Management behavior is the singlemost important factor in communicating the Total Quality Process. The company's senior executives must make an uncompromising commitment to implement
Total Quality and personally involve themselves on the personal front.
 
 
 

When we aspire for more, then we challenge ourselves to excel, and with that striving comes excellence.

- Ed Hoofnagle
Group Chairman and CEO

 
 
 

We both have to have an SDLC, we happen to call it UniRAD.

- Sanjeev Midha
Group President and CTO

 
 
 

...making ebusinessware as one of the most cherished companies in the world.

- Ashu Chadha Executive Director and CAO

 
 
 

Many of you were surprised with the simple real life examples on how a more productive people attract more prosperity.

- Rajesh Abhyankar Technology Partner
 
 
 
A strong culture is a system of informal rules that spell out how people behave most of the time. It helps people feel better about what they do so they are most likely to work harder.
 
 
 
 

This issue of our newsletter will be presenting a series of thoughts about quality and process discipline in the context of our global business. It is encouraging to see the business continue its strong growth even through the traditionally slow summer days. However, with growth like this, one can't help but think that the best is yet to be. For my part, I believe that our aspirations will continue to climb along with our growth - and I see that as a good thing. When we aspire for more, then we challenge ourselves to excel, and with that striving comes excellence.

As a continuing effort of our innovation programme, we continue to seek new opportunities in our target markets and we continue to invest in our internally-generated intellectual property-based solutions:

  • The Data Quality Management System (also known as - CreditDimensions)
  • Derivatives Price Capture System (aka - Genie)
  • CRM Implementation Services (aka - E.piphany)

    There are others of course, and we are constantly trying to find new ways to market these offerings and to build recurring client relationships around these solutions. The results to date have been encouraging - we see a bright future from our internal innovation as well as our good client relations. But, we can never rest on any laurels. Innovation requires constant work, constant striving to improve and constant renewal in thought - sometimes we make leaps with a "new set of eyes" other times its the same eyes that see something in a different light. So, we have to always be looking, examining and thinking about what comes next, about how to make things better. Therein lies the opportunity for quality management and process discipline. If we apply discipline to our challenges of innovation, then we can sustain the follow through which is needed after the initial joy of creation passes. The creative process comes in small bursts - process discipline is required to analyze creative inputs for re-use and to cultivate the IP from a seedling to a full-grown solution. So, while creativity is like art, the innovation process more like a factory. We have to be rigorous in our application of quality to the work that we do, we have to constantly strive to make things better, and we have to continually look for the potential for re-use. Once we find those seeds of promise, we need to find ways to test our hypothesis, then find ways to generate ongoing, sustainable solution sets. Sanjeev, myself and all of the partners are at your service to try to help you in identifying and cultivating solutions from innovation. But, the road is long and the challenges are many, so we need tenacity, discipline and creativity.


    As I sat with my sons to watch the magnificent Discovery Shuttle Liftoff and subsequent flipping as well as docking with Space Station, “programmer” in me couldn’t help but think about the coding that must have gone behind the scenes and the team of unknown programmers whose work contributed to this seemingly dream like project. But then I started drawing parallels between NASA programming and what we do at ebusinessware.

    We both have to have an SDLC, we happen to call it UniRAD. We both have to have teams comprising of architects / designers, developers, QA testers, project leads, and tech writers. We both have domain experts as critical part of the team, more the team members know about the subject more effective they are. We both work on mission critical systems where failure to meet required standards and results can cost heavy which include money, name, face and more. We both have to have multiple testing points namely unit testing, module testing, integration testing, system testing, etc. List goes on!

    Imagine NASA team of software engineers leaving bugs at the end of their projects in each of their mission critical assignments for their users “the astronauts in space during the flight) to find the bugs for them. There would never have been any achievement in the area of space exploration by NASA (and as a matter of fact, Russian Federal space agency, India’s ISRO, Chinese Academy of Space, European ESA, etc.) but fortunately the facts prove otherwise. There has never been any proven software bug that has resulted in disaster of any kind in over 50 years of history of space exploration programs. 50 years ago, there were no consultants who had yet coined the terms like “Total quality management (TQM)”, “Six sigma”, “Zero defect”, “Continuous improvement (CI)” and had not yet made millions of dollars by holding seminars and writing books on these subjects. There were no automated testing software products either.

