Wednesday, January 28, 2009

ARE YOU TAGGED?! - :IIPM-News:

Those marketer’s are clever dudes... But here’s how businesses track competition via SNSs and hey, your HR heads are using them too

If Roosevelt was the first Radio President and JF Kennedy the first television President, then Barack Obama is undoubtedly the first Internet President that the American people have escorted into the White House. Not only did he swear allegiance to social media early in his campaign, but he also created a web-based rumour clearinghouse to ‘Fight the Smears’. Facebook and MySpace were Obama’s playing field during a long-drawn campaign that levelled rival McCain’s bid to the Presidential post. But we talked about all that in the previous piece. What’s important to note here, however, is the fact that both Obama and McCain not just pushed their own brands on social networks, but also went to great efforts to track each others moves on popular social networking sites, including their own social networking sites viz. Mccainspace.com and My.Barackobama.com respectively. To their surprise, their special ‘tracking the rival’ teams discovered that coveted research about voter moods, opinion, leanings, issues, et al (which once required a set of proprietary quantitative tools to be accessed) could now be done via tracking Facebook ‘friend’ requests and network affiliations; or just by reading scrapbooks on Orkut and user comments on YouTube videos. And the rest, as they say, is history!

Clearly, for marketers, social media is not restricted to just reaching out to consumers, but also tracking and taking on competition. Take the Starbucks and Dunkin’ Donuts controversy that dominated social networks last month. The latter went the whole hog on Facebook, claiming that Starbucks had an inferior taste of coffee than Dunkin’ Donuts. They even developed a micro website named dunkinbeatsstarbucks.com to highlight a survey which said Dunkin’ coffee was superior to that of Starbucks. Worse, early last year, Starbucks bore the brunt of another Internet controversy when Oxfam Charity posted a video on how Starbucks ill-treats Ethiopian farmers. Starbucks countered the same with another video but the incident resulted in a major dilution of the coffee retailer’s brand equity.

Even Microsoft developed a MySpace style social networking site to promote its revamped Zune (portable music player) last year. The management thought that the social network could create a similar buzz around Zune, as rival Apple had managed to create with iPod. In this case however, Microsoft failed, as iPod had already captured the first mover advantage with consumers. Says Yogesh Bansal, CEO, ApnaCircle.com, “You will find numerous examples globally of how brands are leveraging social networking websites and emerging one step ahead of competition. The trend is already beginning to catch up in India.”

More importantly, messages posted on the web are normally there for long so any company can easily attack the brand value of its rival by putting up articles, videos, images or simply hiring youngsters to either track competition or spread their brand message around among communities. Jet Airways, for one, invests a lot of moolah in tracking competition on this media. Says Mahesh Murthy, CEO, Pinstorm, “For Jet Airways, we track competitive social media activities of airlines around the world, especially those with a presence around our destinations like San Francisco, Hong Kong and New York City, also around the Brussels hub,” adding that for another client (a large Japanese consumer electronics giant), his company constantly tracks online activities of youth brands. “We earlier tried to track other consumer electronics brands in India online but there weren’t too many, so rather than segment tracking, we are doing demographic tracking here,” he enthuses.

And here’s more food to chew on for all those who thought social networks are kid stuff and that no one really takes them seriously. From global consultants like Ernst & Young (E&Y) to dozens of call centres and eateries alike, social networking sites are prime spots to identify and recruit manpower. HR specialists believe it to be a more credible and reliable source of finding the right person for the right job. They even tag it as one step ahead of the popular employee referral programme. Ernst & Young, for one, employs as many as 3,500 college graduates using a career group on Facebook; the company also posts job information on the career group and answers individual questions from prospective employees.

