is the most important thing in life, after breathing.”

Barry Diller: The Taskmaster Embraces creative conflict but intimidates employees into pulling allnighters.

Martha Stewart: The Control Freak Made a fortune on her attention to detail but has trouble ceding control.

Don’t Be Big Brother

University of Chicago researchers found that when people are being monitored (or monitoring themselves) too closely, they tend to underperform—that is, they feel choked.

Rudeness Hurts

In a study by the University of Florida and the University of Southern California, people who were exposed to uncivil behaviour were 33 per cent less creative and four times less helpful than those who were not.

Scott Rudin: The Hothead Produced hits such as The Social Network and School of Rock; once fired an assistant for bringing him the wrong muffin.

How to Kill Productivity In a Georgetown University poll of 800 managers and employees, 80 per cent said they had lost work time worrying about a rude incident at the office.

MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  17


Get Real

BY

Jason Fried

Jason Fried is co-founder of 37signals, a Chicago-based software company. He is a man, not a machine.

To some, it’s all about searchengine optimisation. To others, marketing means advertising. This one speaks in terms of public relations. That one approaches marketing through the lens of analytics. But what was interesting to me was that no matter the specific orientation, every marketer we met with was focused on one thing: customer acquisition. To the marketers—to most people, I guess—the goal of marketing is to expand your market by picking up business that you didn’t have from people you didn’t know. I understand that. You market to increase awareness, attract customers, and spark sales. It makes perfect sense. But the more I spoke with all of these talented and passionate marketers, the more I realised that I wasn’t interested in what they had to offer. In fact, I found myself thinking less about new customers than about our existing ones. So we made a decision: 37signals will begin spending money on marketing. But rather than targeting new customers, we’re going to focus our energy and resources on helping current customers get more out of Basecamp they have. You’re probably thinking, Say what? If you already made the sale, why bother selling it again? That’s the thing. If my crash course in marketing taught me anything, it’s that I don’t want to market to boost sales in the short term. Instead, our marketing efforts will be about expanding our current customers’ awareness of what’s possible with our product. I want today’s customers to know more about how Basecamp can help turn them into heroes of progress at work. The way I see it, I can spend a lot of time and money trying to persuade a bunch of newcomers to try Basecamp. Or I can spend a lot less effort helping current customers get more out of something they’ve already purchased and enjoy using. As I said at the outset, sales take care of themselves when you put out a great product and treat your customers with the ultimate respect. Or, to put it another way: If you take care of your existing customers, they will take care of your new customers.

Marketing Without Marketing Rather than spending money to snag new customers, lavish some love on your current ones I love selling. But I’ve always been suspicious of marketing, at least the way it seems to be practiced by most companies. It seems to me that a lot of marketing is often deployed to cover up a product’s deficiencies rather than point out what makes it great, to confuse as much as to illuminate. So there is no marketing department or chief marketing officer at 37signals. Instead, we behave as if everything we do is marketing. Customer service is marketing. So is product quality. The phrasing of that error message, what you call that button, how you greet your customers—it’s all marketing. And so far, so good: Our flagship product, Basecamp, has earned the business of tens of thousands of businesses almost entirely on the basis of word of mouth. But I’ve recently begun wondering: What would our business be like if we put some effort into formal marketing? How many more people could we reach? How many more Basecamps could we sell if far more people know about Basecamp? So we decided to talk to some marketing execs about what they would do if they were charged with spreading the word about Basecamp. It was an interesting exercise. Not because we hired someone. We didn’t. But I learned a lot about marketing in the process. When I hire a designer or a programmer or an office administrator, I know what I’m getting. But marketing is different. The very definition of the term changes depending on whom you’re talking to. 18   |  INC. | march 2014

Follow Jason Fried on Twitter: @jasonfried. illustration by Peterson PJ


REGD . OFFICE : B-72, 2nd Floor, Rohit House, Vishwakarma Colony, Tughlakabad, M.B Road New Delhi -110044 Tele/Fax: 011 -26364425

FREIGHT FORWARDING

HEAD OFFICE: D-193, 1st floor, Okhla, Industrial Area, Phase-1, New Delhi-110020

AIR CARGO

Ph: 011-40770000 Fax: 011-41802484

RAILWAY TRANSPORTATION

Email: enquiries@satkarlogistics.com

FUMIGATION

www.satkar.com

Website: www.satkarlogistics.com,

CONTAINER YARD CUSTOM CLEARANCE NVOCC ROAD TRANSPORTATION

:- Mumbai, Ludhiana, Kanpur, Gandhidham, Jaipur, Nagpur, Kolkata.

Our Branch Offices

Coming Soon...


innovation

Companies on the Cutting Edge

A future remote control

Perhaps one of the most distinctive characteristics of a world-changing innovation is in its potential to be ubiquitous (think, a microchip, a SIM card or a battery) and to be used in a number of devices to create more complex innovations. Bangalore-based start-up Connovate Technology seems to have got there with their product Gecko. Slightly bigger than a rupee coin, this sleek and light (weighs seven grams) Bluetooth smart device primarily allows two key functions—gesture control and motion detection—but opens up endless possibilities for its user. For instance, once connected to your smartphone, Gecko allows you to perform several functions on your phone just by shaking it or turning it left or right. The motion detection sensors on the device trigger the necessary actions required to control your phone’s music system, make an emergency call, click a photo or record a video. Not just that, you could stick the Gecko to a patient’s pillbox and the Gecko app on your phone will alert you if the pillbox is not used at the scheduled time. You could also use Gecko to tag your luggage at the airport and get an alert if your bag is moved. Launched in December 2013, Gecko has already received 7,000 orders globally. The team also provides an open API to developers and has bagged 11 partners around the world to write applications using the device. Price: $25 An inspiring fan The Gecko project was crowdfunded on Indiegogo with a goal to collect $50,000 in less than two months. Not only did the team surpass that goal to collect $1,35,410 but it even got Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak to pledge $100 and tweet about it.

2 0   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

Specifications: LED indication Buzzer for audible alerts Accelerometer sensor for motion detection Removable coin cell battery with average life of one year Works with Bluetooth 4.0, iOS and Android 4.0 Colours: Black, Pink


Gecko

Connovate Technology

“Gecko isanot just pq. “This is dummy another tagisand find is a real pq tk. This device. It’s an Internet dummy pq, real pq is of things enabler.” tk tk tk tk.” —This is a pq Technology attribute — Bahubali Shete, CEO, Connovate

Lead tk vero dio dolestrud tat. Peros nissed magnit lore minisi.Rem zzriurem zzrit vero core magnibh exero dolorpero od magnibh eliscin ismodoloreet la consendre modo diamconum eugiam nonsendigna feu feum in henis nim ipisi.

photograph by Subhojit paul

reported by Ira Swasti


As per a 2012 World Bank report, India generates 1,10,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste (MSW) per day. A clutch of Indian companies is seeing a massive business opportunity to create both impact and profits from this.

Can these entrepreneurs dig trash for treasure?