    Why would NASA engineers never leave bugs in their systems time and again while we would? This is the question “we all programmers of the world” must ask ourselves at the beginning, during and at the end of our assignments, I can assure you the quality of our output will improve by leaps and bounds for each of the NASA engineer is a programmer just like all of us as proven in hypothesis above.

     

    Rajesh’s arrival to the ebusinessware India office, carrying a very symbolic just-published book—'The World is Flat' stirred the conscience of many employees. My recent return from the annual vacation to Thailand had already evoked many thoughts at my leisure time on shrinking of the world and our role becoming more and more comprehending and evolving.

    While taking Rajesh on a drive through Gurgaon—the hub of IT sector in India —
     
    I could see his amazement on the mushrooming of glassed tall buildings specially “made to order” for IT.

    He was enthusiastic, but somewhere down the line I could see some concern in his questioning eyes and he said, “To sustain this growth, we need to do a lot of smart and hard work” which provoked a lot of thought process.

     
    After I completed reading the book, 'The World is Flat', I realized at my inner conscience that all of us are very fortunate to be born in an age in a century where the world is becoming a global village. Where, sitting in a conference hall, we talk to four different countries, where in the early morning we catch up with Singapore, afternoon with London and evening with the US.

    It has definitely increased the momentum, the speed and the growth which is directly proportionate to responsibility, productivity and reward for each one of us. Nonetheless, the concern remains like that of Rajesh, which I thought of sharing with you in this newsletter. Our dream of achieving the success, making ebusinessware as one of the most cherished
    companies in the world. And this can only be achieved by our persistent effort and taking measures on the following:
    1. An aggressive hunt for more knowledge and creativity.
    2. Balance between values, both human and financial.
    3. Commitment towards the cause for which we come to work together.
    4. Two-way communication and information-sharing.
    5. Truthfulness towards the organization’s motto.
    6. Mutual support towards collaboration at all levels.
    7. Never say die attitude.
    8. Ability to measure input and output.

    Our endeavor to bring quality in whatever we do, will take us miles ahead. Remember we need to take part in this scenario in the best possible way so that someday when someone like Friedmen comes to India, visits Gurgaon, reaches the ebusinessware office, watches the commitment of our young engineers, witnesses our processes, sits in our conference rooms and looks at our hanging video cameras, uses our IP phones, he will say “Wow”.

    Dear all, this day is not too far. It is very near waiting for all of us. We have to walk towards it and be part of what the world holds for THE BEST. Lets work on our competitive strengths:
  • Innovation.
  • Leadership and management.
  • Proven global delivery model.
  • Comprehensive solutions.
  • Commitment to superior quality of delivery.
  • Process execution.
  • Long-standing client relationships.
  • Ability to scale.
     

    Somewhere I had read:

     

    “I hear and I forget
    I see and I remember
    I do and I understand”

     

    The Singapore office welcomed ebusinessware Group President and CTO Sanjeev Midha on his visit to the city on June 13, 2005. During his four-day visit, Sanjeev’s agenda included meeting clients and updating prospects with ebusinessware’s latest service offerings. An important part of Sanjeev’s itinerary was meeting the staff and their families in Singapore.

    Among the existing clients, Sanjeev, along with Sameer Randive, met the CSFB team. The client representatives expressed their appreciation of the ebusinessware team’s efforts, work ethics and their strong contribution to the risk management project.

     
    From left to right : Sanjeev, Ramesh, Sharad, Ramakant and Gurpal.
     
    From left to right : Manish, Kanushree, Anita, Mahua, Sanjeev, Ramakant, Gurpal, Vasant, Ramesh and Sameer.

    Sanjeev and Sameer also worked on developing future strategies for the Singapore office and launching a new marketing initiative from Singapore for Global Marketing.

    On the evening of 15th June, a staff dinner was arranged at a local Indian Restaurant where Sanjeev spent time with the Singapore team members and and vice versa. Sanjeev spoke with them individually to understand their motivations, both personal and professional. He lauded the team's excellent efforts at the client site and encouraged members to continue contributing strongly towards the company growth.
     
