First you should end your printfs with "\n" (or at least the last one). But that is not related to the segfault.
When the compiler compiles your code, it splits the binary into several section. Some are read only, while other are writeable.
Writing to an read only section may cause a segfault.
String literals are usually placed in a read only section (gcc should put it in ".rodata").
The pointer name points to that ro section. Therefore you must use
const char *name = "Vikram";
In my response I've used a few "may" "should". The behaviour depends on your OS, compiler and compilation settings (The linker script defines the sections).
Adding
-Wa,-ahlms=myfile.lst
to gcc's command line produces a file called myfile.lst with the generated assembler code.
At the top you can see
.section .rodata
.LC0:
.string "Vikram"
Which shows that the string is in Vikram.
The same code using (Must be in global scope, else gcc may store it on the stack, notice it is an array and not a pointer)
char name[] = "Vikram";
produces
.data
.type name, @object
.size name, 7
name:
.string "Vikram"
The syntax is a bit different but see how it is in .data section now, which is read-write.
By the way this example works.