The Global Indian Friday, June 27 2025
  • Home
  • Stories
    • Exclusive
      • Startups
      • Culture
      • Marketplace
      • Campus Life
      • Youth
      • Giving Back
      • Zip Codes
    • Blogs
      • Opinion
      • Profiles
      • Web Stories
    • Fun Facts
      • World in numbers
      • Didyouknow
      • Quote
    • Gallery
      • Pictures
      • Videos
  • Work Life
  • My Book
  • Top 100
  • Our Stories
  • Tell Your Story
Select Page
Indian Sports | Arjuna Awardees 2022 | Global Indian
Global IndianstoryArjuna awardees 2022: Chosen for being on top of their games
  • Global Indian Exclusive
  • Indian Sports
  • Whatsapp Share
  • LinkedIn Share
  • Facebook Share
  • Twitter Share

Arjuna awardees 2022: Chosen for being on top of their games

Written by: Amrita Priya

(November 28, 2022) On November 14, the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports announced a star-studded list of Arjuna Awardees. Twenty five sportspersons will receive the award on November 30, including Sharath Kamal, after his superb outing at the Commonwealth Games 2022, as well as shuttler Lakshya Sen, who brought home a gold from Birmingham and was part of the Indian team that won the Thomas Cup 2022. The Ministry received a large number of nominations that were considered by a Selection Committee headed by Justice A. M. Khanwilkar, Retd. Judge, Supreme Court of India, eminent sportspersons, sports journalists and administrators. Global Indian takes a look at some of the Arjun awardees 2022 – the winners of the country’s second highest sporting honour on November 30.

The golden girl: Nikhat Zareen

On her first day at the boxing camp, Nikhat Zareen was asked to train with boys, because there were no other girls picking up the sport in Nizamabad. She has come a long way, from being the only girl in the camp, to the world boxing champion. “I remember telling my father that someone had told me that boxing is not meant for girls. He told me, there is nothing one can’t do if they are determined,” shared Nikhat, during an interview with Global Indian.

Indian Sports | Arjuna Awardees 2022 | Global Indian

Nikhat Zareen

The champion, who has been conferred with the Arjuna Award this year, has won several gold medals in various international boxing championships, including Commonwealth Games 2022, IBA Women’s World Championship 2022, Strandja Memorial Boxing Tournament 2022 and 2019, and 56th Belgrade Winner International Championship 2018. Passionate and focussed, the 26-year-old boxer is training hard to claim many more medals for the country. “I took a short leave to visit my family in Nizamabad after winning the World Championship. But I am back to the training camp now. My next aim is the upcoming World Boxing Championships and later the 2024 Paris Olympics. I dream of winning gold there for my nation,” shared the champion.

  • Follow Nikhat Zareen on Instagram 

The sound of success: Jerlin Anika

It wasn’t easy for her ever. Born into a middle-class family and diagnosed with a hearing disability at the age of two, badminton player Jerlin Anika had it tough right from the get go. But the champion was determined to show the world that no limitation could stop her. “When my eight-year-old daughter started showing a liking towards badminton, I thought the sport will distract her from her hearing impairment. I never thought that she would reach this level,” her proud father, J. Jeya Ratchagen, said during an interview.

Indian Sports | Arjuna Awardees 2022 | Global Indian

Jerlin Anika

The young star created history after winning three gold medals at the 24th Summer Deaflympics, held in Brazil earlier this year. Passionate and focussed, Jerlin had earlier won the gold for India at the 2019 World Deaf Badminton Championship in China. One of the highest-ranked Indian players in World Deaf Badminton, Jerlin is working hard for her upcoming sporting events, and wants to participate in major international tournaments. “She has reached the highest stage in the deaf category, so now she is looking to do well in the general Olympics. But it won’t be easy, (because) the level of the game is very high there and she has to improve a lot overall. So we are planning to send her to countries like Indonesia and Malaysia for coaching, where she can technical sessions from leading international coaches,” her father said.

  • Follow Jerlin Anika on Instagram

Poster boy of Indian badminton: Lakshya Sen

Lakshya Sen has rounded off 2022 with a blaze of glory, shooting up to rank six in the World Badminton Federation. The young champion bagged the gold in the men’s singles at the 2022 Commonwealth Games and was a part of the Indian team that brought home the Thomas Cup 2022.

“This has been an amazing year for me. From the time I was a child, I dreamed of participating in the All-England championships. As a matter of fact, that was the only tournament I was aware of at the time. Being a part of the finals was one of the most incredible experiences,” Sen tweeted, in November 2022, shortly after the big win.