By Sonal Khetarpal

Design by anil vk

2 2   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014


April 2013

Delhi High Court expresses serious concern over the failure of the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) and the government to find new sites in the capital for dumping garbage. The issue acquired urgency as the dumping sites in Delhi at Bhalaswa, Ghazipur and Okhla were overflowing and DDA hasn’t allotted any new site for landfill.

September 2013

A report by IT trade body ASSOCHAM declares that Bangalore is on its way to become the e-waste capital as it generates 18,000 tonnes of e-waste in a year.

June 2013

The only dumping ground for solid waste in Kolkata is at Dhapa which has reached a saturation point and is unfit for further use. Kolkata Municipal Corporation (KMC) has been looking for an alternative site for the last five years but none has been approved by the court so far.

MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  2 3


ccording to a paper published in Nature, a leading international science journal, over the next 12 years South Asia, and specifically India, will be the fastest growing region for generating waste. Increasing urbanisation, a growing middle class population and adoption of high-consumption lifestyle, says a Worldwatch Institute report 2012, has led to this spike. To handle the waste problem, the Government of India passed the Municipal Solid Wastes (Management and Handling) Rules, 2000 under the Environment Protection Act of 1986. More than a decade has passed since these rules were enforced yet muncipalities have not been able to implement proper waste disposal systems in the country. Over the past decade or so, though, a bevy of companies have spotted the opportunity in different kinds of waste— such as municipal solid waste (consisting of household waste, he Municipal Solid Wastes (Management and Handling) Rules, 2000 mandate all municipal authorities in India to construction and implement improved systems of solid waste management for proper waste disposal. The rules don’t entitle municidemolition debris, palities to collect waste from the source—the residential sanitation residue, and complexes, the commercial buildings and others. So, the muncipalities collect waste from the city dumphouses and then move all the trash to waste from streets), and the landfills, which are usually on the periphery of the cities. This puts the responsibility of collecting waste and taking it to dumphouses on e-waste (mostly the residents. To do that, a lot of them get into an informal contract with electronics). Here we take a the waste pickers to take the garbage to these secondary dumpsites. Those who can’t get waste picker services, do it themselves or throw the look at these companies garbage out on the streets. It’s this puzzling rule of not collecting trash from the households that are trying to pull India that Amit Mittal, founder of the `935-crore engineering and infrastrucout of its trash trouble. ture company A2Z Group, attributes as the main reason for India’s

T

2 4   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014


Memoirs of Garbage

filthy cities. Mittal’s rendezvous with waste began in 2005 while his company was managing facilities for the Indian Railways in Kanpur. Railway authorities asked A2Z to handle its waste disposal too. That request got him thinking—could waste management be an exciting new vertical for him? As Mittal set out to figure out the industry’s commercial viability, he discovered the many, many flaws that needed to be fixed. First, he realised that the few waste management players that were operational would concentrate on only one or two aspects of the waste management cycle. They would do either of the two—transport waste or process it. No one specialised in an end-to-end solution for waste management. After studying the market for two years, A2Z developed their integrated solid waste management model, and did its first pilot study in Kanpur in 2008. The first step was to collect the waste directly from houses. Mittal says, “collection of waste directly from households would solve many problems at once. It helped in keeping streets clean and eased the tedious process of waste segregation for the rag pickers. Since segragation was done at source, the rag pickers didn’t have to climb mounds of trash at the landfills that reek of methane.” For collecting the waste, each residence paid A2Z a monthly payment of `30-50 and commercial complexes paid `100. A2Z forwarded the entire collection corpus to the city’s municipality. In return, A2Z got a fixed monthly sum for their services from the municipality. This improved the economic margins for the municipality because A2Z charged them less than the amount collected. That way, the municipality made a cash surplus which reduced the amount of money spent by the government on waste management. Apart from the service fee from municipality, A2Z also made money from selling the derivatives of waste—compost (made from organic waste), Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) (made from plastic, rubber and other combustible items), and recycled tiles and bricks (made from construction debris). Photograph by Subhojit Paul

They also got the waste pickers from the informal sector to work for them. Employing them wasn’t easy, says Mittal. Rag pickers have their own associations and they maintain their loyalty to them. Any new company is treated with suspicion on account of the fact that they might take away all the waste, especially recyclables— rag pickers’ main source of income. To convince them, his company had to send a team of five people to educate rag pickers about the financial and health benefits of joining the organised sector. It took them six months to establish trust with them. Eventually they did become a part of his company. Within a year, they had 300 waste pickers working for them. This model ensured all entities involved make profits —the operator company, the government and the rag pickers. Since that pilot in 2008, A2Z has grown to manage 8,000 tonnes of waste per day for 21 muncipalities across different Indian cities. Now, they work with more than 5,000 ragpickers. Mittal says their model is also being studied by Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a case study for integrated waste management in developing countries. Yet, A2Z Group, which clocked up an impressive CAGR of 100.69 per cent in the 2004-2013 period, hasn’t struck gold

Collection of waste directly from households would solve many problems at once. It helped in keeping streets clean and eased the tedious process of waste segregation for the ragpickers. Amit Mittal

founder, A2Z Group

MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  2 5


Memoirs of Garbage

cal fertilizers. Since it is not made mandatory by the government, fertiliser companies do not buy compost or give a good rate for it. Hence, companies like A2Z do not get the right price from selling compost. Mittal says till the government doesn’t take waste management seriously as an industry, the going for companies like his is going to be uphill. It’s why companies such as Waste Ventures India, the Indian operating company of the US-based social enterprise Waste Capital Partners, isn’t waiting for the government to fix its policy. They understood the government’s lack of support from their first integrated solid waste management project with the Osmanabad municipality in southern Maharashtra in January 2011. Twenty-six tonnes of garbage was generated each day and all of it was dumped in open landfills. Much of it wasn’t even collected. Waste Ventures India had hired 110 waste pickers that were part of the waste cooperative. They would collect waste from households and properly dispose it. But, after three months they stopped their work because the municipal leadership was unwilling to release any payment because they refused to bribe them. So, Waste Ventures India had to find a strategy to work around the unfavourable environment. Parag Gupta, founder of Waste Ventures, says, “We realised we had to develop a model in India wherein no financial transaction with the government bodies was required.” After the Osmanabad incident in 2011, Waste Ventures started working on non-payment contracts with the muncipalities in India. As per the new model, the muncipalities would provide Waste Ventures with facilities to compost organic waste which comprises of 70-80 per cent of municipal solid waste. In return, Waste Ven-

We realised we had to find a strategy to work around the unfavourable environment in India and develop a model wherein no financial transaction with the government bodies was required. Parag Gupta

founder, Waste Ventures 2 6   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

Photo courtesy subject

(read, it’s not making money) in its `100-crore waste management vertical. Mittal points out the dominant cause for this. A major chunk of their revenue in waste management comes from selling the derivatives of waste—the compost, RDF and the recycled tiles. But, the government doesn’t give the waste management company any subsidies, grants or even attractive tariff rates to sell these derivatives. For instance, the combustible part of the waste is turned to energy or a combustible fuel like methane. To process this, A2Z had got commissioned to built its first waste to energy plant in 2012 in Kanpur. Now, they have four power plants, one in Kanpur and three in Punjab. But, the government hasn’t fixed an attractive power tariff (rate at which government buys power) for waste to energy plants. The current tariff is approx `5.5 per unit which makes it very difficult for operators of waste to energy plants to make profit. Another by-product generated from waste is compost which is used as a fertiliser in agriculture. There is a clear cut directive from the government to the fertiliser industry to buy and sell compost along with chemi-


Memoirs of Garbage

How to start your office waste management programme Poonam Bir Kasturi, founder of Bangalore-based composting solution provider Daily Dump, has helped companies such as IT major Mindtree and Mahindra Reva’s production plants to manage their waste. She gives Inc. India a stepby-step guide on how companies can form their own office waste management programme.