“We hire a lot via social networking websites,” agrees Vikas Raj Sharma, COO, Akiko Callnet. In fact, seeing their rising popularity among companies, job portals like Monster.com have begun to feel the heat. Ajeet Chauhan, VP-HR, Nirula’s, even goes on to say that the “Response from print ads is poor as compared referrals & social networks.” Insiders aver that since it is tough to judge a candidate during a 15-20 minute interview, picking up executives from social networking websites adds the necessary authentication and insight into the prospective’s attitude (whether he’s a team player, positive, et al) of the potential employee. “The only challenge that remained untracked is that you cannot judge the depth of the talent of any candidate on the social network,” asserts Vidya .M. Iyer, HR specialist, Saita Consulting.

The most popular global professional network currently is believed to be LinkedIn, which has around 30 million active users. The network has seen tremendous growth in registered users over the past two years in India and companies are increasingly using LinkedIn for recruitments. Of course, the numbers are still small, but the rising popularity of social media for hiring is largely because of two reasons: one the cost factor, which is almost zero; and the second and more important – the large talent pool. “The industry is in a slowdown and suffering from a talent crunch. Also, insertion costs are very high in all other mediums,” agrees Rajkamal Gupta, VP-HR, Lurgi India.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

Top Articles on IIPM:-
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Thursday, January 22, 2009

IIPM NEWS - Global auto giants Toyota and Honda

Take global auto giants Toyota and Honda. Both are gung-ho on the success of their fuel-efficient hybrid cars, not just to allay government pressure but also because they know its potential to add to their bottomline. Already, both Toyota Prius and Honda Civic Hybrid are honking home with consumers. In FY-07 Toyota sold about 429,400 hybrid vehicles globally. Although less than 5% of its total vehicle sales, yet in terms of sheer hybrid sales, the figure put Toyota up 37% from FY06. Had the US slowdown not gate crashed as a party pooper, even the ailing Detroit three (GM, Ford & Chrysler) were all set to receive a cool $25 billion as a government loan to retool their gas-guzzler set ups, produce more fuel-efficient cars and fight the Japanese onslaught. As it happens, the credit crisis has put them in a spot and Detroit execs are instead requesting a $25 billion bridge loan from the Congress to merely help keep their head above the water.

India is not too far behind in the green race either (See India Inc.’s Green Gamble on page 75). Maruti and Hyundai have come up with LPG and CNG based variants for WagonR and Santro respectively to boost sales. Further, Honda has already launched its Hybrid in the Indian market, while other auto majors like Toyota and Mahindra are mulling strategies to launch their eco-friendly hybrids. What’s more, even before the Japanese and Americans could even start thinking in that direction, an Indian ‘hybrid’ car was already zipping across the efficiency highway - and we are not referring to oil efficiency here but electric cars. Reva, India’s very-own, Bangalore based, company was the first in the world to commercially release an electric car. Gung-ho by industry predictions that electric cars will constitute about 25% of all new cars by 2020, the management at Reva is excited about their steadily rising sales chart. In fact, Reva is already being sold in countries like UK, Ireland, Belgium, Spain, Cyprus, Greece and Norway.

However, the present global economic downturn may be a challenging time for the green brigade, albeit temporarily. With families struggling to stretch their household budgets, higher price of organic products is a big turn off, especially when cheaper mass market alternatives are ready to fill in the gap. But the lean phase is certainly not turning off marketers across the board, who are betting big on booming demand in times to come. And for all those who thought that green laptops, refrigerators, handsets, were part of a company’s philanthropic benevolence, rest assured that Jeff Immelt is (and will remain) an intransigent businessman, not a gullible altruist.
For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative
Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

Top Articles on IIPM:-
'This is one of Big B's best performances'
IIPM to come up at Rajarhat
IIPM awards four Bengali novelists
IIPM makes business education truly global-Education-The Times of ...
The Hindu : Education Plus : Honour for IIPM
IIPM ranked No.1 B-School in India, Management News - By ...
IIPM Ranked No1 B-School in India
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IIPM ranked No. 1 B-school in India- Zee Business Survey ...
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IIPM ranked ahead of IIMs

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

India List of Terrorists gave to Pakistan

The name of Hafiz Mohammad Saeed is missing from the list of terrorists India gave to Pakistan by TSI's Niloo Ranjan Kumar

