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Reading: Customer forced  Narayana Murthy  to sleep on a box in the warehouse during his visit to America: books  
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Customer forced  Narayana Murthy  to sleep on a box in the warehouse during his visit to America: books  

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Last updated: 2024/01/07 at 4:24 PM
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 Donn Liles,  head of  the New York-based  Data Basics Corporation, was a  hot-tempered  and  sometimes particularly irritating customer of  Narayana  Murthy.  

 New Delhi: 

 When Narayana Murthy once  went to  the  United States to work  for  a  client  in  the  early  days of Infosys, a temperamental American businessman made him sleep on a large box in a windowless  warehouse  surrounded by  by boxes when  his own  house only  had four bedrooms.  

 Indian-American author Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni has  published  a biography  about  the early years of  the lives of  Sudha  Murty  and Narayana  Murthy, which contains a lot of interesting information  about  this  iconic couple.  

Published by Juggernaut Books,  ‘An  Uncommon Love: The Early Life of Sudha and Narayana  Murthy’  is the story of the Murthys’ early years – from their courtship to  the  founding years  of Infosys  and from their marriage  theirs until they become parents.  

 Donn Liles,  head of  the New York-based  Data Basics Corporation, was a  hot-tempered  and  sometimes particularly nasty customer  to  Murthy. 

 “He would often delay payments when  possible,  and Murthy would then  become  the target of his  anger  because he  stood  his ground, refusing to budge on  paying  for  services on time.  Or Donn  won’t pay  Murthy and  him in time.”

Infosys colleagues  booked a hotel  when they  visited  him in Manhattan. 

  “Once,  when Murthy  went to America to work  for  a client,  Donn made him sleep on a large box in the  pantry,  surrounded by  cardboard boxes, even  though his  house  had four bedrooms.  In addition,  Murthy had to manage Donn’s  last  many  bedroom-minute  demands  on  resources,” the book says.  He  tolerated  Donn’s  behavior  for the  benefit  of his fledgling company, but the  incident  at the club really  shocked Murthy.  “My  mother used to say that a guest  is  like God, and  how  you  treat  your guests  will reveal who  you really  are,”  he told  his  wife Sudha. 

  “When  my father invited someone over without  notice, she often served  food to  the  guests herself  and  fell asleep  without dinner. And here  is  Donn enjoying a good night’s sleep in his luxurious bed after  putting  me  up in  a big box  for the night. The storage room has no windows,”  he said,  making  Sudha  angry.  

 The book also mentions how Murthy  objected  to his wife joining  Infosys, even though she was  a  brilliant  engineer who knew she could  make a much  more  solid contribution  to the company than  just  helping with  the  odd tasks  her husband  entrusted  to her.  

 When she proposed the idea  one evening at the dinner table, Murthy  flatly  refused:  “I’m  sorry. You  cannot work at Infosys. » His reason was: “We  can’t work  together  in the same  company. »  He  doesn’t  want Infosys to have  similar  horror stories  about family  businesses and  be seen  as dynastic or nepotistic. 

 Murthy told his wife that she  was  extremely  qualified and  that  no one  had  her  determination,  but if she  joined  “Infosys  would  become  more of  a husband-and-wife  company  than a professional company”. 

  Divakaruni writes that  although  Sudha and Murthy  have much  in common  due to  their shared Kannada background and  love  of  reading, their very different childhoods shaped them in unique ways. 

  Murthy was a staunch socialist who  was  influenced as a teenager by his father’s ideas as well as Jawaharlal Nehru’s open admiration of the  Soviet Union.  

 He once told Sudha:  “Russian  is the language of the future. That’s why I’ve been studying Russian and collecting Russian books for  two  years. »  Sudha shook her head  resolutely. “I firmly believe  that English  will  remain the language of the world. That’s why I  try  to read as many English books as  possible,  even though I  studied in  a  Kannada medium  school and  prefer to read in Kannada. ”  

“Murthy stubbornly  clung  to his Russian books even after  changing  his  philosophy  of life.  to compassionate capitalism. After their marriage, it  took  Sudha  years of  coaxing  before  she was allowed  to  escape them,”  the book says. 

Divakaruni says  describing  in words the lives of two extraordinary people from ordinary backgrounds, who  changed the face of entrepreneurship and  philanthropy,  was  a challenge.  “At its heart, this is a  rare  love  story.  It  is  not  just about  Sudha and Murthy’s love for each  other  but also  about  their love for their values  ​​and  their country – and  determination  Their  use  of  the former to transform the latter.  

 It shows us that human love – no matter what  romantic movies  claim  –  has  failures as well as successes, sadness as well as  joy,”  she  said.  

 For more  information,  visit at https://happenrecently.com/zepto/?amp=1

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