1

The first step is to understand the kind of waste that is generated in the office. Differentiate the waste produced in terms of biodegradable waste (includes kitchen waste, fruits, flowers); recyclable waste (plastic, paper, glass); toxic waste (medicines, batteries, chemicals) and rejects like sanitary waste that goes to landfills. Also, estimate the quantity of each type of waste that is produced. 60-80 per cent of office waste can be either composted or recycled.

2

bin for wet waste, recyclables such as plastic and paper, and toxic waste. The dustbins can be differentiated on the basis of colours or different stickers. This helps in segregation of waste. It is an absolute must in waste management because if the different kinds of waste gets mixed, it is very difficult to process it.

Once that has been figured, put dustbins at the common areas in the office premises. It is better to put dustbins at short distances from each other rather than one big common dustbin. Also, ensure there is a separate dust-

3

It is also essential to create awareness about the importance of waste management in your office. It has to be an inclusive policy where everyone from the top management to the lower echelons of the organisation is involved. First, explain its benefits to the maintenance staff since they will be the one implementing the waste

Poonam Bir Kasturi

tures India helps the municipality optimise its collection and collection staff schedules and then operates the compost plant. Waste Ventures incentives are aligned towards environmental processing because if they do not compost the organic waste, they cannot make their operations financially self-sufficient. That way, the municipality receives environmental processing of waste at no cost and the district has a fully integrated solid waste management process in place. “What investors and commercial markets hate most is uncertainity and risk. This model mitigates risk. One earns from what is recycled and sold. However, our profit margins are lower because we are a social enterprise. But, this model is financially sustainable which others can follow and make profit,” Gupta believes. Waste Ventures implemented this model in Miryalaguda in Andhra Pradesh at the end of 2013. The project has been named second best municipal waste manage-

disposal process. Then, move on to all the employees. This can be done by dividing everyone in small batches and showing them a presentation or a small movie on waste management which can be followed by an interactive session. This can be repeated every six months so that the enthusiasm doesn’t die among the employees and it becomes their habit.

4

The last step is to devise a strategy for waste disposal. Dry waste needn’t be collected everyday. It can be stored in a separate space and collected once in two or three weeks. Wet waste has to be collected everyday. It can be composted, or if its quantity is huge wet waste can be converted into bio gas by installing a bio gas plant on site.

ment project in Andhra Pradesh and third overall across India (for cities under population of four lakhs). The earnings of the waste pickers who processed the organic waste increased by two to three times over their prior wages. Also, more than 70 per cent of the waste was getting environmentally processed. Also, this model helped in selling compost directly to farmers as most of the sheds were located at the outskirts of the city. According to Fertiliser Association of India, only 0.5 per cent need for soil conditioners is met in India. No wonder, as Gupta informs, they were 400 per cent oversubscribed for compost in Andhra Pradesh. But, the real win of the model, Gupta says proudly, is that it improved the waste pickers’ sanitation, work environment, earnings and health all at once. In fact, Waste Ventures was selected by World Wildlife Fund in December 2011 as one of the “50 Green Game Changers” in the world. MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  2 7


Memoirs of Garbage

A

report released by IT trade body ASSOCHAM in September 2013 reveals that Bangalore is soon to become the country’s e-waste hub generating about 18,000 tonnes of e-waste a year, growing at a compounded rate of 20 per cent per year. Following Bangalore is Mumbai at 10,000 tonnes a year, and then Delhi and Chennai. E-waste refers to discarded electrical and electronic devices—mobiles, computers, tubelights, bulbs, wires, cables, refrigerators. When intact, these devices don’t pose any threat. But, when dismantled and dumped in the scrapyards or landfills, the harmful metals present in them such as lead, chromium, mercury seep into the environment and contaminate it. They also affect the scrap dealers who dismantle the e-waste without any proper equipments as they burn the components in the open which leads to emission of poisonous gas fumes.

The Indian government woke up to the colossal problem of e-waste a bit late and proposed a draft e-waste policy, e-waste (Management and Handling) Rules, 2010. These rules were gazette notified in 2011 and came into effect in May 2012. By then, Dr P. Parthasarathy had already been working to counter the e-waste problem for several years. Parthasarathy used to work in Singapore in the early 2000s for a recycling company that specialised in precious metal recovery from discarded electronic equipments. In 2004, he moved back to Bangalore to start E-Parisaraa, an electronic waste recycling company, both to provide solutions to a mammoth problem, and to cash in on the right market opportunity. Today, Parthasarathy claims E-Parisaraa is India’s first e-waste recycling company to be approved both by the Central Pollution Control Board and the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board. Their first processing unit is located on a 1.5 acre land in Dobaspet

Robert John, CEO of Earth Sense gives some basic steps to consider while drafting your company’s IT policy for e-waste management.

Four simple steps for office e-waste management

2 8   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

1

Procure hardware from vendors who promise to take back e-waste when it becomes obsolete.

Robert John

2

Try to extend the use of electronics by as much as possible. It helps in reducing the generation of e-waste drastically.

3

Achieve 100 per cent environmentally responsible disposal of e-waste by getting the services of an authorised e-waste recycler rather than selling it to people from unauthorised informal sector.

4

Ensure no one disposes of electric items in the dustbins. This can be done by putting separate E-bins for collection of e-waste in the office premises.


Memoirs of Garbage

which is around 50 kms from Bangalore, an area that has been earmarked by the government for hazardous waste management. But, how does e-waste recycling work? Companies such as E–Parisaraa buy obsolete and discarded electrical equipments from electronic manufacturers or bulk consumers of electronic devices such as corporates and institutions. The average price that these recyclers give for e-waste is `30-40 per kg. Plastic items are sold for relatively less price, around `15 per kg, informs Parthasarathy. These companies then bring back the e-waste to their processing unit to be dismantled. All components are segregated into glass, plastic and metal. These are sold to different manufacturers who use these recycled product waste as raw material. For instance, the copper in your desktop can be used to make electric wires, and the silver and gold in your mobile phones can be used for plating of imitation jewellery. It might sound like a logical win-win that everybody works towards. However, things haven’t been easy for E–Parisaraa. Its e-waste processing capacity is 10,000 tonnes annually across five facilities in Bangalore, Chennai, Mumbai, Gurgaon and Kolkata but they recycle only one-fourth of that. These problems are echoed by other e-waste recyclers as well. For instance, K.P.K. Kumaran, founder of Chennaibased e-waste management and recycling company Earth Sense, says they have been getting only 2,000 tonnes (10 per cent of the capacity) of their processing capacity of 20,000 tonnes across their three recycling plants in Mumbai, Gurgaon and Hyderabad since the last five years. Clearly, there is no dearth of obsolete electrical items in India. So, the pertinent question is where does it all go. Parallel to these authorised e-waste recycling company exists a separate world of informal recyclers that also buys e-waste. This informal sector does not recycle, but refurbishes the goods and sells them again in the secondary market. Reselling of refurbished goods gets a much higher price than selling of processed recycled metals to manufacturers. Due to this, the informal sector pays a better price for e-waste that goes up to `100 per kg of e-waste. “If we pay more than `45 per kg of e-waste to companies, we are out of business,” says Parthasarathy. Photograph by sri vatsa

