IIPM Admission

Showing posts with label MBA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MBA. Show all posts

Thursday, March 15, 2012

IIPM: A leader in Academic excellence

IIPM being a leader in Academic excellence is a part of this growth and is serving its better than the best MBA graduates to biggest names in India Inc. over the last 35years of its presence. Our students can be found in every function of an organization in Fortune 500 companies with no geographical boundaries. In addition IIPM now with its international placement offices has started to focus on international placements as we have seen our students after being employed for some years in national locations move out for prospects abroad and are working at senior levels in countries like Singapore, America, Australia, Dubai, London, Canada and the list is endless. In the current year the highest national package for an IIPM student was Rs. 12 lacs and seven students were selected. Our national recruiters are leaders in their industries like Consulting; Price Waterhouse Coopers, Deloitte Consulting…, Banking; Citibank, ICICI Bank, HSBC, Standard Chartered, HDFC, ABN Amro, Kotak Bank, American Express…, Financial and Research services; Evalue serve.com,Copal Partners, WNS Global, Pipal Research, IMRB, Karvy Consultants, Prudential ICICI, G.E Money, Citifinancials…, Consumer products; Eveready Industries, Asian paints, HLN, Berger paints, LG, Bluestar ... , Insurance; ICICI Prudential, Bajaj Allianz, Met Life, Tata AIG, Aviva Life, Birla Sunlife… , Information Technology and services ; Oracle Corporation, HP, IBM, Intel, HCL, Hutchison… And many more industry leaders like Yamaha Motors, Essar Group, DLF universal, Shaw Wallace, Sahara India, Reliance Communications, Anand rathi, NEI, Bharat Shell, Malwa Group…

Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM: What is E-PAT?
Planman Technologies is Leaders in educational publishing solutions
Management Guru Arindam Chaudhuri Dean Business School IIPM

IIPM Mumbai Campus
IIPM - Admission Procedure

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

IIPM: Leading consistently on multiple fronts



The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM) has scored consistently high in this year survey. Not only has it retained IIPM stands top in DNA National B School Surveyits place in the overall top ten rankings with an eighth position (advancing one level higher as compared to last year's survey) but it is also topping the entire list when it comes to international exposure. IIPM also features in the top twelve list across the remaining parameters when it comes to curriculum (11th position), intellectual impact (9th position), image of the institute (6th position), placement (11th position), industry interaction (6th position), infrastructure (8th position) and the potential to network (12th position).

IIPM has so far claimed the superiority of its Entrepreneur-ship program neither by the size of its campus, nor by the entry level salary of its passouts, but by its qualitatively superior and intellectually stimulating academic program. The IIPM course is a 22 month, 1944 hour course which includes in depth studies of national economic processes and ways to regulate its parameters to achieve higher growth rate of GDP ensuring higher growth of market segments within the national economy as well as higher growth of income of all sections of the people, including those who are below the poverty line.

IIPM's Entrepreneurship program also develops certain entrepreneurial qualities in program participants. These helps to remove aversion to calculated risk taking, imbued with ambition beyond normal career growth. Personal ambition in tune with social vision makes an entrepreneur reach out beyond boundaries again and again. Work remains no work, but hobby. Failures are looked upon as inevitable intermediate stages to success.

The IIPM programme further includes a compulsory specialisation in Marketing- wherein all the 20 plus papers of Marketing are compulsory for all students. Additionally students chose another elective like Finance or H.R. etc. This stems from the firm conviction that IIPM holds that business is marketing.

What perhaps is the most difficult part of the IIPM progaramme to be explained in words is the tremendous change in personality and life on the whole the IIPM course brings about thanks to its special focus on Executive Communication which is a 4 credit per trimester course running throughout the course duration. As a part of this course students typically have to participate compulsorily in more than 40 competitive debates and extempores under the eagle eyes of IIPMs world-class communication faculty members. The end result is a supremely confident and extremely smart personality which can speak from any public platform fearlessly.

IIPM also offers a unique Global Opportunity and Threat Analysis (GOTA) program, through which students are taken abroad for a period of 10-20 days, wherein the students get to attend lecture sessions at leading academic institutions and organisations like World Trade Organisation, United Nations, World Bank, Credit Suisse, Nestle, etc. This allows them to widen their horizon in understanding various forces of globalisation through experiential learning.

Further, under the Global Outreach Program, IIPM invites distinguished faculties from leading global institutions like Harvard, Wharton, Columbia, Chicago, Yale, London School of Economics, Oxford, Cambridge, IMD Lausanne, INSEAD, etc., to come down to India to interact with IIPM students.

