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IIPM: GIDF A helping hand

April 14th, 2011

After Irom Sharmila last year, Anna Hazare wins IIPM’s 2011 Rabindranath Tagore Peace Prize of Rs. 1cr. To be handed over on 9th May
 
AC M GIDF was founded by  the noted author and management guru - Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri in the  year 2001 in the loving memory of his younger brother Late Shri  Aurobindo Chaudhuri. It is a registered national level NGO under the  Indian Societies Registration Act xx1 of 1860. It is neither a profit  making nor political in nature. ACM GIDF is a developmental  organization of national repute facilitating community development  initiatives since 2002. The strategy is to empower the vulnerable  sections of the society by building their capacities through  education, health and skill-based development. GIDF is working for  the cause of human development focusing on the less privileged  sections of the society in the rural and urban areas of the country.  The spheres of GIDF’s work are governed by issues related to  health, education, livelihood and environment. ACM GIDF is a social  initiative of IIPM - India’s Global B-School and Planman  Consultants.

GIDF has taken following  initiatives in the recent past:

     
  • Education (changing      lives) – GIDF’s Educators changed the life of 11 year old boy      Bhagwan Das, by convincing his elder brothers and grandmother to      start sending him to the education centre nearby their place. GIDF      has changed the lives of several others like Bhagwan, who have been      exploited by the society.

     

  • An old man named      Parsum Ram Lodha from interior of M.P, was treated for breathing      problems during GIDF’s Mobile Health Outreach Program. All many      more like Parsum Ram have been treated by GIDF’s Mobile Health      Outreach Program from different corners of the country.

     

  • Environment (saving      villages) - GIDF’s efforts resulted in the construction of rain      water harvesting structure in the drought prone village kakvasa of      M.P. GIDF has initiated several such projects in different drought      prone areas of our country.

     

  • Livelihood (poverty      to prosperity) - Ramkali Bai, a member of the GIDF’s self help      group started with her own grocery shop with the monetary help from      GIDF’s self help group, and moved from poverty to prosperity in      few months time. GIDF has helped numerous others like Ramkali Bai,      to start a venture of their own, thus helping all to move from      poverty to prosperity.

GIDF has been taking  several other initiatives like the mentioned above on a regular and  continual basis over the years in different parts of our country, and  there are many other life changing projects lined up with them in the  years to come, which will be helping hand for the underprivileged  sections of the society.
 
The day was slightly chilly but despite  that the environment was full of energy, as the little children from  our Early Childhood Development Programme were all set to put their  best foot forward & enjoy the day that was organized specially  for them by GIDF & supported by ING Vysya.

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IIPM Prof Rajita Chaudhuri on ‘SEEDHI BAAT, NO BAKWAS’

March 12th, 2011

INDIA’S BEST COLLEGES, INSTITUTES and UNIVERSITIES


“How to get your roommate to clean the room?”
“How to survive the boring talks of your girlfriend?”
“How to stare at other women, in front of your girlfriend?”

Find all your answers at the “University of Freshology”. These new advertisements of Sprite which ask you to “first drink, then think” are bringing a smile on many faces! The new advertisements take a fresh look at Sprite while keeping the ‘Brand Image’ the same. From the beginning, Sprite has believed in one thought – unlike other innumerable products / brands that promised you impossible benefits, Sprite offered you only freshness. From the time it was launched in India in 1999, with the tagline “Sprite bujhay only pyaas, baki all bakwaas”, it has stuck to its image of being the no-nonsense- just-thirst-quencher brand. This time too, its advertisements are interesting and, well, obviously refreshing.

POWER OF WORDS

They are really more powerful than a bomb if handled well. The right words can spark a revolution, can make people even give up their lives for you. Many a time, they even change the world. When Mother Teresa said, “If you can’t feed a hundred people, then feed just one” she changed the perspectives of a lot of people who thought how helping just one person could change the world? She showed them how – with her words. Martin Luther King spoke about apartheid & its indignities and people cried after they heard his famous speech “I have a dream”. He even told people to speak up when they saw injustice; and for that he said: “In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.” In his own humorous way, Woody Allen echoed our anxiety about death when he said, “It’s not that I’m afraid to die. I just don’t want to be there when it happens.”