This problem is worsened due to the easy procedure for obtaining recycling authorisation for e-waste. Anyone with barely two or three employees can also get a license, says Parthasarathy. Due to this a lot of people from informal sector become authorised dealers for recycling and can legitimately take part in auction of e-waste in companies. This increases the competition for genuine recyclers as they bid for a higher price for e-waste. “Since companies get better price from informal sector they are more keen on selling to them and make end-of-life profits rather than properly disposing off their electrical equipments,” says Parthasarathy. To counter this, Parthasarathy says companies like his need to launch massive awareness campaigns. So, along with Umicore Precious Metals Refining, Belgiumbased world’s largest precious metals recovery company, E-Parisaraa started a programme called Crystal Project in May 2010. Under this project, they bought e-waste from the informal sector so that they can dispose off the e-waste safely. Although they had launched it for a year, the project’s success has ensured it continues till today. In 2011, they also launched a vehicle that would go around the city collecting e-waste. Earth Sense also partnered with the NGO, Ishta Foundation to spread awareness about the importance of recycling e-waste in corporates, schools and colleges and created the website, welovetorecycle.com. Only after working aggressively on it for three years,

Since companies get better price for e-waste from informal sector they are more keen on selling to them rather than properly disposing off the e-waste. Dr P. Parthasarathy founder, E-Parisaraa

MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  2 9


Memoirs of Garbage

Waste Watch

Subrata Barman, senior operations officer, Sustainable Business Advisory at the development financial institution IFC South Asia talks to Inc. India about the lucrativeness of investing in an e-waste business in India. this problem 15-20 According to the years back. Europe Department of is the leader in this Electronics and space. It has put in Information place the right policy Technology, and legislation for electronics import extended producers may far exceed oil responsibility imports by 2020 as (EPR)—the strategy the demand for according to which electronics in the the manufacturer is Indian market is responsible for the expected to reach Subrata Barman entire life-cycle of its $400 billion by then. product, including for take-back This has also led to the and disposal at the end of life of tremendous opportunity in the the product. e-waste space which is growing Even though the Indian govat a phenomenal pace of 20-22 ernment has made EPR mandaper cent. No wonder, a lot of tory under the e-waste rules but companies are mushrooming in unlike Europe it has not included this space. And, if they are able any quantitative target, that is, to make profits, there is no the quantity of goods that the reason why VCs shouldn’t invest producer is mandated to take in them. But before that one has back at the end of its productive to understand the three main life. For instance, if a company challenges that the e-waste sold 100 mobiles in a European industry in India faces. market, the government made it mandatory to responsibly recycle From the policy perspec65% of the same. This quantitative: The e-waste policy in India tive target is missing in India. A is still at its nascent stage. It was reason for this could be that the enacted recently in May 1, 2012. government wants to give some In contrast, if you look globally, time to producers to put in place developed countries woke up to

the take-back infrastructure required for efficient collection. integration of informal sector: Presently, bulk of the e-waste is managed by the informal sector. that disposes it off irresponsibly. Since 95% of the existing e-waste market is informal, it is important for the formal recycling companies to structure innovative and sustainable partnerships with the informal sector players and try to integrate them in the formal supply chain. This is a big challenge and has to be addressed if one has to evolve a sustainable solution for this sector. Consumer behaviour: Another big challenge is consumer behaviour. The mindset is that if one sells, irrespective of the fact that it works or doesn’t, a certain money is

from 2005 to 2008, the companies giving them e-waste increased from 150 tonnes to 1,000 tonnes. As Earth Sense’s CEO John Robert informs, “Initially, almost 60 per cent of the companies we approached refused to even meet us .” However, the problems voiced out by these recycling companies remain far from being solved. As per the survey done by E-Parisaraa last year in 2013, 80 per cent of the e-waste produced in Bangalore still goes to the informal sector. There are also many clauses remaining to be included in the e-waste policy. The e-waste rules does not have any guidelines about the occupational health and safety of workers. 3 0   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

expected to be earned. This isn’t the case in developed countries such as Europe where an advanced recycling fee is already included in the selling price of the product. So, the consumer pays for the recycling fee in advance at the point of purchase. Unless producers join hands together to take such similar measures in India, the existing situation will not improve. Recycling companies that are working to integrate the informal sector in the formal supply chain or influence the value chain— essentially collecting, dismantling and disposing off e-waste—in a positive way stand much better chances of getting investment. In the long run, as the enabling environment for responsible e-waste recycling improves, it is these companies that will grow and prosper in the emerging e-waste market in India.

Also, the government has missed lighting equipments such as tubelights and bulbs from the e-waste category. The policy does not mention a unified set of authorisations that recyclers require from Pollution Control Board. Due to that, recycling companies have to obtain licences from each state they operate in which is a very time consuming process as each state has a different set of regulations, says Robert. Clearly, the journey from trash to treasure is unlikely to become a smooth run anytime soon. Hopefully, entreprenuers like Mittal and Parthasarathy are fuelled by perseverance and grit, and can stay the course and soon make treasure from trash.



war ready

War Indian companies are lining their security arsenals with more powerful tools, and are better prepared to both understand and deflect cyber attacks, finds CSO Forum survey. By AMAN SHUKLA

photos.com

Design by Sristi Maurya

3 2   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014


war ready

Ready?? Financial institutions, government, military, hospitals and mostly all businesses in today’s world collect, process and store a great deal of confidential information on computers and transmit that data across networks to other computers. This has led to the imperative need to protect sensitive business and personal information, especially since the volume and sophistication of cyber attacks has also radically increased. To bring out the complexities faced by IT Heads and security professionals, our group publication CSO Forum did a survey with 50 companies to understand the issues and challenges faced by them. The report, Annual State of Cyber Security Survey 2013, seeks to assess the current state of cyber security in India as perceived by CSOs/CISOs, and highlighted issues and challenges in the current cyber ecosystem in the country. The findings suggest that cyber security breach is a “new normal” for Indian companies. All the companies surveyed had a “reported security breach” in the last one year. What was encouraging though was the greater understanding, and preparedness demonstrated by CSOs and IT teams in India to safeguard themselves from attacks.

MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  3 3


war ready

1. Indian companies are catching up with their global counterparts

2. Disruptive IT innovations were the least important factor

Indian companies are catching up with their global counterparts in recognising and expressing concerns about the growing threats from cyber security breaches. As a result, more than 80 per cent of the companies surveyed have a formal security policy in place. Cyber fraud and cyber crime protection were considered to be the two most important factors in designing the content of these security policies. This was closely followed by the need to protect IPRs and government policies & regulatory compliance. Similar to other studies around the world, risk associated with employees, past and present, was rated highly at 4.2.

Contrary to popular hype in the media, disruptive innovations like Cloud computing, Big Data, Social Media and Mobile devices were rated to be the least important factors while designing these policies. Possibly, companies and CSOs are yet to fully understand the implications of these rapidly evolving technologies and formally incorporate them in their security policies. Given the complexity of cyber attacks around the world, the survey exhibited strong preference for internal self regulation, as opposed to government regulation to protect their organisations from cyber risks.

Description of companies’ information security policy— percentage of respondents who chose from the following options

3. 76 per cent of the companies formally train their employees on cyber security

2% 2%

Are your employees trained on matters of information/ cyber security?

14%

82%

Yes

76% We do not have information security policy We have an informal policy Formal policy is being designed Formal policy exist

3 4   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014


war ready

The importance of the following factors in influencing the design and content of your company’s ‘information security policy’? (Rate on a scale of 1 to 7 where 1 = not at all considered, 3 = important and 5 = extremely important)

4.3 4.2 4.2

Risk associated with employees—present and past Growing sophistication of cyber attacks The need to create self-regulatory environment internally

4.6 4.4 4.5 4.4

Protection from fraud/cyber crime The need to protect IPRs and reputation Business continuity/disaster recovery Government policies and regulatory compliance

3.8

Disruptive IT innovations Global best practices

A whopping 76 per cent of the companies formally train their employees on matters relating to cyber security and cyber security breaches. Equally significant, 22 per cent of the CSOs surveyed, mainly from the traditional sectors, are yet to train their employees. Despite the findings above, almost all the companies surveyed know whom to contact in the organisation in case of a cyber security breach.

Are your employees instructed on whom to contact in the organisation in case of cyber security breach?

9Yes0%

6% Not formally

4% No

4.1

4. Government needs to do more to restore confidence about cyber security in India Government needs to do more to restore confidence about cyber security in India. While 36 per cent of all CSOs surveyed were either very confident or extremely confident about the existing cyber security policies system in the country, 62 per cent were not confident with the existing government policies. Recognisant of this fact, the Indian government proposed the National Cyber Security Policy in July 2013. The policy plans to set up a national nodal agency to co-ordinate all matters related to cyber security in the country. Though ambitious, the respondents trust the government to implement these policies.

How confident are you about the existing cyber security policies of India?

36 31

Extremely confident Very confident

26

NO

22%

Not very confident Somewhat confident Not at all confident

don’t know

2%

5 2 MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  3 5



Tactics. Trends. Best Practices.

Strategy

PHOTOS.COM

Design Not Just Pretty Why good design is about utility, not good looks

Design is a series of homonyms with several different meanings. It is in no way just restricted to the world of fashion, interior or graphic designing. At its core, design signifies a new way of doing things and a new way of creating value that can make products more inclusive and egalitarian. While the former references to design are fairly well understood, it is the product and industrial design that Indian

businesses could focus more on to solve society’s most pressing problems. Take the Simputer, for example, a palmtop-like personal computing device that was launched in 2002 amidst a lot of fanfare (it was hailed as the most significant innovation in computer technology that year by Time magazine and The New York Times). Developed by Bangalorebased Encore Software, this device had

several features convenient for rural use. It was easy to carry and handle, came with a low price tag and could run on batteries (essential in villages where electricity supply is intermittent). It was also simpler than the regular PC where the user needed to know Windows, English and the functions of the mouse to use it. Not just that, the Simputer worked on the open source OS Linux, had a touch screen and stylus MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  3 7


Strategy

with simple visual icons and multilingual options to translate English into regional languages, and a Smart Card reader and writer for secure financial transactions. Due to abysmally low internet penetration in rural households, the device also had an inbuilt modem to transfer information to internal servers. In all, the device was a product of focused thinking and was specifically developed for the rural market. And still, Simputer sales were disappointing. Encore managed to sell only one lakh units over three of its best years. Vinay Deshpande, CEO of Encore and co-developer of Simputer, confesses their target was “much larger”. Deshpande attributed the low numbers on the users’ distrust of indigenous technology, and the lack of funds for marketing or large scale commercial production. He also believed that the product was ahead of its time when it was launched and potential users could not appreciate its many applications. But, were these really the predominant reasons for the lukewarm response Simputer received from the market? Perhaps there was a different reason at play that Deshpande could not identify—was it truly designed keeping in mind a user working in a village?

I

n 2008, Pune-based DSK Digital Technologies, a subsidiary of the `4,000crore DSK Group, bought the technology used to make the Simputer from Encore and started its own R&D operations to create another computing device for rural markets called the Mobiliz. Unlike the Simputer that was developed by a team of scientists at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, Mobiliz was developed by a business group that had roped in product and communications designer Satish Gokhale, co-founder of Pune-based Design Directions, right at the early stages of product development. “I always believe that a product should be designed outside in. So my goal with Mobiliz was to first find out what the product should look like depending on what it will be used for and then the entire electronics inside it,” Gokhale says.

3 8   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

Typing long reports or even page long documents would have been cumbersome on a mobile phone or a tablet like design and hence these forms were ruled out, right from the beginning. A standard laptop QWERTY keyboard was thought to be ideal for the purpose instead. “Then when we went onto the field to understand how people in villages in Maharashtra worked, we saw they didn’t have chairs or tables to sit on and work,” he says. That meant Mobiliz had to be physically different from a regular laptop so that users could use it while sitting cross-legged in a sugarcane field under a strong sun. So, Mobiliz was conceived to be a more compact device with ample space for resting the wrists. At 800-900 grams, it was lighter than a regular laptop which usually weighs between 1.5 to 2 kg. It also has a 7-inch touchscreen that can be laid flat or angled anyway to prevent the glare of the sun. The touchscreen made the interface intuitive and easy-to-use for rural users, many of whom were first-time computer users. The touchscreen also played a key role in building trust with the users. “It’s purely psychological but the touchscreen gave Mobiliz the look and feel of a high-tech product. It gave our users—farmers, dairy workers—the confidence that their financial transaction and data were safe with this sophisticated device. That type of confidence in a product plays a big part in establishing trust,” explains Gokhale. Apart from technology trust issues, there was another significant challenge in rural areas—the erratic supply of electricity. Using simple batteries could have been an option but earlier Simputer designers had observed that people interchanged polarities while using AAA batteries and battery contacts even became loose due to rough handling at times. However, there is one natural source of energy that is in abundant supply in most villages in India—the sun. Mobiliz has been designed to be powered through two small solar panels attached to the device’s storage

