At about this time last year, we were hard at work
preparing to bring Interop, the leading global business technology
event, to India for the first time, slated for February 2009. We
were all pretty eager and keyed up, confident that we would be able
to deliver a blockbuster show despite the fact that the financial
storm had already broken in the US, with the Lehman Brothers
collapse being the first of a series of body blows that would knock
the stuffing out of financial markets globally.
Our confidence stemmed from the fact that we were already sitting
pretty, with most of the expo space booked and confirmed by global
IT majors keen to showcase their enterprise-IT wares to corporate
India. After all, a broad-based enterprise-IT event on this scale
hadn’t been organized in India for quite a while; apart from
an inconsistent Bangalore IT.com, the only show of any significance
was MAIT’s IT Asia in Delhi—and it had been more than
10 years since IT Asia wound up.
And then the 26/11 terrorist attack on Mumbai happened. Our parent
company’s flagship pharma-industry event CPhI, scheduled to
commence the next morning, had to be called off. Moreover, by early
December 2008, it was pretty evident that India would not be exempt
from the effects of the global recession, and a downturn was very
much upon us now. This double whammy meant that despite our best
efforts, the first-ever Interop in India could not possibly be all
we wanted it to be. Reluctantly, we took the tough decision to
postpone the show to October 2009, watching helplessly as all our
hard work melted down the drain.
We started rebuilding the blocks early in 2009, and, painstakingly,
everything began to fall into place once more. We were even more
determined now to make Interop Mumbai a spectacular event and truly
world-class in every respect—expo, conference, keynotes,
speakers, delegates, visitors, look-and-feel, everything. By
mid-September the stage was set. The exhibit space was sold out;
the speaker roster, impressive by any standards, would definitely
attract a large audience; the on-ground logistics were being
planned to the most minute detail, factoring in every conceivable
contingency.
But we couldn’t possibly have factored in the unseasonal deep
depression in the Bay of Bengal. Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka were
flooded in the depression’s wake, and the subsequent fallout
was heavy rains in Mumbai the weekend before Interop. Were our
efforts going to be washed away once again, this time down the
clogged storm water drains of Mumbai city?
No way! Perhaps someone “up there” is assigned the task
of rewarding perseverance and sincerity. Wednesday, October 7
dawned bright and sunny. Interop Mumbai was inaugurated in style,
and for the next three days the fair weather held out. We had
something like 120 speakers from all over the world for the
conference and over 70 leading IT vendors demonstrating the latest
in enterprise-IT technology right there on the adjoining exhibits
floor.
Of course we realized that we could not match the scale of Interop
Las Vegas (yet!), but feedback from the multitude of delegates,
visitors and participants indicated that Interop Mumbai was
everything that everyone has come to expect from the world’s
leading enterprise-IT show.
One of the highlights of the event was the awards evening, at which
we celebrated the best IT implementations in the country by
recognizing Network Computing’s EDGE winners in the Diamond
and Silver categories, and also honoring the 10 CIOs from India who
made it to InformationWeek’s first-ever Global CIO 50 list.
Unlike some other IT awards in the country, where one has to merely
fill up a form—or in some cases just show up—to be
declared a winner, both EDGE and the Global CIO 50 have stringent
qualification and evaluation criteria, and I am certain that both
will soon become the most sought-after and coveted awards in the
industry.
Many of you probably were part of Interop Mumbai in some
way—either as partners or speakers or exhibitors or delegates
or visitors—and certainly contributed significantly to the
success of the event. To the rest who couldn’t make it, all I
can say is that you sure missed the chance to witness history in
the making. Next year, Interop Mumbai is scheduled for 28 to 30
September 2010 at the Bombay Exhibition Center. Do make sure
you’re there for the amazing Interop experience!