It’s more often than not that great words make an advertisement more memorable. Sometimes witty, sometimes crisp, sometimes direct, sometimes funny, never boring, but always simple and easy to remember. Consider these, “Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia”, or “Because, you’re worth it – L’Oréal”, or “Let your fingers do the walking – Yellow Pages”. These short and very simple sentences defined the whole business, the benefits of buying or using the brand, and stuck to our memory like glue! In fact, some great advertising punch-lines consisted of only two words. Here are some, “Connecting People – Nokia”, “Life’s Good – LG”, “Hello Moto – Motorola”, “Live Unboring – Ikea”, “Intel Inside – Intel”. In fact, it took just two words to unite our country against the British: “Quit India!” Sometimes, even one word did the trick. Budweiser’s “Wassup” tagline made the brand look young and super cool!

Some ad jingles and slogans became so famous and were etched so firmly in people’s memory that they were used to make a point by famous people to prove their point. When Burger King came out with its tagline “Where’s the beef?” indicating that its burgers were beefier and hence better than the competitor’s where you hardly spotted the beef, the three words became a rage. Even some presidential candidates quoted them to show their superiority over their competitors.

“Just Do It” is again one of those very famous taglines that has been used by all of us during our conversations. It not just became a part of our lingo, but catapulted Nike to great heights, making it a Power Brand! A survey showed that 45% of Britons regularly use the line from Guinness commercials, “Good things come to those who wait.” It’s amazing, the impact advertisements have on our lives, our thoughts, and our speech. Some 80% people have claimed to use advertising slogans in their day to day conversations. Time to think which ones do you use most frequently! That’s the power of advertising and “I’m lovin’ it”. After all, its advertising that’s “The Real Thing”.

IBM was the big daddy of computing. Back in 1914, its tagline “Think” became a big hit. Then, a few decades later, came Apple with its tagline “Think Different”, to show the world that the rules of the game were different now and the world of computing had a new Godfather!

WORDS – LIVE FOREVER


A great slogan or tagline comes with no expiry date. It lives on almost forever. “Utterly… butterly…” You know which brand I am referring to. “Thanda matlab…” Again, I don’t need to complete the slogan. A great tagline is sometimes all you need to increase your sales and beat your competitors. After all, with so much choice, the consumer most of the time buys on impulse and those are his emotions many a time that help him decide when he is confused with too many choices. The right combination of words helps create those positive feelings. Onida’s slogan “Neighbour’s envy, owner’s pride” made you feel proud about owning it (wish they would bring back the slogan again in their ad campaigns). LIC’s slogan “Jeevan ke saath bhi, jeevan ke baad bhi” gently and in a non-threatening manner told you about the benefits of a life insurance policy.

Words live on, even after the people who spoke them are gone. In fact, sometimes your last words become the image that people remember you with. The last words Karl Marx spoke were “Go on, get out. Last words are for fools who haven’t said enough.” William Wallace, the Scottish Patriot, screamed “Freedom” even as he was tortured to death, according to the film based on his life Braveheart. In fact, some words have made films immortal. From Scarlett O’Hara’s very famous last words in the film Gone with the Wind (“After all, tomorrow is another day”) to Amjad Khan in Sholay (“Kitne aadmi the”), words live on in our memories & remain a part of our daily language forever almost!

WORDS – DON’T MESS WITH THEM

Just as words have the power to make fortunes, they can destroy them too. Verbal slips, gaffes can prove to be disastrous. One person who was very famous for this was George Bush. In fact, his gaffes are so famous & so many that they can be published as a book of “Bushisms”. One of his famous gaffes is, “We are concerned about AIDS inside our White House – make no mistake about it.” Take another one – it’s even better than the previous one, “Our enemies are innovative and resourceful, and so are we. They never stop thinking about new ways to harm our country and our people, and neither do we.”

The one who has a command over his words truly leads. Every word that Gandhi spoke was a treasure house of wisdom. He knew and understood freedom and the power of the mind, and expressed it like no other. He said, “You can chain me, you can torture me, you can even destroy this body, but you will never imprison my mind.” His words broke the spirit of the British. Rabindranath’s words strengthened the spirits of the freedom fighters as they repeated his lines, “Where the mind is without fear and the head held high, … into that heaven of freedom, my father, let my country awake.”

Our greatest heroes gave us the greatest quotes & words of wisdom. Our greatest brands have the best worded slogans and tag lines. If you want to inspire, lead, conquer the world or the markets, the first thing you need to do is develop a masteryover the words you speak. From children, to workers, to consumers, everybody loves “Seedhi baat, no bakwaas!”