Simputer

Management education at a premier school, even today, can be completed without ever being exposed to the fundamentals of design or product development, and you hardly ever have designers migrate into decision-making positions in an organisation. —Dr Aditya Dev Sood, founder, Centre for Knowledge Societies


Strategy

photo courtesy subject

Mobiliz

jacket which goes into a halo sack used to carry the device. This halo sack also has enough room to carry a tiffin. It’s handy to carry on a cycle as well. As Mobiliz is a lowpower device that consumes only 3.5 watts of power (compared to a normal laptop that consumes 60 to 100+ watts in an hour), it has a Lithium-ion rechargeable battery back up of more than five hours. It also dissipates less heat without cooling; reducing the harm to the farm and village ecosystem where the device will be used in. However, what differentiates the laptop and Mobiliz the most are their applications. “Our field studies taught us that a laptop has a lot of wasted applications that never get used in a rural setting. It is an all-purpose common device,” says Vinod Philips, CEO, DSK Digital Technologies. “Mobiliz, on the other hand, can be custom configured to have very specific features, say for only data entry at a dairy farm, or for e-learning at a municipal school or for financial transactions

Design Wise The successful design evolution of Simputer to Mobiliz bears testimony to the fact that industrial design has the power to open up new markets for any business.

with a microfinance business correspondent. That way it cannot be used for anything else. This prevents the device from being sold or getting stolen by nonusers,” he says. The end user of the Mobiliz today are trained (albeit literate 10th class graduates, not college graduates) personnel taught to carry out specific tasks in the village, and not every member of the rural household. There are three versions of the device—silver, gold and platinum and the price varies from `20,000 for the lowest model to `35,000 for the highest version. The price range begs the question—why would anyone want to buy a Mobiliz and not a cheaper laptop available under even `20,000? The manufacturers of the product believe that the features that this device provides are not available on a normal laptop, and stress that this is only the launch price. As production volume increases, DSK aims to reduce the price to an affordable `10,000.

Their optimism may not be too misplaced. Mobiliz was launched in March 2013 and within a year of its launch, the device has received a good response from banks, dairies and milk collection centres. DSK has tied up with 22 nationalised banks to deploy it to business correspondents for carrying out banking transactions in villages of Madhya Pradesh. 300 rural dairies in Maharashtra have connected the device with their milk analysers and milk weighing scales to measure the amount of milk delivered by a farmer and clear his dues in real time. And the team has already started work on collaborating with government and private players to develop applications for floriculture and horticulture.

S

imputer’s journey to becoming Mobiliz bears testimony to the fact that industrial design has the power to open up new markets for any business. Yet, it’s not used enough as a vehicle to lead that change in India. When it comes to design, DSK’s Philips believes it’s a cultural trait among Indian entrepreneurs to use jugaad to cobble up something, or to copy from a variety of sources to put something together instead of hiring a professional design agency that understands the right process involved in product design. He concedes that getting Mobiliz market-ready took longer than he had anticipated because of this design intervention but confesses it might well be the game changer for his company. Dr Aditya Dev Sood, founder of innovation consulting firm Centre for Knowledge Societies, adds that education too has a role to play for the lack of enthusiasm among Indian enterprises (though it is becoming a buzzword in the startup world) for design. “Management education at a premier school even today can be completed without ever being exposed to the fundamentals of design or product development, and you hardly ever have designers migrate into decision making positions in an organisation,” Dr Sood points out. “Given these challenges, if a company has come out and developed great design, it’s laudable.” —Ira Swasti MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  3 9


Strategy

Social Media #NotSoTrendy Facebook’s new feature unlikely to be a marketer’s power tool trends based on a user’s interests? Facebook claims: “Topics are personalised based on things you’re interested in and what is trending across Facebook overall.” I doubt though that the feeds are personalised. This is a quick snapshot of the trends on my profile for the past two days:

Day 1

But, I barely ever like any sports pages, and am as uninterested in Microsoft as in Justin Beiber. On my larger friends list also, there were very few people talking about Jai Ho that day. In fact, more people had updates on the movie the next day but it wasn’t trending then.

Facebook recently launched a trending section which is visible on the top right hand side of the homepage for it’s web visitors. The feature isn’t currently available on mobile. Since this is a major change on the homepage and seems to compete with Twitter’s trending topics, it has piqued the interest of marketers. So, before your brand manager presents a snazzy presentation on Facebook Trends, it’s smart to get an indepth view of what these “trends” means for your business.

First, what is trending?

According to Facebook, “it’s a personalised list of the most mentioned words and 4 0   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

phrases at the current time with short explanations of why each is blowing up. A click-through leads to a page of mentions by friends and public posts by anyone who lets people “follow” them.” Facebook has an “explanation” feature which details why a particular topic is trending. This might seem to some as an improvement on Twitter because the challenge there is that often it isn’t clear why something is trending. Facebook’s explanation clarifies the why, and stokes a user’s interest which might generate more clickthroughs for Facebook. For marketers, an important question has been—is Facebook personalising

Again, no one on my list was talking about the Celebrity Cricket League or the Chinese tennis player, Li Na. On Republic Day, there were definitely several posts by friends or pages I liked but that is still on the second place for me. So, it seems Facebook takes a more macroscopic view of trends—more at a region level, not at an individual level. Also, Facebook Trends aggregate the headlines of the day while Twitter Trending Topics check the pulse of the moment. More users would be interested in that “pulse check”. As marketers, does Facebook Trends change our lives? Although Twitter does use this feature as a source of revenue, Facebook is yet to announce anything like that. Even in the near future, I don’t think Facebook Trends will directly be used as a revenue source at least not until

Photos.com

Day 2


strategy

Day 2

Day 1

Facebook gets the product right via various iterations. So, why have it in the first place, you might ask? I think they introduced it for three reasons—to build further engagement and clickthroughs, serve Facebook’s objective of being the ultimate news destination (considering Facebook is currently the largest medium in the world; bigger than any newspaper or TV channel ever!), and to capture current consumer interest by

which the company could eventually drive more real time marketing/ advertising. Actually, “real time” is the goldmine for today’s advertisers. Facebook must be hoping their trending feature will help them get to that. Apart from brands which are involved in the highly topical issues such as

movies, cricket and politics, I see this having little benefit to marketers in its current avatar. If you are promoting a new movie which will get mass traction on a specific day or if a politician gets talked about a lot on a given day, the trending features makes what’s popular more popular but it doesn’t have the ability to make something “trendy” out of an issue people are hardly interested in. For instance, Akshay Kumar’s new movie Holiday probably reached out to a much larger audience since it was trending across the home page of millions of people who logged onto Facebook in India. On the other hand, actress Parineeti Chopra began trending after the release of her movie when her performance was appreciated and not when the trailer/movie was released. Clearly, the Akshay Kumar release has more interest to begin with. Another reason why Facebook’s trends are unlikely to take away from Twitter’s is because most content on Twitter is public. One can see the opinions of both people you know personally, and those that you don’t. However, Facebook’s privacy settings make it more restrictive. Their move towards the trends seems directed more to their goal of being a one-stop news source rather than a brand medium. Brand messages will come up when Facebook as a news source is firmly established in the minds of the consumer. Considering the fact that it’s the largest media platform in history, that seems quite possible. But, that is definitely not now, or even in the next six months. And, that’s as far as one can forecast about anything on the internet! —Saurabh Parmar is the founder of Brandlogist Communications. He is also a visting faculty at Indian Institute of Mass Communication, Delhi. You can reach him here: www. facebook.com/Brandlogist. MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  41


Relax? Who has the time to relax?

