Hello India? I need help with my Math.

By Steve Lohr
Published in the New York times

Adrianne Yamaki, a 32-year-old management consultant in New York, travels constantly and logs 80-hour workweeks. So to eke out more time for herself, she routinely farms out the administrative chores of her life — making travel arrangements, hair appointments and restaurant reservations and buying theater tickets — to a personal assistant service, in India.

Marissa Roth for The New York Times
TutorVista has 600 tutors in India and 10,000 subscribers in the United States, including Kenneth Tham in Arcadia, Calif.
Kenneth Tham, a high school sophomore in Arcadia, Calif., strives to improve his grades and scores on standardized tests. Most afternoons, he is tutored remotely by an instructor speaking to him on a voice-over-Internet headset while he sits at his personal computer going over lessons on the screen. The tutor is in India.
The Bangalore butler is the latest development in offshore outsourcing.
The first wave of slicing up services work and sending it abroad has been all about business operations. Computer programming, call centers, product design and back-office jobs like accounting and billing have to some degree migrated abroad, mainly to India. The Internet, of course, makes it possible, while lower wages in developing nations make outsourcing attractive to corporate America.
The second wave, according to some entrepreneurs, venture capitalists and offshoring veterans, will be the globalization of consumer services. People like Ms. Yamaki and Mr. Tham, they predict, are the early customers in a market that will one day include millions of households in the United States and other nations.
They foresee an array of potential services beyond tutoring and personal assistance like health and nutrition coaching, personal tax and legal advice, help with hobbies and cooking, learning new languages and skills and more. Such services, they say, will be offered for affordable monthly fees or piecework rates.
“Consumer services delivered globally should be a huge market,” observed K. P. Balaraj, a managing director of the Indian arm of Sequoia Capital, a venture capital firm in Silicon Valley.
But globalization of consumer services faces daunting challenges, both economic and cultural. Offshore outsourcing for big business thrived partly because the jobs were often multimillion-dollar contracts and the work was repetitive. In economic terms, there were economies of scale so that the most efficient Indian offshore specialists could become multibillion-dollar companies like Infosys Technologies, Tata Consultancy Services and Wipro Technologies.
It is not all clear that similar economies of scale can be achieved in the consumer market, where the customers are individual households and services must be priced in tens or hundreds of dollars.
Then there are the matters of language, accent and cultural nuance that promise to hamper the communication and understanding needed to deliver personal services. Already, some American consumers voice frustrations in dealing with customer-service call centers in India. At the least, the spread of remotely delivered personal services will be a real test of globalization at the grass-roots level.
Even optimists acknowledge the obstacles. In a report this year, Evalueserve, a research firm, predicted that “person-to-person offshoring,” both consumer services and services for small businesses, would grow rapidly, to more than $2 billion by 2015. Yet consumer services, in particular, are in a “nascent phase,” said Alok Aggarwal, chairman of Evalueserve and a former I.B.M. researcher. “It’s promising, but it’s not clear yet that you can build sizable companies in this market.”
Veterans of the business offshoring boom predict an emerging market, but most are not investing. Nandan M. Nilekani, co-chairman of Infosys, said there is “definitely an opportunity in the globalization of consumer services,” and he listed several possibilities, even psychological counseling and religious confessionals. But, he added in an e-mail message, “This is just ‘blue sky’ thinking! We have no business interest at this point in this direction.”
What the offshore consumer services industry needs, it seems, is a solid success story in some promising market.
A leading candidate to watch, according to analysts, is TutorVista, a tutoring service founded two years ago by Krishnan Ganesh, a 45-year-old Indian entrepreneur and a pioneer of offshore call centers.
Concerns about the quality of K-12 education in America and the increased emphasis on standardized tests is driving the tutoring business in general. Traditional classroom tutoring services like Kaplan and Sylvan are doing well and offer online features. And there are other remote services like Growing Stars, Tutor.com and SmarThinking.
Yet TutorVista, analysts say, is different in a number of ways. Other remote tutoring services generally offer hourly rates of $20 to $30 instead of the $40 to $60 hourly charges typical of on-site tutoring. By contrast, TutorVista takes an all-you-can-eat approach to instruction. Its standard offering is $99 a month for as many 45-minute tutoring sessions as a student arranges.
TutorVista also stands out for its well-known venture backers, its scale and its ambition. The two-year-old company has raised more than $15 million from investors including Sequoia, Lightspeed Venture Partners and Silicon Valley Bank. TutorVista employs 760 people, including 600 tutors in India, a teaching staff it plans to double by year-end. Its 52-person technical staff has spent countless hours building the software system to schedule, monitor and connect potentially tens of thousands of tutors with students oceans away.
“Our vision is to be part of the monthly budget of one million families,” Mr. Ganesh said.
It is a long-term goal. To date, TutorVista has signed up 10,000 subscribers in the United States, and its British service, rolled out in September, has 1,000.
Further gains will depend on winning over more customers like the Tham family in California. Since he was in elementary school, Kenneth has had stints of conventional tutoring, often in classroom settings with up to 10 other students. At times, this cost the family up to $500 a month. Last year, Ernest Tham, a truck driver, noticed a reference to TutorVista on a Web site and suggested his son give it a try.
“Kenneth was apprehensive at first, and I wasn’t sure how it would work,” Mr. Tham said. “But, shocking to say, it’s gone very well.”
Kenneth said he initially found it “very unusual, not seeing another person. You get used to it, though. It’s not a problem.” He schedules one or two sessions nearly every day, mainly for English and chemistry. With a digital pen and palette, he writes sentences and grammar exercises, for example, and his work appears on his computer screen and on the screen of his tutor. They discuss the lessons using Internet-telephone headsets.
“You can also get help with homework problems,” Kenneth said, “but they’re not supposed to do all your homework for you.”
In a year with the TutorVista service, Kenneth has improved both his grades and standardized test scores, his father said.
Ramya Tadikonda has tutored Kenneth Tham, among many others, from her home in Chennai, India. To achieve its ambitions, TutorVista must recruit, train and retain thousands of tutors like her.

