Indian telecom department officials face charges

India's Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) said Thursday that it is pursuing criminal charges against some officials of the country's Department of Telecommunications (DOT), private sector companies and some individuals, in connection with alleged irregularities related to the award of telecommunications licenses by the DOT. The CBI did not name the individuals or companies that it plans to charge under the country's Prevention of Corruption Act. The award of licenses for mobile 2G telephony and related services was criticized by the local telecom regulator, Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), which recommended competitive bidding. The CBI conducted searches Thursday to collect incriminating documents in the Wireless Planning Cell (WPC) and in the office of Deputy Director General for Access Services of the DOT, it said in a statement. The DOT instead decided that licenses would be allocated on a "first-come-first-serve" basis at low prices that were current in 2001, CBI said.

DOT went along with the recommendation but in October 2007 it stopped accepting applications, citing a surge in demand for the licenses. TRAI had also recommended in 2007 that there should not be a ceiling on the number of service providers in a service area. In a letter to TRAI in July this year, DOT asked the regulator to review its decision that there shouldn't be a cap on the number of service providers in a service area. India awarded 281 telecom licenses as of June 30 this year, but there is still a waiting list of 343 applicants for 22 service areas in the country, according to the letter from the DOT. This backlog exists despite the DOT stopping acceptance of license applications in October 2007. The CBI said that by putting a cap on the number of licenses, there had been a criminal conspiracy between certain officials of the DOT and some private companies and individuals to award licenses to select companies. DOT said that the requirement of creating competition in the market had been met, and that it would find it difficult to allocate spectrum to all the applicants.

There is worry in government and industry circles that investors may be bidding for telecom licenses to make a quick buck by subsequently selling stakes in their telecom companies at huge valuations to large Indian and foreign service providers, said informed sources. In the case of 3G licenses, the government has taken the view that licenses and spectrum should be auctioned. Among the companies waiting for a license are some construction companies that have found mobile telecom services a new diversification opportunity. This auction has been postponed since January.

10 Tried-and-True Tips for Switching Industries

With the economic recession wreaking havoc on the financial services, automotive, retail and other industries, many IT professionals in those markets who've been laid off are considering an industry switch to open up their job searches. They say diversifying one's job search will increase their odds of landing a new job more quickly. Indeed, many career experts are urging job seekers to apply for jobs in the few industries that are growing or are poised for growth despite the recession, such as green energy and technology, education, and healthcare.

But switching industries can be an uphill battle for IT job seekers. Hiring any executive is a high-risk and costly endeavor, so employers want to make sure that whomever they hire is right, can hit the ground running, and doesn't need to come up to speed. Companies often don't want to hire executives outside of their industries because it increases their risk. Consequently, that often means that employers seek candidates with experience specific to their industry. (Of course, there are times when a company specifically seeks an industry outsider to bring in a fresh perspective.) Despite the challenges associated with switching industries, doing so is not impossible. Recently, I moved from healthcare to educational publishing.

I have worked in multiple vertical markets, including broadcasting, retail, manufacturing and education. I found this particular transition very challenging, but from this-and other-experiences, I learned several valuable lessons about moving from one industry to another. Consulting or unpaid internships are options to consider if you have the opportunity and the means. I hope my lessons will help you move into a new industry and make your transition a seamless one. 1. Immerse Yourself If you're hunting for a job in a new vertical market, consider spending a week or two in the new environment. As an experienced IT leader, your expertise is extremely valuable to many organizations.

That large-scale project management expertise sets you apart. Have you overseen an ERP conversion? For every vertical market, there is a company struggling with a problem you've already solved. I had experience that a company in those markets found beneficial, and a conversation with the head of each organization led to those opportunities. This is how I got into publishing, health care and education. Start by reaching out to your existing professional network.

Through those conversations, I got the chance to guest-lecture for one of my professional colleagues as an IT industry expert. When I engineered my transition to higher education, I sought out colleagues who taught at colleges and universities, and I talked to them about their experiences and challenges. I thoroughly enjoyed the experience, and it led to further introductions to other professors, more discussions about higher ed's needs, and gave me the opportunity to explain how my work in publishing applied to their needs. Using Twitter and LinkedIn, I connected with educators all over the country and learned what troubles were universal. If you can't find connections in your professional network, social networking tools like LinkedIn and Twitter are great places to find professionals working in the vertical market you wish to enter.

