
Motivational
“Just a Slip … Not a Fall”….:” No Question of Giving Up”….
Climbing a ladder of success is definitely not an easy task. There is a saying that goes, “Rome was not built in a day,” similarly there is no successful person who has got the name and fame overnight. It’s not like successful personalities have never failed but they dared to stand against all odds, which can only attain through hard work and sheer determination. Let us take a look at these personalities who have never accepted defeat to achieve their goals, as compiled by listdose.com
1. Lionel Messi:
Argentinian striker, Lionel Messi is widely regarded as one of the greatest players of the modern generation. He plays for FC Barcelona and the Argentina national team. He has been described as Diego Maradona’s successor because of his prolific goal scoring record and ability to dribble past opponents. Widely recognised as the best player in the world and rated by some commentators, coaches and players as the greatest footballer of all time, he is the first football player in history to win FIFA world player of the year four times. Despite his successful career today, Messi as a child was diagnosed with a growth hormone disorder, or GHD. It is often called idiopathic short stature, but there are problems that go beyond being shorter than average. The treatments were expensive, a $900 monthly expense that his modest family could not afford. So his parents decided to move to Barcelona, Spain for the treatment.
2.Sudha Chandran:
Sudha Chandran is a well known Bharatanatyam dancer from Chennai, India. She completed her Masters in Mumbai, and while travelling from Mumbai to Chennai, she met with an accident. The wound on her right leg got affected by gangrene, which resulted in the amputation. But despite her injury, Sudha went on to become one of the most highly acclaimed dancers. She is recognized in many countries and has been honored with numerous awards and still receives invitations to perform dance in all over the world.
3 Ludwig van Beethoven:
Ludwig van Beethoven, a German composer and pianist is one of the most famous and influential composers of all times. Some of his best known compositions include 9 symphonies, 5 concertos for piano, 32 piano sonatas, and 16 string quartets. Miraculously, this great composer went deaf during his course of life as a musician. Then on, he was unable to hear his own compose music. In spite of his physical shortcoming, music made him carry on and gave the world some of the best music ever.
4. Thomas Alva Edison:
Thomas Alva Edison was an American inventor and businessman who developed many devices that greatly influenced life around the world, including the phonograph, the motion picture camera, and a practical electric light bulb. He was also called ‘The Wizard of Menlo Park’. This extraordinary inventor, failed over ten thousand times on his attempt to invent the light bulb. For this Edison states, “I have not failed. I’ve just found ten thousand ways that won’t work.”
5. Abraham Lincoln:
Abraham Lincoln, The 16th president of the United States, was a self educated person. He faced many obstacles and fought it with determination to come up as a well known and successful leader respected all around the world. His success as president was particularly interesting because of the amount of personal and professional failure he had in his entire life. Lincoln had two business ventures fail, lost 8 different elections and had a complete nervous breakdown before becoming president in 1860. His story is indeed a great inspirational story which shows how one should keep moving towards one dream to eventually achieve it.
6. Helen Keller:
Helen is an American author, political activist, and lecturer and was the first deaf-blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree. Her teacher Anne Sullivan played a very important role in Helen’s life by teaching her how to communicate. Hellen Keller has also campaigned for women’s suffrage, workers’ rights, and socialism, as well as various other progressive causes. Keller has met almost every President during her life and was friends with Keller famous personalities such as Alexander Graham Bell, Charlie Chaplin, and Mark Twain.
7. Nick Vujicic:
Nick Vujicic is an Australian Christian evangelist and motivational speaker who was born with no arms and legs. He was suffering from tetra-amelia syndrome, a rare disorder characterized by the absence of all four limbs. But this doesn’t stop him from taking his life ahead. The early days were quite difficult for him. Throughout his childhood, Nick not only dealt with the typical challenges in school, but he also struggled with depression and loneliness. But eventually, he came in terms with his disability and, at the age of seventeen, Nick started his own non-profit organization, ‘Life Without Limbs’. Today, he gives motivational speeches all across the world about life with a disability, on hope, and on finding meaning in life. He also talks about his belief that God can use any willing heart to do his work and that God is big enough to overcome any disability. It is his small foot on his left hip that helps him balance and enables him to use his one foot to type, write with a pen and pick things up between his toes.