The list
1993 Mumbai blast accused

1 Dawood Ibrahim

2 Ibrahim Tiger Memon

3 Ayub Memon

4 Anis Ibrahim

5 Sheikh Shaqeel alias Chota Shaqeel

6 Anwar Ahmad Haji

7 Mohammad Ahmed Dosa

8 Ishaaq Hussain alias Ali Musa

9 Sagir Sabir Ali Sheikh

10 Aftab Bataki

11 Javed Patel

12 Karimullah Habib Sheikh

13 Salim Abdul Ghani Ghazi

14 Riyaz Abubaker

15 Munaf Abdul Majid

16 Mohammad Tahir

17 Khan Bashir Ahmad

18 Yaqoob Khan

19 Mohammad Safi

20 Irfan Ahmad

Accused of hijacking IC 814

21 Athar Ibrahim

22 Azhar Yusuf alias Mohammad Salim

23 Zahir Ibrahim Mistri

24 Saeed Shahid Akhtar

25 Saqir Mohammad Sarkar

26 Abdul Rauf

Accused of terror acts in J&K

27 Maulana Yusuf Shah alias Sayyed Salahuddin

28 Amanullah Khan

29 Firoz Abdullah

30 Zaki ur Rahman Lakhvi

31 Aamir Raza Khan

32 Mohammad Abdul Sahid

33 Azam Cheema

34 Rahil Shiekh

Accused of Parliament attck

35 Maulana Masood Azhar

Khalistani Terrorists

36 Gajinder Singh Khalsa

37 Lakhbir Singh Rode

38 Paramjeet Singh

39 Ranjit Singh Neeta

40 Wadhwa Singh

Monday, January 19, 2009

What is it about them? - The Sunday Indian Magazine Story

Right from the dawn of indian cinema, Muslim actors like Suraiya. Madhubala, Meena Kumari to Shah rukh and Aamir have dominated the silver screen. Ajay Brahmatmaj speaks to Aakriti Bhardwaj about the links between the muslim society and the indian dream factory.

Prior to independence, in the conservative Indian society, there were a lot of restrictions imposed upon girls from Hindu families; one of which was participating in performing arts. So, when the requirement of actresses went up in Hindi films, priority was given to girls of Muslim families, as they were positively inclined towards cinema. This has historical roots as even during the reign of the Mughals and the British, the tawaifs were mostly Muslims. Nargis’ mother, JaddanBai, was also a tawaif. She understood the changing times and took the first step. Girls from Parsi and Anglo-Indian families also got a chance in Bombay. Even today, traditional Hindu families prohibit the entry of girls in movies. You can make a list of actors and actresses from Hindu dominated states and the count would not be more than 10 or 15. Heroines from Punjab, Bengal and southern India have been more popular in Hindi movies. Now the place has been taken by models and girls from beauty contests.

If we talk about the heroes, then Punjab has always dominated the silver screen. It happened because of solid aesthetic reasons and it became a tradition. Film journalism often refers to ‘Hero Material’. Common meaning of ‘Hero Material’ is tall, fair, handsome, black hair, blue-brown eyes, broad forehead, pointed nose…. But actually this image of the ‘hero’ came from Raja Ravi Verma’s calendar art. Men with such built usually come from the North-West frontier. This is the same race that keeps Khan, Kapoor or Khanna as their surname.

If we go a little behind in time then after the Mughals came in India there was a rapid religion conversion in the North-West frontier. Many Hindus converted to Islam. It is not mere coincidence that those actors who took to fame post-independence like Dilip Kumar, Dev Anand and Raj Kapoor had a Lahore connection. Punjab has a very strong and active lobby in the Hindi film industry, which is why, knowingly or unknowingly, Punjabi culture has become the main culture of the Hindi film industry. However, whether it is Shah Rukh Khan, Salman Khan, Aamir Khan or Saif Ali Khan, their popularity can have nothing to do with their faith. Aamir, Salman and Saif are from the film industry so they did get initial support and a launch pad. If you notice, it did take a lot of time for Saif to establish his position and win over the audience. Aamir and Salman are good actors. As far as Shah Rukh is concerned, he came at a time when the industry needed fresh faces. He is a good performer and he took some risks which worked in his favour. Hindi films don’t work on the basis of religion but a fair section of the audience is Muslim. It is said that Salman Khan is the most popular actor among the Muslim audience.

