Jun 192005
 

A recent edi­tion of India Today, India’s most widely cir­cu­lated news mag­a­zine has a sur­vey of Indian col­leges — a sur­vey that the Edi­tor in Chief claims is “the barom­e­ter of aca­d­e­mic excel­lence” in India. So, how does the barom­e­ter start its “pres­ti­gious” rank­ing of the top 10 busi­ness schools in India?

If you don’t read MBA as MBA but as Mas­ter of Busi­ness Admin­is­tra­tion, it sounds more lofty than CEO, chief exec­u­tive offi­cer, notwith­stand­ing the fact that the two belong to dif­fer­ent ends of cor­po­rate hierarchy.

cuse me?

And, hard as it may sound, the write-up man­ages to bet­ter(!) the incred­i­bly bad start. It’s con­structed almost entirely from inane cliches (“India Inc”, “there are MBAs and there are MBAs”), more inane cliches (“customer-driven”, “an insti­tute is only as good as its users think it to be” ) and ill-formed cliches (“feel-great-sentiments”?). The author has a lot of trou­ble with arti­cles, so he takes the safe route and just throws a few around to make sure — (“In the times as good as these, why bother with a rank­ing of B-schools?”).

Here’s another gem:

B-school aspi­rants have been look­ing beyond Indian shores for many years now, of late, not just to the US but also to schools in Europe, Canada and Australia.

If that’s the leader from the most cir­cu­lated issue of the most cir­cu­lated news mag­a­zine in India, then no won­der the Finance Min­is­ter thinks for­eign papers will hurt Indian news­pa­pers. . I hope they let at least the for­eign mag­a­zines in soon. All of them, that is, except this one. Hmm.. maybe that one too, the author knew his arti­cles, and I’ll for­give the word play on Suren­der and sur­ren­der as a one time thing.

  One Response to “Crummy Writing”

  1. Crummy writ­ing is not the forte of Indian Print mag­a­zines. Some igno­ra­muses writ­ing for rediff.com or indiatimes.com will win crummy-Indian-writing cham­pi­onship with­out even trying.

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