With those insights, I developed a pitch that expressed how my experience could help them. They introduced me to their peers, and a new professional network was born. Specifically, I explained how my experience with open source tools, web publishing and marketing was valuable to admissions professionals in higher education and how I helped colleagues build tools to measure and improve the effectiveness of their social media campaigns. About two weeks into my social media campaign, I started to get recognized as an industry expert, even though I had never worked in the industry. With the economy being what it is, your target market is likely experiencing a major shortage of training and development dollars.

I simply joined the conversation, contributed where I could, and respected those who were already there. Figure out what you can offer folks in that target market and get out there. 2. Practice Nemawashi Nemawashi is a Japanese term that literally translates to "going around the roots." The concept of nemawashi is so engrained in the Japanese culture that it is difficult to translate into English, but it is most often translated as 'laying the groundwork.' As it was explained to me, nemawashi is an informal process of quietly laying the foundation for a change by talking to the people concerned, gathering their support and feedback before any formal steps are taken, and maintaining the harmony and credibility of those involved. This is a critical practice for gathering information about your new industry and identifying ways to help prospective employers in it. It's similar to our concept of getting buy-in, but the primary difference is that nemawashi is done quietly-almost covertly-before the idea for the desired future state is formed. I wish I had practiced nemawashi during the early stages of my current career transition.

The amount of paperwork he had to do to open an IRA account was staggering. I was spending a lot of time with Jeremy, the branch manager at my local bank, to get my personal finances in order. I helped Jeremy a few times with some simple Windows shortcuts as he was trying to copy and paste information from one form to another. It was enough for Jeremy and I to retire on. I did a little math in my head and realized that for this bank, the 20 minutes of work Jeremy was doing, multiplied by the number of IRA accounts they open (which Jeremy estimated for me) worked out to be a very large dollar figure.

I shared my calculation with Steve, a colleague who was doing some programming work for Jeremy's bank. Steve liked my ideas, but said it wasn't quite practical for the bank for security reasons. I also shared my ideas on how to trim some costs from the process. Had I practiced nemawashi with Jeremy and Steve, I could have learned about the security risk before suggesting the possible change, and perhaps I could have worked with Steve to refine and revise the idea so it more closely matched the needs of the bank. Nemawashi can help you gain support in the rookie stages, win allies, and most importantly, influence an organization in the right direction. 3. Establish Your Credibility I met Chris Brogan and Julien Smith during my days in publishing, when they were working on a book, Trust Agents, about using the web and social media to build influence, reputation and trust.

Whether you have five or 50 years of experience under your belt, in a new industry, you are the rookie. One of the core premises of their book is that to have credibility in a social network, you must be "one of us." For example, if a soft drink company is trying to sell a new cola to an online community of gamers, the company can't just join the conversation with, "Hey guys, check this out." Only if an existing, valued member of the group says, "Check this out," will the recommendation have any merit. I don't know how many times I had ideas shot down because I didn't have experience in the industry, simply because "that's not how it's done." It didn't matter that I was hired to improve things; I had no credibility with the audience and met resistance at every step. Brogan and Smith's notion of "one of us" applies to switching industries. When I moved into education and health care, though, things were different. Staff management is probably the area where this is most true.

I was a trusted member of the group from the get-go because I had practiced nemawashi without even realizing it. 4. Don't Assume Your Experience Transfers Not all of your leadership experience is going to apply from one industry to another. The industry you're in will impact the types of people your company will attract and retain, and this will shape the culture of your department more than any other factor, even when the fields seem similar. Certain aspects of budgeting can also vary from industry to industry. For example, I found that certain management techniques, such as mentoring and motivating employees with challenging projects, worked well in an advertising agency, but were completely ineffective in publishing, where a much heavier management style was necessary. One of the most common mistakes I've seen-and made myself-is miscategorizing information assets and liabilities on balance sheets and improperly valuing the assets stored on a company's IT infrastructure. This made asset categorization very clear and easy.

