Friday, December 30, 2011

Happy New Year 2012

Happy New Year!

Google

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Disadvantage of Technology !!!!

 

Mail meant for 300 sent out to 8 million!

A New York Times employee sent an emailer by mistake to millions instead of a few hundred intended to receive it

29 December 2011

About 8 million people are believed to have received email from the New York Times offering them a special discount if they chose to reconsider cancelling their subscriptions.

According to a Reuters report, this email was actually supposed to go to only 300 people who had chosen to cancel subscriptions. But erroneously, it was sent to the millions on an email marketing list.

The incident was also widely reported on various social media sites, some even suggesting that a hacker might have got access to the Times database.

As per a statement issued by the renowned newspaper and quoted by Reuters, "An email was sent earlier today from The New York Times in error. This email should have been sent to a very small number of subscribers, but instead was sent to a vast distribution list made up of people who had previously provided their email address to The New York Times."

What havoc a small human error can cause in these connected times!

Mail meant for 300 sent out to 8 million!-ITNEXT

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Dataquest : DQ CIO Series : CIO of the Month: Integrating Technology with Business

Simplify the Business ProcessesAmitabh Singh, vice president & CIO, industrial group, Alghanim IndustriesWith cloud, virtualization, tablets, and smartphones, the CIOs phone does not stop ringing. Today, every CIO is in demand to create and judiciously manage the humongous volumes of data and information to cater to the demands from these platforms. The CIOs role has gained a different dimension from what it was beforeof implementing the best available technology and bringing down the overall costs to understanding the business needs and the processes and trying to integrate technology to end processes to stay ahead of the competition. The simplification of the IT platform has to be accompanied by the the integration of technologyto avoid unnecessary duplication of data, believes Amitabh Singh, vice president & CIO, industrial group, Alghanim Industries.Singh feels that virtualization although is in nascent stages, his own group of companies have witnessed a sea change with its deployment as the number of physical hours and servers have reduced drastically. It has resulted in 20-25% reduction in the overall cost of operation. And as far as the cloud platform is concerned, CIOs are steadily moving towards it by partnering with hardware providers who can take away or to whom they can sell off their remaining/redundant IT infrastructure.In fact, Alghanim Industries will have 100% virtual environment by 2012-13 and will also move to hybrid cloud for their confidential data. Cost savings is achieved after deploying virtualization or cloud platform because of the reduction in real estate cost for the storage of servers, electricity, and other maintenance heads.Today, there are many applications available for various platforms, therefore the CIO should only selectively use those applications that can enhance the end-user experience and also keep a check on the rising IT costs. Understandably, says Singh, over a period of one-and-a-half years, Alghanim industries has decreased the number of apps from 400 to 65.Speaking about the tablets and smartphones, Singh said that his organization will soon be providing tablets to senior management, while smartphones with suitable apps will be given to the sales and marketing workforce to ensure visibility and transparency of data without restricting their mobility.Singh rates simplification of business process and adherence to the process through technology deployment and usage of hand-held devices as a big challenge. In addition, social media platform also poses risk to the intellectual property and business as even though an explicit external policy is in place in most organizations, but internal policy is still missing. The CIOs have to go that extra mile in order to reap the benefits of social media with the help of appropriate apps and policy, but he would also have to create awareness about the use of social media.

via Dataquest : DQ CIO Series : CIO of the Month: Integrating Technology with Business.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Mint ePaper–The Wall Street Journal

28_12_2011_007_003_Mint

http://epaper.livemint.com/ArticleImageEx.aspx?article=28_12_2011_007_003&type=1&mode=1

How Online Surveys Can Help Your Business

 

How Online Surveys Can Help Your Business

March 11, 2011 By admin Leave a Comment

The Internet has opened up all kinds of opportunities for various businesses. Businesses can now have their own websites, advertise online and gain valuable customer feedback online. In today’s business world, customer loyalty is important. Businesses must be certain they are meeting their customers’ needs and desires.

Online surveys have gained popularity in the past few years. They can give businesses valuable information from their customers in a manner that is easy for their customers to utilize. Gaining insight from customers can enable businesses to make changes or adjustments to increase or improve their business. Online surveys can also help determine if employees are following certain policies and procedures set forth by the business and improve customer service.

In order to get customers to the business website, they must know it exists. Businesses should put their website on anything possible such as sacks, receipts or on signs in the store. Businesses may even want to offer coupons that can only be gained by printing them from the business website.

