Preparing for the INK Conference 2012 , Pune

The final countdown begins. We are just one day away from INK2012 and the Pune Marriott Hotel and Convention Center is buzzing with activity.

The INK team and volunteers are working away from the production office and beyond, fellows and speakers are polishing there talks on stage, and the stage crew are perfecting the cameras, sound and lighting.  Backstage a jungle of electric wires, multiple projectors illuminating the ginormous stage screen, and the tech crew are ensuring all the key electronic connections to light up the INK2012 stage fall smoothly into place.

The impressive stage, designed by our much loved INKster Raghava KK – where the speakers will deliver their talk of a lifetime – will be unveiled shortly – we don’t want to spoil the surprise :)

This is what INK Curator & Host, Lakshmi Pratury has to say on the chosen theme for this year – ‘Designing the future — Now’ 

Eleanor Roosevelt said,“The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.” We, at INK, agree. INK is all about people – mavericks, out of box thinkers, geniuses, doubters, arguers, and inventors – in essence, those who actively design the future with pure passion.
When Marie and Pierre Curie invented radium, they were designing the future for the generations that followed. They took charge and devoted themselves to their research, even when there was no institutional support. When Steve Jobs was pursuing his dream of technological revolutions, he did not let anything stand in his way – not even getting fired from his own company. He went to work every day, every moment, designing the future he dreamed of. All of us can be active designers of our future, and not just passive observers of it. We get to decide NOW.. RIGHT NOW.. the future that we want and work together, as a community, to make it real.
We, at INK, invite all of you to participate in writing our future. To do this, we need to identify what aspects of our past need to be held on to, what aspects of our past need to be discarded and most importantly, what new aspects need to be created. We need to dream of a future and make sure that we do everything we can to prepare for it. So, to add to what Eleanor Roosevelt said: “The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams, especially to those who are unstoppable in making those dreams real.”
This year, we are thrilled to have four co-hosts who will share the stage with me to contribute their ideas to our collective pursuit. Please join me in welcoming them and let us all take charge and design the future …now.
- Lakshmi Pratury

preparing for INK2012

preparing for INK2012

INK2012 will showcase installation art by some of the most well known artists in the world as a part of Art at INK

For more pictures Click Here

Exclusive Sneak Peak: Lakshmi Pratury records on her phone — Jeff Marx, a speaker at INK2012 rehearsing for his performance.

Checkout the full list of Speakers and Fellows for INK2012 Here

Don’t forget to tune in for the the free livestreaming online! Limited sessions from the conference will be webcast live on our homepage http://inktalks.com

Mint in conversation with Lakshmi Pratury: “INK is the best brain spa there is..”

Mint’s Malia Politzer talks to Lakshmi Pratury, the curator of the INK conference, about what inspired her to hold the conference in India and the potential she sees in Indian youth.

