Posts Tagged Career Counselling

Mentors for Tepper School of Business and McCombs School of Business

Parul BansalParul Bansal

Carnegie Mellon University- Tepper School of Business

Parul is currently studying in Carnegie Mellon University – Tepper School of Business. Coming from an MCA background, she can specially be of help to students from similar background and planning to apply to US business schools.

Abhinav MittalAbhinav Mittal

McCombs School of Business – University of Texas & Delhi College of Engineering

Abhinav Mittal is currently pursuing MBA at the University of Texas at Austin- McCombs School of Business. Prior to joining school, Abhinav worked as an IT Consultant with TATA Consultancy Services. IT/ITeS professionals can consult him for applications to US business schools.

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New Mentors for Advertising & Media careers, Entrepreneurship, CA in Financial Analysis

Tariq Hyder

Tariq Hyder

Tariq Hyder is a Maverick Entrepreneur who founded Ross Fortune Interactive, Ideasonic Studios, Webserve Networks, iMarkets and Green Coalition Network. He is an expert marketer with 10+ years of experience in startups and NGOs. He holds an MBA from University of New Hampshire. His experience as Unit Head of Content for eGurucool.com, PR & Event Manager and stint as an Associate editor all mean that he is the mentor for areas such as Advertising and Communications.

View Tariq Hyder’s mentor profile


Alvin Saldanha

Alvin Saldanha

Alvin Saldanha’s career can hardly be summed up in two paragraphs of text for his expertise in the field of advertising is insurmountable, in over two decades of advertising experience, he has worked on a significant roster of the best Indian and International brands such as Air-India, TATA Indicom, HSBC, Taj Group of Hotels and more. Starting off as a copywriter and he worked his way up to hold top positions and current serves as CEO with the Watermelon Healthcare Communications Group. To a mentee this translates to excellent mentoring in the fields of communication media and advertising business.

View Alvin Saldanha’s mentor profile


Rachit Gupta

Rachit Gupta

Rachit Gupta is a CA and a PGDBM holder from IMT, Ghaziabad. If you are looking for mentoring in the field of finance, fianancial accounting and/or stock market, Rachit has a vast range of experience to guide you in the right direction. His expertise (but not limited to) are in the areas of Financial Advisory, Capital Raising, Indian Stock Markets, Financial Analysis & Training,Strategic Finance and Equity Markets. These areas of study are highly beneficial to those pursuing (or those who intend to) MBA. He also excels in giving advice for job interviews and training related to finance.

View Rachit Gupta’s mentor profile

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Mentoring students online – The Hindu Story on MentorPolis.com

The post as it appeared in The Hindu – Chennai and Hyderabad Edition on 31st August 2009.

Hindu MentorPolis Article

Hindu MentorPolis Article

If collegemates meet up, they would probably discuss favourite spots on campus, or talk about their professors, or possibly recall funny anecdotes that their batch witnessed. But this four, who are alumni of the Indian Institute of Technology – Delhi, went beyond.

Anshuman Chaudhary, Avijit Sharma, Anshul Aggarwal and Pratik Aggarwal of IIT-Delhi, who were lucky to have very helpful seniors, realised that not all students had mentors to help them through the challenging decision-making phase that is part of college life.

“While most students follow what others around them are doing, they may be unaware of their true potential and opportunities that exist in the outside world,” says Anshuman, who works from Mumbai, with his other three Delhi-based colleagues.

Thus was born www.mentorpolis.com — a portal that seeks to help students and professionals looking for advice on higher education or career. “Mentors not only help people in identifying the most suitable places for them, they also guide them to reach those places.”

The portal enables visitors to obtain Career guidance from experts in different fields. Course-specific mentoring as well strategy-based mentoring is provided by a panel of mentors representing different academic disciplines and professions.

“When we started, our own IIT seniors and their secondary contacts were the first buyers of idea and were enrolled as mentors. Hence, the starting point was engineering and management,” says Anshuman.

How it works

MentorPolis boasts of mentors from top institutions such as Harvard Business School, Stern School, New York City, Stanford and Yale.

Considering that mentoring is a continuous process demanding systematic interaction and consistency in guidance, it could be a challenging service, particularly when it is offered online.

Aware of this challenge, team MentorPolis employs a mix of web and telephone-based counselling process. A candidate seeking guidance could browse the site and look at mentor profiles. After this, they could select a suitable mentor, schedule communication, pay for the consultation request and subsequently keep connecting with the mentor.

Once a call is scheduled, MentorPolis dials out to both the mentor as well as the ‘mentee’ to connect them on phone. The subsequent follow-up, rescheduling and document transfer, if any, takes place online. “We provide an online collaboration space for the mentor and ‘mentee’ to interact after they are finished with the telephonic consultation. Such a collaborative environment ensures that the ‘mentee’ is in continuous touch with the mentor for any future guidance or doubts.” The team is also working on an offline model to serve people who are not very comfortable with web as a medium.