Online surveys should be short and to the point. A customer is not going to take the time to fill out a survey that is time consuming to them. It is a great idea to provide something such as a coupon for something to provide incentive for the customer to fill out the survey. Businesses can provide anything from a free dessert to a 20% off coupon.

Many online survey sites that will let businesses try out online surveys for free. They offer limited information but still provide valuable feedback. Such sites are a great way to test drive online surveys and see if they can help a particular business gain valuable insight as to their customer service and how their customers feel about their business or service.

Businesses can decide to employ an online survey site have the benefit of confidentiality from competitors seeing their information and allowing someone to run their survey system continuously for maximum ongoing results.

How Online Surveys Can Help Your Business

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

'भारत' में क्या कमाल दिखा रहा है इंटरनेट?

 

हिमाचल प्रदेश की कांगड़ा घाटी के पहाड़ी इलाके चीड़ के पेड़ से अटे पड़े हैं। यहां के बाशिंदों का मानना था कि चीड़ की पत्ती जंगल में बार-बार आग लगने की एक मुख्य वजह है। जाहिर है, इससे उनकी परेशानी बढ़ती थी और चीड़ की पत्तियों से नाराजगी भी।
लेकिन, यह धारणा तब बदल गई जब स्वयंसेवा समूह कांगड़ा महिला सभा (केएमएस) की कुछ महिलाओं को इंटरनेट के जरिए इस बात की जानकारी मिली कि मैक्सिको और कनाडा में लोग चीड़ के पेड़ की पत्तियों से कई तरह के हस्तशिल्प उत्पाद तैयार करते हैं। आज केएमएस की कम से कम 500 महिलाएं इन पत्तियों से टोपियां, कोस्टर और टोकरियां बनाकर जीवन बसर कर रही हैं।

- Indiatimes Infotech

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

2012: Year of 'Bring Your Own Device' - The Times of India

 

2012: Year of 'Bring Your Own Device'

Brocade predicts what trends will shape the business and IT landscape in 2012, and foresees the consumerisaton of IT driving networking evolution in unexpected ways.

NEW DELHI: 2011 was a year of significant IT innovation, with major advances in both consumer and business sectors. It was also the year of 'cloud', but as we say goodbye to 2011, what does 2012 have in store for us? Rajesh Kaul, India Regional Sales Director at Brocade looks into his crystal ball to outline the top five technology trends we should watch out for in 2012:
BYOD' (Bring Your Own Device) changes IT procurement
The company PC is becoming a thing of the past, as businesses increasingly allow, and even encourage, employees to bring their domestic, consumer devices into the workplace and access corporate applications.
This will allow application availability at anytime, from anywhere, and will help business slash procurement costs. The smartphone/tablet phenomenon will fuel this trend, and will drive uptake of Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI), wireless networking and end-point security solutions in the corporate arena.
However, it will create many problems for IT departments as they attempt to mitigate risk, and signals a tough future for PC and laptop manufacturers. Next year, I believe we will see at least one high profile security disaster as a result of this trend, and that will be act as a wake-up call for companies to get proper security processes in place before unlocking their networks to all and sundry.
Campus LAN gets smart
With BYOD, the growth of smartphone/tablet usage among consumers and the Unified ommunications market set to triple by 2015, the Campus LAN will have to step up to the plate to meet demand - 2012 will be the year the campus gets smart. Legacy environments will not be able to cope with the huge pressures being placed on them; high-performance applications (such as video streaming, IPTV, real-time image transfer and distance learning) will suffer as a result and productivity/revenue/brand reputation will fall.
I predict that by the summer of 2012, we'll see enterprise-class characteristics introduced into campus LAN solutions at a more affordable price point. This level of innovation will, for the first time, give companies the simplicity and performance required to meet modern business demands and transform the way campus-wide networks are engineered.
Rise of cloud service revenue
2011 saw organisations slowly moving towards the cloud and this pragmatic adoption will continue in 2012, but will also see the rise of a new form of revenue generation as enterprises from outside the technology sector move towards 'Cloud Service Provision'. In the current economy, businesses look to sweat every asset at their disposal and more and more will look to leverage their data centre environments to offer cloud services as an additional revenue stream.
Those companies wishing to address this burgeoning market will need to have the right data centre architecture in place - a highly virtualised, fabric-based network topology, delivering reliability and performance to meet strict SLAs - to respond to customer demands, and I predict that we will see some high profile casualties as a result of providers trying to make a fast buck.
Greater commoditisation
IT commoditisation will continue through 2012. The maturity of server virtualisation means that hardware is less important; as real estate/energy costs spiral and companies look to reduce capital outlay (CapEx), virtualisation strategies will permeate all companies and the CXO will become more vocal in whether or not their organization has a plan in place.
Traditional, enterprise-owned, clients will become obsolete and businesses will turn to virtualised or even hosted, environments to reduce TCO through procurement of lower cost hardware. Companies that get this right will reap the benefits, but they will need to make sure that the network foundation upon which all virtual environments operate is fit for purpose; get this wrong and soldier on regardless and there will be many, many problems.
Data consumption continues to sky-rocket
2011 was the year in which 'Big Data' stole headlines, but this trend will continue unabated through 2012. The last five years have been awash with new ways to generate, consume and store data - in 2011, the average smartphone user consumed 15Mb of data each day, but this will grow to 1Gb by 2020; as consumers, we will place huge demand on networking and storage resources because of this.
Businesses will need to look at innovative solutions to increase network stability and performance while driving down costs to remain competitive. Those who ignore this trend will face major problems, and we may see one or two more examples!
And finally... the year of the FABRIC
Holistic data centre fabrics - from the storage environment through to the Ethernet network - are going to be the big trend in 2012. All my previous predictions will rely on this. Fabric-based architectures will become mainstream, building on the success of early adopter businesses that have reaped the benefits of flat, reliable, high performance networks that can offer simplified management and increased business agility.
This trend will see a fundamental attitude-shift to data centre design, and will underpin many of the aforementioned predictions. After all, the network is the heart and lungs of modern business and without it simple actions like sending an email or accessing a document, taken for granted by all of us, would be impossible. Fabrics will revolutionise network design and change the networking landscape... forever.

