Wide Aware moments that stay with us for life

Archives for the day Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

Just coming back from a successful training programme. This one was for a bunch of new recruits in an upcoming software company. This was one of the most bizarre programmes I ever conducted, yet, it was satisfying in a very meaningful way.

The participants were fresh from college, and had a lot of ideals, but very little idea of what working is all about. Chaos ruled, and initially, it took some time to get them to believe that outbound training programmes are not office picnics or perks, but the company actually expected them to be learning something out here.

There was a time when I was willing to write the programme off as a disaster.

We took off in fits and starts. Somewhere down the line, the whole thing clicked in place, when we were discussing happenings in an activity that required a lot of perseverance and their
performance was a dismal failure. Something happened in that group. All of a sudden, there was an awareness that here was something important going on.

The tempo picked, and at the end of the three days, I can say that this was one of the programmes where we were able to acheive a lot of constructive change among the participants. It is probably not even close to some of the outstanding programmes if discipline and performance in activities is to be considered, but if we see the magnitude of change we went through, this one has me thoroughly humbled.

Shows that even trainers have a lot to learn from their own experiences.

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Ah, what do I say, the growth pangs of a young company are torture indeed. I’m in the process of negotiating a deal for outbound soft skills training for a BPO. Money is a crunch, and they want the world as always, but what’s more annoying is that they want really safe “high
adventures”.

In the clients words, “Most of us have never been in the outdoors, so we want to experience something really dangerous and spectacular” and in the same breath, “it shouldn’t be too scary”.

I think they want to have some kind of a good time in the outdoors, but as usual, the focus is on the adventure rather than the learning.

That’s fine. I guess I’ll just need to show them some fancy pictures
and some explanations on actual and perceived risk.

Let’s see how it goes.

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Cheapoair

This is a paid review, but I have been looking at sites with cheap air ticket offers for quite some time, and I found the rates here quite interesting.

Cheapoair Top 25 Deals  is the site I am speaking about this time. On the whole, it looks like any other flight booking site. The rates are reasonable and the database works fast enough that you don’t site around twiddling your thumbs waiting for something to turn up, like it happens on so many travel booking sites. And there are handy links on top for group and corporate travel, so that you don’t have to hunt around wondering what happens in those cases. So that is a plus. Worth bookmarking for the next time you need to book tickets, though I would recommend comparing sites and deciding for yourself.

What I also liked, were the handy links to travel resources, hotel bookings, car hire and other needs related with travelling. So on the whole, it could be a one stop shop for planning your trip.

The wicked temptation in the site is the vacations they have. Well presented and tempting pictures. The problem being in chosing which of all the places ot go, so a definitely dangerous site for your wallet, if you’re susceptible to temptation.

On the minus side, this site is geared specifically for Americans, with local destinations, international travel and stuff being from that perspective. So, for the regular readers here, out of which only about 20% are Americans, this is a shift of perspective. Local means different to different people depending on their location, and it feels alien for a non-American.

I would definitely have felt more comfortable with the “Domestic” being America, so that I don’t have to figure out where exactly domestic is.

On the whole, a nice, convenient travel bookings site, with speed of use and access and a good variety of information available, even if it is nothing exceptional and seems to be meant only for Americans. I think they could reach out better to travelers from all over the world with that simple change.

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Just as I was sad about how I missed the regional event and how it would be expensive to now go for a National event, I got the newsletter from ISABS that announces a new regional event that is IN Mumbai, very low budget and coming up soon.

I guess my ISABS journey is destined to go on without delays.

For folks in Mumbai, this is an unparalleled opportunity. The Umang 2007 event is from the 10th Oct to the 14th Oct 2007 and takes place in Malad - Aksa beach and overcomes one of the major hurdles for the common man to participate - money. Accommodation is dormitory type, but that is what brings it within reach.

So, where I was planning to go, my husband is also planning to join me this time with his BLHP.

Seriously folks, don’t miss this one. For more information, go the the ISABS website.

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About Author

Footprints on the mountainside is a blog about all things that are important to me, as an outdoor person, as a facilitator on experiential learning programmes and adventure sports.

The blog largely reflects things that come to my notice, experiences in day to day life and things I wish to say to the world at large.

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