Harish bijoor biography definition
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Bijoor
Village in Karnataka, India
Bijoor is a Village near to Byndoor in the southern state of Karnataka, India.[1][2] It is located in the Byndoortaluk of Udupi district in Karnataka.Bijur Gram Panchayat consists of a single village consisting of 4 broad wards. The village is bounded by the town of Byndoor to the north, Kergalu to the south, Kaltodu to the east and Uppunda village to the west. Bijoor village is located in 3 km from the taluk center and Hobali. The village has one high school, four higher primary schools and one private Shri Vivekananda English Medium School[3] that provides high-quality education.
Demographics
[edit]As of 2001 India census, Bijoor had a population of 5791 with 2513 males and 3278 females.[1] Bijoor has a small halt railway station on the Konkan Railway Line.
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Challenge of consumerism
HARISH BIJOOR
AT the end of a rather long working millennium, one has the luxury of putting up one’s legs on a soft stool, sinking into a soft beanbag and thinking soft thoughts of a soft millennium gone by.
I call it soft, particularly from the Indian perspective of things. The hundred marknadsföring years behind us were distinctly soft years. Soft issues faced and soft options exercised. Soft covenants arrived at softly.
The years ahead look different indeed. Hard years indeed! Troublesome marketing times. Troublesome times for the marketing of the country that fryst vatten India. Tough years that will call for tough ways.
Let’s then explore what is ahead of us. Visit and revisit the strengths that exist. Strengths that will redefine the competitive advantage of India in the world marknad. The India ahead as the new consumer superpower of the world. The new intellectual capital of the world and of course the new seat of the buying, selling, marketing and facili
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GUEST COLUMN: Why does a city need a logo?
So Bengaluru has a new logo now! The Department of Tourism-led initiative that crowd-sourced logos in a contest that seems to have attracted more than 1,700 entries, has finally landed up with a logo that looks good, looks bold, and looks so predictable. Much of a much-ness with many a city logo, starting with the very prominent one that the “I Love Amsterdam” format boasts of.
As Bengaluru becomes the first city with a logo all its own, there have been questions around. Why does a city need a logo? Let me address that point first.
A city is essentially much more than a geography. It has its geographical boundaries, but within that live an amalgam of people. These people are city people. They are bound together by the fact that they live in close proximity with one another. They may have little in common when it comes to food habits, dress, language, religion, social norms, but nevertheless, they are all bound by the one fact t