This was inspired by Ramesh Narayan, a well-known captain, and evangelist in the fields of advertising, management, and other pasture, in his customary succinct and interesting style.
It is a genuinely inspirational tale as well because, after all, it concerns a little-favorite candidate who, despite never having studied management or advertising, over 24 years, developed a prosperous advertising agency. Who achieved success in all of his endeavors, including literature, photography, business, industry efforts, and more. He spent his whole working life penning advertising-related pieces for prestigious newspapers, retired at age 50, and then began anew as a professional in the field and society. For you, that is only a portion of Ramesh Narayan.
31 gratifying episodes will make up this series. Ramesh discusses his life, what success means to him, and what led him to where he is today in each chapter. Additionally, he provides a wealth of useful insights drawn from his experiences.
I wed the woman I had always wanted to marry in 1986. Devi. She was an American native who completed her engineering degree at the University of Pennsylvania and worked on the missiles’ navigation systems before deciding to leave it all behind and relocate to the warm city of Mumbai to start a new life with me.
They claim that you marry a family, not an individual. Since Devi’s mother lived in the USA and tragically passed away around 18 months after we were married, I never had the chance to get to know her properly.
Her affectionately referred to father, Ramu, was a diamond. At the age of 40, he moved to the USA to begin a new life. His education includes an engineering degree, an MBA, and a Ph.D. in accounting, and he joined Drexel University as a lecturer before becoming dean of the business school. Ramu (I called him that too) readily filled that role for me after my father passed away. He was genuinely happy for me in every little thing, and we could talk for hours about the majority of topics.
Homi Bhabha, who is always willing to help, Mahendru Gursahani, who is quiet but sympathetic, Ajit Wadhwani, who is silent, Gopal Ramourti, who is knowledgeable, and Pratibha Pai, who is outgoing and frighteningly effective. Apart from Pradeep Guha and Srinivasan Swamy, who I have learned to rely on for a variety of things, these are personal pals.
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