English, asked by avneet98, 10 months ago

what has Malcolm Gladwell said in his book that Indra Nooyi is referring to in her speech​

Answers

Answered by mindfulmaisel
21

Gladwell said that “Indra Nooyi is referring to in her speech”:

Referring to Gladwell’s book, Nooyi told the ‘August audience’ in the presence of the then ‘President of India Pranab Mukherjee’, “who you are cannot be separated from where you came from. I left India 35 years ago, went on to the United States and went on to have tremendous success in that meritocracy. But none of that could have happened if I hadn’t had a wonderful upbringing very much here in India. So I have a lot to thank India for.”

She broke many a ceiling to rise to such heights – being a ‘non-white Asian’ that too being a woman. These are still major handicaps even in the so called ‘advanced world’. She performed spectacularly in the ‘West’s dog-eat-dog business world’. Indeed, Nooyi does not have too many peers or competitors amongst professional managers.

Indra Nooyi is referring to in her speech is Malcolm Gladwell’s assertion that who we are cannot be separated from where we are.

Answered by harshapathyj07
0

first beueh3h3 hehe e rhb3he e rhrb rhe w8ehe

Similar questions