The IIPM programme is today regarded as the only course with a wider coverage than MBA courses taught anywhere else in the world because of its integration with National Economic Planning and a compulsory Marketing Specialization making it the most intellectually stimulating course in India. In the light of globalization, IIPM aims to create a new generation of entrepreneurial managers, who can face with confidence emerging challenges of international markets, while remaining committed to remove massive poverty masses within a generation.


Wednesday, July 13, 2011

IIMs look at the manufacturing industry for jobs

IIPM Prof Rajita Chaudhuri on ‘The Magic of Number 3 in Marketing’

The slower-than-expected growth in the country's factory output may send markets in a tizzy every now and then. But, management graduates passing out of premier B-schools are betting big on manufacturing. Volatility in the global financial markets is pushing fresh graduates to brick and mortar industries.

An increasing number of students passing out from the Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) are choosing careers in manufacturing over traditional finance roles post-slowdown. On an average, 10% more students across IIMs have taken up jobs in core sectors this year as compared to previous years. This is likely to go up further over the next three years, say experts.

Traditionally, MBAs prefer services sector with finance, marketing and consulting roles. The perception towards manufacturing industry is that of being too technical. But, with multinationals from the manufacturing space with projects in India opening doors to fresh MBAs, the game is changing. "There is an increased focus on infrastructure-related developments and acceleration in the manufacturing industry leading to an increase in demand for students from various specialisations," says Kanwal Kapil, chairman (placements), Management Development Institute.

No wonder, IIM Ahmedabad (IIM-A) recently partnered with Samsung India Electronics to motivate students to look at the manufacturing industry for jobs. While IIM-A has several companies sponsoring students, Samsung will be the first manufacturing company to have a tie-up with the institute. IIM Lucknow (IIM-L) plans to invite more manufacturing firms in 2012 after seeing a good appetite for this sector during its final placements of 2011. "The improving economic situation is sure to create want for more managerial talent in the manufacturing sector," said a placement committee member at IIM-L.

And, IIM Kozhikode (IIM-K) sources live projects to give students an experience of the sector. G Sridhar, chair-placements at IIM-K, says, "There is an increased interest in the operations and general management verticals, which are focused towards the manufacturing sector. More firms operating in this sector are recognising the talent pools in IIMs."


Monday, January 10, 2011

When foreign shores beckon


Prof Rajita Chaudhuri follow some off-beat trends like organizing make up sessions

In post-liberalisation India, the dreams of the youth have probably become too big to be contained within the geographical or cultural boundaries of the nation. So in their quest for recognition in the global arena, Indian students are going places

There is something about an academic degree from a foreign university. From the perspective of Indian students, that is. The higher education infrastructure in India is quite good, and by any measure it is far better than it is in other South Asian countries. Going by the standard and quality of education, India is clearly the leader in the higher education realm in the region. However, all that does not seem to steal the lustre away from a foreign university (read a Western university) stamp, no matter how little known the university may be. The UK, the US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand are generally the hubs of such universities where every year thousands of students from across the globe land to realise their dreams. Of course, institutes like Cambridge, Oxford and Harvard are not being discussed here. Our focus is on universities that border on anonymity.

Every year thousands of Indian students sign up to study abroad. If the mushrooming consultancy-for-studying-abroad firms across the country and their blooming business is anything to go by, the craze among the students to head to foreign climes is on the rise. That takes us back to the opening line of this piece: Do students go for foreign universities and institutes just because it sounds glamorous? The answer to this question can't be a simple yes or no. A number of things go through a student's mind before he signs up to study abroad. Remember that the cost involved is pretty high.

People who aspire to study abroad can be broadly categorised into three sections. First, there is the elitist section consisting of people who have a lot of money, and despite having made their money in India, do not consider the country good enough to trust it with their pampered children's education. So they send them abroad to acquire a 'good education'. And it helps them in more ways than one.

Second, there are students who excel in academics but somehow fail to make it to the top academic institutes in India such as the IITs and IIMs. They mostly seek, and get, admissions in good foreign universities. The third category comprises students with low percentages in board/university examinations. They usually do not get the courses of their liking in India and settle for a little known foreign university instead because there is not much difference in the cost involved. A one-year post-graduate programme in a university in Australia, UK, US or Canada costs about Rs 10-15 lakh, including the boarding and lodging expenses, which is almost equivalent to a two-year programme in India in a good private college. There are other factors to reckon with. 'In India most post-graduate degrees are two-year programmes while in Australia or New Zealand you get the same degree in just one year,' says Neha Khurana, admission manager, Fateh Education, a consultancy firm based in Delhi. 'Besides, in India education is more theory-based while in a foreign university the curricula are more activity-based and you get more exposure,' she adds. And then there is another advantage ' you can hardly fail in the exams there. 'I have never heard in my five-year career that anybody flunked in a foreign university,' says Khurana.