Have you ever wondered why movies release only on Fridays? Well, it's not just aping Hollywood, but it is also convenient for the Muslims, as it is a holiday for them.

In proportion to their population in the Indian society, Muslim society wasn’t picturised in Hindi films. Films weren’t made with Muslim characters in the lead. Yes, historic Muslim characters were definitely a part of the films, but the post-independence Muslim young man was never seen romancing in a romantic movie. We have never seen a Kabir, Khursheed, Aalam, Fatima, Zohra or Shabnam in a lead role. One can count movies like "Chak De," "Dhoka" and "Fanaa" on their finger tips.

The audience of Hindi movies primarily consists of Hindus. Without announcing, our audience wants to watch the tales of Hindu heroes only, those who have the traits of our heroes from the epics. The characters of Islamic and Christian culture can’t get a leading place in Hindi films. And, this has commercial, social as well as geographical reasons."
For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

Top Articles on IIPM:-
'This is one of Big B's best performances'
IIPM to come up at Rajarhat
IIPM awards four Bengali novelists
IIPM makes business education truly global-Education-The Times of ...
The Hindu : Education Plus : Honour for IIPM
IIPM ranked No.1 B-School in India, Management News - By ...
IIPM Ranked No1 B-School in India
Moneycontrol >> News >> Press- News >> IIPM ranked No1 B-School in ...
IIPM ranked No. 1 B-school in India- Zee Business Survey ...
IIPM ranked No1 B-School in India :: Education, Careers ...
The Hindu Business Line : IIPM placements hit a high of over 2000 jobs
Deccan Herald - IIPM ranked as top B-School in India
India eNews - IIPM Ranked No1 B-School in India
IIPM Delhi - Indian Institute of Planning and Management New Delhi ...
IIPM ranked ahead of IIMs

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Mourners of hussain

The Shias have a wonderful tradition in the country, which includes the Hussaini Brahmins, writes Saurabh Kumar Shahi

On a certain day every year, Park Circus and Rajabazaar areas of Calcutta become police camps. Thousands of young men armed with swords and whips slowly move down the street, flagellating themselves furiously, bleeding, and constantly chanting, almost possessed, “Hai Hussain… Hai Hussain”. And then there is the Tazia. Adorned with colourful papers, screens and papier-mâché, these wood and bamboo structure bobs and sways a few metres above the heads in the crowd as the people meander through the road. The day is Azadari, or the day of mourning in the Islamic month of Muharram. The Tazia is basically the replica of the tomb of Imam Hussain, grandson of Prophet Muhammad and the martyr in the battle of Karbala. And the mourning crowd that accompanies these Tazias is that of Shias, or Shiites.

And whether in Park Circus in Calcutta, Hussainabad and Chowk in Lucknow or the Shah-e-Mardan in Delhi’s Lodhi Road area, the scene is the same, year after year. An integral part of Muslim community in India, Shias have seldom figured in the discussions of non-Muslims, news of their conflicts with Sunnis notwithstanding. Shias have a different tradition and beliefs than the majority Sunni sect. Both Shias and the Sunnis equally accept and regard the same book 'The Quran', voiced by the God. Both the sects accept Prophet Mohammad as the last in the incarnation tradition. The Haj (annual pilgrimage to Mecca and Madina), Zakat (alms-giving), Roza (fasting during Ramzan month), prayers five times a day and oneness of God are practiced by both. However, the similarity ends here. Bloody scuffles between the two sects are common across the world.

