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Indian Americans helping Indian Americans — No caste, religion, and regional.

SouthDesi

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When Vijay Vashee joined Microsoft in 1982 he was just one of two Indians at the 160-person company. It added several more recruits from India, mostly IITans, over the years. They held low-level technical positions. Vashee became the first Indian to break through Microsoft's glass ceiling in 1988 when he was named general manager for Microsoft Project.

In 1992 he was asked to head the fledgling PowerPoint Division and helped grow this from $100 million to a billion-dollar business. About the same time as Vashee, Indians in Silicon Valley began breaking glass ceilings. They all faced the same hurdles: a belief that Indians made great engineers but were not capable of becoming managers— certainly not CEOs.

A common perception was that they didn't know how to delegate authority and could not lead companies. Fast forward to today when the top two contenders for the Microsoft CEO role are both India-born. No doubt Satya Nadella and Sundar Pichai are highly competent and worthy of consideration. Yet they would not have made the list a few years ago because of the negative stereotypes.
This shows how much the technology industry— and America has changed. How did this transformation happen? Very simply: Indian Americans started helping Indian Americans—regardless of their caste, religion, and regional heritage.

They decided to forget which part of India they were born in and just to focus on the cause. When the first generation of Indians in Silicon Valley succeeded in shattering the glass ceiling, they decided to help others follow their path. They realised that they had all surmounted the same obstacles. And that they could reduce the barriers to entry for others behind them by sharing their experiences and opening some doors.

They had open discussions about the hurdles they had faced. They formed networking organisations such as TiE (The Indus Entrepreneurs) to teach others about starting businesses, and to bring people together. The first generation of successful entrepreneurs—people like Vijay Vashee—served as visible, vocal, role models and mentors to the next. And they provided seed funding to members of their community.

This helped Indians achieve extraordinary success. Research by my team at Duke, UC-Berkeley, and Stanford showed that as of 2005, 52.4 per cent of Silicon Valley's companies had a chief executive or lead technologist who was foreign-born and Indians founded 25.8 per cent of these companies. This proportion increased to 33.2 per cent in 2012.

Indians, who constitute only 6 per cent of Silicon Valley's working population, start roughly 15 per cent of its companies. That is quite a feat to achieve in the most competitive, entrepreneurial, and innovative place on this planet. There are important lessons to be learnt here for groups that face discrimination. The key to uplifting a community is mentorship and education— not from outside but from within. It starts by members of the community admitting there is a problem and working together to fix it.

They need give back to their community and "pay it forward". Everyone that achieves success must help others behind them. They may not win a short-term advantage but will definitely gain in the long term as perceptions change and new doors open for the entire community. That an Indian can lead the world's top software company is an important milestone for Indian-Americans and for America. But the larger message is for India itself: imagine what Indians can achieve at home if they put their differences aside and start helping one another.
 
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South Asians in general are much closer to one another in America than in other parts of the world.This is mainly due to the level of education and entrepreneurship found within the SA community.Therefore, there is greater respect for one another.
 
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Used to attend the TiE seminars when was in college. They opened my eyes to a whole lot of opportunities and possibilities. What it also gave me confidence, was that an ordinary boy, without a lot of money could dream and start something. And yes, they had some very good facilities like tutoring and guidance sessions. Though decided to stay back in India, which is what a lot of them used to say too...stay back and do something here, there is fantastic opportunities. One of the best advice have received.
 
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