Striving towards Excellence

Web Name: Striving towards Excellence

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Striving towards Excellence "Excellence is the result of caring more than others think is wise, risking more than others think is safe, dreaming more than others think is practical & expecting more than others think is possible." -Karthik Gurumurthy About two years back, Australia’s Test cricket team became entangled in a ball-tampering scandal during the third Test of a series in South Africa. Captain Steve Smith, vice-captain David Warner and batsman Cameron Bancroft were the key figures involved in an incident dubbed ‘sandpapergate’ and one which would cast a dark shadow over the sport. Steve Smith was stripped of captaincy and handed a ban along with David Warner and Cameron Bancroft. The Australian cricket authorities were forced to make changes in personnel. Justin Langer, a retired top-class batsman, was brought in as head coach and Tim Paine was made team captain.For all cricket lovers, who are in desperate need of some decent viewing during this time of isolation and lock-down, the newly released Amazon Prime The Test: A New Era for Australia’s Team is worth the watch. This is an in-depth, behind-the-scenes, eight-episode examination of a cricket team in crisis. It chronicles 18 months in the travails of the Australian national team, from the squad’s all-time lowest point to its return to relevance in the 2019 World Cup.Review:Born in India I have been passionately following the game as much as I can from the late 1970 s and 1980 s and it continues to provide non-stop entertainment and excitement. Australia has been one of the most successful cricketing team and been a dominant force for decades winning multiple World Cups and other ICC trophies. I always admired Aussie team for their fighting spirit but never liked them as a team as most of the team members were arrogant, offensive and knew that these players would do anything to win and I strongly felt that what happened in Capetown was something they totally deserved. With regards to this documentary..Where do I start?The series takes a deep look at coach Justin Langer’s ruthless yet humble characteristics and attributes, both as a former player and as a potential manager of a team that had hit rock bottom in 2018. Coach’s vision was also quite clear and obvious from the start – that is to build a team that will earn the respect, not only of their own country, but of the cricketing world once again .This documentary showed all the raw moments of the players and coaches and this showed you the person behind their own titles. It brings forward the real people, real emotions and real drama that unfolded after what happened. The series was thoroughly enjoyable, it s rare for outsiders to see inside the inner sanctum of a test dressing room and that was great. Everybody in the Aussie dressing room was very passionate and charged up and not afraid to show their frustrations. The camaraderie was almost tangible and the way the team stuck together through thick and thin was amazing to watch. The behind-the-scenes footage shows all the drama and emotions of winning and losing matches all before Australia departed for last year’s World Cup and Ashes series in the country of their biggest rival, England. After watching two of the episodes, cricket fans will have a completely different perception of the Australian cricket team. First time in my life I will use the word respect and Aussie cricket team in a sentence. It was great to see what Aussies thought of Virat Kohli and the Indian Cricket team. However, I am surprised that they didn t include the part when Virat Kohli pleaded to the fans to stop abusing Steve Smith when the crowd booed him constantly during the India-Australia World Cup 2019 game played at the Oval.If you re a true lover of the game, if you can put aside team loyalties and just applaud the Rising from the Ashes to win the Ashes , this series is for you. -Karthik GurumurthyIn light of COVID 19, the related crisis and challenges and the normal every day difficulties we all face, what should be our code of conduct?I believe the question of our time is, “How can I help?” The first and obvious answer is to take care of yourself and stay safe so that you are able to help others. But if you stop there, you’ll limit both your impact and your happiness. The best way to beat self-absorption is to answer the question, How can I help?Here are some possible good answers:Share good ideas if it can add value. Just be careful you don’t spread disinformation. Focus on what you’ve learned and know from experience. (Unless you are an epidemiologist or a medical professional who understands and worked on virology, it is risky to speculate about specifics of the virus.) We can all grow through this experience if we share great ideas and learn from each other.Offer encouragement. A phone call or an email with a kind word, a positive