In a span of three months, over 700 ‘mentees’ have registered with MentorPolis. The users are mostly from the Tier-1 and Tier-2 cities. “Our team has already started the marketing campaign in the Tier-2 cities, as these are the places where our need is felt the most.”

Interestingly, quite a few people abroad have also shown interest in the services and have registered for them.

The young team of entrepreneurs, which has worked out an interesting revenue model, seems quite eager to make sure candidates get the best. ‘Web Seminars’ featuring the mentor panel are also offered free for all registered users. “We want to make the right kind of advice available for candidates when it matters the most!”

MEERA SRINIVASAN ”

You can access this article here.

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Want to go to Harvard? Hire a guide – Mid Day Story on MentorPolis

The post as it appeared in Mid-Day – Delhi Edition on 25th June 2009.

Mid-Day MentorPolis Article

Mid-Day MentorPolis Article

Wish you could get an ex-MIT honcho to help you with your aspirations, instead of that monotonous coaching class? Three young IITians are busy building a stream-specific mentor-mentee nexus

If only foreign studies could be figured on Facebook, and tutors came via Twitter, social networking would’ve lost all the frivolity it’s associated with. But since super-specialised interest groups are still a rarity in the country, there has to be another way to work around it, especially when it comes to education and career. A bunch of young IITians found this way fast, and headed to form a communication channel that brings together achievers and aspirants for career guidance. Called Mentorpolis, their project allows accomplished mentors to hold seminars and consultation sessions with fuchcha mentees, and both the sides can pick people as per their needs and deeds. midday1 Who’s who

Here’s a clear picture of how the whole thing happens. Mentees are high school students, undergraduates and young professionals looking for authentic information and personal guidance, whereas mentors, in this case, are senior students and professionals who have ‘been in mentee shoes’, have ‘made it’, and thus can suggest solutions to the former segment’s problems. Their current list of the latter includes students from IIT, IIM, Stanford, Harvard and other top MBA and engineering schools. They are armed with enough experience to give you all the gyaan on MBAs in India and abroad, entrepreneurship and engineering. “To begin with, we wanted to concentrate on the most major educational concerns. But less stereotypical subjects will also be taken up gradually. Law and Commerce are coming up,” says Avijit Sharma, co-founder.

The connect

Just a month into operation, the project has already enrolled about 600 students as mentees, and about 60-65 mentors. The latter’s credibility is measured on time commitment (how many hours they can spare in a week), referrals, experiential assessment, academic portfolio and previous mentoring records. Anyone can apply for either category. Once a mentee furnishes his specific needs in the form available on their website, the administrators get busy with matchmaking. “We check backgrounds, and think of somebody who has the same kind of a history; similar circumstances lead to a better connect. Then, we further the filters and see who’s equipped enough,” explains Avijit. Then, the prospective mentor and mentee get to decide if they’re up for each other. If it doesn’t work out, alternatives are arranged for. The service is pan-continental, with its headquarters in the capital. Once a ‘pair’ is made, they interact through Web seminars, telephonic consultation and in-person meetings, if proximity allows.

Fee good factor

At a fee of Rs 500 per session, is the facility worth it? “It’s true that you tend to find mentors in your own immediate circles, but I, for instance, couldn’t find one for entrepreneurship. The problem is pretty rampant in tier two cities, and that’s where we come in. If you’re not satisfied with the counselling, there’s always the option of cashback. A feedback mechanism is also well in place,” Avijit signs off.

You can access this article here.

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Career Log – Indian Express Story on MentorPolis

The post as it appeared in Indian Express – Delhi Edition on 21st June 2009.

IndianExpress MentorPolis Article

IndianExpress MentorPolis Article

After graduating from IIT Delhi two years ago, Avijit Sharma, 23, faced a common dilemma: what next. “My friends’ formula was to opt for an MBA and then grab a job in a well-paying multinational firm,” says Sharma, who settled for a job instead. But he continued looking for a solution to such questions. After brainstorming with friends at his Gurgaon home last November, the mechanical engineering graduate thought of a platform that brought mentors together for dispensing career and educational guidance, available at the click of a mouse.

On May 1 this year, Sharma started an online portal, mentorpolis.com, for fresh graduates and young professionals to help them make informed career decisions. “We always look to our immediate seniors and friends whenever we want to take an important decision that could impact our career. But at times we end up making the wrong choices because we could not get timely advice. We want to do away with that problem,” says Sharma, who quit his job with a Bangalore software firm earlier this year. He teamed up with two friends and IIT alumni Anshul Agrawal and Pratik Agarwal to carry the concept forward.

The portal has got over 600 registered users in the age group of 17-25, comprising under-graduates, fresh graduates, young professionals and those looking for a change of job. They also provide advice on entrepreneurship. A Facebook community and a group on LinkedIn network help with the publicity.