Indian Sports | Arjuna Awardees 2022 | Global Indian

Lakshya Sen

Sen, who started his training at the Prakash Padukone Academy when he was 12 years old, became acquainted with the game when he was five years old, accompanying his grandfather, Chandra Lal Sen, known around town as the ‘grand old man of Badminton’ to the only outdoor court in his hometown, Almora, Uttarakhand. A year later, he began training under his father. Sen is one of two badminton players to receive the Arjuna Award 2022.

  • Follow Lakshya Sen on Instagram

Glory of Kolhapur: Swapnil Sanjay Patil

An accident at the age of six left Swapnil Sanjay Patil with a permanent deformity on his leg. His treatment involved water therapy, which led to an interest in swimming. His father, who is a swimming coach, was more than happy to teach him, as his son had not been inclined towards the sport until then.

Indian Sports | Arjuna Awardees 2022 | Global Indian

Swapnil Sanjay Patil

The para-swimmer, who is doing his master’s degree at Shahaji College, Kolhapur aims to open a swimming academy in Kolhapur for physically-challenged swimmers like him. His father, Sanjay who is a pillar of strength for him at every step, has already started work in this direction by training a few such youngsters before Swapnil takes it up in a full-fledged manner. The next goal of the Paralympic swimmer is to do well at 2024 Paralympics. To make the dream come true he has been training for six hours a day, and devoting a good chunk of time to his fitness regimen as well.

  • Follow Swapnil Sanjay Patil on Instagram 

The dependable defender: Deep Grace Ekka

Born in Lulkidhi, a small village in the Sundergarh district of Odisha, Deep Grace Ekka started playing hockey in school. At that point, however, she had no intention to pursue it as a profession, and was content with participating at activities organised by her school.

Indian Sports | Arjuna Awardees 2022 | Global Indian

Deep Grace Ekka

Her life changed during a round of hockey selections at her school, when she was got selected to join Sports Authority of India’s, SAI-SAG centre. Deep was just 13 when she represented the state, after which she went on to play the senior nationals in Sonepat at 16.

Though Grace started hockey as a defender, her desire was to become a goalkeeper. However, her uncle, who was also her, coach believed she showed more potential as a defender. Grace heeded his advice and honed her skills as a defender until she excelled.

  • Follow Deep Grace Ekka on Instagram 

 

 

Subscribe
Connect with
Notify of
guest

OR

Connect with
guest

OR

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
  • Arjun awardees
  • Arjun awardees 2022
  • Arjun awards
  • Arjun awards 2022
  • brandindia
  • Deep Grace Ekka
  • Global_Indian_Official
  • GlobalIndian
  • GlobalIndians
  • Jerlin Anika
  • Justice A. M. Khanwilkar
  • Lakshya Sen
  • Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports
  • Nikhat Zareen
  • Swapnil Sanjay Patil
  • TheGlobalIndian
  • TheGlobalIndians

Published on 28, Nov 2022

Share with

  • Whatsapp Share
  • LinkedIn Share
  • Facebook Share
  • Twitter Share

ALSO READ

Story
Priyamvada Natarajan: Meet the Indian woman on TIME’s 2024 list of 100 most influential people

(April 30, 2024) Enough has already been said and written about the Big Bang theory, and how from a single point, the universe expanded through the formation of stars and galaxies to the size that it is now. But for years, it's the science of black holes that has kept scientists, astronomers, and even physicists intrigued. One such name is Priyamvada Natarajan, who recently found her name on TIME Magazine's 2024 list of 100 most influential people for her research on the "invisible universe" – the black hole and its formation. The recognition left her stumped, so much so that she thought that it was spam mail. "When I heard from them (TIME Magazine), I thought something was wrong. Although I wrote to them saying that 'I am super grateful and really stunned' but thought is this for real," she said in an interview, as she found herself featured alongside Microsoft CEO Satya Nthadella, World Bank President Ajay Banga, actor Alia Bhatt and Olympian wrestler Sakshi Malik. Thrilled to be at the #TIME100 Summit - wow! It finally feels real - how wonderful to be in the incredible company of brilliant thoughtful empathetic people impacting the world in their own

Read More

Summit - wow! It finally feels real - how wonderful to be in the incredible company of brilliant thoughtful empathetic people impacting the world in their own unique way - so honored and humbled 🙏 @TIME pic.twitter.com/aPA4oHmfT4

— Priyamvada Natarajan (@SheerPriya) April 24, 2024

Her interest in stars and the universe

Born in Tamil Nadu and raised in Delhi, Priyamvada was obsessed with maps while growing up. She would devour every atlas that she could lay her hand on, and she credits her family for her curiosity to learn. "I grew up in a house full of books and got enormous support and encouragement from my parents," she revealed.