TRANSCRIPT OF THE INTERVIEW WITH MALIA POLITZER OF LIVEMINT
Malia Politzer: Today I have with me Lakshmi Pratury, the curator of the INK conference, to be held in Pune between October 11th and 14th. Lakshmi, can you tell me a little bit about the INK conference? what is it ?
Lakshmi Pratury: INK is a place where people come together to learn about what is happening around the world. We call it– it’s the best brain spa there is. So, you learn a little bit of everything that is happening around the world, from art to architecture — to technology to business, who are some of the people who are doing cutting-edge work there. And we become a part of a community.
Malia Politzer: So, my understanding is — this is India’s version of the TED conferences. So, first can you tell me Why you decided to bring TED to India in the first place?
Lakshmi Pratury: I wanted to do something here. And I believe in the intersection of corporate, community, and culture. I think they three should intersect very tightly. And that’s really what we wanted to do. The original idea was– I was living in California, working there. I came here just to co-host TEDindia, and I was going to go back. But the year I spent really with people here — coaching them on their stories. I really realized that we are sitting on a treasure trove in India. we are just not telling these stories properly on a global stage. Not because we can’t, it’s just we don’t feel it’s necessary. I really feel it is necessary to tell the India’s story in it’s entirety .
Malia Politzer: And how is India INK different from TED? like what are the goals and how do they differ from the global TED conference? what’s the India specific angle?
Lakshmi Pratury: I wouldn’t say we are different from TED. I think we have added layers to it. Initially when we started, it was just to showcase the ideas. And, like TED did we had a Fellows program, where we would bring all the young people — and we had a separate track for them, they would speak there, they would learn there etc., and  we had the main stage where we brought 40-50 great amazing thinkers, doers– who are all extremely accomplished.
But what we felt after the first year was — that in India we need to give more support to the youth because they don’t have enough forums where they are taken seriously, and they are amazing thinkers. In fact, I feel I learn everyday from someone half my age and twice as smart — that’s the only rule we have in our company about hiring.
And I felt we need to give them stage in a much more profound way. So, what we did was we said there will be no separate fellows track. we still have that where they get together, they learn. But, all the fellows, majority of them will speak on the main stage. So, we have blended in the conference to feature the youth in a much more significant way.
Malia Politzer: So, who is the key audience?
Lakshmi Pratury: The key audience is, you know… the thought leaders of India, the people from the corporations, communities,etc. And we do have a youth component. we bring about 20 fellows every years — who are very young, most of them can’t afford to come to a conference like this on their own. But, they are all doing just amazing things in their own fields — so, we bring them for free. This year, for the first time we are doing a thing called INKlive, where we are webcasting the conference to a live location, 45 minutes away — where it costs someone only a 1000 rupees to come and attend that, and some of our speakers are going to go interact with them.
Malia Politzer: Why is there this huge emphasis on youth? I mean you have also spoken about this in previous interviews, how do you feel that youth in India right now are to contribute? and do you think they are different from previous generations?
Lakshmi Pratury: I think the youth today is very different. And, the reason first of all [that] I am passionate about the youth is that everyone does a business that is close to their heart. And to me, when I was young, and I started doing things out of the box — I remember feeling ‘I was wrong’, ‘what was wrong with me’. Luckily I had a great home which was very unusual than any of my friend’s had. I had a very supportive father, very supportive set of sisters who allowed me to stray out of the path, so to speak, and still feel okay… I’m okay, If I didn’t have that, I really feel I would have lost my passion — I would have lost who I am .
And, I saw that happening a lot around me. where there are a lot of people, with a lot of passions and interests and capabilities, who couldn’t pursue it because they didn’t have that support structure. So, there is a personal passion for me — to let someone know ‘there is a home here for you.. don’t worry’.
Beyond that, from a business point of view, this is — we are at a very amazing time in India. anyone who is born after ’91 is truly free in their mind, which is the most important thing. I was born way after independence, but somewhere in my mind I am not free, because I remember we were ruled by the British, I felt I had to leave here and go to America because the best education was there. So,  somewhere in the back of my mind I might feel, no matter what I say that someone else knows better than me, whereas, anyone born after ’91 —  in 2000s there were teenagers, and they have seen India only rising, they have seen India growing.
And they feel that they can do anything they want, they don’t have to leave India to pursue what they want. And, no matter what their pursuits are, there is some commercial angel to it that they can sustain themselves. If you loved Photography, in my time, what do you do?– there were like 3 papers and 1 television channel, and where do you go? — but today, if you want to be a photographer you can pursue many avenues.
So, I feel we are at an amazing tipping point in India. And, I feel we really have 5-7 years, and if we don’t support the youth now, and give them this freedom to think out of the box — we will create robots, and they wouldn’t be able to think out of the box. But, they can, and they are. So, that’s why this is exciting for me to do this in India now, because I just feel I have gone back to school, there is so much for me to learn. And, the young people teach me all the time, my 8 year old teaches me all the times.
Malia Politzer: Thank you so much for joining us.
Lakshmi Pratury: Thank you.. Thank you..

Lakshmi Pratury: Innovation in India – The new Rev of Reva

My job at INK is to collect people – whether they have anything to do with what we do or not. I always admire people who have a vision, take a stand and be with it way before anyone else can even understand what they are talking about. Here is a story of the man who pursued a vision for a greener world — way before it was fashionable.  