I learned quickly that in healthcare, an information asset has a fixed shelf life that's normally mandated by a governing body. This was also the case in broadcasting. The morale of this story? But it was not the case in publishing, as I once learned the hard way, after spending a pretty penny to store assets that had little value to the company. Understand the business as well as you can before you categorize your company's assets. 5. Don't Assume Your Experience Doesn't Transfer Some disciplines are stable enough that the differences between vertical markets are barely discernible.

A basic rule of thumb is that if an IT function is frequently outsourced, your experience in that area will be transferable. 6. Learn the Industry's Concept of Customer If you take only one thing from this list, make this it: Who is the customer for your organization or industry? Telephony, application delivery, helpdesk service, and project management easily transfer from one industry to another. In healthcare, our customer varied from conversation to conversation: It's the patient, the insurance company, the government, the referring physician, the patient's employer, and the patient's family. The reason it's so important to know the customer is because the customer truly is your boss. We all understood that it was the patient who chose our practice, and all the other customers were also working for the patient.

They can fire you (and your organization) simply by taking their business elsewhere. What's more, your understanding of the customer guides every decision you make. I've found that the most successful companies are the most customer-centric. Knowing who your organization is ultimately accountable to-and demonstrating this from the earliest point possible-will ensure that your transition is successful. I also recommend you ask prospective employers during your job interviews with them who their customer is.

I recommending asking yourself, "Who is my customer," every day. If their answer ever varies, take this as a huge warning sign. While I was consulting for a media company, the IT staff I was working with pulled me aside to tell me about one person in particular who was troublesome. If the organization can not agree on the central concept of customer, it will have an identity crisis about who it serves and will always struggle to provide exceptional customer service to its ultimate customer base. 7. Identify and Win the Troublemakers Once you're in your new job in a new industry, you have a short amount of time to identify the influential troublemakers and make them your ally. They advised me to avoid that person at all costs.

I wanted to know why the IT staff felt the way they did, and if there was any merit to their feelings. Instead, I sought her out immediately. I didn't ask her those questions specifically, but I asked her what she felt the IT organization was doing right and wrong. By having an open and honest conversation with her, I made a very powerful strategic ally, and in the process, I identified a number of solutions to some of the key issues the IT department was facing. We talked for two hours. We went on to make some great progress together, and those accomplishments were critical in helping me understand the industry, the company, and most importantly, to quickly identify where big progress could be made in a short amount of time.

There is a delicate ecosystem of cash flow, and it can be disrupted at many different places. That was several years ago, and this person's name is still on my reference list. 8. Learn the Industry's Revenue Streams Who actually pays for your product or service? Do you clearly understand the industry's revenue stream? Luckily, I was young when I made it, and I have tried to avoid it ever since. The biggest mistake of my career came in this area. My first "real" job out of college was in radio broadcasting.

It was my job, I thought, to entertain the listeners and keep them tuned in to the station as long as possible. I went to work for a large FM radio station. According to the ratings, I was pretty good at it. There was a partial power failure in the area, and about one-third of the building was without power. One evening when I came in for my shift, I found the afternoon air personality sitting in a dark control room.

The transmitter was on, but we weren't able to put anything on the air or to control the transmitter. I knew the station's cash flow relied on our ability to play commercials to our audience, so I proceeded to reschedule every commercial that was missed during the previous hours. Using extension cords, power strips and wirenuts, I managed to put us back on the air nearly five hours before the power was restored. I thought my program director would be ecstatic; I had saved several thousand dollars of revenue. I had gotten the station back on the air and reestablished our link to the audience, but the audience had turned to other stations when we fell silent a few hours before my shift began. As it turned out, I was only half right.

Commercials that should have aired to a few hundred thousand people aired only to a few thousand. In the end, I was credited with saving a large portion of the revenue and making the best out of a bad situation, but I only understood a small portion of the equation that made up our revenue stream. It took nearly a week for our ratings to return to their normal levels. I never forgot that lesson. Is it directly by the customer, or is it like the health care system where the customer has multiple agents (many with different goals and objectives) serving them and their needs, and therefore funding your cash flow? How is your industry's revenue stream supported?