After the Prophet passed away (632 AD), the Muslims split into two camps. One believed that the baton of the lineage should rightfully belong to his son-in-law Ali. They called themselves Shia. And those rooting for Abu Bakr Siddiq as the Caliph were branded as Sunnis. “Later, Yazid, son of a Sunni Caliph, Muawiah and a tyrant, murdered Hussain and 72 members of his clan at the tragic battle of Karbala (October 10, 680). Since then, the sects don’t see eye to eye,” says Asad Rizvi, a Shia theologian.

In Lucknow, for instance, the two sects have clashed several times over decades, especially during Azadari processions. However, a new thaw in the relationship has emerged due to efforts by reputed theologians from both sects. Last Eid, Maulana Kalbe Sadiq, vice president, Muslim Personal Law Board and a noted Shia cleric, offered namaaz at a Sunni mosque, led by the Naib Imam of Idgah. Sunnis reciprocated, with Padmashri Haji Kalimullah of Malihabad leading a delegation of about 20 to the historical Asifi Mosque to offer namaaz behind young Shia cleric Maulana Kalbe Jawwad. “They (clerics) must promote dialogue and unity. I have read about other sects and have come to the conclusion that while they differ in matters of ritual, at the core many of them share the same spiritual basis. We need to build on that shared spirituality,” Jawwad told TSI.

However, it is anything but easy to remove the scars so easily. Both, Sunnis who adhere to the Wahabi school of thought, as well as fundamentalist Shias scorn such initiatives. Barring the Jamaat-e-Islami and Barelwis, every major Sunni school of thought (maslak) in South Asia considers the Shias as ‘divergent’. Ulemas of these maslaks have penned voluminous treatises that openly brand the Shias as heretics. They draw their ammunition from ideological forebears such as Ibn Taimiyah and Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi, who have reserved the choicest invectives for Shias. The problem is, books by these scholars and their progeny are taught in madarsas, which in turn beget similarly bigoted maulanas.

But the times are changing. “In Pakistan, a Deobandi scholar, Maulana Irshad Madani, recently challenged anyone who can justify the denial of the need for Sunni-Shia dialogue. A leading Indian Deobandi scholar, Maulana Khalid Saifullah Rahmani, recently wrote a wonderful article stressing the need for Shia-Sunni unity and dialogue. Things are going to change for good,” stresses Sadiq, while talking to TSI.

And then, there are matters of jurisprudence. In the Jafari Shia school of jurisprudence, Ijtihad or “reconstruction of religious thought” is allowed, while many Sunni ulema argue to the contrary. “However, due to clearly defined roles of Ayatollah and a centralised system of jurisprudence, one seldom finds confusing and contradictory fatwas in Shia Islam. Sadly, the same cannot be said about the Sunni sect,” Tanveer Rizvi, noted expert on Shia-Sunni relations told TSI.

The Ijtihad has helped the Shia community come to terms with changing realities of the world. For example, noted Shia clerics have time and again advocated the use of anti-pregnancy pills and condoms as tools for family planning. Similarly, Shias have done away with triple talaaq system, which has been rampantly misused by the male dominated society. They have also offered the right to ‘Khula’, or divorce to Muslim women, an option given by Holy Quran but discontinued by later day clerics. “It is not possible to have a stagnant jurisprudence (fiqh) for a constantly and rapidly changing world,” Sadiq underscores.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

Top Articles on IIPM:-
'This is one of Big B's best performances'
IIPM to come up at Rajarhat
IIPM awards four Bengali novelists
IIPM makes business education truly global-Education-The Times of ...
The Hindu : Education Plus : Honour for IIPM
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Deccan Herald - IIPM ranked as top B-School in India
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IIPM ranked ahead of IIMs

Friday, January 16, 2009

A trip down memory lane
"Ghajini" has been one of the year's most awaited films. We deconstruct this psychologial action thriller that promises to give the term 'The stuff memories are made of' a whole new meaning
FIRST AMONG EQUALS
His performance (in the Tamil original) impressed Aamir Khan enough to reprise the act in Hindi. Surya, named one of the sexiest men in India by People, recollects his "Ghajini" experience in an exclusive conversation with Neha Sarin…

How did you prepare for your role in "Ghajini"? What all did your research constitute?