2012: Year of 'Bring Your Own Device' - The Times of India

Next100 Winners 2011 Profile Book

130

 

 

 

 

Next1next10000 Winners 2011 Profile Book

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Calling on IT to do more : ZDNet Asia Blogs : By The Way by Eileen Yu

 

We all go through days where we feel jaded, fatigued and weary of dealing with petty politics and inconsequential squabbles in the office, while stressing out over the need to meet quarterly business targets.
I've had my own share of corporate fatigue having run the rat race for over 13 years which, though short by some standards, can feel like an eternity when you're a media professional in an industry that runs at 300,000 km per second. That's the speed of light, by the way.
Often, I've stopped to ponder why I'm spending the bulk of the short amount of time I have to live this life, on a seemingly endless chase to reach the top of a profession that, at the end of the chase, mayn't have the rewards that match the level of investment.
Covering the IT industry isn't exactly life-changing. The stuff I write about doesn't discuss why the poverty line in some countries is well below a dollar a day, nor does it expose how citizens in war-torn nations are ravaged by famine.
My idealist goal as a young journalist to change the world for the better has since given way to uncovering news about corporate M&As, business strategies and current buzzwords like cloud computing and mobile development...and to the occasional blog rumblings about the meaning of an IT-enabled life.
It's hardly earth-shattering or Nobel Prize-worthy material. In fact, I saw covering the IT industry to be almost immaterial and often, would ask myself: Is this it? What's the meaning to all this?
Fortunately, a dinner function this week helped provide some answers and slap me out of self-pity.
A handful of professionals from the local IT industry had gathered over dinner to meet Thorkil Sonne, founder of Specialisterne, a Danish IT computer company that hires individuals with high-functioning autism.
We had written a piece that looked at the potential of autistic workers to excel in IT, tapping their intrinsic passion for details to perform tasks such as software testing and quality control. Thorkil's organization aims to help the autistic hone their skills and secure gainful employment with IT companies, and he was in Singapore this week to champion this cause to the relevant stakeholders here.
Over dinner, he spoke passionately about how his own son, diagnosed with autism at the age of two, had ignited his desire to help autistic people identify and build on their strengths so they can also be independent citizens of the world.
He explained that high-functioning autistic individuals have much to offer if companies would give them the opportunity and understand their unique traits so they can be appropriately managed in a work environment.
Autistic people, for instance, don't get irony. They can't read between the lines or get innuendos and are unable to detect sarcasm. What they say is what they mean so electronic communications like e-mail and text messages are actually ideal because with text, what you see is what the words mean.
According to Thorkil, autistic individuals do congregate on Facebook and engage with like-minded peers in spirited conversations, so they can be sociable--on their own terms and under conditions that they comprehend. Two people whom Thorkil's company had assessed and trained were recently offered internship with IBM in Denmark.
Conversations that night also turned to news this week that the Bill & Melinda Gates foundation would set aside US$42 million in grants to spur innovation to help improve toilets and sanitation. Some 2.6 billion people worldwide currently lack access to safe sanitation, leaving waste that usually go into a sewage system on the ground or in a ditch. Such unsanitary conditions have resulted in illness, killing 1.5 million children each year from diarrhea-related diseases.
Part of Gates' efforts include reinventing the toilet and by year-end, the foundation expects to have some 50 groups working on ideas for the next generation of toilets including one that runs without water or electricity.
That night over dinner, I realized that immaterial it might sometimes seem, technology can play a role in helping to change lives and make the world a better place for those in need of one.
So rather than wallow in self-indulgence about how meaningless the corporate race can get, I shall resolve to help in whatever small way I can, to highlight how individuals and organizations like Thorkil and the Gates foundation are driving the use of technology to improve society.