A clear understanding of that cash flow process well help you identify where your IT team can best contribute. 9. Acceptable Risk Always Varies You've probably had a directive from a CEO after a server malfunction that sounded like this: "We simply can not afford any more down time. The conversation immediately following sticker shock is where you and your CEO decide what is the acceptable risk-level for the organization. Fix the problem!" So you proposed a clustered server, a disaster recovery site, or some other topology proven to increase reliability and uptime, and presented it to the CEO. That's when sticker shock sets in. Basically, it's the amount of risk the enterprise is willing to tolerate in exchange for the cost to mitigate that risk. Healthcare, for example, has a low risk tolerance for data loss: It can't afford to lose historic patient data. And you can not assume that the level of risk an organization in one industry tolerates will be the same for an organization in another industry.

But comparatively, publishing has a higher risk tolerance for data loss. 10. Keep an Open Mind Just as individual organizations are at different stages in their IT systems maturity, some industries are categorically ahead or behind the curve. Keep an open mind as you move from one industry to another. As technical folk, we find it difficult to imagine that magnetic tape is still used as a primary storage medium; however, many broadcasters are just now moving to hard disk and optical-based storage media from tape drives. J. Marc Hopkins is a Cincinnati, Ohio-based veteran of small business technology leadership in a variety of industries, including higher education, healthcare and media. He currently teaches at DeVry University and can be reached through his blog on CIO.com, LinkedIn and Twitter. He specializes in infrastructure design and consolidation, staff development, business intelligence, and business process improvement for non-profit and mission-focused businesses.

2009 Women of Influence Award Winners Named

The 2009 Executive Women's Forum "Women of Influence" Awards were awarded recently at the event in Scottsdale, Arizona. The winners nominated by peers in the security community. The awards were co-presented by Alta Associates and CSO Magazine, recognizing women in four categories: one winner from the public sector or academia, a private solutions provider from the security industry, a corporate practitioner from the private sector, and finally, 'One to Watch,' a future leader in the security field.

This year, the public sector winner is Mischel Kwon, the director of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT). Kwon, an IT professional with more than 26 years of experience, was named to her current position in June 2008. As the director for the US-CERT, Kwon is responsible for the operational mission of the US-CERT, including the analysis and reduction of cyber threats and vulnerabilities in federal networks, dissemination of cyber threat warning information, and coordination of incident response activities. The 2009 private solutions provider winner is Patricia Titus, chief information security officer with Unisys Corporation. Kwon previously served with the United States Department of Justice, where she was deputy director for IT security staff. Prior to her position with Unisys, Titus served for six years with the Transportation Security Administration, where she created, implemented and maintained a robust IT Security program and led her team to have an IT Security Program rated with a FISMA compliance score of "A" for 18 months. This year, the winner in the WOI corporate category is Michelle Dennedy, chief governance officer for Sun Microsystems.

When she joined Unisys Federal Systems as the Chief Information Security Officer, she brought much of that rigor to its security program, according to her nomination. Dennedy is seen as a creative leader in changing the view of privacy from that of strict regulation to one of social responsibility, according to her nomination. The 2009 'One to Watch' winner is Char Sutter, SVP Information Security with HSBC North America. In addition to raising the visibility of data privacy and data integrity issues to all of Sun's engineering and field employees, Dennedy has been a staunch advocate of processes to incorporate that awareness into best practices, ranging from laptop encryption to evaluation of privacy standards in acquired companies. According to Sutter's nomination, while she is a relatively newcomer to the information security field, she has embraced it with a passion and made a tremendous difference at HSBC. Sutter has made significant contributions to an HSBC Identity and Access Management program that was launched two years ago.

App Store success could change software-buying habits

More than 2 billion applications have been downloaded from Apple Inc.'s App Store, with more than 85,000 apps available to 50 million-plus iPhone and iPod Touch owners worldwide. After the App Store launched on July 11, 2008, it took nine months to hit 1 billion, and only six more months to hit 2 billion, noted Carl Howe, an analyst at Yankee Group Inc. "The more devices that are out there, the more people want to download software, and they see it's an easy and fun experience," Howe said in an interview. The numbers announced by Apple today are staggering to even normally reserved analysts, who noted that after a somewhat slower summer buying rate, App Store downloads globally have exceeded more than 10 million a day in much of September. It also helps that Apple has attracted 125,000 developers to its iPhone Developer Program, he noted.