    In the last week of June, this year, Edward Hoofnagle, Group Chairman and CEO visited London. Accompanying Ed on this visit was Sudhir Dhingra, Director-Financial Data Operations. Ed and Sudhir had detailed discussions with ebusinessware’s alliance partner Adsatis, represented by Michael Smethurst and Steve Shute.

    On the card were updates of data service offerings from CreditDimensions (CDI).
     

    It was a fantastic opportunity for me to work from our India office after over two years. It was great to meet the entire India team and put faces to the voices I kept talking to on the phone. A lot has changed as expected - changed for the better. During my visit I tried to meet with all Project Leaders at least twice as a group and many others individually. Through these sessions the idea of Process Innovation initiative was born that is in line with the Innovation 2005 theme that Ed chalked out. I will talk about this a little later in this article.

    I took that opportunity to meet with the entire team – all five floors and deliver the presentation that showcases some of our best practices and ideas. A quick recap is in place for the messages I wanted to and tried to deliver to all of you at the India office.

    Support Sales and Marketing Effort
    All of us need to support the Sales and Marketing effort in whatever way we can. Writing case studies and one-pager summaries, reviewing existing marketing material, providing interesting ideas for our client presentation, improving content on the website, anything that suits your skills. Why not put a little effort into showing off our hard work? Moreover if we want to work on more interesting technologies, why not support the Sales team to get more projects in these areas? We have already seen results where the E.piphany marketing material (one-pager summary, two-pager case study and a detailed case study) was put together in record time with help from the ECMS team. Can we see more of such examples? I shared a spreadsheet with all of you after the presentation that has an Executive Summary for each Practice and detailed Case Studies for each project. That is a good starting point to start coordinating with your Practice Manager – Partner.

    The World is Flat
    I have left a copy of this interestingly titled book at the India office. We no longer have the privilege in India of being the only destination of choice for offshore IT work. We have to grow up on the value chain before others in this level playing field take us over. I think the message was loud and clear – no longer plain vanilla ice cream; need to create innovative sundaes! We can all act by taking a simple step of following our Top 5 Key Process Areas. I have shared more about this in the Process Innovation section in this article.

    The Tipping Point
    A standard human response to implementing any new idea is – how can I do this alone? A book I mentioned by the same name is an interesting read and can show you with concrete example something many of you already know – every long journey starts with a single small step. There is no need to wait for an initiative to be formulated by someone in the management team to bring about a change. I believe in the power of intention. All it requires is a small group of individuals to bring an excellent idea to a point where it tips and gathers momentum for larger user involvement. We have already seen this with simple ideas like putting a small project code in the subject line of all our emails. More such ideas can lead to small gains in productivity to all of us. This leads to my next point.

    Productivity = Prosperity

    Many of you were surprised with the simple real life examples on how a more productive people attract more prosperity. This applies to individuals, companies, even governments of nations. How can we be more productive and automate our unit testing? How can we automate every such task that we are bored doing! Remember the equation.

    Forums and Discussions
    This is something I keep talking about at every possible opportunity. Many Project Leaders also enquired about method to enhance discussions and conversations across the five floors at the India office and across the continents between our other offices. We have many different channels to facilitate this – Mailing lists like ebw-ThinkTank and Discussion Forums on UVS. Yet again, why limit us to these? Does anyone have any new ideas? We need to further promote candid discussions and take them in the right spirit to improve. Remember the world is flat and we cannot afford to be complacent sitting at our cozy desks!

    Process Innovation
    Lastly, the Process Innovation program that all Project Leaders participated in now needs to be supported by each one of us. The idea is simple – We have great processes defined and automated – now is the time to start following at least the Top 5 across the board. If you recall, we created five teams of Project Leaders and each team has a mission to evangelize one of these Top 5 Key Process Areas using innovative means and ways –

  • Timesheet Process - Kapil, Vivek, Sudhir Dhingra and Richa.
  • Issue Tracking Process - Abid, Shuchita, Susanta and Kedar.
  • Project Planning Process - Sajjan, Amit, Brijesh and Sameer Khanna.
  • Automated Unit Testing Process - Sumit, Nikhil, Tarun, Pawan and Rajesh Kumar.
  • Vacation Planning Process - Prashant, Vineet, Shailendra and PL Arora.

    Ashu will keep us informed on the progress these teams are making by way of concrete quantitative metrics. E.g., Number of defaulters reduced by what percentage; how many projects now have an updated project plan and a weekly status report etc.

