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To Marry or to Date?
We will be learning about Strategic Alliances this term, and while our  Professor has given us just 415 pages to read, it set me thinking about how I  could draw similarities between all the technical definitions I am learning and  examples from day to day life. This post is the result.
    
    The business world reflects life - our parents got married (merger or acquisition) for life, but today, we  first evaluate many partners from around the world (globalisation) and then go  steady (strategic alliance), then live in (joint venture), and finally either  get married or break up. In the past, marriages (mergers and acquisitions)  worked because there was limited awareness, no Internet and no way to reach out  to the better choices out there; there were strict societal/ parental  (government) norms and the world was comfortable with the feudal system. Then  came the Industrial Revolution, the Russian revolution (twice), computers, the  Internet, Facebook and Twitter. The world got “Googled” and my friend Steve  made it his “Job” to put the googled world under our fingertips! Rapid  technological advances became a major motive for alliances. Men wanted choices  (as always), and women had better choices for the first time and the economic  freedom to walk out of a bad relationship. Thus entered economic uncertainty  (for men at work and home) - another major motive for seeking  alliances. 
    
    As we added more friends of every colour from across the world on  Facebook, our outlook became global - we learnt about new customs and  new ideas germinated. For some, it was access to low-cost capital, for others  it was access to new markets, and for still others, it was low-cost production;  in any case, you figured out that alliances offered lower transaction costs  (another motive). Think of your parents marriage (M&A) and what it  cost. A few thousand rupees would have made it a rich wedding then. Today, you  have wedding planners who play in a well segmented market - under one crore, between two and five crores, above five crores, and  the obscene crores segment. 
    
    And, all the while, rapid technological advances keep happening, product  life cycles are short, there is uncertainty, both men and women find other  cost-effective options, governments have relaxed rules, and suddenly, there is  no longer any reason to remain invested in the one to obscene crore marriage.  Ugly or happy divorces take place, once again there is a huge cost (and mental  trauma added to the mix) ... and sometimes, one or both the partners just  wither away and sometimes they become wiser. 
    
    The wiser ones then go the dating, steady (strategic alliance) and/ or  live-in (joint venture) route and may never marry, or their marriage  (M&A) will be an informed decision. You know exactly what each other’s  strengths and weaknesses are, whether you have complementary skills, whether  there are learning opportunities on both sides, and hopefully, if the  M&A does happen, it leads to a united front (whether it is progressive  or otherwise depends on many other factors). Yes, I jumped to our favourite  bashing boy -  the UPA alliance. Interesting,  isn’t it, that in politics you rarely find M&A but only alliances,  because they offer so much more flexibility and you can play up or down the  entire spectrum of goodwill to acrimony without batting an eyelid - wily politicians, indeed!
    
    So ultimately, the moral of this post and Term 8 is: be smart, date, go  steady, live in and be fully informed before you marry. There are no guarantees  that the marriage will still succeed, but at least you’ll improve the chances  of success (Arun and Professor Deshmukh's probability) and not burn a hole all  over your sari/ shirt. Of course, this is gender neutral global advice: Grow  up, man!
    
    Bindumalini Krishnan
    PGPMAX Class of 2013