With the success of the App Store and the growth in other application storefronts backed by BlackBerry, Android and others, "any digital media is fair game," Howe said. After the one-year mark was reached in July, analysts were heralding application stores, including several imitators of the App Store, as the new way to buy software. "You don't have to go to a store to a buy a disc and get the ultimate in instant gratification," Howe said. In fact, while games are a big hit on the App Store, both the free and the paid versions, Apple is calling attention to its "staff picks," which include a free app for the complete works of Shakespeare, with a text-sizing tool. Howe said one of the secrets of the App Store's success is the large number of devices downloading them, but another is the ease with which the apps are downloaded. "If you provide a friction-free way of buying things like App Store, which shortens the time it takes from an impulse to buy to actually buying something, you'll sell a lot," Howe said. "There's not a lot of time for buyer's remorse, and it's a lot like going past a magazine stand in a store and paying $3 for a magazine. In a 28.8 MB app, users get all 40 plays, 154 sonnets and six poems, as well as some works attributed to the Bard, although whether he wrote them remains in doubt.

There's not a lot of remorse in buying that item." A Yankee survey of 1,200 U.S. smartphone owners showed that 18% of applications are paid for. Even the recession has not held back this kind of impulse buying. "The recession doesn't seem to be having an impact. However with growth in the average cost of the paid apps, and the growth in the number of devices, the U.S. revenues from applications will grow by 10 times between 2009 and 2013, reaching $4.2 billion in 2013 . In that survey, more than 70% of all the apps downloaded in the U.S. were games. "It's interesting that you see how the App Store is doing when it was not that long ago - about 2001 when the dotcom bubble burst- that people were saying people would want information to be free on the Internet," Howe noted. These small impulse purchases are kind of recession-proof," Howe said. Enderle said the application store concept might have come along earlier had bricks-and-mortar retailers not objected. "The fact is, that with enough bandwidth, there's very little that can't be delivered over the Web," Enderle said. "We're witnessing what will probably be the end of the traditional software delivery model.

Rob Enderle, an analyst at the Enderle Group, said the two billion mark is "outstanding" given the number of phones available for downloads. App Store is an indicator that the times they are a changin'."

Oracle profits rise but sales fall in Q1

Oracle's first-quarter net income rose by 4 percent year-over-year to US$1.1 billion, but revenue fell by 5 percent to $5.1 billion, the company said Wednesday. New software license sales fell 17 percent year-over-year to $1 billion, indicating that customers are still reluctant to make new software investments amid the ongoing recession. Earnings per share were $0.22. Excluding one-time charges, Oracle reported earnings per share of $0.30, partly meeting the expectations of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, who had on average predicted earnings of $0.30 per share and $5.25 billion in revenue.

Oracle managed to increase profits even as revenue fell by "substantially improving" its operating margins, company President Safra Catz said in a statement. Associated expenses were just $226 million, meaning the profit margin for this part of Oracle's business was greater than 90 percent. Oracle's results were also bolstered by growth in revenue for software license updates and support, which jumped 6 percent to $3.1 billion. Oracle blamed the dip in new license sales partly on weak business at other software vendors. "They sold less of their applications, and so they drive less database with them," Catz said in a conference call. Oracle announced plans to acquire Sun earlier this year, but the acquisition is being held up by an antitrust review by European authorities.

The earnings report comes a day after Oracle announced a new Exadata data warehousing and OLTP (online transaction processing) appliance jointly developed with Sun Microsystems. Oracle executives offered no new details about the deal Wednesday, but said integration planning work is proceeding. The company is well-positioned to compete against IBM with its recently updated database and middleware products, he said. During the call, CEO Larry Ellison repeatedly targeted IBM, who Oracle will soon be battling in both software and hardware markets. Oracle shares were down $0.78 in after-hours trading to $21.35.