    Other important things I cherish about this trip are Abid Sahab’s sher-shayari (Urdu Poetry), Gunbir’s Jaya Jaya Shiva Shankar (Hindi Song), Brijesh’s new-comer mandatory performance at the dinner and most important of all is the efficiency and planning that all teams demonstrated in organizing lunch sessions at fantastic places. We now need to extend that planning expertise to our projects. Keep up the good work and remember the two things that you cannot go wrong in this company if caught practicing – Process Leadership and Meritocracy!



     
    Following the close monitoring of adherence to EIS Project norms, by the project teams, The HR Department announced the winning team for EIS Awards (Timesheets).
         
    Apart from this, the department also announced the awards for
    1. Star Performer of the Month July 2005 is Goldie Sehgal.
    2. Employee of the Month July 2005 in US is Aseem Narula.
    3. Employee of the Month July 2005 in INDIA is Rajesh Kumar.
    4. Employee of the Month July 2005 in SINGAPORE is Sharad Mohan.
         
     

    1.
    The India team members also wished farewell to Shalabh Agrawal who left for the US to join ebusinessware’s prestigious project Primus. He will be a part of the onshore team to handle the new challenge to build a trading system to encapsulate the complete life cycle for a hedge fund investment for the client.
    2.
    Ebusinessware team bid adieu to Hemant Gaur who left for the US. Hemant took up his new assignment in a leading US investment bank project to develop an engine that will handle diverse email formats and extract trade information to automate one of the bank’s processes and improve overall efficiency.
     
     
    1.
    A warm welcome awaited Rajesh Abhyankar on his latest visit to India. His guidance to teams as part of the run-up to two crucial deliveries was greatly appreciated. He also initiated the constitution of groups, comprising team leads, to take charge of five crucial project development aspects under UniRAD.
    2.
    Gurpal Singh was welcomed by the India team on his arrival in India. He interacted with the senior management during his stay.
    3.
    The India team also extended a warm welcome to Sandeep Singh. His visit was aimed at facilitating knowledge transfer among the teams of several prestigious projects. The teams interacted extensively with Sandeep throughout his stay.
    4.
    Shrikant Dixit was welcomed back to India office. His return was marked by knowledge transfer in a prestigious project.
    5.
    Asheesh Sharma was welcomed by the team on his visit to the India office. During his stay valuable sessions of knowledge transfer among the SAAS team members were conducted.
    6.
    Contact Management System team member Shanu Sharma too shared her knowledge and project-related developments with the E.piphany team members.
    7.
    India team also welcomed back Shailendra Mathur on his return from the US after successful completion of knowledge acquisition of the Out Brokerage Repository Applications for an Insurance client.
    8.
    On the completion of his knowledge gathering for the Credit Derivative Swaps project in the US office, Lovkesh Joshi was welcomed back to India.
    1. Parth Sarthi Ghosh 2. Sameer Khanna 3. Mursheed Alam
    4. Brijesh Sharma 5. Siddhartha Srivastava 6. Chetan Arora
     
    The training imparted by Offshore Faculty and Onshore visiting Directors, Sandeep Singh and Rajesh Abhyankar in May-June 2005, were enriching sessions for the participants. These initiatives were broadly divided into:
    1)
    Hibernate : Hibernate concepts including Object/Relational Mapping with Hibernate were explained to 21 participants attending this session.
    2)
    Java : This included Core Java and JSP/Servlets. A total of 20 participants attended the Core Java session and another 11 participants attended the JSP/Servlets session.
    3)
    UniRAD : UniRAD’s five Phases including Project Handling using CVS and Tutos were explained to 24 participants.
    4)
    Finance : Finance Basics, Financial Markets, Time Value of Money, Financial, Instruments, Fixed Income Securities and other Finance concepts were explained to 16 participants.
    5) Eclipse and ANT : A total of 12 participants attended this training session.
    6)
    VBA Training : A total of 8 participants attended this training session.
    7)
    Quality Assurance : The emphasis was on the need for automated testing in projects using Rational Robot to all 12 QA participants.