comment and whatever reassurance you can offer means more than ever now. You don’t need to offer solutions (unless you are confident you have really good ones). The goal is to lift the spirits of anyone who is down, lonely or discouraged.Check in with others. Ask how people are doing. Let the person know you care for them and are thinking of them. Go deeper than the normal conversations you have with people that are often rushed.Reconnect. Dust off old relationships you haven’t had time to re-establish in the past. For most of us, there is no pressing agenda or no time crunch that keeps us from doing so.Donate Time. This one is tricky as nobody wants to risk exposure. That is a personal choice. But you might not necessarily have to leave your home to help if a charity needs skills you have that can be applied virtually. To find out your options, call and ask what you might do to help. It is equally important not to spread the virus knowingly or unknowingly by restricting trips outside your home (And my deepest gratitude and respect goes out to the first responders who are there on the front line for us at their own peril.)Donate Money. This is the least risky thing to do, and how much you donate isn’t the point. Any and all donations are appreciated. Take care of your family’s financial needs first. But if you have something you can give where needed, consider donating. But please do your homework so you don’t become a victim of a scam.There are no quick fixes to the problems we face. But enough people doing what they can to help will indeed make a big difference.God bless you, and please be safe. -Karthik GurumurthyAnd so we enter a new world of social distancing, people stocking tissue paper, and limitations on how we can gather. Borders are closing, airports are shutting down, and in some countries, police and armed forces are getting prepared for handling this new situation. How are we going to handle this new normal?Nothing concentrates the mind more than an existential threat. At our core, we all want to survive. We will check we have the fundamentals in place and learn to live without the non-essentials we used to rely on.Social distancing is vital to slowing the spread of COVID-19, but it also pushes against human beings’ fundamental need for connection with one another. Especially during difficult times, people feel an urge to commiserate, to comfort and be comforted by each other.We will see the best of human behavior. We will see extreme acts of kindness as our streets connect up and we look after the elderly. Volunteer networks will spring up across the country and across the world. We will witness the selflessness of our health workers who will continue to turn up, day after day, exhausted and exposed. We will owe them our lives.We will see the worst as well. Absolute greed as families hoard months supplies of tissue paper while others can’t find any. Price gouging. Thankfully, it will not stay that way for long.There will be misinformation and rumors, because these things thrive in a time of crisis. Social media aggravates this and gives oxygen to sensationalism/ quick cures. If you can, counteract the nonsense that is already spreading, and call-out the worst to get it shut down.We have known times of adversity before. And just as we have come through those difficult times in the past, we will come through this one. It’s who we are and it’s what we do. But before we complain too much about this new normal, how about taking time to count our blessings. Write down 3-5 things you are grateful for at the end of the day. They can be simple things like when someone smiled at you.This is the opportunity to be more thankful for what we have , to show courage and kindness and act with common sense. Our example matters.If we do that, we will sustain, survive individually and collectively. This is the time to slow down everything, act with empathy, kindness and reflect. Not sure when we will get this again. -Karthik GurumurthyRajinikanth Veeraraghavan:(June 28 1974- March 6 2020) Circa Nov 2015: Three Quarter Chinese restaurant , Church Street BangaloreThis is my good friend Rajinikanth (also known as Superstar) from school who went to be with Almighty today (March 6, 8:10 AM IST). Our school friends and I are still coping with this tragic news and we are recollecting all the good memories we have had with him. I have known him from VI grade and he was one of the math whiz who did very well in academics in school. He was in the same section from VI -IX grade. I took language classes and he was very thorough and complete in his approach towards acads and was jovial too. He lived in a place called Velachery which is quite far from where I used to live and thus I was not in regular touch with him. After high school, I found out from my other friends that he got admission to one of the premier institutes named BITS Pilani. All of us went our merry way to do our undergrad and lof us decided to come to US to