The working visa one gets in countries such as Australia, New Zealand and Canada after procuring a degree from a university there is a big lure for many. It paves the way to settling abroad. 'One of the strong positive points of studying abroad is that you get a chance to work simultaneously. This kind of work-and-study culture that gives you a practical grip over the subject you are studying has not quite developed in India as yet,' says Chandigarh-based Navdeep Kaur, who is currently working in New Zealand after completing her MBA (Human Resources) from Mt. Albert University.

Navdeep plans to permanently settle in New Zealand if she gets a good job there. But not all want to settle abroad, especially those who have well-settled family businesses here. Some actually do not want to leave their native places. V. Madhan Gorky is an example. After completing his M.S., followed by a Ph.D from Queensland University, he got a decent job with good remuneration in Australia. But he had his own dreams. So he returned to India and is working as a professor in Anna University.

Sometimes, certain study options are not available in India. Syed Asim Ali, a working journalist based in Delhi, wanted to go for research on conflict resolution in Kashmir. But he did not get a guide for the subject at any of the universities in India and had to go over to the UK to pursue his M.Phil on the subject. 'I tried in a few universities in India that were offering higher studies on this topic. Pondicherry University flatly said no after they came to know of the topic. At JNU, a professor was interested but she also backed out after her department discouraged her,' says Ali. Recognition of a foreign degree is another issue. T. Saravana Kumar from Tamil Nadu went to Russia a few years back to study medicine after he failed to make it to a medical college in India 'because of the reservation policy'. He did MD from St. Petersberg University and is currently a physician in a government primary health centre in Maraimalai Nagar.

Although the Medical Council of India recognised his medical degree, he had to undergo a test before that. Besides, his post-graduate degree is treated here as equivalent to an M.B.B.S. 'I want to do post-graduation in medicine and would have to do an MD here all over again. I am preparing for it,' says Saravana Kumar.

However, few care about the recognition part. Ranjith Krishnan, a young Keralite who did his M.Sc. (called M.Tech here) from Paisley University, Scotland, says he does not know if a degree from Paisley University is recognised in India or not. 'Students going back to India after completing their studiies somehow get placements there,' he says. P. Thampi, the father of a student, Vineeth Thampi, studying MSc at the Dubai campus of Hariot Watt University (Scotland), holds similar views. In post-globalisation India, parents and students by and large are for quality education. The question of recognition arises only when you go for government jobs. But these days people are not that crazy for government jobs,' he says. Fat salaries and opportunities in the private sector are driving forces behind the craze for foreign degrees. Private firms these days are not too bothered about the recognition part of foreign certificates. If you can deliver, there is no dearth of employment opportunities. The grass is greener...

Navdeep Kaur, MBA (Human Resources), Mt Albert University, New Zealand

'I had completed one-year diploma in business management (Human Resources) in the year 2007 from Symbosis Institute, Pune. After that I got job in a consultancy firm in the HR department at Chandigarh. Although the salary was good for a beginner like me, but somehow I was not satisfied with the job. Then I decided to go for a masters degree in the same field. As I searched for good management schools in India and looked at their fee structure, I found out that the fee was very high. Then I thought why I should spend so much money here? Instead, I decided to go abroad for higher studies. I chose Mt Albert University, New Zealand. According to the immigration policy of New Zealand, after completion of the degree, you get a two-year working visa. I think students run after foreign degrees because of these reasons:

Firstly, they get the chance to work while studying there. As in India this kind of work and study culture is not very developed.

Secondly, they get the chance to establish themselves there.

Thirdly, there is no reservation, corruption, and favouritism in the admission process in these universities, and later in the job market.'


For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM BBA MBA Institute: Student Notice Board
Run after passion and not money, says Arindam Chaudhuri
Award Conferred To Irom Chanu Sharmila By IIPM

IIPM Lucknow – News article in Economic Times and Times of India
IIPM Prof Rajita Chaudhuri's Snaps
IIPM Prof Arindam Chaudhuri on Our Parliament and Parliamentarians' Work