HR summit on ''capability enhancement and value creation''
22 Oct 2005
New Delhi: A two-day national HR summit organised by the Lal Bahadur Shastri Institute of Management (LBSIM) opened in the capital today. Inaugurating the event, Vinita Bali, managing director, Britannia Industries said, "The surest way to become globally competitive is to invest in the development of human resources. The world today is a single global marketplace, not only in terms of goods but also human skills. India has already benefited from outsourcing of services in some sectors; only when our capabilities improve, will we see transfer of assignments and capital for many more, increasingly highly skilled tasks."
The LBSIM summit focuses, among others, on the human side of mergers and acquisitions, knowledge sharing in strategic alliances, HRD in a cross-cultural environment, and training for underprivileged workforce in organisations as a societal responsibility.
Delivering the keynote address, industrialist and member of parliament Navin Jindal said, "As India steps into the world of global competition, human resource capability becomes a critical factor. A key mark of developed economies is technical capacity, the application of technology to local conditions and, while India has shown an aptitude for this already, we still have a long way to go in fully realising our potential."
The summit is aimed at inviting discussion on contemporary issues, identifying competencies required to enhance organisational capabilities. According to Anil Shastri, chairman, of LBSIM, "The Institute strives to sponsor meaningful exchanges between academia and the corporate world and this seminar is part of that effort."
Executives
from Voltas, Ernst & Young, HDFC Bank, Iffco Tokio
General Insurance Ltd., Grasim, and ACC among others are
participating in the event.
Latest articles
Featured articles
Server CPU Shortages Grip China as AI Boom Strains Intel and AMD Supply Chains
By Cygnus | 06 Feb 2026
Intel and AMD server CPU shortages are hitting China as AI data center demand surges, pushing lead times to six months and driving prices higher.
Budget 2026-27 Seeks Fiscal Balance Amid Rupee Volatility and Industrial Stagnation
By Cygnus | 02 Feb 2026
India's Budget 2026-27 targets fiscal discipline with record capex as markets tumble, the rupee weakens and manufacturing struggles to regain momentum.
The Thirsty Cloud: Why 2026 Is the Year AI Bottlenecks Shift From Chips to Water
By Axel Miller | 28 Jan 2026
As AI server density surges in 2026, data centers face a new bottleneck deeper than chips — the massive water demand required for cooling next-generation infrastructure.
The New Airspace Economy: How Geopolitics Is Rewriting Aviation Costs in 2026
By Axel Miller | 22 Jan 2026
Airspace bans, sanctions and corridor risk are forcing airlines into costly detours in 2026, raising fuel burn, reducing aircraft utilisation and pushing airfares higher worldwide.
India’s Data Center Arms Race: The Battle for Power, Cooling, and AI Real Estate
By Cygnus | 22 Jan 2026
India’s data centre boom is turning into an AI arms race where power contracts, liquid cooling and fast commissioning decide the winners across Mumbai, Chennai and Hyderabad.
India’s Oil Balancing Act: Refiners Rebuild Middle East Supply Lines as Russia Flows Disrupt
By Axel Miller | 21 Jan 2026
India’s refiners are rebalancing crude sourcing as Russian imports fell to a two-year low in December 2025, lifting OPEC’s share and raising geopolitical risk concerns.
Arctic Fever: How ‘Greenland Tariff’ Politics Sparked a Global Flight to Safety
By Axel Miller | 20 Jan 2026
Greenland-linked tariff threats have injected fresh uncertainty into transatlantic trade, triggering a risk-off shift in markets and reshaping global supply chain planning.
The New Oil (Part 5): Friend-Shoring, Supply Chain Fragmentation and the Cost of Resilience
By Cygnus | 19 Jan 2026
Friend-shoring is reshaping lithium, rare earth and graphite supply chains, creating a resilience premium and new winners and losers in clean tech.
The New Oil (Part 4): Can Technology Break the Dependency?
By Cygnus | 16 Jan 2026
Can magnet recycling and rare-earth-free motors reduce global dependence on strategic minerals? Part 4 explores breakthroughs, limits and timelines.