Indian ExpressThe mentors are usually students with an impeccable academic record. “We receive entries from students keen on advising people about careers and courses. After scanning their educational qualifications and personal bio data, the potential mentors were short-listed based on their credentials,” explains Anshul, a civil engineering graduate, who helped design the website. At present, the portal only has mentors from the engineering and business fields and provides career advice on jobs in the automotive sector, finance, consultancy and FMCG sectors. The pool of mentors includes graduates from Harvard Business School, Stern School of Business, New York, Indian School of Business and the IIMs in the business stream and students from Stanford, MIT and the IITs from the engineering stream.

“We rope in mentors at various levels for catering to the varying needs of the students,” explains Pratik, who recently successfully mentored an IIT graduate on how to clear the GMAT, TOEFL and application essays needed for an admission into Yale Business School. “Since I had recently cleared the admission process for Harvard Business School, I was better clued in on the preparations needed for such business schools,” he explains.

At present those seeking advice can speak to the mentors over the phone for a fee of Rs 500 per call or chat with them through webinars or online live seminars or post their queries on online message boards—free of cost. “We are charging the telephone fee to run our operational costs. Plus we are saving students thousands of rupees which they would otherwise have invested in coaching institutes,” says Anshul.

Next, the trio hopes to rope in mentors for the humanities, law and other professional streams. “Since we are engineering students, it was a natural inclination that we opted for mentors in science streams first,” says Sharma.

You can access this article here.

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More coverage – Mentorpolis.com in Alootechie

The post as it appeared on alootechie.com page.

A group of recent graduates from IIT Delhi have launched MentorPolis.com, an online platform that aims to connect mentees, who seek academic and professional advice, with mentors through telephonic consultations and web seminars.

MentorPolis.com claims to have currently more than 50 mentors who come from distinguished colleges from India and abroad such as IIT, IIM, Harvard Business School, Stanford university and other top colleges of US and Europe. These mentors offer advice on verticals like engineering in India and abroad, MBA in India and abroad, entrepreneurship and job preparation.

“We had two strong reasons of focusing our effort in education and professional vertical. Firstly, we realized that there is a dearth of competent advice and guidance for most Indian students and professionals. And secondly, good mentors not only help people in identifying most suitable places but guide them in reaching those places as well. Here is where we saw the opportunity,” Avijit Sharma, co-founder and CEO, MentorPolis.com told AlooTechie.

According to Avijit Sharma, MentorPolis.com does not charge mentees for creating an account and for using knowledge resources such as Q&A, web-links and video-casts. “The web seminars taken up by our mentor panel are also free for all the registered users. However, we charge mentees for any personal consultation they request with any of our mentor. A part of the fees is retained by MentorPolis,” Sharma informed.

Launched in April 2009, MentorPolis.com has so far attracted over 500 registered mentees who are primarily high school students, undergraduates and young professionals. According to Avijit Sharma, most of the users are coming from the Tier-I and II cities. “As an interesting trend, there have been quite a few people from abroad who have shown interest in the services and have registered as mentees,” Sharma added.

Thanks to Alootechie.com for their review, you can access this article here.

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MentorPolis.com featured by StartupDuniya

The post as it appeared on the startupduniya page.

Mentorpolis is a new startup by IIT graduates, that hopes to make it easier to search and find mentors.  A lot of times, we’re faced with significant dilemmas about what decision to make – be it in your professional life, related to education, job or entrepreneurship. What would help is if we get some guidance from a person who’s ‘been there, done that’. And that’s what Mentorpolis hopes to accomplish.

Briefly put, Mentorpolis is a marketplace for finding mentors. Here’s how it works:

  • You search for and explore various mentor profiles on the site
  • Select a mentor whose expertise closely matches your requirements.
  • Schedule a mutually agreeable time to touch base with your mentor
  • Mentors decide their own charges for mentoring sessions. You (the mentee) pay the amount before the scheduled call
  • Get in touch with your mentor for personalized advice and recommendations

Some sample questions that you can seek out a mentor to guide you through:

I’m thinking on doing my masters in engineering from US. Can you help me find good schools that fit my profile and interests?

I am very good with web 2.0 technologies but lack the commercial sense of a web enterprise. How do I get started with my idea?’

You can also view a couple of sample mentoring session transcripts here.

Web seminars and online conversations on the site are free of cost. However, each telephonic or in-person session costs Rs 500/-.

I think this is a great idea. Going by the number of young folks who seek out answers to such questions, there is a viable market out there. A couple of suggestions for them:

1) Reach out to sites like NENOnline and bloggers like Rashmi Bansal – they deal with a lot of young folks who are seeking career guidance , education advice and the likes.

2) Rs 500/- may be a bit steep for fresh graduates or those who are still in college. I would suggest making it more alluring to this demographic – introduce a per hour pricing and probably some discount to such young folks. In addition, introduce a ‘free mentoring sessions for the first month’ kinda deal – this will help to get the initial user base on the site.

Do check it out and let me know what you think about Mentorpolis.

Thanks to startupduniya for their review and kind words of appreciation, we would definitely think upon their suggestions for future.

You can also access this article here.

MentorPolis Team

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