Calling on IT to do more : ZDNet Asia Blogs : By The Way by Eileen Yu

Calling on IT to do more : ZDNet Asia Blogs : By The Way by Eileen Yu

 

We all go through days where we feel jaded, fatigued and weary of dealing with petty politics and inconsequential squabbles in the office, while stressing out over the need to meet quarterly business targets.
I've had my own share of corporate fatigue having run the rat race for over 13 years which, though short by some standards, can feel like an eternity when you're a media professional in an industry that runs at 300,000 km per second. That's the speed of light, by the way.
Often, I've stopped to ponder why I'm spending the bulk of the short amount of time I have to live this life, on a seemingly endless chase to reach the top of a profession that, at the end of the chase, mayn't have the rewards that match the level of investment.
Covering the IT industry isn't exactly life-changing. The stuff I write about doesn't discuss why the poverty line in some countries is well below a dollar a day, nor does it expose how citizens in war-torn nations are ravaged by famine.
My idealist goal as a young journalist to change the world for the better has since given way to uncovering news about corporate M&As, business strategies and current buzzwords like cloud computing and mobile development...and to the occasional blog rumblings about the meaning of an IT-enabled life.
It's hardly earth-shattering or Nobel Prize-worthy material. In fact, I saw covering the IT industry to be almost immaterial and often, would ask myself: Is this it? What's the meaning to all this?
Fortunately, a dinner function this week helped provide some answers and slap me out of self-pity.
A handful of professionals from the local IT industry had gathered over dinner to meet Thorkil Sonne, founder of Specialisterne, a Danish IT computer company that hires individuals with high-functioning autism.
We had written a piece that looked at the potential of autistic workers to excel in IT, tapping their intrinsic passion for details to perform tasks such as software testing and quality control. Thorkil's organization aims to help the autistic hone their skills and secure gainful employment with IT companies, and he was in Singapore this week to champion this cause to the relevant stakeholders here.
Over dinner, he spoke passionately about how his own son, diagnosed with autism at the age of two, had ignited his desire to help autistic people identify and build on their strengths so they can also be independent citizens of the world.
He explained that high-functioning autistic individuals have much to offer if companies would give them the opportunity and understand their unique traits so they can be appropriately managed in a work environment.
Autistic people, for instance, don't get irony. They can't read between the lines or get innuendos and are unable to detect sarcasm. What they say is what they mean so electronic communications like e-mail and text messages are actually ideal because with text, what you see is what the words mean.
According to Thorkil, autistic individuals do congregate on Facebook and engage with like-minded peers in spirited conversations, so they can be sociable--on their own terms and under conditions that they comprehend. Two people whom Thorkil's company had assessed and trained were recently offered internship with IBM in Denmark.
Conversations that night also turned to news this week that the Bill & Melinda Gates foundation would set aside US$42 million in grants to spur innovation to help improve toilets and sanitation. Some 2.6 billion people worldwide currently lack access to safe sanitation, leaving waste that usually go into a sewage system on the ground or in a ditch. Such unsanitary conditions have resulted in illness, killing 1.5 million children each year from diarrhea-related diseases.
Part of Gates' efforts include reinventing the toilet and by year-end, the foundation expects to have some 50 groups working on ideas for the next generation of toilets including one that runs without water or electricity.
That night over dinner, I realized that immaterial it might sometimes seem, technology can play a role in helping to change lives and make the world a better place for those in need of one.
So rather than wallow in self-indulgence about how meaningless the corporate race can get, I shall resolve to help in whatever small way I can, to highlight how individuals and organizations like Thorkil and the Gates foundation are driving the use of technology to improve society.