This article is sourced from PR-USA.net, click here to read compelete article.

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SHUTTER ISLAND: Thriller island

December 14th, 2010



Prof Rajita Chaudhuri follow some off-beat trends like organizing make up sessions


TSI Five-O: An interesting amalgamation of spooky thrill and psycho grill

One of the finest directors in Hollywood, Martin Scorsese, strikes the right chord yet again with his psychological thriller ‘Shutter Island’. Set in the 1950s, the movie begins with a sea-sick Federal Marshall Teddy Daniels (Leonardo Di Caprio), who with his partner Chuck (Mark Ruffalo), has been sent to Shutter Island to investigate the case of Rachel Solando, an inmate of Ashecliffe Hospital, a mental Institution which is home to the criminally insane. It’s a facility where dangerous maniacs are subjected to questionable methods of ‘treatment’, and soon the H.O.D, Dr Cawley (Ben Kingsley) and his staff of physicians and nurses find themselves under Teddy’s microscope of suspicion. With no cooperation from the heavily armed policing party and the other staff members, Teddy finally gets a chance to sneak a peek into the inmates’ records when a hurricane hits the island and things get a little out of hand for the authorities to handle. The movie is very well sculpted in the first half which lays the foundation of each character in order to eliminate chances of utter confusion in this rather twisted tale. The second half has more pace and an interesting flow of events where Teddy questions not only the doctors, staff members and the inmates, but also his own sanity! Laced with a Hitchcockian touch but executed in a distinctly Scorsese style, ‘Shutter Island’ packs in the thrills and the chills to send a shudder down your spine.

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

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Keeping it real

December 1st, 2010

Prof Rajita Chaudhuri on ‘THEY ARE COMING TO GET YOU – NOT ALIENS SILLY’

he’s the one known for the grit and the grime that lace his works on celluloid. prakash jha, whose middle name should perhaps be ‘hard-hitting’, if his filmography is any indication, talks to Ravi Inder Singh about his upcoming “raajneeti”

Keeping it real You recently commented that characters in ‘Raajneeti’ do not bear any resemblance to any politician, then why is the revising committee still taking time?

The movie absolutely has no resemblance with any political leader and moreover the movie is at the revising committee’s end only because they are yet to decide on its category. They still have to give it a rating ‘ either ‘A’ or ‘U/A’.

Are there any such sequences that deciding the category is getting tougher?

Well, explaining everything with respect to every shot picturised in the movie wouldn’t be possible. Let’s just say that the revising committee would take decision on its category based on votes.

Between politics and films, which do you think has more influence on the masses?

I think it is films. In this film the central idea may hover around politics but it also focuses on politics within the family, interpersonal relationships, it’s about betrayal and deals with politics with respect to loyalty.

While selecting Ranbir Kapoor, was there ever a dilemma to choose someone more rugged or grittier?

Wow! You don’t know how rugged this guy is (laughs). Fortunately, there was no one in contention and just after ‘Saawariya’ I had spoken to Ranbir about this role. In this film, Ranbir’s character studies abroad and is away from all the political influence that the family has. But once when he visits a function, circumstances are such that joining politics becomes inevitable.

Which was the most challenging scene to shoot in the film?

Every single scene was challenging. Whether a scene has four characters or four thousand, every scene is important. As a writer or a director you never keep anything that’s just functional, every scene has a meaning. There are seven huge characters in the film: Arjun Rampal, Ranbir, Manoj Bajpai, Ajay Devgn, Nana Patekar, Katrina Kaif ‘ and each one needs to be justified. Finally what the audience likes is what I am waiting for.

Why do you think that the media misunderstood that this movie has been inspired by the first family of Indian politics?

The reason could be that Katrina is from England and she comes from abroad in the movie, also Katrina’s Hindi has a little bit of an accent. Similarly Sonia ji is also from abroad. It’s like putting two and two together, and once something of this sort happens, everyone starts talking about it. In my film Katrina is a normal girl who is shown to be in love with Ranbir. Now I can’t show the movie to the media, you’ll have to see it to believe it.

Through your film, do you intend to change the way people look at politics, or is it purely meant for entertainment?

I’m trying to change nothing. I do not have power to change anything. I have only sculpted a story on the present political system. What eventually you would draw from it is completely your choice.

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