pursue Grad school. While we were here, we tried reconnecting back with our school folks and tried to get back in touch with most of our friends. Slowly but surely we finished our grad school and got married and some of them started family as well. We got back in touch around 2005 and started writing back and forth via email. (Googlegroups). He was very quick to respond and started sharing the funny incidents in school and always took time to correspond via email. With most of my school folks, there was always a sinusoidal pattern where all of a sudden, all the team members felt the need to correspond sharing their nostalgic moments or about the birth of their son/daughter and suddenly it will soon ebb. In the year 2014, suddenly with the advent of WhatsApp groups, bunch of school folks started reconnecting and ended up finding almost of our school friends and it was like frenzy catching up with the school folks all over again. Thanks to the initiative of my classmates Maya , Ram Pai and other networkers we all got back in touch. After 1991, I got a chance to speak with Rajini only in 2014. I vividly remember running downstairs to call him during my lunch break and was so excited to hear his voice and we were so happy to catch up on lot of stuff. Needless to say that the lunch break was long. After that we were in regular touch and I am thankful that I got to meet lot of my school folks in 2015. Thanks to my school friend Anu s initiative, I was able to meet Rajini in person and had dinner together. It was wonderful to meet and that was the last time I met in person. That was the time I captured the picture posted above. We did talk over the phone regularly and Rajini went through lot of challenges at work and I tried my best to help him out with the best of my ability and was in regular touch till Oct /Nov 2019. Yesterday, all of a sudden, I received a message from a great friend of mine, GB that Rajini has been battling a health issue and is not looking good.I was totally shocked to hear that as I wasn t aware of the same and my friends started sharing about the health challenges that he had been facing last few months. I was at first incredibly confused. “How could this happen?” I wondered. Not comprehending in that moment that life does eventually lead to inevitable death. Even our highly intelligent, self-aware species can’t grasp the idea of a guaranteed future demise. I just couldn’t process it, until I finally did. Then the shock came. I stared at my computer in complete silence as my brain began to rewind ancient memories through my eyes and into my bones at a rapid fast-forward speed. Death is always an unexpected earthquake, regardless of whom it happens to or what your relationship was. The sudden impact of receiving this news made me aware that I had absolutely no idea he was suffering. Our group of school friends still prayed hoping a miracle can happen which will make him live longer. Few of my friends who live in Madras decided to meet him in the hospital and today morning as they reached the hospital found out that he just departed. As soon as I saw the message from Mana (Anand) from the hospital, I started to sob uncontrollably quietly. I texted a couple of high school pals who I remained tight with and asked them if they knew. They did. They expressed their shock and anguish as well. Like me, they seemed to be in regret that their grief was so consuming, considering they also were not aware of his health issue. I guess he has gone from being a super star to a shining star. This poem written by the unassuming anon. sums it all. The angels looked down from heaven one night.They searched for miles afar,And deep within the distanceThey could see a shining star.They knew that very instantThat the star was theirs to gain,So they took you up to heaven,Forever to remain.Look down on us from heaven.Keep us free from hurt and pain.You ll always be within my heartUntil we meet again. -AnonP.S; I have added a GoFundMe site supporting Rajini s family kids. Whatever you could help would help his family/kids. Thanks in advance! Tags: #Classof91, #KarthikGurumurthy, #RajinkanthVeeraraghavan, #SriSankaraSeniorSecondarySchool -Karthik GurumurthyWhat is common between a student, Business Analyst, Project Manager, Program Manager, and your profession. Irrespective of your chosen profession, one thing common is the ability to ask questions. I recently read a book Ask More written by Frank Sesno. He was a former CNN Anchor and White House correspondent and spent his career asking questions. In this book, he talks about the taxonomy of questions and explores the value of inquiry. Each chapter covers a different type of question, including diagnostic, bridging, confrontational, mission, interview, legacy, etc. and more.What I got from the book:Asking questions helps you open doors, solve problems and break down barriers.To use inquiry effectively, master asking different type of questions, including: Diagnostic