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Fire in the belly

Over the weekend I was at IIT Kanpur. I was there to talk to students who had come from the best engineering schools across India to participate in the Asian leg of the annual Intercollegiate Programming Competition. The top team from India will be selected to participate in the world finals which will have about 80 teams selected from about 60 centers across the world.

I spent some time talking to the judges who have been associated with this event a number of times. One of them was a young lecturer from Bangladesh who had reached the finals twice.
The profs told me that in the world competition the top ten places are always bagged by the teams from Russia and China. The best performance from the teams from India ever was a rank of 29. 

“How come India which is supposed to be a powerhouse of software development does not fare well?” I asked

“The Chinese kids do a lot of preparation. The colleges give them enormous support. In fact I understand that they even give really good team members relaxed schedule to complete their other curriculum schedules” one of the faculty explained.

I found it quite familiar. We hear similar stories about the focused development support institutions and government provide for development of international competitiveness in different fields including sports in countries like China and Russia. We also need to build such national priorities and support systems to see our competitiveness boosting. 

“But then how do you explain the kids from Bangladesh doing better than Indian kids”

“That is a different dimension of performance. These kids are full of passion and are desperate to prove to the world that they are good” The Professor explained.

“With the IT Industry booming, our kids are sure of the job opening irrespective of their academic performance. So they don’t want to put in the hard work needed to be even to participate in the world finals; forget being the world champions.”

“In the Asian leg, practically no teams from IITs ever reach the top positions in the recent past. It is the students from the institute from the next rung that end up in the top 10. In fact the team from Indonesia & IIIT Hyderabad topped this year.” the Prof continued.

“I agree. The inner passion to demonstrate our software credentials helped leaders like Moorthy, Nandan, Bagchi, Soota and their team to slog it out and build large software powerhouses from India. Our kids have it easy these days!”

I remembered what my good friend Ajay had explained to me as a possible contributing reason why Jewish race has managed to win more than 175 Nobel prices though they form a very small proportion of global population. They had been exposed to multiple occasions of severe persecution and they were pushed to their limits for survival. This trial by fire could be one of the reason for their outstanding performance in various fields. 

It is a well understood fact that whether it is in sports, computer programming or business one of the key essentials for success is ‘fire in the belly’, a ‘burning desire’ to make a mark. It is of equal importance at the top, at the bottom and in between. If the top dog has no ambition to build, his team will also settle down and relax. If the top dog has ambition but he fails to build a team that share his dream then too the results will be limited. When any organisation get to be dominated by people who have retired in their hearts, it will be the beginning of the end.

And that is the challenge that any leadership faces..

“If you ask people to reach, to think creatively, and produce extraordinary results, they usually will. Too often in our modern world they are simply not asked” John Wood, Founder, Room to Read

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  1. I myself passed out from IIT Btech 7 years back and I fully agree with your view. The thing i felt during those days and which is very true even today. Our institute’s own famous worldwide programming contest was never topped by our own dept. students, always by teams from other countries.

  2. @Devesh A sale is complete on two counts – payment and delivery, not either but both. My part of purchase was over when I paid. Since eComm is not brick and mortar, delivery takes time and hence, the onus is on seller to complete the sale from his side by delivering – exactly what I ordered and for exactly the amount i paid.
    The same would be apply on me, if I choose Cash on Delivery…the onus then would be on me to show up and pay the amount i promised, when the package is delivered.

    Vegetable vendor analogy applies here. Because its about honoring your prices, more than anything else. You are buying barbie sets from etailers, not futures and options.

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