Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Ruchi Sanghvi - The First Female Software Engineer of Facebook

Digital Indians: How Ruchi Sanghvi engineered her rise


Ruchi Sanghvi Ruchi Sanghvi came from a family of entrepreneurs
When Ruchi Sanghvi arrived at the Facebook office in California for a job interview in 2005, she found a menu card outside saying: "Looking for engineers."
The start-up was located above a Chinese restaurant in downtown Palo Alto. It was modest looking place filled with gawky engineers, black sofas, lava lamps, and walls covered with murals and movie posters.
Earlier that year, the computer science engineer from Carnegie Mellon University had fled a job with a bank on Wall Street after three weeks. "I had panicked. I wanted to be in a business that was dependent on my core skills," she says.
She had flown out to California, interviewed with Oracle and started out there, when a friend had told her about Facebook.
"I didn't know much about them. I didn't even know that they had moved to California. I thought they were still in Boston working out of Harvard dorm rooms," she says wryly.
Scooter culture
We are sitting in the hip Dropbox office in downtown San Francisco, where Ms Sanghvi, 31, works as a vice-president of operations.
Employees at the online storage firm whizz through corridors on skates and office scooters, some take time off to play pool and video games, and a plush music room is ready for a karaoke contest.
But, for the moment, we are talking about how Ms Sanghvi got the job at Facebook and became its first female engineer.

"When I started out in Facebook, it had only 20 people. I saw it grow to a thousand employees and from five million users to over a billion users. I saw it evolve from a service that served college students to one that served the world," she says.
"It was extremely chaotic, but it was a wonderful experience. I learnt everything there."
At Facebook, she was part of the team that developed the news feed.
How was it, I asked, being the first female engineer at Facebook?
Ms Sanghvi says she was used to being in a minority: at engineering school, she was one of the five female students in a class of 150.
But at Facebook, she says, she truly came into her own.
"You had to be opinionated, you had to make sure your point of view was heard, you had to ask questions. Sometimes people would tell you were stupid and you'd start all over again," she says.
"But it was, by and large, a meritocracy. It had one of the best environments for learning."

Ruchi Sanghvi: Silicon Valley’s pioneering woman
Facebook was also where she met her future husband who was the first Indian engineer the company had hired.
I ask her for a story about Mark Zuckerberg, one of the founders and chief executive. She frowns, thinks hard, and says she doesn't quite like talking about Mr Zuckerberg. Then she relents.
It's a story about how the news feed launch outraged users and nearly killed it.

Start Quote

The journey from employee to entrepreneur was a complex and taxing one for an immigrant like me”
Ruchi Sanghvi
"We had less than 10 million users when news feed arrived. Mark was at a press conference (announcing it) and over a million users began protesting against it," she says.
Last year, Ms Sanghvi spoke about the time in vivid detail.
"Groups with names like 'I hate Facebook' and 'Ruchi is the devil' had been formed. People camped outside our office and demonstrated. But we realised the very people who hated it were able to spread the word because of the news feed," she told a talk.
But Mark Zuckerberg stuck to his guns, Ms Sanghvi tells me.
"Typically in any other company if 10% of your users decide to boycott a product you are obviously going to reverse the changes or do something about it. But Mark was really adamant about his vision about the potential of news feed."
Mark ZuckerbergMark Zuckerberg 'was adamant about his vision' for Facebook, Ms Sanghvi says
When Ms Sanghvi left Facebook in 2010 after an itch to start her own company, the social networking site had more than 1,500 employees and more than 500 million users.
As a young girl growing up in India's industrial city of Pune, she had dreamt of taking over her family business.
Her father, a second generation businessman, runs a heavy engineering company. Her grandfather ran a stainless steel business. "We are an entrepreneurial family," she says.
But now, she was in the US, having studied computer science and worked at Facebook. The world beckoned.
So she went ahead and set up her own company, Cove, with her husband in 2010. There, helped by a team of engineers, they made "collaborative software" for communities and networks.
"The journey from employee to entrepreneur was a complex and taxing one for an immigrant like me," says Ms Sanghvi, who has been lobbying US authorities to ease immigration laws.
"When I started Cove, I spoke to three immigration lawyers who gave me a long checklist of things to do before my company could hire immigrants."
Diverse roles
Two years later, in February 2012, Cove was bought by the cloud-sharing service Dropbox.
At Dropbox, a six-year-old company with more than 175 million users, Ms Sanghvi has diverse roles. She has led hiring - "only great people can make great products," she says - and managed marketing and communications.
I ask her if she plans to do anything back home in India.
"I'd love to do something if it was easier to do it. It is difficult to do exciting things in India. There are a lot of issues and barriers, simple things like a good internet line to the office," she says.
"It doesn't seem as easy as Silicon Valley where you have an idea you can simply execute it with hard work. But I admire folks who are doing things in India. It requires a lot grit and determination.
"You know I think I have had it pretty easy here in US actually," she adds, with a laugh. Then she skates away for her next meeting.
Ask the innovators
On 25 September at 20:15-21:00 India time [02:45-03:30GMT], we will be holding a final hangout of the series with some of the digital Indians you have met so far, including Ruchi Sanghvi.
This hangout will provide the opportunity for you to put your questions to the experts.