[caption id="attachment_51135" align="aligncenter" width="688"]Priyamvada Natarjan | Global Indian Priyamvada Natarajan[/caption]

Interested in the stars and the universe since her school days, she started doing research at the Nehru Planetarium in Delhi. But in the late 80s with only limited options for research, she left for the US to pursue her undergrad degree in physics and mathematics from MIT. She later enrolled in theoretical astrophysics at the Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, receiving a Ph.D degree in 1998, where she was the first woman in Astrophysics to be elected a Fellow at Trinity College.

Working on invisible universe

Over the years, she did extensive work in the field of gravitational lensing, clusters of galaxies, and binary black holes. Currently a professor of Astronomy and Physics at Yale University, she has been interested in the components of the universe that are invisible. "You can't actually see them and study them like stars and galaxies that have visible light. These entities are dark matter, dark energy, and black holes. So, you infer their presence indirectly from their gravitational effects that they actually exert around their vicinity," she said.

In November 2023, she along with her colleagues at Yale identified the oldest known X-ray quasar (highly luminous supermassive black hole). For years, scientists have been mulling over the formation of super-big black holes in the middle of most galaxies. More than a decade ago, she had reasoned that they started when clouds of gas collapsed and made huge black hole "seeds." These seeds then grew over billions of years inside their galaxies. But with the identification of the oldest quasar, her theory was proven true. “It’s thrilling to be able to reveal the presence of a supermassive black hole, in place at the center of a galaxy a mere 450 million years after the Big Bang," she said.

Thrilled and deeply satisfied at this awesome discovery of UHZ1 that provides compelling evidence for the existence of direct collapse black holes - nature has more than one way to make the first seed black holeshttps://t.co/O3oCCne4oX

— Priyamvada Natarajan (@SheerPriya) March 12, 2024

Praising her work, American astrophysicist Shep Doeleman wrote in the TIME article, "Priya has a knack for pursuing the most creative research, and as a fellow astronomer, I am always inspired by her work. Her latest result takes us one step closer to understanding our cosmic beginnings."

Getting recognition for her work

Priyamvada, who has earned various honours including a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Physical Society, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, is the author of Mapping the Heavens: The Radical Scientific Ideas That Reveal the Cosmos (2016).

[caption id="attachment_51137" align="aligncenter" width="680"]Priyamvada Natarajan | Global Indian Priyamvada Natarajan[/caption]

On being recognised as one of the 100 influential people, Priyamvada said it's an honour and a privilege. "It sends a message that people working in science can be seen as influential, and that is very gratifying."

Priyamvada Natarajan's groundbreaking work in the field of black hole formation has not only deepened our understanding of the cosmos but has also earned her a well-deserved spot on TIME's list of the 100 most influential people. Her innovative ideas and contributions have propelled her to the forefront of astronomy, making her a household name among scientists and enthusiasts alike. As we continue to unravel the mysteries of the universe, Natarajan's work serves as a beacon of inspiration and discovery, shaping the future of astrophysics for generations to come.

Follow Priyamvada Natarajan on X

Story
Sagar Honnungar: Building disruptive AI at Hakimo

(October 29, 2022) Puzzles can be deceptively simple, if you know how to approach them. Techpreneur Sagar Honnungar, the co-founder of Hakimo has what it takes to solve even the most complex ones. In school, Sagar Honnungar loved solving puzzles. That childhood hobby continued to inspire him, even his work today could  be described as solving a mountain of puzzles, as he and his team go about securing big enterprises, including airports and multinational companies. Hakimo, where Sagar is both co-founder and CTO, is a California-based company that acts as an AI assistant for GSOC (Global Security Operations Centre) operators in big enterprises by eliminating most nuisance alarms and enabling them to prioritise high severity alerts using cutting-edge AI solutions. “This significantly reduces the chances of a real break-in going unnoticed by security operators in the midst of false alarms,” explains Sagar, in conversation with Global Indian. The company’s product won the Judges Choice award across all categories in the New Products Showcase at ISC West conference this year — a proud moment for the Hakimo team. [caption id="attachment_31149" align="aligncenter" width="684"] Sagar Honnungar, co-founder of Hakimo[/caption] Growing up in Bengaluru, the garden city and Silicon Valley of India, Sagar did

Read More

age-31149" src="https://stage.globalindian.com//wp-content/uploads/2022/10/PHOTO-2022-10-18-00-36-281.jpg" alt="Techpreneur | Sagar Honnunagar | Global Indian" width="684" height="513" /> Sagar Honnungar, co-founder of Hakimo[/caption]

Growing up in Bengaluru, the garden city and Silicon Valley of India, Sagar did his schooling until Class X at S. Cadambi Vidya Kendra, and then went to National Public School Rajajinagar until Class XII. “I had always been the class topper and was taught to aim high in life,” recalls Sagar, who was strong in science and mathematics. His father Kashinath Honnungar was an electronics engineer (now retired), mother Sanjivani Honnungar is a home-maker.