Ms. Tadikonda, 26, is a college graduate who had previously worked as a software and curriculum developer for a math Web site for students, but left to raise her children. Earlier this year, she joined TutorVista, took the company’s 60-hour training course, followed by tests and practice sessions for two months. She now works about 24 hours a week as a math and English tutor and makes about $200 a month.
Ms. Tadikonda says she enjoys tutoring and the flexible hours. “You can have a career and still spend time with your family,” she said. “I never thought I could do that.”
The timing is right for global tutoring, according to John J. Stuppy, TutorVista’s president and a former executive at Sylvan Learning, the Educational Testing Service and The Princeton Review. Improved Internet technology and the ability to tap of vast pool of educated instructors at low cost are crucial ingredients. “It becomes possible to make high-quality, one-on-one tutoring affordable and accessible to the masses,” said Mr. Stuppy, who joined TutorVista last year.

Steve Ludmer, 28, and his partner Avinash G. Samudrala, 27, are betting the time is right for another kind of global consumer service. They left lucrative jobs in management consulting and private equity to start a remote personal assistant service, called Ask Sunday, which began in July.

The company is based in New York, but its work force is mostly in India. It is one of a handful of startups trying to create a business in offshore personal assistant service. Some, like GetFriday, charge hourly rates of $15 or so, but Ask Sunday has a per-request model, $29 a month for 30 requests a month or $49 for 50.
The requests can be unusual. A few subscribers had Ask Sunday search online dating services for short lists of people who meet their criteria. But the requests are mainly to help busy people like Ms. Yamaki, the New York management consultant, free up time and outsource hassles.
During a late meeting at the office recently, Ms. Yamaki said, she sent a one-line e-mail message from her laptop that told Ask Sunday to order her usual meals from her favorite Manhattan restaurant, for delivery at 9:30 p.m. When the meeting ended, her take-out food was waiting.
To handle such personal chores, Ms. Yamaki has handed Ask Sunday a wealth of personal information, including credit card numbers, birth dates of family and friends and phone numbers for doctors, car services, favorite restaurants and others. She finds the convenience well worth it.

“The service is great in a pinch to make your life a little smoother,” Ms. Yamaki said. “And it’s available 24 hours a day, which is more than you can expect from a personal assistant at work.”

VODAFONE Paint the tv screen red




Today...September 21, 2007...did any of you watch the television?? Stupid
question. Of course you did. Wherever you switched, between movie breaks, during
movies, news, reality shows, during sports program breaks, after every other
thing that went into break, you name it.... we saw.... "Hutch is now VODAFONE".
I was so transfixed to the ad campaign that I waited and just observed whether
or not VODAFONE ad does come up during the breaks or not. And sure enough, there
it was. Including the cute little pug we associate Hutch with. I would really
like to know what their expenditure on advertisement for this single day alone
stands at. I have never ever, in my entire life of watching television, seen so
much publicity. This is what the Associated Foreign Press Had to
say...


Global mobile provider Vodafone began using its own name across India Friday following its purchase of an Indian firm, rolling out what the company called one of the world's biggest rebrandings.