Thursday, 19 September 2013

Charlie Chaplin - Let Us All Unite

 Charlie Chaplin's 1940 anti-fascist speech from The Great Dictator, as a song. 
Charlie Chaplin in Let us all Unite

The Great Dictator's Speech ...



Lyrics : 
I’m sorry, but I don’t want to be an emperor. That’s not my business. I don’t want to rule or conquer anyone.. I should like to help everyone - if possible - Jew, Gentile - black man - white. We all want to help one another. Human beings are like that.In this world there is room for everyone. And the good earth is rich and can provide for everyone. The way of life can be free and beautiful, but we have lost the way.
Greed has poisoned men’s souls
Has barricaded the world with hate
We think too much and feel too little
More than machinery, we need humanity
More than cleverness, we need kindness
Without these qualities, life would be violent
And all would be lost
Do not despair
The hate of men will pass
And dictators die
And the power they took from the people
Will return to the people
Let us all unite!
Let us fight for a new world
To do away with greed
Now let us fight to free the world
To fulfill that promise
Let us all unite!
Soldiers, don’t give yourselves to brutes
Men who despise you and slave you
Tell you what to do, what to think and what to feel
Who drill you, diet you, treat you like cattle
Don’t give yourselves to these unnatural men
Machine men with machine minds and machine hearts
You are not machines
You are men
You the people have the power
To make this life free and beautiful
Let us use that power
To make this life a wonderful adventure.