8. Glenn Verniss Cunningham:
Glenn Cunningham was one of the United States’ fastest runners who shines against the greatest odds. At the age of 8, Glenn met with a horrible accident at school that left him with complete loss of skin around his knees and shins. So, doctors urged his parents to amputate his legs, but his parents refused it. The doctors told his parents that he would never walk normally again. However, Glenn and his family refused to accept such claims and with much determination and unwavering faith, he not only walked but also ran faster. In 1932 Summer Olympics, Glenn stood at fourth place in the Men’s 1500m and in 1936 Summer Olympics, he bagged silver in the same 1500 m. Then in 1934, he set the world record by finishing a mile in 4:06.8. Glenn received the James E. Sullivan Award for top amateur athlete in the United States in 1933. Such kinds of achievements would never happen without extreme will power and faith.
source::::: siliconindia .com
natarajan
Spreading Smiles thro Food !!!
Sathyanarayana G, Yourstory.in
Vijay Abhimanyu Rajendran who founded Billion Smiles Hospitality Pvt Ltd in 2007 at age 19 talks about his inspiration behind launching the south Indian chain of restaurants and how he intends to spread smiles through his venture, both nationally and internationally.
Vijay Abhimanyu Rajendran, a 25-year-old second generation entrepreneur is the force behind Billion Smiles Hospitality Pvt Ltd.
Started about six years ago with a single casual dining restaurant, there are currently three business verticals operating under Billion Smiles which include casual dining, catering business and quick service restaurants.
Of these, two of their casual dining brands — South Indies and Bonsouth — have already become popular, meanwhile another brand called Upsouth, which operates as a fast food chain is equally gaining momentum.
Billion Smiles is driven with a vision to build a strong brand which is highly scalable in India and eventually aspire to take it internationally with south Indian cuisine.
We caught up with young Vijay Abhimanyu, 19, who started Billion Smiles in 2007.
For the launch of their first restaurant, South Indies, the initial investment came from Billionways, which is a holding company of Billion Smiles and is founded by his father Venkat Rajendran.
With 14 outlets already operating in Bangalore and Pune, in the next five years, Vijay Abhimanyu says the company has plans to go pan-India, expanding massively to open more than 250 outlets and establish their presence abroad.
In the candid conversation that follows, the young entrepreneur talks about his inspiration to start a south Indian chain of restaurants, challenges he confronted when he started up and his illustrious vision for the company

What motivated you to start at such a young age?
Everyone was entrepreneurial in my family, that’s what pushed me to start something on my own. And my father always used to tell that this economy will be built and driven by entrepreneurs and we will build India in to one of the top three nations, in spite of governance. But entrepreneurs will drive growth and this is evident in the last 15 years in our country. So that is something which excited me.
One thing which came as revelation was the fact that there was consumer retail consumption driven business had reached a significant scale.
We see KFCs and McDs with thousands of outlets doing extremely well, building nation-wide brand, moving to international markets, this was the trend which was clearly visible. And during that time, it had only about seven per cent of penetration through organised operators. This was a huge opportunity and there were lots of data points that indicated at targeting markets from the West, Europe, China etc for expansion.
These markets had chain restaurant penetration to an extent of 40 to 50 per cent. This was a major driving factor and we knew that it was going to happen some day, and now it’s finally happening.
As a business the space seemed right, the opportunity seemed fantastic, the timing, perfect, so the idea really appealed to me.
At that point, my dad decided to back this venture and the initial seed money came from the group holding company Billionways and that’s how we started Billion Smiles Hospitality in 2007.
What were your initial challenges when you decided to start up?
Both my father and I belong to IT backgrounds and had no former experience of running a restaurant before. So we made it a professionally-run business from Day one. But core competence and capability in south Indian food was a challenge. So we got Mr Ventatesh Bhat who is a former employee of the Taj and Leela group who bought along with him the core competence of south Indian cuisine.
We’d always wanted to specialise in this and convert south Indian food into a casual dining brand and occupy the up-market south Indian dining space which was vacant.
What were your early advantages when you started out?
South Indian is probably is the only cuisine which is apt for a fast food all day dining format particularly in the Indian cuisine. You can have idly and dosa any time of the day.
The product is friendly for an 8 am to 11 pm offering. At the same time you have north Indian food which is generally a meal-centric offering. It’s more lunch- and dinner-centric offering; not necessarily an all-day diner. This gives south Indian cuisine an edge to build a highly scalable fast food experience.
Secondly, the south Indian cuisine is the most sought after cuisines in terms of popularity across the country. Traditional cuisine like idly, vada, dosa etc, is liked by people across demographics and have indicated to be the popular cuisine in the country today.
If you look at Bangalore alone, it has more than 2500 Darshinis in the home market segment. In the north and western market, it’s more of an exotic and unique market which has not been penetrated.

source:::::rediff.com
natarajan