As a child, he wanted to be an astronaut, for he was fascinated by the vast expanse of the sky and space. But when he was first taught Java in high school, Sagar discovered he was that quite good at programming and fell in love with it.

The cream of the crop

Having performed well in the IIT-JEE examination, Sagar went to IIT Madras for his undergraduate studies. “I learnt to adjust to new environments and live independently. The peer group was undoubtedly the best,” smiles Sagar, who maintained a stellar academic record.

He first visited the US in the summer of 2015 as a Viterbi-India scholar to complete a research internship at USC (University of Southern California). Towards the final year of his undergrad, the techpreneur developed an interest in computer vision and computational imaging. He completed his B Tech in Electrical Engineering in 2016 and ranked second in the entire department.

The Stanford experience

Sagar returned to the US a year later and this time, for a Master’s degree in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University. For this, he received the JN Tata Endowment Scholarship. Sagar describes the Graduate school at Stanford as an intense and enriching experience. “Since it has a quarter-based system as opposed to a semester system, it felt quite fast-paced compared to my undergrad. I soaked up all that I could during my two years there and did a number of research projects in the field of machine learning,” explains Sagar, who graduated in 2018.

[caption id="attachment_31150" align="aligncenter" width="643"]Techpreneur | Sagar Honnunagar | Global Indian The Honnungar family[/caption]

He considers himself lucky to have worked with renowned experts like Prof. Srijan Kumar and Prof. Jure Leskovec on identifying malicious users based on their activity in websites like Wikipedia, and understanding and predicting entity-set interactions in different kinds of networks.

The IT guy

The Stanford alumni’s first job after college was at a fast-growing startup called Rubrik, which was right next to Stanford, where he worked from 2018 to 2020 as a software engineer. “I built Rubrik’s first cloud native data management product for O365 protection on a SaaS platform, designed with a unique enterprise architecture,” informs Sagar, who was also an integral part of the design and implementation of the storage layer which managed the entire lifecycle of data stored on the platform. Two patents were filed based on his work at Rubrik.

Entrepreneurship in Silicon Valley

As he was thinking about and researching different startup ideas at the beginning of 2020, Sagar met with his friend, Samuel Joseph, who was also looking to work on something new. Together, they founded Hakimo in California, now a 15-person company that has disrupted the physical security industry like no other.

The Hakimo team noticed a few major trends. For example, the number of cameras being deployed was increasing exponentially and they were mostly for physical security use cases. The cost of cameras was coming down rapidly, and computer vision and deep learning techniques were advancing fast, opening up possibilities for new innovative products.

“With these trends in mind, we spoke to a number of security professionals to understand their pain points,” he says. Two major problems came up repeatedly — false alarms from access control systems and tailgating incidents. He and his team analysed the reasons and came up with solutions.

Building a prototype and a successful launch

Sagar built the initial prototype of the algorithm and tested it out on a few sample alarm videos from a couple of interested customers. “They were highly impressed at what Hakimo’s AI algorithms were able to achieve,” says Sagar, whose elder sister, Shruti works as a software engineer in the US.

They swiftly decided to raise VC funding to take it to the next level. “We raised a $4M seed round in Oct 2020 with Neotribe Ventures as our lead investor with participation from Defy Ventures and Firebolt Ventures and some angels. We have now grown to a team of 15 split between the US and India,” informs Sagar.

Techpreneur | Sagar Honnunagar | Global Indian

One of the logistical challenges he faced was understanding and navigating the visa requirements and constraints when founding a company in the US since Sagar was an Indian citizen. “In the early days, we encountered a lot of challenges which are common among most startups. Hiring a good initial team is very important but also hard since the candidate has to trust the vision of the company and take a big leap of faith without concrete signals of growth or success,” he explains.

How do tailgating detection and false alarms filter work?

Hakimo’s software is layered on top of and integrates with the existing access control system (which manages the badge readers and door sensors) and the video management system or cameras. It ingests alarms from the access control system and for every alarm, fetches the corresponding video from the camera facing the door or alarm point. The AI engine then analyses the video using state-of-the-art machine learning and computer vision techniques to provide a severity score for the alarm and resolves it automatically if it is found to be a false positive.

“Our product can eliminate more than 80% of such nuisance alarms, of which some common ones are Door Forced Open (DFO) and Door Held Open (DHO). We can identify tailgating by correlating the badge reads from the access control system with the number of people entering through the door in the video for that time window,” he explains.