Thursday, 12 September 2013

Eleven shades of an entrepreneur

This article highlights the characteristics of an early-stage company entrepreneur in 11 shades. “Success is walking from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.”- Winston Churchill. Do you have what it takes to make a complete colourful journey of entrepreneurship? There are many more shades which I will share in my future articles. These 11 shades are good to begin for assessment’s sake.
color_wheel_pencils
1. Focus on a specialisation shade in a niche. Be a leader in your field of expertise. Many times entrepreneurs spread themselves too thin with multiple products and offerings. It is good strategy to go after the specific areas where the momentum is good and build big on it. Narrowed market focus helps address customer requirements in depth hence can command premium pricing. Generalisation vision of doing everything for everyone is sure-shot death for a startup.
2.  Avoid mixing shades of business interest with near relations like friends and families. Offering discounts, accepting late payments are usually seen when one does business with friends. Relationship clouds the decision when hiring. Design your startup founding team with good complementing professionals whom you can make friends with and will become your so-called extended family.
3. Announce the shade of commitment about your startup’s vision in public.Entrepreneurs who do it are considered serious as they have put their personal reputation at stake. Startup is THE life of entrepreneur. It does not have a predictable end. Commitment with total immersion is required from founders. It evokes lot of trust for in its team, customers and investors equally.
4. Shade of planning should be for best and worst outcomes equally. Things which are beyond your control – look at them in a pessimist way. Things which can be managed, created and steered – look at them optimistically. Entrepreneurs should invest in capital expenditure for better future and cut operational costs assuming worst scenario. If the desired success is not achieved, then plan for the downside as athletes do. It spurs them to take on the next big opportunity.
5. Entrepreneur shade of willingness to gain knowledge is important. Startup founders will be expert in technology, and design, but may lack financial acumen. Learning helps open minds to new and fresh ideas. Hence, learning, reading, and understanding financial management are important for scale, growth and investment value creation. A wise entrepreneur will be eager to learn to increase his wisdom; fools resist teachings and remain ignorant.
6. Entrepreneurs many times are very rigid in their ideas, processes and partnerships. Unable to adapt to situations results in loss of time, opportunity and relationships. Very often entrepreneurs are at cross roads with multiple options to select. There are times when conflicting guidance, approach to a problem is given to entrepreneurs. It is of utmost importance to maintain shade of flexibility along with persistence.
7. Priority shade brings in the value of saying NO to all which does not matter, and what is not useful and not good. Entrepreneurs should learn to say ‘No’ without feeling of guilt. Do not try to please everyone at the expense of the startup’s interest. Entrepreneur’s first and only goal is realising its vision. It is not considered rude if one is not able help, give time, and entertain, due to business priorities.
8. Entrepreneurs should learn the shade of active listening. Listening is not merely hearing the words but interpreting the underlying message. Good listener will be able to know unsaid or partially said communication, which is common in startups. Listen without bias, for ideas, for knowledge to become efficient and effective. Talk less, listen more.
9.  Shade to focus on good quality content in all modes of communication.Startups value increases with its ability to generate high quality content. Entrepreneurs’ focus on technology skills is very high. It misses out on creating content related to its products or services. Content is extremely important to engage and attract customers, investors and employees equally. Great entrepreneurs build arsenal of content recipes like good chefs which leaves a lasting taste on its readers.
10. Intuitive shade is like shadow which follows the entrepreneur all the time. Internal voice of entrepreneurs is very strong signal for actions when in early stage. Intuition helps entrepreneur innovate in unchartered territories. Education trains to believe in analysis, data and experts, but entrepreneurs have relied otherwise on gut feelings while taking decisions.
11. Shade of being imperfect is a gift within every entrepreneur. One has the right to do mistakes, but not to repeat the same. Do not wait for the perfect moment, perfect product, perfect team and perfect investors to land up. ‘I will release the product which is perfect, complete and flawless’, we hear entrepreneur speak many times.  It is ok launch products even when it has fewer features and not a perfect one. Perfections are a myth and enemy of good.
“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” – Mark Twain. 