Vodafone Plc's media saturation blitz follows its purchase in March of a majority stake in Hutchison Essar from Hong Kong-based Hutchison Telecommunications International for 11.1 billion dollars.
"The re-branding exercise has been good," said a beaming Arun Sarin, chief executive of Vodafone, who was in the financial capital Mumbai to attend a board meeting of the company's new Indian unit.
"We're going to paint the town red," said Sarin in reference to Vodafone's red speech bubble logo, meant to signal the start of a new conversation.
The purchase of the Indian unit is seen as crucial to the British company's earnings growth as it struggles with saturated cellular markets in the developed world.
India is the world's fastest growing cellular market, adding more than six million subscribers a month.
"We think the brand change is the largest seen in this country and we think it could be said to be as big as has ever been done globally," Harit Nagpal, a senior official of the Indian unit, told AFP.
He declined to comment on the cost of the campaign but media reports put it at several million dollars.
Vodafone tied up with Rupert Murdoch's Star TV network to launch a 24-hour nationwide brand-awareness campaign.
Vodafone has said it wants to make its Indian unit the number one mobile provider in India by 2010. It has already moved up to third from fourth place since being acquired, overtaking state-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL).
Vodafone has said its focus will be on rural markets and media reports said it has tied up with Chinese handset maker ZTE for low-cost handsets.
"Consumers can look forward to many great innovations from Vodafone in India," Indian-born Sarin said to reporters.
So far India's "mobile revolution" has been mainly confined to the cities, but analysts say the real prize lies in its vast rural areas, where nearly 70 percent of the country's 1.1 billion population live.
The Indian unit's formal name is Vodafone Essar as the other partner is Indian steel-to-shipping conglomerate Essar.



I Must admit that I am an Airtel loyalist. I had shifted to Hutch for a
year and soon became cell-sick. After watching the campaign, (and I have seen
enough of Vodafone sponsorship in international sport) I seriously want to shift
to Vodafone. Talking of ads creating an impact, this is it. In any case,
anything that sponsors any Formula One event, will interest me. And don't worry,
I'm not gonna drink Kingfisher.....Will only fly one. PEACE!!

KEEP SMILING

Well haven’t we read this time and again about how a smile can brighten up other people’s day??? I thought why not give it a try. I hadn’t mentioned anything about this experiment of mine to my family as I know what their reaction to this idea of mine would be. They would say they cant imagine me going around smiling at random people. I usually sulk around unknown people. Yet once I get to know them, they tell me I am somewhat of a spoilt cartoon. Whatever that means.
So here I was planning on smiling at randomly anyone whose eyes meet mine. People who I see walking on the road or driving their cars, riding bikes or simply standing and waiting for someone or something. People whom I might never meet again.
I start from home to go to my computer institute that is around 20 kms away. Now I am not driving, in case you wonder that I will concentrate more on smiling and cause an accident. The driver is doing his job. So its evening and on the way, a group of kids from a government school are the first to be bombarded with the smiles as my car passes them by. They give a glance and I smile and wave at them. As if I were some sort of celebrity. Now the most brilliant thing about being a kid is you enjoy everything simple that life has to offer. And almost instantly, I was getting the smiles and the waves back from an absolutely unknown bunch of kids. The brightest heartfelt smiles from kids. The first experience was good. I move on.
I live in the cantonment area. It is obvious that I would get to see young and dashing men in their uniforms through the entire stretch of my journey towards the main city. I’ve seen a few of them do duty in the area on a daily basis. And earlier I used to be really skeptical about looking straight at them. I don’t know but men in their uniforms pose a more different feel altogether. Very authoritative, head-master/principal kind, if you get what I mean. My driver has slowed down near a speed breaker behind another car with an “L” Board on it. And there I notice a young army man standing in the weather just sweating it out in the middle of nowhere. Well not exactly nowhere. But standing all alone at one corner must surely seem like being nowhere. At least I feel so. I can’t stand to wait alone in a street for friends even for 10 mins. It seems like eternity. I wonder how they spend their time for hours together. I still have no clue why they are there.
So let me get back to it all again. Now there was this army man standing and I have never looked at any army man in the eye. Even if I look, I look away instinctively. I have my resolution for the day already going Caput with only the second person looking at me. But small miracles do happen. Instinctively instead of looking away I just smiled. It was probably the fact that I was filled with smiles given by the earlier bunch of kids, that this was just a carry forward of it all. I dint really expect any reaction from that man, but he did. He smiled back. Now we move ahead and I really don’t notice too many people as my driver ups his speed. I begin to wonder what my driver would think if he saw the rear view mirror and saw me smiling away. To hell what anyone thinks. It felt good to be smiling and seeing others smile.
We reach a busy intersection and among the hordes of slow moving vehicles, ours is in corner of the road. Now the speed must have been 20 km/hr or less and I get to see the facial expressions of people again. I search for my next target of bombardment of smiles and there I find one instantly. A vendor selling grapes. Must have been in his fifties, or maybe less. So here I was smiling away at him and I had my first negative response to the smiles today. He just looked at me with a blank face, probably thinking that I need some medical help. That really did not disappoint me as I moved on smiling at everyone I could find looking at my side. I smiled at many aunties, many more kids and a few youngsters. The result wasn’t always positive. I had a few comments from a bunch of guys but I had to take it in my stride. I was on a mission. A mission to smile and see other people smile. And I had witnessed it. The rate of people smiling back must have been marginally greater than those with no or negative responses. But yet, the smiles had left a greater impact. I reached the institute in high spirits. And I had one thought in mind. I might never meet those people again and not recall their faces, even after one hour of seeing them. But the smiles I had witnessed will always remain. I can conclude by saying that yes, smiles do make other people’s day…as they do make your own. Keep SMILING.