Initially, I did not commit to this project because of the medical conditions involved. Of course, the flash cuts to the past and the reality was very interesting. It was in the second half of the shooting when I really got into the character – a friend of mine, Dr Keshavan at Apollo Hospital, helped me with access to a library of video files. I got permission to discuss cases with neurosurgeons and they showed me how patients behaved post-operation, from the way they sit to how they reacted to situations.

Did the project ever take you close to a real patient?

Not really, it was all very theoretical for me. I didn’t meet anyone in person. This character I played couldn’t be as slow as an ordinary patient; he was a strong guy and he had revenge on his mind. We wanted to essentially capitalise on the amnesia part of it.

If you were suffering from Anterograde amnesia, do you think revenge would have been on your mind?

It was a little more than just a medical phenomenon in the movie. The protagonist is not a regular-patient type, for we show him as a person who is not weak and who is able to carry on with what he has on his mind. We portray him like he was a very special case to study. So in this film, revenge was possible, but in real life, I guess a lot of bad experiences one goes through can only go away with time. So at times forgetfulness helps.

Sometimes you don’t get a cure; you can’t reason out, you don’t have a solution, and then it so happens that you get your answer only as time passes by. Slowly, you let it go and you don’t want to be reminded of it again!

Any memory or mind themed movie(s) that you have particularly liked or been inspired by?

My all time favourites are "I Am Sam", "Awakenings" and "Rain Man".

How forgetful are you in real life? What is your method of reminding yourself of important occasions or events?
I am very forgetful! My memory doesn’t even stay for 15 seconds (laughs). I simply forget where I left my cell phone or my keys. However, ever since my daughter came along, my reaction time lag has gone down! My daughter has managed to change me...

What do you think is more debilitating – memory loss or physical handicap?

I think memory loss. With physical handicap, you are still in your senses; you can achieve whatever you want to. When your mind says you can and if you have the drive, they say nothing is impossible. There are a lot of examples proving that around the world.

I really feel sad with the idea of memory loss. Actually, I did meet a patient, a software engineer from south, a jet-setting professional who had settled in the US. One day she was getting out of the mall when she was hit by a car at 140 miles/hr…she got multiple fractures in her body and also lost her memory. Her family helped her with notes, photos all over her room; she doesn’t even remember her own husband and her daughter. Sometimes, she becomes a different person and hears the noise of traffic. I met her and gave her the same camera I use in "Ghajini".

Besides, when people get old, the memory is affected; they keep repeating things, and forget that they mentioned it at all… it’s kinda sad… In fact, much of our young generation is impatient with such suffering elders. I think we need to spend good quality time with our parents when they age.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
ZEE BUSINESS BEST B SCHOOL SURVEY
B-schooled in India, Placed Abroad (Print Version)
IIPM in Financial times (Print Version)
IIPM makes business education truly global (Print Version)
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM)
IIPM Campus

Top Articles on IIPM:-

'This is one of Big B's best performances'
IIPM to come up at Rajarhat
IIPM awards four Bengali novelists
IIPM makes business education truly global-Education-The Times of ...
The Hindu : Education Plus : Honour for IIPM
IIPM ranked No.1 B-School in India, Management News - By ...
IIPM Ranked No1 B-School in India
Moneycontrol >> News >> Press- News >> IIPM ranked No1 B-School in ...
IIPM ranked No. 1 B-school in India- Zee Business Survey ...
IIPM ranked No1 B-School in India :: Education, Careers ...
The Hindu Business Line : IIPM placements hit a high of over 2000 jobs
Deccan Herald - IIPM ranked as top B-School in India
India eNews - IIPM Ranked No1 B-School in India
IIPM Delhi - Indian Institute of Planning and Management New Delhi ...
IIPM ranked ahead of IIMs