Incubating
Part II
Two weeks
ago, I wrote a blog titled Incredible India: Improving the Koenig Solutions Brand
– Part I, since then, I have thought about what to include in what
would become Part II and I have decided it should be about improving your
Koenig Solutions experience.
After all
that I have written about my experiences in India, I believe given the
opportunity again, I would avail myself of Koenig Solutions services if their
repertoire of courses extends to include Enterprise Architecture though that
would also require getting trainers out of industry rather than just having
people with book knowledge of seriously impacting concepts.
Besides,
there are other courses that might be of interest too as one tries to keep in
line with market developments and establish a niche area of expertise.
Very useful
advice
There are
however a few key things that will make your experience worthwhile one that I
share here comes from someone who is quite conversant with the system and the
way things get done in India.
This is what
he had to say, “This is India. However much we strive to root out this sort
of stuff, ubiquitous chaos, poor English and even carelessness on behalf of
some of the lower staff has always been and will always be intrinsically part
of the India experience of most of our students.
It takes a
while to get used to and find the right mental disposition to tackle. As a rule
of thumb, do not take sloppiness from anyone but under all circumstances
remain calm and firm about stuff that is not to your liking. Call in the center
manager if necessary.
Do not depend on no one. Most staff will never take any initiative whatsoever
and will expect you to do so. If people don't understand you, they won't admit
to it, thus adding to confusion. When in doubt or unhappy about the answer
given or services provided - especially about issues pertaining to hygiene and
health, ask to talk to someone else or take it to the reception desk or center
manager directly.
Adjust your notion of time. Whereas most of us are punctual on time related
issues, the majority of Indian folks are on IFT (Indian Flexible Time) which
tends to drive us totally mad on our first India visit. Never wait till
the last minute to make arrangements for something. Anything asked for less
than 24 hours before deadline will most probably fail as most people are
unfamiliar with concepts like timely resolution or urgency.
These days, I've gotten used to all things you describe and by finding ways to
work around them by adjusting my mindset to how things work in India.”
I think this
should be on the front page of every tour guide or brochure you get concerning
India, it will go a long way to helping you adjust to the severe culture shock
you might experience on your visit to India.
Your
preparations
In terms of
preparations to go to India, these are the things you probably need to note.
Whilst most people using Koenig Solutions get a Tourist Visa, be prepared to
consider getting a Business Visa and if your stay will be more than 30 days you
might have to get an Entry Visa.
If based in
Europe obtain information about Koenig Solutions’ bank account in Belgium
rather than travelling with thousands of Euros, Pounds or Dollars of
Traveller’s cheques.
On arrival
in India, if you are unsatisfied with anything, let the management know. Do not
be fobbed off with excuses or apologies if you are not satisfied with the
proposed resolution. At times, you might be offered compensation which in
Indian terms might be huge but in general terms, is paltry if not insulting, be
ready to stand your ground and escalate – you paid for a service, get the
service you paid for.
Insist on
these, all the time
Regarding
course material, your books should be shrink-wrapped, if not, they are
second-hand books, do not sign the receipts until you have been provided with
new books.
For the
curriculum delivered from PowerPoint slides, I have found it is quite difficult
to take useful and relevant notes – insist on having those PowerPoint slides
printed out at no extra cost for you to annotate throughout your training. You
cannot annotate electronic copies and to be honest any decent PowerPoint-based
training material provides hard copies.
For each
test-based curriculum that you take, allow for at least 2 days after the course
for study and preparation for the tests. Whilst some might be able to walk into
tests and pass immediately after the training, others trying that might find
that they will be repeating tests before scoring a pass.
If you have
non-lecture days and need to study, the provided accommodations can be quite
Spartan; I have however not found out if public libraries are better equipped
for this.
Other useful
tips
For the
cost, I will advise that you hire the mobile Internet dongle because Internet
connectivity at both the training centre and the accommodations can be patchy
at times.
If you
obtain an Indian SIM Card ask that mobile data be enabled as part of the package
if you need to use your smartphone to surf the Internet.
Get a
TravelCard if you use the New Delhi metro, it means you do not have to join
interminably long queues for tokens to travel.
New Delhi of
all the Koenig Solutions Training Centres is nearest to Agra some 200
kilometres south this is where the Taj Mahal is located but the road to Agra
has Mathura – the birthplace of Krishna with the great statue of goddess Durga,
Sikandra where the Tomb of Akbar the Great is – the grandfather of Shah Jahan
who built the Taj Mahal, a good deal of the Agra Fort and the Red Fort back in
New Delhi.
It is better
to get Koenig Solutions to book a train to Agra or arrange with other
colleagues to book a more comfortable bus than the Koenig city transit buses which
will also allow you to stop at these other places than just the journey to the
Taj Mahal where you are also put in the hands of unscrupulous restaurants or
persons ready to fleece you. If you have amongst you someone who speaks Hindi
you can get much done and if you have to be really assertive, have one amongst
you who is articulate, forceful and insistent on getting the results without
backing down.
Be
streetwise
When it
comes to food, be careful, circumspect and wise. Cooked and cooked well is important,
keep off cold vegetarian dishes if you have no resistance to the local bugs.
Most visitors pick up Traveller’s Diarrhoea, so pack your Imodium take lots of
yoghurt/curd and eat lots of bananas. Lassi is a yoghurt drink that can settle
your tummy quite well but don’t even venture Bhang Lassi – it contains cannabis,
but you might get more than a high, you could end up in hospital paying bills
as part of a medical scam.
For lunch
you usually have the choice of McDonald's, Subway, Dominoes or Hakka, then you
have to decide between vegetarian and non-vegetarian dishes – I stuck with rice
in most cases. Haldirams which is a purely vegetarian chain has many choices
but be careful what you choose and be sure you have the stomach for that
choice.
When
shopping, only use reputable shops, it is better to see the price tags up front
than attempt to haggle and then realise you have just become a victim of
daylight robbery. If you don’t know cashmere you might end up with a fine
hybrid of polyester and nylon, the real factory markings are not on the edges
of the cloth, if the bales were taken off the shelf, that chalk-like factory
marking with the true composition of cloth would have been cut off.
Always
negotiate up front for services that do not have a clear price tag – in the
end, India can be fun, but you have to be aware, smart and really streetwise
with a presence, so you do not get taken for granted and end up the worse for
it. Be aggressive if you must and walk away if you can. Click on the Koenig
Solutions label below this post to see my other related posts.
2 comments:
Thank You
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