Saturday, 31 August 2013

10 inspiring social entrepreneurship quotes that will make you think

Words have the power to make you smile, quicken your heartbeat, make you think, spur you to action and maybe even quit your job and take a stab at changing the world. We bring the thoughts of 10 stalwarts who have positively shaped our world.
Read, absorb and press into action.
1) Who?
Bill Drayton
billdraytonPic courtesy: fuzeus.wordpress.com
Importance:
Drayton founded Ashoka Changemakers and is one of the world’s foremost thinkers in the world of social entrepreneurship. He was the first to recognize and support social entrepreneurs dubbing them change-makers.
Best quote:
“Social entrepreneurs are not content just to give a fish or teach how to fish. They will not rest until they have revolutionized the fishing industry.”
2) Who?
Muhammad Yunus
yunusPic courtesy: www.goodreads.com
Importance:
Yunus is founder of Grameen Bank, the pioneer in the microfinance industry, he’s also a Nobel prize winner. Leveraging the power of micro-loans he was responsible for lifting millions of women out of poverty.
Favorite quote:
“When we want to help the poor, we usually offer them charity. Most often we use charity to avoid recognizing the problem and finding the solution for it. Charity becomes a way to shrug off our responsibility. But charity is no solution to poverty. Charity only perpetuates poverty by taking the initiative away from the poor. Charity allows us to go ahead with our own lives without worrying about the lives of the poor. Charity appeases our consciences.”
3) Who?
Mahatma Gandhi.
02gandhi1
Importance:
If you need to know, we rather not say.
Favorite quote:
“Poverty is the worst form of violence.”
4) Who?
Jacqueline Novogratz
118085_389x292
Importance:
Founder of Acumen Fund, an impact investing firm, she’s one of the most well-respected individuals in the social entrepreneurship universe.
Favorite quote:
“My dream is to find individuals who take financial resources and convert them into changing the world in the most positive ways.”
5) Who?
Jeff Skoll
skollwww.ted.com
Importance:
After co-founding eBay, Skoll decided to use his billions to set up the Skoll Foundation to invest, recognize and connect social entrepreneurs. Skoll also founded Participant Media, to make movies that matter.
Favorite quote:
“I believe that Silicon Valley is truly a place of excellence and the impact of this tiny community on the world is completely disproportionate to its size. We are the undisputed leaders of technological change. But with our abundance of talent and resources, we also have the opportunity to be the pioneers of social change and, ultimately, this may be our greatest contribution.”
6) Who?
David Bornstein
david-bornsteinPicture courtesy: philanthrofiles.org
Importance:
Bornstein is author of what is considered as the social entrepreneurship Bible, ‘How to change the world’, where he wrote about social entrepreneurs, and the power of new ideas. He’s also founder of Solutions Network Journalism that seeks to support journalists who seek to write about issues that matter.
Favorite quote:
“The communications revolution has given millions of people both a wider and more detailed understanding of the world. Because of technology, ordinary citizens enjoy access to information that formerly was available only to elites and nation-states. One consequence of this change is that citizens have become acutely conscious of environmental destruction, entrenched poverty, health catastrophes, human rights abuses, failing education systems, and escalating violence. Another consequence is that people possess powerful communication tools to coordinate efforts to attack those problems.”
7) Who?
Pierre Omidyar
Pierre-OmidyarPicture courtesy: pitchyourtalent.wordpress.com
Importance:
Omidyar is a co-founder of eBay, but he’s increasingly becoming more famous for his efforts in philanthrophy. He set up Omidyar Network, a venture philanthropy firm, with his wife Pam to invest in social entrepreneurs using a mix of grant and equity.
Favorite quote:
“We believe people are basically good; we believe everyone has something to contribute; we believe that an honest, open environment can bring out the best in people; we recognize and respect everyone as a unique individual; we encourage you to treat others the way you want to be treated.”
8) Who?
Verghese Kurien
amulgirlkurien650Picture courtesy: www.hindustantimes.com
Importance:
Single handedly made India go from a milk-importing country to the world’s largest producer through his organization Amul. Also helped lakhs of women to become financially independent through the self-ownership cooperative model of Amul.
Favorite quote:
“India’s place in the sun would come from the partnership between wisdom of its rural people and skill of its professionals”
9) Who?
Bill Gates.
billgatesPicture courtesy: www.winbeta.org
Importance:
Gates may have helped make the personal computer a commercial success through Microsoft, but he will be remembered in time to come because of the philanthropic work that he’s doing through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. No everybody gets to have two separate, very successful careers, or become the world’s richest man, and then give it all away.
Favorite quote:
“Humanity’s greatest advances are not in its discoveries, but in how those discoveries are applied to reduce inequity.”
10) Who?
Florence Nightingale.
Florence-Nightingale-007Picture courtesy: www.passudiary.com
Importance:
She may have been one of the world’s first social entrepreneurs. Nightingale is the founder of modern nursing, a prolific writer, statistician, administrator and social reformer. Her exploits first came to the fore in the Crimean war.
Favorite quote:
“Rather, ten times, die in the surf, heralding the way to a new world, than stand idly on the shore.”

