Well for once this post is not about how ISB as a brand adds value to your resume yada yada yada (it does).
This post is not about how the name of the school or the institute from where you have done your education and / or MBA matters etc. That debate we can save for a later date.
This post my dear friends is about our name (at least mine) and what kind of impact it has. While on campus and even today when I go to the ISB campus I land up meeting the sexily named Chopras, Mittals, Goenkas, Shahs, Sharmas, Kalras, Kumars, Reddys, etc etc and I suddenly squirmed at the "Yadav" tag in my name.
Now before you start thinking I am not proud of my name etc etc, let me set the record straight. I am too narcissist to not like anything that I am associated with including my name. So I do say with "garv" that I am "Yadav, Amit Yadav" and then follow it up with a "How you doin?" (This is where I failed most of my job interviews).
But me and another of my dear friend from my batch "Nishant Pandey" had this conversation once on the campus during the placement season. We discussed what kind of a mental image will the recruiter conjure up in his / her mind when they read the name "Yadav" or a "Pandey" on the resume. Will they think of a suit clad smart looking professional or a village baboon sitting on a buffalo and talking about strategy. This was a discussion in jest and now thinking back I think this surely would have been when Nishant was trying to console me when I did not make one of the shortlists. We laughed about it and also ideated about whether it makes sense to actually add a picture of ours to the resume (I know it would have been more detrimental in hindsight)
But that discussion did linger on in my mind for quite some time and every time I now get a resume in front of me I consciously try to gauge if there is a bias that is creeping in because of the name. Another thing that we experienced during the "Gender and Leadership" sessions in ISB - You will always have biases and can never be unbiased. The trick is to be aware of your biases when you are making decisions. The prof (I forget her name) also said that if you ever get rid of your biases you will lose your sixth sense.
....... coming back to the point....... I did eventually get a job and so did Nishant and both of us are doing pretty well in our industries and roles. We did not notice any bias against any name during the process but the thought of me being pictured by some recruiter as a "typical" Yadav (don't ask what that means) was pretty funny.
In conclusion, there is nothing in the name : you may be a Yadav, Pandey, Fernandes, Goenka, Mittal, etc, your employer will still make the mistake of hiring you :)
Monday, December 6, 2010
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Does your Job have a Future?
Ever since I read the book "Who Moved My Cheese" I have always been wondering if my Job is actually the next cheese which may be moved? (Hope not)
Being in the outsourcing / offshoring industry (IT and now BPO) I have always thought that the biggest risk to my job and profile is the economic, political and military stability of India. If someday there is an eminent and real threat to any of these, then the whole offshoring industry in India can actually collapse leaving my job in jeopardy. I wonder what my back up plan would be? Where else can I contribute with whatever perceived skills I posses?
One of the key reasons for me to opt for an MBA was to actually minimize that risk a little more and make my skills "transferable" between industries. I had hoped to be part of the core industry post my MBA but for a variety of reasons did not (rather could not). However I wish to test the waters one day and confirm if my skills and my education actually help me traverse into some other industry. For this very same reason I had applied to multiple non offshoring jobs on the campus, got shortlisted and even got interviewed at a few places. This indeed boosted my confidence that what I bring to the table may be valued outside the offshoring and outsourcing world too. However being heavily risk averse at that time decided to land up back in the Offshoring MNC world.
One of the key parameters that I keep tracking these days is that how "real" is the future of the offshoring world?
While I maybe pondering on the future of my job, here are the 10 jobs which may actually be in jeopardy.
Being in the outsourcing / offshoring industry (IT and now BPO) I have always thought that the biggest risk to my job and profile is the economic, political and military stability of India. If someday there is an eminent and real threat to any of these, then the whole offshoring industry in India can actually collapse leaving my job in jeopardy. I wonder what my back up plan would be? Where else can I contribute with whatever perceived skills I posses?
One of the key reasons for me to opt for an MBA was to actually minimize that risk a little more and make my skills "transferable" between industries. I had hoped to be part of the core industry post my MBA but for a variety of reasons did not (rather could not). However I wish to test the waters one day and confirm if my skills and my education actually help me traverse into some other industry. For this very same reason I had applied to multiple non offshoring jobs on the campus, got shortlisted and even got interviewed at a few places. This indeed boosted my confidence that what I bring to the table may be valued outside the offshoring and outsourcing world too. However being heavily risk averse at that time decided to land up back in the Offshoring MNC world.
One of the key parameters that I keep tracking these days is that how "real" is the future of the offshoring world?
While I maybe pondering on the future of my job, here are the 10 jobs which may actually be in jeopardy.
Disappearing Jobs: 10 High-Paying Careers with No FutureThis one is even more interesting (Damn - one of them is my DREAM Role
Top 5 Highly-Paid But Useless Corporate Jobs
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