Rooted in tech skills

A strong technical background forms the core of the Hakimo team, with multiple employees from reputed colleges like IITs and Stanford. Each team member has deep expertise in computer vision, artificial intelligence, cloud computing and design of robust, scalable and reliable software systems.

Roughly half of Sagar’s workday is spent on managing, coordinating, guiding and unblocking the team on ongoing projects. Then, it’s time for talking to customers, identifying avenues for improvement and product expansion and thinking about the company’s vision and roadmap. “The remainder of my day goes into coding and contributing to product development. I also actively engage in hiring activities for team leaders across different departments as well as engineers in the company,” says Sagar.

Expansion to India

The California-based company already has an R&D centre in India and currently employs around eight people with plans to expand over the next few months. But currently they are selling only in the US market. “Once we reach certain milestones in the US market, we will be looking to expand and get some clients in India as well,” informs Sagar, whose way of giving back is by creating more jobs back home.

Techpreneur | Sagar Honnunagar | Global Indian

When not working, Sagar loves to explore the outdoors and going on hikes in the sunny California weather. Otherwise, one can spot him playing tennis or the piano to unwind during his free time. “I also find solving different sorts of puzzles like sudoku and crosswords very exciting,” smiles the Hakimo co-founder, who is currently reading Masters of Doom, the story of two legendary game programmers Carmack and Romero.

  • Follow Sagar Honnungar on Linkedin

Reading Time: 8 min

Story
Spare the life, use the rod: Entrepreneur Sharad Ashani gets Rs 50 lakh to grow his anti-suicide device

(March 23, 2022) Sharad Ashani is not your typical entrepreneur. The 66-year-old Mumbai-based founder of Safe Solutions had an over three decade-long career behind him before he decided to start up. Except, he was looking to make a difference after his retirement in 2017. Shocked by the number of suicides by hanging in the India, Sharad patented what is called Gold Life, a range of anti-suicide rods. So far, his company has installed over 50,000 anti-suicide rods in ceiling fans across hospitals, hotels, hostels, jails, and government quarters. Recently, this year (2022) his venture received a funding of Rs 50 lakh from Shark Tank India as well. Back in 2004, actor and model Nafisa Joseph committed suicide by hanging herself from a ceiling fan. “Soon after, an air hostess died in a similar manner. It struck me hard,” says the entrepreneur. “How were such educated and successful people taking such drastic measures? Was it so easy for one to hang from the ceiling fan? Around the same time, I came across a National Crime Record Bureau report that stated over 40 percent of those committing suicide in India died by hanging. It was time to do something about this,” says the

Read More

thing about this,” says the entrepreneur in a conversation with Global Indian.

[embed]https://twitter.com/SharadAshani/status/1232910384539095040?s=20&t=bDu--Q4l6EsbrJJyeibd7Q[/embed]

The journey of research

Sharad then began archiving news reports of suicides by hanging to work on a solution. He went through medical journals, and came up with a thoroughly researched prototype. This endeavour also took him to Nata Mallick, the West Bengal executioner to understand neck pressure, and breathing rates once the hanging process begins. “On a visit to Kolkata, I went to Mallick’s house to discuss the product I was mulling over; I wanted to ensure it was free from any loopholes,” says the Indian entrepreneur. Several trials later, Gold Life anti-suicide rods were patented in 2007.

The rod, which can be retrofitted into any ceiling fan, has an unlatching mechanism. When someone tries to hang oneself, the load exceeds the determined point, activating the unlatching mechanism, safely landing the person on the ground.

[caption id="attachment_21757" align="aligncenter" width="906"]Indian Entrepreneur | Sharad Ashani | Global Indian Sharad Ashani with his son, Gaurav[/caption]

However, Sharad was still far from working full-fledged on this as he was employed with Crompton Greaves. In 2011, the entrepreneur got the opportunity to participate in Mahindra’s Spark The Rise competition where he won a grant of Rs 4 lakh as the first runner-up. This further strengthened his belief in his idea.

Second Innings

When Sharad retired in 2017, he immediately got to work to launch his venture. “I began working on refining my product the day after my retirement. To ensure that it was 100 percent fool-proof, I had it tested at the government’s MSME testing centre. I did not want to take any chances with the quality, and also got the anti-rust testing done,” the entrepreneur explains.

The next step was marketing. As he wondered how to market the product, a news report of another suicide by hanging in a Mumbai daily caught his eye. He wrote to the editor about his anti-suicide rod. An impressive coverage followed.

[embed]https://twitter.com/SharadAshani/status/992017337564975104?s=20&t=bDu--Q4l6EsbrJJyeibd7Q[/embed]

Soon, government institutions began placing orders; the Air Force School in Faridabad and Kota Hostel Association were some of the first to place orders, followed by IIM Kashipur, and then psychiatry hospitals, hotels, and private institutions.