questions help you get to the heart of the matter and zero in on the problem. Bridging questions act as connectors between a reluctant subject and needed answers. Confrontational questions demand accountability and uncover the truth. Mission questions identify shared values and goals. Interview questions can be helpful or can intimidate both employees and employers. When used correctly, interview questions produce meaningful revelations. Legacy questions give you the opportunity to reflect back on your life. The simple act of asking, of listening without comment or judgment, and letting a silence linger or a free-form thought coalesce invites a person to reflect or think out loud. -Karthik GurumurthyA young woman wanted to be a doctor, but couldn t get into a US medical school. A Cuban medical school accepted her, but she couldn t read or speak Spanish. She graduated within five years and now a physician. Authors Sampson Davis and Sharlee Jeter attribute her success to her having the stuff . They discuss the essential elements of this level of fortitude and share stories about people whose stuff enabled them to overcome life s challenges.The nuggets from this book:Life is tough. To stay on top of it, you need the stuff Using your stuff requires a mission statement and steadfast hope. Having the stuff means defying your limitations. Use your stuff to embrace the hard work.Remain alert to unexpected inspiration.With this level of fortitude, you can ignore fear and turn negatives into positives.The stuff is inside you. We need to activate it. If you can re-evaluate a situation after experiencing trauma, look past the pain and find the positive elements of the experience, you are better positioned to grow from it. -Karthik GurumurthyYour time and attention have never been more valuable. Tech companies vie for your attention and trade it as a commodity. They lure you into increasing your time on their platforms, and exploit neuroscientific discoveries to manipulate your online behavior. You succumb to the barrage of distractions, losing focus and creativity. Digital anthropologist Brian Solis noticed the demise of his own creativity and developed the Lifescale method in response. He provides a framework for recapturing your focus, rekindling your creative spark, and igniting a deep sense of purpose and well being.People suffering addiction to digital devices often drop out of real life to sleepwalk, zombie-like, through a virtual existence. They lose the ability to focus, meet goals and fulfill responsibilities. The detrimental effects of never disconnecting from the digital world include decreasing attention spans, loss of empathy, and less energy for creative activities or critical thinking. Productivity drops as workers spend an average of two hours a day on their smartphones. The time you spend on apps, networks, social media and texts does not make you happier. It erodes your sense of well-being, increases stress and anxiety, and engenders feelings of loneliness and self-doubt.The author has clearly spent a lot of time thinking through the optimum way to deal with the stress that can overwhelm us through being constantly interrupted by alerts, emails, messages on a plethora of platforms from Slack and WhatsApp to Twitter and Facebook.The author provides a framework to help you navigate your way through your work life and personal life while still being able to be connected and avoid the inevitable burn out we all suffer from leading a digital life. As he says we ve all, somewhere along the way, have become distracted. Maybe we don t realize quite how much our personalities have changed due to the advancement in technology but they undeniably have.Read this book, reclaim your attention, break the cycle of instant gratification to think creatively and critically once again. Learn to waste less time on distractions and spend more time with your loved ones! Happiness and success are possible if you live consciously.This book helps you build good habits, live with a strong sense of purpose and make technology work for you, not the other way around. -Karthik GurumurthyThere are few books that I like to go back once or twice a year to reflect on and how I can get better. One of those books is Stephen Covey s The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People . One of the concepts in the book that I found very interesting was that of the circle of influence. For those of you who have not gotten a chance to read the book, I shall briefly explain the same, essentially the aspects to improve productivity.The core of the concept is that broadly, everything that has an effect on you, impacts you and is of consequence to you can be divided into two broad circles. One is called the circle of influence, which comprises all those things that you have an influence on, and the other is the circle of concern, which comprises things that impact you directly or indirectly, but which you can t influence. These