A new German-Indian Round Table (GIRT) inaugurated at Coimbatore

The German-Indian Round table (GIRT) was formed in 2001 in Germany as a loose federation of businessmen and entrepreneurs with strong ties and interests in India. The GIRT is targeting to inform about India and strengthen Indo-German business relations. Members of GIRT also support cultural and social activities related to India. GIRT meetings are organized regularly in 10 German cities and connect about 3000 people from the Indo-German business community. The head of the local GIRT and the speakers work on a non-profit basis.

Recently the first German-Indian Round table was founded in Delhi and shortly after that in Pune. The GIRT offers a forum to Indian Entrepreneurs, Businessmen and other people who are interested in Indo-German relations to meet every two month. Lectures by outside speakers about topics like how to do business in Germany or the current German economic development will be held and on request of the participants other topics will be presented or discussed. The interaction between the members is also important as most of them will have different experiences in doing business with German companies.

Now a third Indian chapter has been started by Ruediger Schroeder, President & CEO of Roots Multiclean Ltd. in Coimbatore who lives here since 2010. For the inauguration Dr. Andreas Waldraff, speaker of the German-Indian Round table, was attending the meeting in Coimbatore on 1.10.2011 at 17.00 h at the Hotel Residency. 15 participants showed up and listened to the introductory remarks of Ruediger Schroeder and Dr. Waldraff and then discussed the structure and future topics for the next meetings.

Ruediger Schroeder

German Indian Round Table Coimbatore

„Doing well by doing good“: New opportunities for Indo-German cooperation?

Report in Germany Contact India, 5/2011, p. 17:

„Doing well by doing good“: New opportunities for Indo-German cooperation?

Last few years have seen the rise of several new and dynamic paradigms in innovation management, especially at the bottom of the population pyramid. These seek to motivate companies to develop affordable and good-quality products for rural and poor customers especially in developing economies.
Such ideas, though admirable in their own right, have in many instances failed to fully appreciate and utilize the power of innovative ideas and the rich heritage of traditional knowledge passed down the generations and are lying largely untapped.
Many local users in rural areas come up with inventions that are not only innovative and useful but also less expensive than the usual solutions available in the market. Other important features of these so called grassroot innovations are that they are environment friendly and in sync with the given infrastructural conditions. Examples of such innovations include water-based cooling systems that do not require electricity or non-sticky frying pans made of earth (clay).
The idea of grassroot innovations has been popularized by Professor Anil Gupta of the Indian Institute of Management (IIM) in Ahmedabad. Grassroot innovations are being fostered by institutions like the National Innovation Foundation (NIF) and the Honey Bee Network in India. The Institute of Technology and Innovation Management at Hamburg University of Technology (TIM/TUHH) has recognized the potential of this paradigm, both, for the practice of innovation management in firms and for giving an impetus to Indo-German cooperation in fields of science, technology and business. There are several studies currently under progress at TIM/TUHH to survey the potential implications of grassroots innovations.

TIM/TUHH, together with the German-Indian Round Table (GIRT), will hold a workshop during the India Week Hamburg 2011 to explore and demonstrate the vast cooperation opportunities for German companies, especially small and medium-sized ones, to assist the inventors with technical and marketing know-how. Mutual benefit can be found, for instance, in the giant domestic Indian market as well as in international marketing of such products in other corresponding markets of Africa, Latin America and Asia. Anil Gupta is scheduled to deliver the keynote address and to participate in a panel discussion. Other cooperation partners include India’s National Innovation Foundation (NIF) and the Hamburg Chamber of Commerce.