The game changer

“After the Shark Tank India episode was aired, my phone did not stop ringing for five days,” says Sharad, adding, “Some were to appreciate my innovation, others to place orders. Surprisingly, most of the calls were from eastern India and Puducherry. That’s when I learnt from an NCRB report that Puducherry topped the list of states when it came to suicide by hanging,” says the Indian entrepreneur.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKFAJjEBREs

Following the buzz generated by Shark Tank India, Sharad’s company has been getting more orders than its manufacturing capacity. “We are working to expand our manufacturing units. We plan to begin retailing online this April,” says the entrepreneur, who finds himself working 24x7 post-retirement. “Of course, I am enjoying the entire process. I feel that just like Edison’s invention benefitted the world, my innovation will also greatly impact society. In 10 years, I hope every ceiling fan in the country will have these anti-suicide rods leading to a drastic fall in the incidence of suicides,” he says optimistically.

Reading and forgetting is not the solution

Intrigued with the number of suicides and their fall outs on the deceased’s kin, he adds, “From police investigations, stigma about renting such places, financial repercussions, the complications are huge.” He recently received a call from a woman who’d lost her husband to suicide by hanging, who admitted that if she had been aware of the rod, her husband would be alive.

Present and future

While Sharad has been contemplating manufacturing energy efficient fans with anti-suicide rods, he is currently swamped with orders following the reality show.

[caption id="attachment_21759" align="aligncenter" width="677"]Indian Entrepreneur | Sharad Ashani | Global Indian Sharad Ashani with his wife and daughter[/caption]

The entrepreneur enjoys playing the tabla, reads books by Dale Carnegie, Stephen Covey, and Chan Kim, etc. “These books have been a guide to me in my corporate as well as entrepreneurial journey,” says Sharad, whose wife Sharada and two children Gaurav and Arpita, and their families, make life beautiful. Next on agenda, are plans to innovate on more safety products.

  • Follow Sharad Ashani on Twitter

Reading Time: 7 mins

Story
Philippa Kaye: Advancing sustainable tourism through ‘Indian Experiences’

(April 9, 2024) “I live between India and Yorkshire. Two completely different worlds. My heart lies in India, which I’ve specialised in as a destination expert since 1998, my family lives in Yorkshire, I juggle the two,” mentions entrepreneur, consultant, author and public speaker Philippa Kaye. The British national fell in love with India during her first visit and has since explored its vast expanse, including Delhi/NCR, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Ladakh, Karnataka, Goa, Assam, West Bengal, Gujarat, Odisha, and Chhattisgarh. As a destination consultant, Philippa has been facilitating travel to India since the past two decades, and has spearheaded the establishment of Indian divisions for multiple UK-based travel companies like Selective Asia, Unforgettable Travel and Experience Travel Group. Philippa has also lent her expertise to various hotels and Indian DMCs (Destination Management Companies). “My fervour lies in spotlighting 'A different India,' venturing beyond the conventional tourist destinations,” she tells Global Indian. [caption id="attachment_50611" align="aligncenter" width="576"] Phillipa Kaye[/caption] A gifted writer and author, she has penned a novel, Escape to India. “It is partly my story though I’ve never disclosed which are fact and which are fiction,” she remarks. Moreover, her website Memsahib in

Read More

n="aligncenter" width="576"]Indian Tourism | Philippa Kaye | Global Indian Phillipa Kaye[/caption]

A gifted writer and author, she has penned a novel, Escape to India. “It is partly my story though I’ve never disclosed which are fact and which are fiction,” she remarks. Moreover, her website Memsahib in India encapsulates her varied experiences in India. That’s not all. She has also contributed to columns in prestigious publications such as The Times of India and Mint.

Rich experiences

In the course of two-and-half decades of her association with India, she has enriched her life and developed lasting relationships.

“I have ridden priceless Marwari horses, been invited to royal weddings, been threatened by the local mafia, trekked mountains, rafted white water, been wined and dined by Maharajas, slept out under the stars, driven vintage cars, got caught up in Holi and ended up with hair dyed a permanent shade of green,” she remarks. “Best of all, I have got to know its people and discovered that in India, anything is possible,” the entrepreneur and author mentions. 

[caption id="attachment_50601" align="aligncenter" width="627"]Indian Tourism | Philippa Kaye | Global Indian Philippa Kaye with ladies in Rajasthan[/caption]

Promoting India through ‘Indian Experiences’

Motivated by love for the diversity and richness of the country, Philippa founded Indian Experiences, a consultancy firm in the realm of the Indian travel trade. The firm helps travel companies to showcase the real India helping them discover more offbeat destinations. It promotes experiences beyond normal sightseeing in mainstream destinations and helps to tailor the services to client demographics. 