are two concentric circles- the inner circle, the smaller circle, which comprises things that you can influence, and the bigger circle that has things on which you don t have influence.This is in context to work.You dream of being very successful in your career, but to be successful, one must deliver high quality and high quantity of output at work. You must deliver results which are compelling so that people make note of them, and thus create a good reputation and long-term career for yourself. For you to deliver those results, there are set of things which are within your sphere of influence, in your circle of influence. Likewise, there are things that impact your ability to deliver results at work that are not in your influence and those are in the outer circle, the circle of concern. Whenever I set a target to work at, I measure consistently and review periodically and reflect on how I can get better. Whenever I spend any amount of time on my circle of concern, I realized it is a major productivity killer and an extraordinary waste of my precious time. Whenever I spent time in my circle of concern, I felt irritated, angry, frustrated, at times incapable of creating results and feeling inadequate- a whole set of negative emotions.I have observed from all the productive leaders I have had the opportunity to witness, that they spend all their time on things to which they make a difference, where they have an influence. The benefits of this habit go beyond just productivity. The more you focus on your circle of influence, the more it grows, and slowly and steadily, it starts to cover more of the areas that earlier fell under your circle of concern. To increase productivity, let us focus relentlessly on whatever is in our circle of influence. Rest will take care by itself. -Karthik Gurumurthy Everything must be done yesterday. Ideas need to have been thought of last month and you’re expected to see 4 years into the future. This is the ridiculous notion that the next generation is told to think, act, and work towards. In this new normal, we post about our life on an hourly basis for our “friends to validate our choices and actions. On social media, doing things in private is almost considered “weird”. We reach out with passive aggressive posts hoping for the sympathy and/or support we seek.We compete online for the most ‘likes’ for our achievements and adventures (which are sometimes exaggerated, posed or fabricated), and we post about our challenges as if they’re the worst imaginable experiences. We talk about our routine commute to work or school as if it’s something special or something that needs to be recognized by our so called social media friends.I AM HERE TO SAY STOP IT! There’s no rush to “get there”. Why are we in such a hurry to get to the finish line? Time is still time; still equally as valuable now as it was 40 or 50 years ago. So many people look to others and ask: What is the finish line? Who decides who is winning? What is winning? How can I show others I am succeeding? It really doesn’t matter what others think, you need to answer and define these yourself. In the future, the leaders that will succeed far beyond the rest are those that have patience, love, and live in this moment – Each moment!What if Mahatma Gandhi could have tweeted? Let’s imagine what that would have looked like using an expert from his journal:“Just got back from the Dandi March. I want World Sympathy in this battle of Right against Might. Now, here’s an actual post I read on Twitter: I just had a cup of tea with almond milk. It was one of the worst decisions I’ve ever made in my life.”I am sorry Mahatma. We are pretty entitled aren’t we? Maybe I don’t appreciate my days fully. I need to remind myself that I have it good, Really good!This blog isn’t to offend anyone. I am guilty as charged. I am saying we need to slow down. We need to appreciate the here and the now. We need to stop documenting our lives for the approval of someone else, someone we may not even really know. Be appreciative of what you have. Tell your problems, your challenges to a real human, a close friend, not the world. For those that travel, I get it – it’s exciting. It’s a privilege to travel, and something I get to do. Yet I have stopped posting about getting on planes or checking into nice hotels. I am guilty of that too. But not any more. If you want admiration and accolades from others, do amazing things, create an astounding impact in the world. Let others tell your story for you, it will mean more.If you are sharing stories of cool humans or new interesting experiences then I say, “Do it!” Get excited and share the love because it is good to show human connections and wonderful accomplishments.Be proud of your accomplishments. If what you’re doing is of value to others, creates Joy or provides knowledge, SHARE! People will want to celebrate with you. But if it’s just to gain acknowledgement of what you do or how “great” your life is, maybe it’s time to opt out of this ‘post and brag’ behavior. Today is today. Live in it. You are blessed.I often need to remind myself of that too. Will use this opportunity to take a break from social media as well to see if I can practice what I preach.