Calling on IT to do more : ZDNet Asia Blogs : By The Way by Eileen Yu

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Announcing the NEXT 100 Winners!-ITNEXT

 

Announcing the NEXT 100 Winners!

Ladies and Gentlemen, here are the ones who made it to the Next 100 Awards

06 December 2011

IT Next has announced the winners of its annual Next 100 Awards. They were felicitated at a glittering celebration held at Fort Jadhavgadh Hotel near Pune in Maharashtra on December 4.

Three cheers to all the winners, many thanks to the participants, jury members and the sponsors who all made the event not only possible but a great success! The following list is arranged in alphabetical order of the surnames:

NEXT 100 WINNERS

 





Rajeev Agarwal Head - Corporate IT HAL
Manuhaar Agrawalla Systems Manager (Corporate IT) The Oberoi Group
Sharat Airani Chief-IT (Systems & Security) Forbes Marshall Group
Ajit Awasare Deputy General Manager Larsen & Toubro Ltd
Joy Bagish Senior Manager - IT Apeejay Surrendra Corporate Services Ltd
Manoj Bhat Head - IT Operations 3DPLM Software Solutions Ltd
Pradeep Chaudhary Assistant General Manager (IT) Corporate Shree Cement Limited
Johnson Cherian General Manager - IT Infrastructure Varun Beverages Ltd
Vijay Choudhary Deputy General Manager - IT HRH Group of Hotels
Gurinder Preet Singh Chugh Senior Manager - IT Vodafone Essar Limited
Kaustav Das Delivery Head -SAP Highbar Technologies Ltd (HCC Group Company)
Goutam Datta Assistant Vice President, Technology ICICI Lombard GIC Ltd
Harin Dave Manager - Projects Cognizant Technology Solutions
Keyur Desai Delivery Head - Network & Communications ESSAR Information Technology Ltd
Sanjay Deshmukh Div. Manager - IT Mercedes-Benz India
Yogesh Dhandharia IT & Business Manager Rashi Peripherals Pvt. Ltd
Suresh E IT Manager Paterson Securities P Ltd
Sreekanth Elkuri Project Manager Mindtree
Shiju George Senior Manager Shoppersstop Ltd
Somasekhara Rao Gonuguntla IT Project Manager TESCO Hindustan Service Center
Deepak Gupta Chief Manager (IT) JK Tyre & Industries Ltd
Dinesh Gupta Deputy General Manager - IT Godrej Consumer Products Ltd
Gyanendra Gupta Deputy General Manager (Systems) IFFCO
Kapil Gupta Director - IT MTS
Sandeep Gupta IT Strategy Consultant TCS - Global Consulting Practice
Tarun Gupta Manager Lanco Solar Pvt Ltd
Ravindra H S Associate Vice President - Information Systems Sasken Communication Technologies Ltd
Archie Jackson Senior Manager & IT Service Delivery Manager Steria India Pvt Ltd
Sandeep Jha Manager IT Africare Ltd
Asad Joheb Datacentre Manager Taj Group of Hotels
Makarand Joshi Deputy General Manager (IT) Deepak Fertilisers & Petrochemicals Corp Ltd
Hitender Kanwar Senior Manager - IT Tulip Telecom Ltd
Dipthi Karnad Senior Manager -IT HyperCITY Retail India Ltd
Aniket Kate Manager IT Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd
Suresh Khadakbhavi Deputy General Manager - ICT Bangalore International Airport Ltd
Farhan Khan AVP - IT Radico Khaitan Ltd
Feroz Ahmad Khan Associate Vice President - IT Godrej Consumer Products Ltd
Ashish Khanna Corporate Manager IT Infrastructure EIH Limited (Oberoi Hotels)
Pradeep Khanna Senior Project Manager Infosys Ltd
Shishir Khare Head Internal IT (Noida Region) , Consultant TCS
Manoj Kumar Assistant General Manager - IT Jai Suspension Systems Ltd
Prajwal Kumar Deputy General Manager - IT ACG Worldwide
Prakash Kumar Senior Manager & Head-IT Delta Power Solution (India) Pvt Ltd
Santosh Kurhade SVP - IT IDFC Securities