 “We represent experienced providers and specialist, regional and niche travel companies in India with a focus on ethical and sustainable travel,” adds Philippa.  

Indian Experiences particularly focuses on empowering women and rural population and actively promotes small companies who are specialists in their fields. The firm believes in the ethos of sustainable tourism. In the process, it creates memorable and sustainable travel experiences by crafting unique itineraries for tourists with the goal of making them return for more such Indian experiences. 

[caption id="attachment_50602" align="aligncenter" width="714"]Indian Tourism | Philippa Kaye | Global Indian Philippa Kaye with ladies in Ladakh[/caption]

“Indian Experiences is now in the process of rebuilding itself post Covid” remarks Philippa. Before the pandemic, the firm had an office in India but now it’s working through associate offices. It has also forayed into tourism in Nepal and Sri Lanka. 

India from a British eye 

Philippa describes her experiences in her beloved country as “frustrating, illogical, often hilarious, humbling, surreal, but never, ever dull.”

The most challenging part for her is dealing with the bureaucracy. “It is always a challenge, particularly with setting up a business and bank account and also, as I learnt to my detriment, being able to find a good CA who you can trust,” she tells. “Things take longer over here and in business discussions, there’s a lot more nuance than we use in the UK.” 

It all started when…

Philippa visited India for the first time in 1998 and explored Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka as a part of a six-week recce project for her job – which was for a travel company. After completing her task, she returned to the UK, prepared the brochure and launched the India campaign for the company.

Till date, Kerala and Tamil Nadu hold a special place in her heart – the states that she has visited multiple times since her maiden trip. A strong advocate of meaningful human connections, she still prefers to travel these states with the same driver who she had hired on her first trip to South India.

[caption id="attachment_50603" align="aligncenter" width="829"]Indian Tourism | Philippa Kaye | Global Indian Philippa Kaye with her dad in India[/caption]

Philippa is happily single but has a loving family staying in the UK. “My brother, sister-in-law, nephews and nieces have all been to India. I also brought my dad over for his first trip when he was 80,” she shares with joy.

Escape to India

Her love for the country led her to write the novel - Escape to India - based on a true story about living in the jungles of central India, and running a safari lodge in Kanha National Park in Madhya Pradesh. 

For Philippa and the protagonist in the book, life in India is ‘extraordinary and exhausting, fascinating and unfathomable but always thought provoking’. “Simple daily tasks that we from first world countries take for granted, can become expeditions in India. The most mundane activity can cause endless causes for frustration or amusement. Life in India has tested me, more than occasionally, but amused me endlessly, perhaps that's just me,” mentions the author. 

[caption id="attachment_50605" align="aligncenter" width="499"]Indian Tourism | Philippa Kaye | Global Indian Philippa Kaye[/caption]

 

She is in the process of writing three guidebooks on an alternative India. “I am on the lookout for a publisher,” she says. 

Giving back

Philippa’s consultancy has supported various NGOs in the country by working with them and encouraging tourists to visit the place. It also offers them free marketing and social media strategies to improve their visibility.

The selection of travel partners by Philippa's firm has always been based on their dedication to supporting local communities. While she is in the process of rebuilding the reach of Indian Experiences, the ethos of sustainable tourism and giving back to the community is not being compromised. “I am focusing on steering it in the right direction,” she signs off.

[caption id="attachment_50608" align="aligncenter" width="608"]Indian Tourism | Philippa Kaye | Global Indian Philippa Kaye in Rajasthan[/caption]

  • Follow Phillipa Kaye on LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook and X

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
Shub Bhowmick: Helping Fortune 500s solve analytics problems through Tredence Inc

(May 4, 2024) In today's data-driven world, companies collect vast amounts of information, hoping to unlock valuable insights. Those insights find their way into reports and presentations but often end up not being used, for a number of reasons. For instance, the reports could be too complex and full of jargon for non-technical people to translate into actionable steps, or have so many potential improvements that teams become overwhelmed and don't know where to focus. Change can also be difficult and organisations could struggle to adapt their processes or culture to these new insights, even if they might be beneficial to them. This is the gap that Shub Bhowmick and the team at Tredence are hoping to bridge. For over two decades, Shub Bhowmick has grown as a 'problem solver, entrepreneur and technology leader'. In 2013, he co-founded Tredence, a data science and AI engineering company that now has over 1000 employees with offices in Foster City, Chicago, London, Toronto and Bengaluru. Their clients include over 30 Fortune 500 companies in a wide range of sectors, as they work specifically towards solving this last mile problem in analytics. [caption id="attachment_51261" align="aligncenter" width="368"] Shub Bhowmick[/caption] Discovering the potential in data analytics

