10 June 2009

Indias Best Companies to Work for 2009

India's Best Companies to Work for 2009



India's Best Companies to Work For 2009
10 Jun 2009, 1226 hrs IST


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Business is all about results. Results arise from opportunities. Opportunities arise from relationships. And business relationships must work beyond the boundaries of achievement to distinguish a good workplace from a great one.

In its latest edition of "India's Best Companies To Work For-2009", The Economic Times in partnership with the Great Places To Work Institute, attempts to do just that.

Here's a list of India's top 25 best workplaces:

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India's Best Companies To Work For 2009

RMSI Pvt Ltd
10 Jun 2009, 1223 hrs IST


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Rank: 1

India HQ: Noida

Employees: 1457

Gender Ratio (F:M): 1:4.69

Employee Turnover: 8%

Best Practices:

There is more gravitas in the work culture of the company than the slew of awards it has won over the years reflects. It encourages its employees to diversify and rewards them for their out of the box efforts.

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RMSI Private Pimited : Reach meet share involve





Intel Technology India Pvt Ltd
10 Jun 2009, 1222 hrs IST


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Rank: 2

India HQ: Bangalore

Employees: 2541

Gender Ratio (F:M): 1:3.65

Employee Turnover: 10%

Best Practices:

At every group in Intel, there are broad guidelines or deliverables set, but the culture is always steeped in how they could make things bigger, better. The chipmaker also believes in fully equipping with various tools for its workers.

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Intel Technology India Pvt Ltd : Inside intelligence too



Federal Express Corporation
10 Jun 2009, 1220 hrs IST


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Rank: 3

India HQ: Mumbai

Employees: 511

Gender Ratio (F:M): 1:4.68

Employee Turnover: 21%

Best Practices:

It isn’t just the camaraderie, though that drives the company loyalty Federal Express is reputed for; it’s the fairness that has become a hallmark of the organisation, something its founder-CEO Fred Smith instilled right at its inception.

Read the full article:

Federal Express Corporation : Purple patch



More @ India's Best Companies to Work for 2009



Source:Economic Times

How to turn Rs 100 into Rs 1.9 cr in three months

How to turn Rs 100 into Rs 1.9 cr in three months


n 3 months, Rs 100 could grow to Rs 1.9 cr in Indian market

10 Jun 2009, 0807 hrs IST, Shailesh Menon & Rajesh Mascarenhas, ET Bureau

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MUMBAI: In 1999, when he was barely 18 years old and still a student, American Timothy Sykes decided to invest his $12,000 gift money in the
stock market. In a little over two years, his investment had grown to $1.65 million. Impressive, no doubt, but it’s still not the stock market investor’s ultimate fantasy.


Now, suppose an Indian investor had been struck by a brilliant flash of visionary foresight at the start of March this year. Starting March 2, which was the first trading day of the month, for the next three months he would know how each stock was going to behave and which one would end up being the best performer every single day. What would our investor have done with just Rs 100? Would he have made Mr Sykes look like a babe in the woods?

On March 2, his Rs 100 would have been on Apollo Tyres, the top gainer of the day. At the close of trading, his investment would have been worth Rs 124 and he would have redeemed it to invest the entire amount in Monnet Ispat on March 3. The steel-maker’s stock would then have turned his Rs 124 into Rs 139.

Thus aided by prophetic vision our investor would have gone on, watching his Rs 100 multiply manifold as he picked the best-performing stock each day for 57 trading sessions. As general elections drew nearer around the second week of April, there was a wave of positive sentiment towards the troubled export, infrastructure and real estate sectors.

Stocks of companies such as Gitanjali Gems, Reliance Infra, Sasken Communication Technologies and Unitech rose smartly on hopes that a new government would come up with plans to infuse new life into these ailing business segments.

On the morning of April 16, when India began voting to elect new representatives to the Lok Sabha, our fortunate investor’s Rs 100 had grown to Rs 36,812. He used the money to buy shares of Gitanjali Gems and exited the stock that evening, pocketing a gain of Rs 6,085.


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Over the next month, as the world’s largest democratic exercise unfolded, our investor’s Midas Touch with stocks continued. On election results eve on May 15, he parked his money, now Rs 14,11,863, in Aban Offshore. In a little over five hours, he was richer by Rs 3,10,186.

Again, on May 18, when trading had to be halted twice as the market showed its glee with the outcome of the election, our prescient investor had picked Indiabulls Real Estate. In less than two minutes of trading, the pre-market opening order for shares worth Rs 17,22,049 has become Rs 22,98,074.

Indian investor better off

On June 2, after two months of living the fantasy, our investor’s original Rs 100 had multiplied 2 lakh-fold and returned him a fortune of Rs 1,97,03,879. During this period, the benchmark Sensex index of the Bombay Stock Exchange had risen by a measly 50% while it took Mr Sykes over two years to multiply his investment by 137 times.

Our investor may have been imaginary and his investments fantastic. But like English novelist Terry Pratchett remarked, “Fantasy is an exercise bicycle for the mind. It might not take you anywhere, but it tones up the muscles that can.”



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