Training for a marathon

Playing first-person shooters

I like to relax by:

Paying them more

Direction should come from the top

DISAGREE

Everyone should have a say in setting company goals.

Convening a book group

Spending time in nature

I can best motivate people by...

AGREE

FALSE

TRUE

I don’t tell people how to do their jobs—I just look at their results.

AGREE

Its better to be feared than loved.

Good for keeping people on their toes

Something to fix; harmony in the office is key

Challenging themselves

DISAGREE

Employees first

Your motto?

Confer with a few trusted colleagues

Get everyone’s ideas and put them to a vote.

Customers first

Your business needs a fresh direction. You...

Retreat to focus on the problem alone.

styles identified by psychologist and author Daniel Goleman—isn’t intended as a substitute for other personality evaluations. But if you jump in and answer honestly (as the boss you are right now, rather than the one you aspire to be), you just might get the affirmation, reality check, or wake up call that you need. —By Adam Bluestein

Teaching them new skills

A certain tension in the workplace is...

Making them feel part of something larger

Your employees probably have you pegged—as a relentless Type A charger, a ponderer, a reclusive visionary, or a hothead. But how well do you know your own leadership style? There are several widely used personality tests out there, and you may know your Myers-Briggs, Colour Q, or DiSC type. Our tool—which is based on leadership

Leadership What Kind of Leader are You?

Strategy


4 3   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014

Dismissing someone else’s idea

Think twice before:

ing control of other people’s projects

Think twice before: Tak-

help employees understand what it takes to meet standards, and team builders, who help boost morale

Surround yourself with: Coaches, who can

Surround yourself with: Team builders,

who can connect with employees

Jack Welch Style: High-achieving and hard working, the paragon sets high standards and leads by example but can have trouble communicating and sharing credit.

Giuliani, Martha Stewart Style: Top-down and rather inflexible, this kind of leader often thrives in a crisis but also struggles with morale problems.

The Paragon

Examples: Steve Jobs,

The General

Fix it yourself

Examples: Rudy

Give a stern warning and one more chance— but just one.

One of your people has screwed up. You …

Giving unqualified praise

Think twice before:

enforce high standards, and generals, who can focus on details

Surround yourself with: Paragons, who will

co-founder of Costco, who as CEO, kept employee pay high (and his pay low) despite pressure from shareholders Style: By forging strong relationships with employees and giving them lots of freedom, the team builder encourages open communication and fierce loyalty but may let poor performance go uncorrected.

Example: James Sinegal,

The Team Builder

At an office party or casual lunch

Help him or her make a plan to fix it.

Calling another meeting

Think twice before:

Devoting too much time to employees who resist mentoring

strong ideas of their own Think twice before:

Surround yourself with: Visionaries with

Jordan, CEO of New Belgium Brewing; Bob Moore, CEO, Bob’s Red Mill Natural Food—each turned over 100 per cent ownership of the company to employees Style: This consensus builder values employee ideas and the democratic process but can suffer from indecision.

The Populist Examples: Kim

gons and generals, who can deal efficiently with crises

Surround yourself with: Self-motivated para-

CEO Sam Allen, mentors 20 to 30 employees at various levels of the company Style: This patient leader encourages employees to develop long-term goals and offers plentiful mentoring to help them suceed— but may not focus enough on immediate work-related tasks.

Examples: John Deere

The Coach

In a regular one-on-one

Where are you most likely to interact with employees?

Showing the smart people who work for you and how much smarter you are

Think twice before:

can make sure the needs of individual employees do not get lost in pursuit of a grand vision

Surround yourself with: Team builders, who

son, Bill Gates, Barack Obama Style: A big-picture thinker who sets clear standards and inspires with a sense of shared mission, the visionary leader can be overbearing

The Visionary Examples: Richard Brand-


strategy

The Way I Work | Ruchir and Anuj Bang, roomsXML

“We don’t have formal meetings in office. But at home we always end up talking about work.” Brothers Ruchir and Anuj Bang don’t know what they would have been if they weren’t entrepreneurs. Doing anything else never seemed attractive or likely, the duo say. Fortunately, with building roomsXML, an online accomodation distribution system designed for travel companies, they have validated their belief that entrepreneurship was indeed a calling. In the past six years since Ruchir Bang, the elder of the two, founded roomsXML with his father Prakash Bang, the company has grown to nearly `150-crore in annual sales, has offices in India, United Kingdom, Australia and the US, and a real-time availability of an inventory of nearly 79,000 rooms (three-star and above) around the world. The brothers credit it to their easy rapport and shared work ethos, especially their “mild-OCD” attention to detail. Here, the brothers talk about that dynamic, and the management style they’ve cast roomsXML in. As told to Shreyasi Singh | Photographs by jiten gandhi 4 4   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014


Ruchir Bang: In 2007, when we started roomsXML, I was 25 years old. And, by then I had already been in business for more than six years with RupeeSaver, a reverse auctioning portal for consumer electronics with my father. Although the site had more than 1,00,000 subscribers at its peak, our revenue model unfortunately wasn’t sustainable. Plus, the cash outflow was quite high, and we pulled into my father’s savings account to fund the business. In 2000, we started speaking to some VC funds, and got some very attractive valuations. But, just as the deal was about to come through in 2001, the NASDAQ crashed and the dotcom bubble burst. So, we had to eventually close the portal. But, the experience with RupeeSaver and its closure was one of my biggest learnings, especially since that business was all I wanted to do. No MBA could have taught me those lessons. Although that company not working out did cost us a lot more than what an MBA programme in the US would have!

An Easy Rhythm Ruchir (left) and Anuj Bang enjoy jogging together every morning. It’s the best way to begin the day, the brothers say.

MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  4 5


strategy

Just how old I was when RupeeSaver started, when roomsXML began, Anuj was just 18 years old. In the beginning, I had my hand in everything, and Anuj was really apprenticing. But, we realised soon he has a very analytical mind. I have more of a commercial mind. I’m more adept at financing and marketing. So, we started dividing responsibilities according to our natural strengths. Anuj Bang: Over the past few years, these responsibilities have evolved

quite neatly—now I look after all the back end (operations, product development, technology and inventory mangement). Ruchir looks after the front end, including marketing, business development, finance and HR. Because our roles have evolved this way, and we handle totally different functions, we’ve managed to ensure that there is no conflict or stepping on each other’s toes. The lines of command are very clear for those who work for us. There is no confusion in anybody’s mind about who they need to go to for what type of query. Plus, we’ve consciously maintained a very strict rule that our team members can only approach the right person for the right job. Of course, we know what we are doing in each other’s functions but we don’t get involved in the day-to-day decisions in that. If there is something related to my scope of work, we are always open to difference of opinion. We respect that there can be two points of view. We articulate the pros and cons. For example, if we are entering a new market, we will veer towards his decision because he’s more exposed to the market. If that decision was on product, my decision would be more weighed in. Actually, we work very hard towards maintaining that as a uniform company culture. The ideology of culture is common to Ruchir and me. We want it to be non-hierarchical, non-bureaucratic and transparent. And, that flows from Ruchir and me. Because people see us engage with each other very honestly and casually, it becomes the way for the entire company.

