Saturday, 7 January 2017

Frequent Travellers in India - Travel Well, Safe, Cheap an in Comfort!

I am a frequent traveller in India – sounds very exciting, but the reality can be a bit underwhelming.  With the burgeoning Indian economy and the multitude of travel options, it is indeed a lot more convenient to travel than a decade ago.  But travel today, especially on work, is just a day in the office (outside the office!).

Over the years, frequent travellers have figured out to make the entire travel process easier, more efficient and maybe a bit relaxing as well.  Everything from figuring out booking the cheapest flights to the best hotels on budget to getting around new cities. And most importantly, how to get a few hours of stress free relaxation at the now crowded and bustling Indian airports.

Here are some tips for the weary Indian Traveler!

The Booking: The What, the How and the Where
There are a multitude of travel sites and applications to make your life simpler.  Some that I have frequently used include www.cleartrip.com, www.goibibo.com, www.makemytrip.com, www.easemytrip.com, www.musafir.com  Then there are a bunch of hotel specific sites in addition to the ones above such as www.via.com, www.trivago.com, www.tripadvisor.com etc  All of these sites have their own mobile applications as well for both apple and android phones.

The problem with most of the sites is that there is almost too much information.  These sites are supposed to be travel consolidators to make your life easy – but which one should we go to and for what?  Also, these guys are smart – they all offer promotions for various items at different times – so the traveller has no good way to know when they are getting a deal better than at other sites.
What I usually do is to simply google something like best coupons for flights – immediately our trustworthy Google will enumerate all most coupons related to these sites on the first page.  Easy to click through and complete the booking on these sites and save hundreds and in some cases thousands of rupees.

Many of these sites have figured out that people who download their mobile apps will definitely be more loyal to them.  Very true in most cases – I have downloaded a Goibibo app, a Makemytrip app on my mobile.  The offers are sometimes better on the mobile apps versus their website.
The second big differentiator is the ease of use – how quickly can you make your booking.  www.goibibo.com stores my credit card or form of payment in their profile, so do many of the other sites.  Also, they all offer some kind of an ewallet where you can get cash back for various bookings.  The catch is that you can only use a small amount of the cashback for each future booking.

There are some new promotions coming in through PayTM and other wallet companies – very good to take a look at these for great promotions.  Just last month, I saved Rs 1000 per flight while booking on PayTM.  The money ofcourse goes into your wallet, but easy enough for me to spend since I have tied PayTM as the backend payment for many things such as phone recharges and Uber cars.

This info should be a great way to get started on great savings….watch out for part 2 of my the tips and tricks of frequent travel….






Thursday, 22 December 2016

Tabletization of the EMR - is the future already here?

As the VP of a Healthcare Software company (Amrita Technologies - www.amritatech.com), I am often called upon to visit various hospitals and figure  out ways to make them adopt the next frontier in healthcare Technology.  The traditional B2B software solutions are fast being questioned in the context of the user base's growing awaremenss of b2c technologies.
Tabletization and Mobile Apps - big buzz words a few years ago, are now commonplace in an advanced healthcare information system.  Everybody talks about it, everybody wants it, but the key is - Is everybody or infact anybody using these at all?  And to what extent?
I was touring several of our Client hospitals last month, and it struck me that people love their smart phone apps only if they have to interact with them for a few minutes a day.  But the moment it become "work" - let's say a mobile EMR where you continuously monitor and access patient data, mobile loses some of its charm.  Tablets are even more of a resistor - reading books - sure, reading patient notes - maybe not so good.
The key to understanding technology adoption is not just the ability to showcase applications and data across various devices or platforms, but the prediliction of the user to use or appreciate the type and quantity of information being presented via these devices.
At Amrita, we are focused on not just creating great healthcare technology, but in creating real world technology that will actually be adopted and used.  It is not an easy cycle - creating solid products that are scalable, work seamlessly is good - but sometimes not flashy enough in this constantly hungry for more marketplace. Regardless, we firmly believe that the foundation should be strong enough to uphold the key pillars of our technology - Reliability, Scalability, and Adoptability.  
My advice to budding entrepreneurs in Technology - Do what you firmly believe in, Flexibility is all about change, but not just change for the sake of change. In the words of J. Krishnamurthy “Do not repeat after me words that you do not understand. Do not merely put on a mask of my ideas, for it will be an illusion and you will thereby deceive yourself.” 
Happy Reading......
Sumeet Bahl
Vice President Global Strategy
Amrita Technologies