Friday, September 26, 2008

Why SIEMENS is better than WIPRO

When I woke up my son Aditya on a Saturday morning he started the day with a question "Appa! do you know why Siemens is better than Wipro" (These questions are nothing new to me). Puzzled (and excited because I knew the answer!!) I started giving definitions like "Siemens is a very large corporate, global company, lacs of employees, billions of revenue, diversified industry etc.,"

He patiently listened and said "No....Appa"
I was really worried about my ability to answer a very simple question.
after a brief pause he continued...."Appa! those are not the real reasons..........The real reason is because Siemens makes lots of Trains (Earlier last year he had seen lot of Siemens made trains in Switzerland), that two Zurich Trains.....that two DOUBLE DECKER trains........but...but....Wipro makes only "DIAPERS".
I slowly started fainting.....

Moral of the Story

Date: 25-Sep-2008

I was loudly reading one of the stories written by Sudha Murthy to my seven year old son. The story goes like this,

"Sudha surprised to find a tribal boy named Hanumanthappa whose father earns less Rs. 40/- a day to have topped 8th in a state level examination and wanted to help him.  She had sent a letter to the boy asking him to come and meet her. She also sends some money to him so that he could visit her foundation wearing new clothes. The boy later shows at her office and after a little hesitation expresses his interests to join a nearby college and wanted Sudha to fund his education for approx Rs. 300/- a month. Sudha promptly sends him money for the next 6 months. To her surprise at the end of 6 months she recieves a cover with some currencies along with a letter. The boy had mentioned that he did not spend Rs. 600/- as for the last two months the college did not operate. Sudha was touched by this gesture and closes the story by saying that "honesty doesn't come from the rank, power or money but truly from the heart"

At the end of the story I'd asked my son whether he understood the storyline and asked him to tell the moral of the story. I was actually expecting him to talk about helping the poor and needy or on the aspect of simple expectations from the poor little boy and or about the honesty part.

My son looked through my eyes and said "Yes! I understood the story and in my understanding there where 5 letters exchanged between Sudha and Hanumanthappa"

Moral of the Story: "Though he behaves like an adult many times I've realized that my son is still a little boy"