460 conferred degrees at TAPMI’s 33rd Annual Convocation
Vinobha K T | TNN | Apr 14, 2019, 13:52 IST
MANIPAL: T A Pai Management Institute (TAPMI), India’s premier B-school, held 33rd Annual Convocation on at KMC Greens, Manipal. The ceremony was graced by S V Nathan, partner and chief talent officer, Deloitte India, and Dr H S Ballal, Pro-Chancellor, MAHE.
The convocation witnessed 460 students from the three PG Diploma streams, Post Graduate Diploma in Management, PGDM in Banking & Financial Service and PGDM in Healthcare Management graduating.
Advising the graduating students, Prof Madhu Veeraraghavan, director, TAPMI, said, “The upcoming years will be very crucial as each of you will be posed with numerous challenges that will put you on a path to self-discovery". He also stressed on TAPMI's aim to produce industry-relevant who can take up leadership roles in reputed organisations in the next decade.
Delivering the convocation address, guest S V Nathan said “One must respect every opportunity that comes their way and grab them with both hands. It is imperative to take accountability and master the art of persuasion to make people believe in what you speak. Always live your life as a responsible citizen and lead a life of ethics and integrity. ”
He further deliberated on leadership and what companies look for in a candidate.
Harpreet Singh was awarded the Gold Medal at the 33rd annual convocation. The ceremony also presented awards, scholarships and recognition to students from all three streams for their contribution and excellence in academic and co-curricular activities.
The Institute had earlier announced that it recorded 100% placements for the graduating batch. The average CTC across the three streams was Rs 11.06 lakh per year with the highest CTC offered being Rs 20 lakh per year. The graduating students have been placed in reputed organisations such as Deloitte, EY, Grant Thornton, Tresvista, Citi Corp, JP Morgan Chase, HSBC, Accenture, KPMG, Bajaj Finserve, L&T Finance, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, SBI, Goldman Sachs, Amul among others.
The convocation witnessed 460 students from the three PG Diploma streams, Post Graduate Diploma in Management, PGDM in Banking & Financial Service and PGDM in Healthcare Management graduating.
Advising the graduating students, Prof Madhu Veeraraghavan, director, TAPMI, said, “The upcoming years will be very crucial as each of you will be posed with numerous challenges that will put you on a path to self-discovery". He also stressed on TAPMI's aim to produce industry-relevant who can take up leadership roles in reputed organisations in the next decade.
Delivering the convocation address, guest S V Nathan said “One must respect every opportunity that comes their way and grab them with both hands. It is imperative to take accountability and master the art of persuasion to make people believe in what you speak. Always live your life as a responsible citizen and lead a life of ethics and integrity. ”
He further deliberated on leadership and what companies look for in a candidate.
Harpreet Singh was awarded the Gold Medal at the 33rd annual convocation. The ceremony also presented awards, scholarships and recognition to students from all three streams for their contribution and excellence in academic and co-curricular activities.
The Institute had earlier announced that it recorded 100% placements for the graduating batch. The average CTC across the three streams was Rs 11.06 lakh per year with the highest CTC offered being Rs 20 lakh per year. The graduating students have been placed in reputed organisations such as Deloitte, EY, Grant Thornton, Tresvista, Citi Corp, JP Morgan Chase, HSBC, Accenture, KPMG, Bajaj Finserve, L&T Finance, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, SBI, Goldman Sachs, Amul among others.
Making sense of 2019
#Electionswithtimes
View Full Coverage
All Comments ()+^ Back to Top
Refrain from posting comments that are obscene, defamatory or inflammatory, and do not indulge in personal attacks, name calling or inciting hatred against any community. Help us delete comments that do not follow these guidelines by marking them offensive. Let's work together to keep the conversation civil.
HIDE