Read More

ge.globalindian.com//wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Untitled-design-49-300x300.png" alt="Shub Bhowmick | Global Indian" width="368" height="368" /> Shub Bhowmick[/caption]

Discovering the potential in data analytics

After graduating with a B.Tech degree in Chemical Engineering from IIT-BHU, Shub went on to do an MBA at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management. He has held high ranking positions at Diamond Consultants (currently PwC), Mu Sigma, Liberty Advisor Group and Infosys. His career in data analytics began at a consultancy in Chicago, Diamond Consultants. "Around 12 or 13 years back I was involved in a data analytics practice that Diamond had created, and I was deeply influenced by this experience," he recalls, in an interview with Nasscom. "I realised for the first time how significantly data management can actually have an impact."

From there, he moved to Mu Sigma, which he describes as another deeply inspirational experience. "I was able to see how data analytics services are not just an add-on service offering - at Mu Sigma, it was the core and basically the only service offering," he said. Over a decade ago, Mu Sigma was at the forefront of last mile services in data analytics, and worked to provide actionable business insights for Fortune 500 companies. They offered a range of data analytics services, helping clients collect, clean, analyze and interpret vast amounts of data. They even had their own Art of Problem Solving platform, which is a set of tools designed to help clients translate vast amounts of data into concrete solutions, emphasizing actionable strategies over reports. "They were able to create a very interesting business model around this," Shub recalls. "The industry was also starting to attract some really good talent and nurture them into future leaders."

Still, Shub would wonder if there was a better, more efficient way to deliver this service. "Back then, in the analytics industry, most of the companies and providers relied on a manual process, on a value chain that involved pulling data typically into a throwaway MS Office based data file, using Excel for the analysis, some bit of SaaS, Power Point based summary and delivery."  This was a decade ago, when cloud technology was still very new and not really in use. "It was basically a sales automation platform, there was no Azure or Google Cloud," Shub explains.

The tech-centric approach to business insights

Shub Bhowmick | Global Indian

Around 2012-13, Shub Bhowmick, then based in Silicon Valley, saw an opportunity to start a different kind of data service. "We brought the essence of business analytics, which is the focus on business insights, but we combined that with engineering, to deliver insights in a more efficient, value-driven, adoption-focussed way." This set them up from the competition too, as they moved away from business analysts and the manual processes towards a more technology centric approach. "We were using big tech to automate portions of the value chain and create greater scale and speed in insights delivery."

Over the last seven years or so, cloud-based platforms and hyperscalers took the world by storm, and production workloads quickly moved to cloud tech. Tredence Inc didn't waste time in getting on board, and began developing 'cloud-centric capabilities to deliver analytics services with a focus on adoption and shortening the time to impact," the Global Indian explains. "Cloud and data analytics are very much intertwined and will continue to be so in my opinion, as enterprises invest in cloud native AI capabilities," he adds.

The age of generative AI

The arrival of generative language model Chat GPT was another game changer. "I had never heard the use of the word 'hallucination' in my industry until we all came across this explosion created by OpenAI', Shub said in an interview. "Since then it's been the only topic everybody's talking about, especially in technology." He has watched the ecosystem grow, from a time in Silicon Valley where companies hired AI experts to work in isolated corners of office buildings, to now, where titles like 'Chief AI officer' are common, and AI developers are a core arm of big tech.

"We had talked about AI for a long time, we used to call it advanced data science and applied analytics, and just AI for the longest time. Now we call it Generative AI but the idea is not very different," he says. "It's about how you take data, information that you already have within your firewall, or leverage other data sources and then help your executives make more meaningful decisions to improve their business." At Tredence Inc, he says, the team is working on fine tuning foundational models, and prompt engineering systems to cater to their existing clients, and provide them with a wide range of highly customised insights through AI language models. Coding assistance is another important segment, as the industry begins to recognize that generative AI can significantly improve the productivity of all kinds of engineers.

Shub Bhowmick | Global Indian

In March 2024, Tredence decided to invest 10 percent of its annual revenues in developing GenAi and advanced AI capabilities across engineering, customer experience, machine learning operations, supply chain and other verticals in data analytics. Through this the San-Jose based startup is looking to grow revenues by 40 to 50 percent, Shub Bhowmick told ET.  "We're building AI language models by fine-tuning foundational models. These models need not be large in size, we are using public and proprietary data of our customers to create agents to serve their unique needs in sectors such as retail, consumer goods, healthcare, telecom, banking and financial services and manufacturing."

Share & Follow us

Subscribe News Letter

About Global Indian

Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

Read more..
  • Join us
  • Sitemap
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Subscribe
© 2024 Copyright The Global Indian / All rights reserved | This site was made with love by Xavier Augustin