(Source: Germany Contact India, 5/2011, p. 17)

See a local copy as PDF: clipping-gc-tuhh (76 KB)

TU Hamburg-Harburg: Basisinnovationen sind Forschungsschwerpunkt

(Quelle: IndienContact, 05/2011)

»DOINGWELL BY DOING GOOD«

Basisinnovationen sind Forschungsschwerpunkt

Im Rahmen des Forschungsschwerpunktes »Global Innovation« untersucht das Institut für Technologie- und Innovationsmanagement der TU Hamburg-Harburg (TIM/TUHH) seit 2006 die bisherwenig ausgeschöpften Innovationspotenziale von Schwellenländern mit einem Schwerpunkt auf Indien. Die Forscher um Prof. Cornelius Herstatt, Dr. Stephan Buse und Rajnish Tiwari interessieren sich für die Entwicklung kostengünstiger, an die lokalen Gegebenheiten angepasste Produkte für einkommensschwächere Schichten und untersuchen fortlaufend Indiens Potenziale als Outsourcing- und Offshoringziel für die Forschung und Entwicklung multinationaler Unternehmen.

Im Mittelpunkt ihrer neueren Studien stehen die Erschließung und Förderung der Innovationskraft der ländlichen Bevölkerung. Denn diese Basisinnovationen sind nicht nur kostengünstigund umweltverträglich, sondern hervorragend integrierbar in die oft defizitären Infrastrukturen ländlicher Gebiete in Entwicklungsländern.

Auf Basis der Aktivitäten von Prof. Gupta entwickelt dasTIM Kooperationsmöglichkeiten zwischen indischen Erfindern und deutschen Unternehmen, wobei das Augenmerk insbesondere auf kleinen und mittelständischen Unternehmen (KMU) liegt. Die Kernfrage einer Kooperation ist stets, wie deutsches Produktions-undVermarktungswissen eine erfolgreiche Weiterentwicklung und Kommerzialisierung der indischen Erfindungen sowohl auf dem Heimatmarkt als auch im Ausland unterstützen kann. Deutschen KMU ermöglicht diese Form der Zusammenarbeit den Zugang zu neuen Absatzmärkten.

DasTIM organisiert gemeinsam mit dem German-Indian Round Table im Rahmen der India Week in Hamburg am 20. Oktober 2011 einen Workshop, an dem Prof. Gupta sowie andere renommierte Referenten teilnehmen werden.

Weitere Infos: www.global-innovation.net

See a local copy of the article: clipping-ic-gupta (PDF / 3,7 MB)

BusinessWeek: „Tata Consultancy Seeks Purchases in Germany, France, Japan, U.S.“

Sept. 26 (Bloomberg) — Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. is weighing acquisitions in France, Germany, Japan and the U.S. as Asia’s biggest computer services provider by market value sees further rising demand despite global economic woes. […]

Chandrasekaran declined to comment on a Sept. 7 report by Financial Times Deutschland that Tata Consultancy may learn the outcome of a bid for a majority share in the information technology arm of Deutsche Lufthansa AG after a Sept. 29 board meeting of the German airline. […]

Source: BusinessWeek, 26.09.2011.

>> ‚Year of Germany in India‘ commences in New Delhi <<

Source: India Today, 23.09.2011

The year of Germany in India commenced on Friday amid much fanfare and rhythmic resonance as India’s star percussionist Sivamani and Germany’s solo percussionist Christoph Haberer came together for an open-air concert titled, ‚Infinite Rhythms‘, at Nehru Park in New Delhi.

The fifteen-month programme series titled „Germany and India 2011-2012: Infinite Opportunities“ was jointly inaugurated by Minister of State of the German Federal Foreign Office Cornelia Pieper, German Ambassador to India Thomas Matussek, Chairman of the Asia-Pacific Committee of German Business (APA) Peter Loscher and Lt. Governor of Delhi Tejendra Khanna. The event was organised in close cooperation with SPICMACAY and NDMC.

This year, Germany and India celebrate 60 years of diplomatic relations. The two nations enjoy a strategic partnership since the year 2000. Over the next 15 months, „Germany and India 2011-2012: Infinite Opportunities“ will showcase the entire spectrum of the Indo-German strategic partnership in the spheres of politics, business, culture, education, science and research.

Continue reading at the India Today Website….

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