Today, we talk about Hybrids, Electric vehicles, and sustainability as part of our natural language. But imagine thinking about it 18 years ago. And then to take something as precious as your mother’s name and put on a project that is at best a pipe dream. This is exactly what Chetan Maini did. He launched Reva giving shape to his dreams of a greener world. And he did it in India where he hardly got any support. At a time when outsourcing was just picking up, at a time when MNCs were looking for smart, young professionals to run their companies, at a time when he could have relaxed on family money, he chose to dream. When Chetan started Reva as a joint venture between the Maini group and AEV systems in 1994, he took baby steps in giving shape to his passion and he did not let go of that passion through tough times, even when progress seem to be at a standstill. Over the years, I have heard all types of comments on Reva – some positive, some luke warm but all those who meet Chetan will agree on one thing – he is committed to his vision and is determined to make a difference in his own quiet way. Along the way, he conveyed the dream to Mahindra and got them as his partner. 

Mahindra Reva : Run on the sun

On August 22nd, I got to witness a wonderful moment in Mahindra Reva’s joint journey. The occasion was their all green factory opening… Read More

This post was originally posted to Lakshmi’s Lounge , continue reading this post here 

 

Amit Singhal visits INKtalks : “Beliefs make organizations…”

Amit Singhal

As we were winding down our week on a Friday, we had a visitor who brought a fresh dose of energy and enthusiasm for Team INK. Amit Singhal, Senior VP at Google, Inc. and the man behind Google’s ranking algorithm, dropped by at the INKtalks office in Bangalore. What followed was a spirited discussion on topics ranging from internet penetration in India and China, to what makes Google the company it is.

He was pleased to meet all our Google-INK ambassadors and felt that what the Google-INK Project aims to do ( to bring the next billion Indian people online ) is one of the most important things that need to be done in this day and age.

He spoke about how people use search differently in different countries and his observations on how the online population in India has a lot of potential to grow. So what is keeping many Indians from coming online, when we have such a large middle and upper class population with access to affordable devices and Internet service?

We explored the possibility that the reason might be in the deep rooted beliefs of the people. One of our young staff members said she observed that some older generation Indians treat their gadgets as sacred, fragile showpieces to be touched and operated by the man of the house. They are mostly kept covered to protect from dust, and the opportunities and possibilities of the internet are never explored. A growing number of teenagers are online, but the older generation just doesn’t feel the need to be online. Those who can afford have their secretaries or office-help do the work online for them.

Amit talked about how in the India he grew up in, each town used to have an indispensable post-man who would read out and write letters for everyone. He fears that we might see a time when each town will have a computer-operator-person who sends emails for everyone, because people are not comfortable with using computers yet.

We all agreed that something has to be done and people, old and young, must be made aware of how they can be benefited, empowered, and more informed by using the web.

The most fascinating part of the conversation was when Amit talked about how values and beliefs shape organizations. And how beliefs and convictions continue to define and shape organizations and even countries in the long term.

As a part of his job at Google he has to make big decisions every day.He said that at crucial moments, alongside data, their beliefs help them in making the final decision. For Google, the priority is to provide fair and just information to everyone, profits and market share come second.

So even when under intense pressure form groups who would like to see Google results changed because they don’t like the results for a query, Google stands its ground and refuses to change search results under pressure.

In the early years of Google, they had an opportunity to earn a large sum by placing an ad on the homepage. The question that they asked themselves was if an ad on the homepage would make the user experience any better and when the answer was “no”, they turned down the amount even though they needed the revenue. Profits and money were never the motivator; it was giving the users a great search experience and building innovative and intuitive products. This might be the reason why Google has the trust of millions of users and are generally perceived as the ‘good guys’.

Amit Singhal is also an Inner Circle member of the INK conference. And when asked about what he feels about the INK conferences, he talked about how in life we are constantly struggling each day, and for those 2-3 days of the conference or even 15 minutes of watching a talk online, we slow down, expand our minds and are refreshed with new ideas.

Amit Singhal at INKtalks with Lakshmi Pratury , Google-INK ambassadors and INK staff.

by Vaibhav Mathur, 
Intern