10 inspiring social entrepreneurship quotes that will make you think

Words have the power to make you smile, quicken your heartbeat, make you think, spur you to action and maybe even quit your job and take a stab at changing the world. We bring the thoughts of 10 stalwarts who have positively shaped our world.
Read, absorb and press into action.
1) Who?
Bill Drayton
billdraytonPic courtesy: fuzeus.wordpress.com
Importance:
Drayton founded Ashoka Changemakers and is one of the world’s foremost thinkers in the world of social entrepreneurship. He was the first to recognize and support social entrepreneurs dubbing them change-makers.
Best quote:
“Social entrepreneurs are not content just to give a fish or teach how to fish. They will not rest until they have revolutionized the fishing industry.”
2) Who?
Muhammad Yunus
yunusPic courtesy: www.goodreads.com
Importance:
Yunus is founder of Grameen Bank, the pioneer in the microfinance industry, he’s also a Nobel prize winner. Leveraging the power of micro-loans he was responsible for lifting millions of women out of poverty.
Favorite quote:
“When we want to help the poor, we usually offer them charity. Most often we use charity to avoid recognizing the problem and finding the solution for it. Charity becomes a way to shrug off our responsibility. But charity is no solution to poverty. Charity only perpetuates poverty by taking the initiative away from the poor. Charity allows us to go ahead with our own lives without worrying about the lives of the poor. Charity appeases our consciences.”
3) Who?
Mahatma Gandhi.
02gandhi1
Importance:
If you need to know, we rather not say.
Favorite quote:
“Poverty is the worst form of violence.”
4) Who?
Jacqueline Novogratz
118085_389x292
Importance:
Founder of Acumen Fund, an impact investing firm, she’s one of the most well-respected individuals in the social entrepreneurship universe.
Favorite quote:
“My dream is to find individuals who take financial resources and convert them into changing the world in the most positive ways.”
5) Who?
Jeff Skoll
skollwww.ted.com
Importance:
After co-founding eBay, Skoll decided to use his billions to set up the Skoll Foundation to invest, recognize and connect social entrepreneurs. Skoll also founded Participant Media, to make movies that matter.
Favorite quote:
“I believe that Silicon Valley is truly a place of excellence and the impact of this tiny community on the world is completely disproportionate to its size. We are the undisputed leaders of technological change. But with our abundance of talent and resources, we also have the opportunity to be the pioneers of social change and, ultimately, this may be our greatest contribution.”
6) Who?
David Bornstein
david-bornsteinPicture courtesy: philanthrofiles.org
Importance:
Bornstein is author of what is considered as the social entrepreneurship Bible, ‘How to change the world’, where he wrote about social entrepreneurs, and the power of new ideas. He’s also founder of Solutions Network Journalism that seeks to support journalists who seek to write about issues that matter.
Favorite quote:
“The communications revolution has given millions of people both a wider and more detailed understanding of the world. Because of technology, ordinary citizens enjoy access to information that formerly was available only to elites and nation-states. One consequence of this change is that citizens have become acutely conscious of environmental destruction, entrenched poverty, health catastrophes, human rights abuses, failing education systems, and escalating violence. Another consequence is that people possess powerful communication tools to coordinate efforts to attack those problems.”
7) Who?
Pierre Omidyar
Pierre-OmidyarPicture courtesy: pitchyourtalent.wordpress.com
Importance:
Omidyar is a co-founder of eBay, but he’s increasingly becoming more famous for his efforts in philanthrophy. He set up Omidyar Network, a venture philanthropy firm, with his wife Pam to invest in social entrepreneurs using a mix of grant and equity.
Favorite quote:
“We believe people are basically good; we believe everyone has something to contribute; we believe that an honest, open environment can bring out the best in people; we recognize and respect everyone as a unique individual; we encourage you to treat others the way you want to be treated.”
8) Who?
Verghese Kurien
amulgirlkurien650Picture courtesy: www.hindustantimes.com
Importance:
Single handedly made India go from a milk-importing country to the world’s largest producer through his organization Amul. Also helped lakhs of women to become financially independent through the self-ownership cooperative model of Amul.
Favorite quote:
“India’s place in the sun would come from the partnership between wisdom of its rural people and skill of its professionals”
9) Who?
Bill Gates.
billgatesPicture courtesy: www.winbeta.org
Importance:
Gates may have helped make the personal computer a commercial success through Microsoft, but he will be remembered in time to come because of the philanthropic work that he’s doing through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. No everybody gets to have two separate, very successful careers, or become the world’s richest man, and then give it all away.
Favorite quote:
“Humanity’s greatest advances are not in its discoveries, but in how those discoveries are applied to reduce inequity.”
10) Who?
Florence Nightingale.
Florence-Nightingale-007Picture courtesy: www.passudiary.com
Importance:
She may have been one of the world’s first social entrepreneurs. Nightingale is the founder of modern nursing, a prolific writer, statistician, administrator and social reformer. Her exploits first came to the fore in the Crimean war.
Favorite quote:
“Rather, ten times, die in the surf, heralding the way to a new world, than stand idly on the shore.”