“A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.” – Winston ChurchillWhat we focus on expands. It is a choice. Take every thought captive and redirect.Who is in charge of your mind? If you don t lead your mind, you ll find yourself enslaved to the automation of your younger days. Our minds develop patterns. When we lead ourselves, we disrupt thought patterns that don t serve us well. -Karthik GurumurthyFew months back, I passed an exam called PMI-ACP. This is for experienced Agile Project Managers who wanted to get certified by the prestigious Project Management Institute. Even though I had the experience of leading agile teams for several years, I had to undergo training for the same to take this exam. I took an online course which was offered by Joseph Phillips. He is an outstanding trainer and what I loved about his training was, his videos were short, succinct and to the point. On top of it, he is always encouraging, very positive and says Keep moving forward .. Thanks Joe for your outstanding training and words of encouragement. Be interested, not interesting.Checking your ego at the door and simply just listening is incredibly empowering, both for you and whoever you’re meeting with.The less I talk, the more I feel in control. If I’m 20 minutes in to a monologue about something, barely taking a breath let alone a question from the audience, how can I possibly be sure I’m on the right track?Humility, empathy and listening are key skills to develop as a Program/Project Manager along with the ability to use silence and pauses as tools to control dialogue and it’s outcome.Indeed, as someone more introverted, being in control by listening comes much more naturally than trying to dominate and drive a conversation through words alone.Maybe it’s just me.. but I find it works well for my style. -Karthik GurumurthyWhenever we reach an uncharted territory, we need to remind ourselves of Joseph Campbell s words: The cave you fear to enter holds the treasure you seek. We need to own the fear, find the cave, and write a new ending for yourself, for the people you are meant to serve and support and for your team. We need to choose courage over comfort. We need choose the great adventure of being brave and afraid..at the same time. Devastated! I am devastated that Kobe, his 13-year-old daughter Gianna, and seven others were killed in a helicopter crash in Calabasas, California, today morning. My heart is with the loved ones of everyone who perished in that tragic incident. He was truly an inspiration to many.Remember shaking hands with this legend back in 2004-2005 at the Vons store Newport Coast between my tutoring sessions. He was easy to talk to and was very approachable. What is special about Kobe? He constantly worked on getting better.. Constantly worked on himself..Really fearless , Laker. Can t believe this news..I definitely wish this is not true. #WillmissyouMamba #ReturnIfPossible -Karthik Gurumurthy Thankful to lead an incredible team in Amex. It was a great opportunity to learn and serve an amazing, passionate, sharp team of Engineers and thoroughly enjoyed the experience. As a TPM (Technical Program Manager) while we finish one project/program, we always reflect on the lessons learned from the sprints/iterations/ projects/ programs. Likewise end of the year is a good time to reflect on lessons learned and how to make 2020 year better.What are we thankful for? It is not enough to just count our blessings but to rehearse, relive and revisit them constantly. One of the things my wife does very well is to write thank you letters and she does that with our son on a regular basis. Lot of times, it is easy to get complacent and tend to take things for granted.What did the past year teach us? What are the good things that we are going to carry forward to 2020? What are the things that didn t go too well which we will improve upon in 2020.Over the years, I am realizing the value of simplifying life is to focus on the right priorities and remove the things in the agenda that doesn t add value. We all need to realize and reduce the time we spend on less important things/trivial which doesn t add value from our day-to-day routine. Past will equal future if we do not change.One of the things that I learned from my boss ( Dr. SV) is to always have a learning agenda. Whenever he had free time, he consumed himself with learning new technologies, getting his hands dirty and implementing what he learned. What do we need to learn or want to learn in 2020 to move on to the next level? Cultivating curiosity, expanding intellectual bandwidth sets a great foundation to move forward in 2020.2018 was awesome with regards to exercise and diet. With traveling and staying