HR person, and we don’t want to have that. Each person has been interviewed by me. And, I do their appraisal along with their functional managers. Actually, in a business like ours, after our technology platform, people are our most critical function. Why would I delegate that? As far as possible, and as long as it’s possible, I want to run the HR function myself. Everything else that can be delegated—marketing, customer service, financial compliance—is headed by our heads of functions. Thankfully, our approach seems to have worked. Nearly 80 per cent of our team has been with us for more than five years. The attrition rate of the company is almost zero. Last year, we lost only two or three people. Even those were really young women who had to shift cities because they got married.

A

RB: Fortunately, our HR practices have really benefitted us. I have very strong view on the HR function. So far, we’ve never had a designated

lso, we don’t need to recruit people in big numbers at any one point. We currently have 45 people in our Pune headquarters and we hire two or three people at a time. Without sounding immodest, I pride myself on being able to hire right. And, I have a few rules when interviewing people. First, I don’t look at education. I don’t believe in formal education being a predictor for success at work. More than whether they have MBAs or Master’s degrees, I’d rather try and find out if they have an analytical mind and a positive approach. In fact, I’ve never hired people with too much theoretical knowledge. They come with too many fixed ideas. People in entrepreneurial companies need flexibility, and the ability to do new things. Testing people for basic logic is more important. So, we’ve designed a couple of tests to do this. My other rule is that we never hire anybody from the travel industry. No pun intended, we can do without that baggage! And, I never hire from competitors because they are trained in a different way.

AB: Because we hire so carefully, it’s easy for us to keep our people together in a well-knit group. We celebrate small successes, for example, by having our sabudana vada parties. Every time we achieve a small target we had set for ourselves, we order in for sabudana vadas. The first party for that was in 2007 when we hit sales of 3,000 pounds per day. Our next milestone is selling a room per

“We never hire anybody from the travel industry. No pun intended, we can do without that baggage!” 4 6   |  INC. |

MARCH 2014


strategy

AB: I think these tools and our ability to really

In Step With Each Other The brothers want to replicate their working dynamic at roomsXML for their future ventures too.

minute, or 1,440 rooms everyday. When we achieve that, we will have another sabudana vada party. RB: We want to maintain this small, intimate feel of the office. To be honest, I’m very driven by how we can automate and keep headcount down, especially in our back end processes. I want to completely delink the revenue-headcount proportion by introducing system and automation tools, most of which we develop internally. So, if we grow by 50 per cent in revenue, we don’t want to grow to 90 people. Technology also helps us monitor the business more efficiently. We monitor things quite closely on our dashboard. I don’t have to call people to ask for status. We have reporting systems, business intelligence systems which can throw up status. We are very much into data mining and data analytics. I don’t need to ask what kind of complaints, or how many complaints we have got; or how many rooms we booked in Dubai in the last week. I can pull up those numbers on my own, and keep a close track on this. With technology at hand, we don’t need to make people feel we’re questioning them.

channel technology comes from our shared love for discipline and focus. We’re very meticulous, fastidious and detail-oriented. Maybe it comes from being Virgos! If we start something, we make sure we finish it a certain way. There are other similarities too. We’re both quite conservative, and our ambitions, goals and risk appetite is the same. We have a common goal and a common approach. Actually, I’ve learnt a lot from him because he is seven years older. That age gap has worked in our favour. Because I apprenticed under him, his style has got embedded in me. I’ve almost (only, almost!) become like him. Our easy rapport and being so much in sync could have been different if we were just two years apart. Nature wise, we’re quite different from each other though. He’s a stronger personality. He’s more friendly, and can easily make people follow him because he’s very persuasive. I am more involved in the intricacies of technology while he can articulate the big vision. But, the one strength of Ruchir’s I would love to have is his fast decisionmaking. He can really make tough decisions quite fast, and decisively. I need to be convinced more than 100 per cent before I take a decision. I need to eliminate every wrong possibility. That way, I’m very data-driven. Eventually, even if our decisions are the same, he would have taken that decision across the table, while I would have thought about it and mulled over it much longer.

RB: Clearly, there is an obvious advantage to work together as a family business. It’s given us the confidence to run the business we want the way we want—to run a company with zero debt and zero investors. That’s the biggest asset we have—we don’t have to answer our investors, or “show” numbers to VCs or anybody. We can take our risks, and make our own decisions. There’s a quite bit of interest in a company like ours. But, we don’t have a crunch of funds. If we ever exit, it will be a complete exit. We are entrepreneurs. We want to drive the business in the way we think is fit. That approach could be wrong or right. But, by becoming entrepreneurs, that is the privilege we have bought ourselves. We don’t want somebody with a 10 per cent stake telling us how to run our business. The day we stop liking what we do, we will exit. But, that day is far, far ahead. But, we are working towards our ideal situation—to have the company on auto pilot so we could focus on new ideas after a couple of years. I’m sure both of us will get into a new project. I’m sure we’ll both definitely work together, and we’ll have a model where one person takes care of the front end, and the other of the back end. Or, one person looks after the existing business, and the other focuses on the new business although I don’t think that is the right way to go about it. If we decide to do something new, we will try and repeat this model. MARCH 2014  |  INC. |  47


founders forum teN Questions for Tapas Sarkar

Tapas Sarkar puts employees ahead of customers. No wonder the attrition rate at the project engineering company Mecgale Pneumatics has always been around five per cent.

Chhota Bheem. I am amazed to see how much he influences the present generation of kids in India.

What have you learnt about yourself while running your business?

I have more patience than I actually think I had.

The biggest myth in business is

Sometimes you question if being your own boss is really worth the effort. But, it is the best thing that can happen to someone. What company do you not want to start but wish someone else would?

A wind energy plant. I would like to see a lot of green energy being produced in India. The scenic view of wind farms really gives me a high. What have you sacrificed for success?

Free adda time with my friends.

4 8   |  INC. | march 2014

Who gives you the best advice? Best advice more often than not comes from unexpected corners such as standing in a queue, in an informal meeting or travelling in a group with unknown people. What part of

your job would you gladly give up?

Following up to collect outstanding payments from customers whom I have known for many years. Whom would you trade places with for a day?

Sachin Tendulkar for sure. I deeply admire how he keeps his feet grounded and head right on his shoulders irrespective of so much success and pressure. What was the hardest lesson you learnt during your first year in business?

No matter how good your product is, it calls for huge patience before you really start getting orders. What is the one thing your employees would be surprised to know about you?

That I used to write poems in my school days.

as told to Sonal Khetarpal

courtesy Subject

Which TV or movie character you would like to go into business with?




Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.