    The Technical Training Schedule for the quarter July–September 2005 will include Struts, Java Script, RDBMS – Oracle, JSP-Servlets, Quality Assurance, UniRAD, Finance, Basic Programming Techniques and Object Oriented Analysis & Design, OS and Application Behavior, Hibernate, Eclipse, Cruise Control and ANT.

    The months of June and July have been very eventful for us at ebusinessware with several successful project deliveries completed and multiple new projects added to our fold. Our endeavor to improve our processes has also met with success during this phase. The following projects provided the opportunity to improve upon our processes in delivery as well as project management.
    1.
    The Fixed Income Derivative Application has been put into parallel run. It has been very well accepted by the client. This successful delivery has resulted in a new project being awarded to ebusinessware, almost three times the size of the original project. We would like to congratulate the team for its hard work and persistence.
    2.
    The Forms Development project, undertaken by a very young team, is reaping huge appreciation from the client for the innovative ideas and quality being delivered. We look forward to the completion of the project in right time.
    3.
    We were also able to integrate E.piphany in the client's environment after some hard work by the teams at both the end. It required a lot of coordination and the team came out successful.

    Learning on the way...
     
    Projects where we have not been able to define the success criteria from the very beginning tend to extend beyond our expectation. We all need to be very vigilant during the initial phase of our project to ensure that we have defined and understood the success criteria.

    New Projects:
    1.
    We have been awarded two new projects. One of them involves the enhancement of an existing application on Hedge Funds in Java technology and the other, relates to improvement of performance of a C++ based application. New teams are being constituted for these two projects.
    2.
    The new Project-Fixed Income Derivative Application2 is in the initial phase. Team building is already underway. We expect to complete this project in the next nine months. This is a dream project for all of us due to the kind of complexity and technology involved in it. Our faith in our team has made us confident that we would be able to sail past it without problems.

    Training:
    1.
    In keeping with our schedule of implementing quarterly training plans for our offshore center, we are glad to announce that at least 60 per cent of the offshore team has gone through at least one training course in last six months.
    2.
    We plan to introduce at least two new courses in the next quarterly plan. One of them would be on Project Management and would be aimed towards project leads.


    Singapore – Vasant Kumar, Project Lead
    With more than six years of experience, Vasant’s core competencies are in core Java, JSP, Servlets and Oracle. Vasant joined ebusinessware more than three years ago and has been working with prestigious projects since. Vasant’s strengths -- strong programming and problem-solving skills -- led to his recognition as a project Lead in India. Vasant is currently a part of the ebusinessware risk management team in Singapore, which caters to the exclusive development needs of Risk Management client in Singapore. Prior to this Vasant was the Team Lead for a prestigious client. A  B.Com graduate, Vasant has completed his MCA from IGNOU, New Delhi.

    Vasant’s skill sets include Java (Core, JSP, Servlet, EJB, RMI), JavaScript, Delphi, FoxPro, C, and Visual Basic coupled with Exposure in PERL.
     
    Star Performer of the Month July, Goldie Sehgal
    Goldie, a young member of the India team, has been with ebusinessware for two years. He joined ebusinessware as a trainee in the Electronic Application project. His steady and laudable performance was instrumental in his career growth to Software Engineer. At present Goldie is in charge of an EA project involving the migration of around 800 forms of the existing application from Adobe Version 4 to Version 7.

    Goldie’s specialization is in core Java, Servlets, JSP, Java Script, JDBC, Install Shield (6.2.2) and Configuration management. He completed his BCA from IGNOU, New Delhi and his MCA from Dr. D Y Patil Institute of Management & Research, Pune.

     
     

    UniRAD

    The three dimensions of Quality, Cost and Schedule create a diverging strain on projects. The aim of a Quality Management System is to have them converge by effectively managing the other three dimensions - Process, People and Technology...

     
     
     
    Designing and implementing a process, improving its maturity to higher levels and sustaining continuous improvements are the three functions of UniRAD's process dimension...
     
     
     
    ebw's vision is to excel in providing custom software services to its customers' mission critical applications...
     
     
     

    EIASE

    Focuses on pioneering training initiatives at all levels, in all streams, from time to time
    in the
    company...

     
     
     

    EIS

    ebw Information System is all set to fulfil knowledge demands of employees, management and clients...

     
     
     
    When placed in the same system, people, however different, tend to produce the same results.
     
     
     
     
     
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