away from home for extended period of time in 2019, diet and exercise got really messed up. Developing a proper routine in 2020 with diet and exercise will pave way to better health.Every day, asking ourselves “How can I be of greater service?” Volunteering to help prevents self absorption and serves a higher purpose. Who and how can we serve in little and big ways in the coming year?Success is never an accident. Improving requires intent and we need to work on it on a day-t0-day basis. Let us make the 2020 the best year of our lives. Happy New Year 2020! -Karthik GurumurthyI just finished watching the Netflix series “Inside Bill’s Brain and I love how it ended with a quote from Mary Gates and it is worth sharing the same:“Each one of us has to start out with developing his or her own definition of success. And when we have these specific expectations of ourselves, it’s more likely we will live up to them. And ultimately, it’s not what you get or even what you give; it’s what you become.” -Karthik GurumurthyI have been watching the show Jeopardy for the last 20+ years. Why am I talking about the show now?Let me give a blurb about this gentleman James Holzhauer. He has been unstoppable for the last 32 shows and his total winnings were $2,464,216 until he lost to a librarian from Chicago- Emma Boettcher yesterday. Eleven times during his winning streak, he went a whole game without buzzing in incorrectly. The way James took control of the game for the last 32 days left most of us in awe. I am sharing today what I learned by watching and observing James which all of us can benefit from.Don t just follow the pack. Most players begin at the top of the board, where the more straightforward questions are located and work their way down. They do this to get some wins under their belt. That is not the case with James. He starts at the bottom of the board, so he can accumulate the wealth needed to make significant bets when he hits a daily double. He also does this to unsettle his opponents. What s the lesson here? Just because everybody does it doesn t make it right. We need to be fearless. We need to stop looking for easy tasks and it pays well to go the extra mile to get challenging work.Be relentless. Every now and then James answers a question incorrectly but when it happens, he doesn t dwell on it and lick his wounds for a long period of time. Instead he keeps charging ahead to the next question.Playing to win. There is a huge difference between playing to win and playing not to lose. James does have to play defense, as his offense is so fine-tuned, others can t keep up. We have to create a strategy that will put us in a position of dominance.Creating a buzz. Everyone who watches this show talks about James. Is anyone talking about you/your work in that way? We have got to change this and we have got to do that now.Go all in. I love it when James hits a daily double, and when asked how much he’d like to bet, he cups his hands and pushes them forward while saying, “all in.” This guy knows that to win big, he has to bet big. He’s confident that he’ll come up with the right answer, which he did! Let us think about your work..Are you all in or partly in or sorta in? That makes all the difference. Isn t it?Continuously upgrading the knowledge base. Few weeks back, the program host Alex Trebek asked James how he prepared himself for ‘Jeopardy!’. He said he spent time in the children’s section of the library reading children’s books. Proper Prior Preparation is the key. He had prepared himself to succeed. How are we preparing ourselves? Are we still talking about what we did 10 years back or are we constantly upgrading ourselves?James kept winning and dominated for 32 days mainly because of the above factors. For us to be in the cutting edge in our chosen profession, we need to do the same and let us challenge ourselves to get better everyday. Let us do it! -Karthik GurumurthyIn high school at one point of time, I struggled with Math. Try as I may I just never seemed to get the grades I desired. I was attending all the classes, doing my homework on time, studying for my tests and yet falling short. I got increasingly discouraged. One session my Math teacher NR said “What matters is that you put in your 100%, the result you get may or may not be the best, but that does not matter.Hard work will always reap rewards. It is the best piece of advice I have ever received but it is also the most difficult to follow. We live in a time where results matter most. We are being judged by our test scores, GPA, class standing, school ranking. We are result oriented. When we put in efforts we expect results in accordance. But sometimes it is good to take a step back and enjoy the journey. It is good to appreciate ourselves even when things do not go our way. Efforts matter more than results.

TAGS:Striving towards Excellence KarthikGurumurthy StrivingtowardsExcellence Entrepre

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