Sushanta Kumar Lenka Manager-IT Mitsubishi Electric Automotive India Pvt Ltd
Satish Mahajan Consultant
Suchit Malhotra Senior Manager Program Management Sapient
Umesh Malhotra Assistant General Manager Hero MotoCorp Limited
Kamal Matta Head IT & Telecom Sonic Biochem Ext Ltd
Kapil Mehrotra Senior Manager iYOGI Technical Services Pvt Ltd
Ajit Mishra Manager Sistema Syam Teleservices Ltd (MTS)
Amit Mishra Head IT - Applications & Data Center Mothers Pride Education Persona Pvt Ltd
Samad Mohammed General Manager iSpace Global Services (India) Pvt Ltd
Ramkumar Mohan Head - IT & CISO Orbis Financial Corporation Ltd
Ranganathan N Manager - IT Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services Ltd
Satyen Naik Manager - IT Surat District Co-operative Milk Producer's Union Ltd
Rajkumar Nair Manager - IT Kanakia Spaces Pvt Ltd
Alagar Raj Nallasamy Technical Manager Perfsystems India Pvt Ltd
SDPL Narayana Assistant General Manager - IT Neuland Laboratories Ltd
Subhasis Nayak Senior Manager - IT Bata India Limited
Beena Nayar Manager-IT Forbes Marshall Ltd
Manish Pal Senior Manager Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd
C O Parmar Deputy General Manager (Systems) IFFCO-KANDLA
Nitin Parmar Senior General Manager - IT Welspun
Naresh Pathak Head & AGM - IT Promed Group
Shyamanta Phukon Global Head - IT SIRO Group of Companies
Dinesh Pote Manager Corporate IT Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd
Puneet Prakash Manager Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd
Prasad Pudipeddi Head - IT Hamilton Houseware Pvt Ltd (Milton Plastics)
Adarsh R Assistant General Manager (Systems) Kerala Financial Corporation
Gracekumar Rajendra Associate Director - IT Cognizant Technology
Dharmaraj Ramakrishnan Head - Core Banking, ITCD ING Vysya Bank
Ajay Rana Director Amity
Manvendra Singh Rana Acclerated Value Leader IBM India Private Limited
Subha K Rudra Manager - Group IT Usha Martin Ltd
Anil Saini IT Head Ricoh India Ltd
S Saravanan Deputy General Manager - Technology Transformations IBM Global Process Services
Makarand Sawant Assistant General Manager - Information Technology Deepak Fertilisers & Petrochemicals Corporation Ltd
Rupendra Sharma Manager -IT RJ Corp
Vivek Sharma Manager Reliance Power
Udupi Arunkumar Sheth Head-Software Development Gati Corporation Ltd
Shobha Shetty Deputy General Manager - IT Godrej Properties Ltd
Berjes Shroff Senior Manager - Information Technology Tata Services Ltd
Avtar Singh AVP Bajaj Capital
Dinesh Singh Technology Head SJM Technologies
Jagdish Singh Manager IT Ramtech Software
Prashant Singh Assistant Director Sistema Shyam Teleservices Ltd
Sanjay Pratap Singh IT Head Medical Information Technologies Pvt Ltd (MediSysinfo)
Sanjay Kumar Srivastava Assistant General Manager- IT Andritz Hydro Private Limited
Anuroop Sundd Technical Suport Manager - Asia Pacific Siemens Industry Software (India) Pvt Ltd
Kanaka Durga Bhavani Prasad Suravarapu Senior IT Manager Fifth Avenue Sourcing Pvt Ltd
Dinesh Tandel Senior Consultant Capgemini India Pvt Ltd
Balaranjith Thangakunam General Manager Atul Ltd
Rajesh K Thanua Senior Manager IT Carzonrent India Pvt Ltd
Sanjay Tiwari Manager - IT Star Union Dai-ichi Life Insurance
Mangal Verma General Manager - Application Projects Eon Infotech Limited
Sandeep Walia Assistant General Manager - ( IT) HT Media Ltd
Rajnish K Wangoo Technical Manager - IT Nokia Siemens Networks
Kishor Yadav Deputy General Manager Adani Power Limited
R A Yadav Deputy General Manager Hero MotoCorp Ltd

Announcing the NEXT 100 Winners!-ITNEXT