Waitrose and Aldi UK both has teamed up with BRCGS Professional Programme to work together to develop their future talent and educate their suppliers on best practice in Food safety.
Welcome our latest BRCGS Professional Award Recipients – @Pavan Basani – Canada, @وقاص-اکرم Waqas Akram – UAE, @Chia Siew Lian – Malaysia.
*”Enroll your QA team”*
Fast Track your vision through Virtual Online Training in 5 weekends. Delegates from around the world can attend the courses scheduled at Indian Standard Time.
BRCGS Professionals avail 10% discount. Book any 4 courses and avail 15% discount.
Tentative 9th & 10th Jan 2021 weekend – BRCGS HACCP Course – INR 9000/- (Out of India GBP 155).
Confirmed 23rd – 25th Jan 2021 back to back 2 Weekends, FSPCA PCQI Human Food and Animal Food – 2.5 + 2.5 days Each course: INR 9500/- (Out of India GBP 155).
Confirmed 20, 21, 27 Feb 2021 two Weekends, Risk Assessment, Root Cause Analysis, Validation & Verification – Package INR 24,000/- (Out of India GBP 405). Book first 3 oneday PSM courses and get 28th Feb – Food Fraud VACCP course free.
Tentative BRCGS Food Safety Lead Auditor Course – 5 days split-in 2 weekends on 11, 12, 13 , 18 & 19 Mar 2021 – INR 13000/- (Out of India GBP 235).
Course fee includes Certificate Fee. No hidden charges. Free Exam on last day of the courses.
Hurry Only last few seats available. Contact: Mr.Velavan, +919884017880, lead@processindia.com
We had a power packed panel discussion on Renewable energy moderated by R Jeevanandham (Partner, Fox Mandal) with two expert panelists – R Balajee (Project Advisor & Consultant, Solon India) and Srijith Menon (BDHC Chennai).
The Guest Speaker of the day was Sanjay Rao Chaganti, Executive Coach & Happiness Catalyst who spoke on “Cultivating The James Bond In You” and about inner energy.
BBG South along with close to 50 of its members conducted its 100th meeting virtually. Paul Dryden, Deputy Head of Mission along with Prakash Challa, SSPDL spoke on the situation owing to Covid 19, followed by the speaker of the day, Dr. ES Krishnamoorthy from Buddhi Clinic.
Savita Subbaraya & Uma Ravishankar
Over past two decades, women have made great strides in the workplace, standing shoulder to shoulder with men on basis of their own capabilities. However, in the corporate leadership echelons, women are still in low numbers. Leaders like Indira Nooyi and Kiran Mazumdar Shaw are exceptions that prove the rule.
In order to more closely examine the phenomenon of women in leadership and to look at what can be done, the Bangalore Chapter of LinkedIn Local organised a virtual panel discussion with industry stalwarts such as T R Parasuraman, Dipika Trehan, Kavitha Rao and our own Vikas Chawla on the panel. The event took place in july’20 hosted by Kiran Addala and moderated by Uma Ravishankar.
Mr. T R Parasuraman, Deputy Managing Director, Toyota Industries Engine. started the proceedings with examples from his own life – personal and professional. He was in awe of contributions he had seen from women in his team. His firm opinion was industries could only benefit by the equal involvement of men and women in all aspects – from decision making to execution. Ms. Dipika Trehan, CEO of Corporate Diva, agreed that lot of skills were gender neutral. What held women back was the diffidence women tend to feel and show. She cited the all-too-common example of a couple of candidates for a leadership role. Both were equal in experience and skills, the only differentiating factor being gender. While the gentleman being interviewed had plans in place for how he would lead the team and the functions, the lady was wracked by doubt about whether she could handle the role. This diffidence and self-doubt would prove to be her undoing. It is important for women to be confident in themselves and their abilities and to stop second guessing themselves. Women need to exude self-awareness and self-esteem in order to move ahead.
Kavitha Rao, Director at Learners Route India, spoke next describing how avenues have been opening up for women in recent past. Women have grabbed these opportunities to contribute immensely, especially in urban areas. However, until recently women were stereotyped into ‘caring and nurturing’ roles within the workforce. Therefore, while women predominate in fields like HR, teaching and nursing, leadership roles for women remain elusive.
Ms. Trehan voiced the idea that it is perhaps time for the scope of leadership to change. Leadership is not about aggression. Multi-tasking, the ability to build a cohesive team, firmness in decision making and attention to detail along with a bird’s eye view are all important facets to leadership. These are skills that can be as much a part of a woman’s psyche as a man’s It is here that women in leadership roles will play a big part.
Vikas Chawla of Social Beat, added that an important skill that women bring to the table is creativity. Social Beat’s team of 170+ members has as many women as men at all levels, including leadership. Mr. Chawla felt that women are natural at finding creative solutions and only need to harness this skill and bring it to the workplace to thrive. The discussion concluded that physiology aside, men and women are equally capable in leadership. It is perhaps time to change leadership towards skills perspective to engender great leadership