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Dear
Ram,
I
really enjoyed reading your briefs. Please read my thoughts (given below)
provoked by your analysis.
I
am sorry that our other learned and busy friends have no time or motivation
to acknowledge your mails. Loss is theirs. In the modern world if you
are not active both in the back ground [theoretical] as well as in the
foreground [practical] you have no existence. I am sure that our taciturn
friends must be working on their portion of the study and will come
up with their findings at the appointed time.
Sometimes
I feel nothing great is done by teams, only the lonely wolf thinks impossible
things and blazes the trail.
May
I wish you best of luck and assure my cooperation.
Lots of love,
Swami Bodhananda
...In
the corporate world what matters is market share, customer satisfaction,
share value, innovation and quality products. This creates fierce competition
among corporate players. Though the above are the declared objectives
of all players, corporate governance takes to many undesirable stratagems
to gain market share and profits. As the saying goes,' everything is
allowed in war and love'. Companies consist of people with varying interests,
backgrounds and expectations. To knit them together and motivate them
to pursue a shared goal is difficult involving many compromises. Both
these tasks lead to unethical practices.
The
old problems of ego, arrogance, intolerance and greed creep into the
civilized corporate world. In India we have the additional problem of
poverty and the resultant corruption- using public office for private
gain or taking with out contributing in the name of social justice.
So leadership has many contradictory challenges- to eradicate poverty,
illiteracy and illness; to develop infrastructure; and to create an
entrepreneurial mind set. Indian corporations have to operate in such
a constrained environment.
These
problems are systemic, not just individualistic; cultural than ethical,
political than economic, leadership than managerial, theoretical than
practical, strategic than tactical, long term than short term, has to
deal with the big picture than tinkering with small issues. India is
like Stephen Hawking, the famous astrophysicist who suffers from a debilitating
motor organ disease. India's legs and heart are week, but the brain
is in excellent condition. India's legs are the 700 million poor, the
heart is the 200 million middle class and the head is 100 million upper
class and professionals.
India
lives in three layers. Dialogue and collaboration between these three
layers are important for purposeful and sustained growth. Our effort
to create an Indian Management style will have to take all these factors
into consideration. Essentially corporate management is an upper class
activity, but they don't have much voice in determining the political
environment, which is influenced by the lower and middle class people.
Duryodhana's
arrogance and stubbornness has to be understood in this light, like
even the Indian corporate world has to deal with the arrogance and irrationality
and populism of the Mayavati-s, Laloo-s, Paswan-s, Mulayam-s, Mamata-s
and Jayalalita-s as well as the stubbornness of the Leftist Marxists
and the Trade Unionists. If Dritarashtra were not born blind he would
have been the king and Duryodhana would have been natural heir to the
kingdom. But that was not to be. Duryodhana felt cheated by fate and
became bitter, jealous and vengeful. In a materialistic culture where
there is no inner discipline or acceptance conflict is inevitable. Duryodhana's
intolerance led to war and the more accommodating Pandavas won.
The
lesson I learn from this collaborative, win-win, policies are always
better than intolerance and zero sum games. Pandavas were forced to
play a zero sum game and at the end all lost heavily in terms of men
and material. The Mahabharata war was a case of mutually assured destruction
[MAD]. Hitler's were a zero sum game as well as that of Pakistan in
the Bangladesh war. Can you, Ram, Give us some analogies from the corporate
world for zero sum games and win-win situations? The key negative words
are 'arrogance', 'greed', and positive word is 'Coexistence' and 'collaboration'.
A paltry settlement is no settlement and Pandavas would not have long
been happy with that kind of a humiliating situation.
...
Dritarashtra
had a weakness for his son which was genetic and psychological. D felt
guilty that because of his blindness his son was denied his natural
right to the kingdom and his wife Gandhari was denied sight and the
pleasure of seeing her children grow up. It was this guilt that made
D indulgent to his son Dryodhana and turns a blind eye, literally and
figuratively, to his misdemeanors. Poor Dritarashtra deserves our sympathy.
Indian wisdom tradition brings Vidhi/fate in the understanding of fateful
events whose denouement follows the inevitable twists and turns of a
Greek Tragedy. Now Ram, my question is: is there any thing like this
vidhi/fate/karma concept in the corporate vocabulary to understand certain
decisions taken- like the BJP decision to go for general election before
schedule- which lead to inevitable disaster. In such situations only
spirituality can come to your aid at least in absorbing the shock.
Recently I read that there are three requirements for success - 'Competence',
'concept' and 'connections'. The last requirement is very important
for business success anywhere in the world. And there are economic and
practical reasons too for that. It is said that in B-Schools what you
pick up is just connections and nothing else. Now my question Ram, How
you s distinguish between using connections and nepotism? The Kaurava
model was successful in the case of the delinquent Samir Jain of Times
of India taking over the reins after his father who increased business
from Rs. 250 crores to Rs. 800 crores in five years. Can we have a SWOT
analysis of the Kaurava model that is universally practiced? Capitalism
and the corporate world thrive on inherited wealth and power. What is
the role of professional management in all this?
...
Who will be the sacrificial lamb - hero- in business wars? Is he the
one who takes risk, incubate and commission new projects and if it doesn't
work pack up and leave as per the exit plan or B plan? Where will you
place Abhimanyu in a business model? I am sure such heroes are the initial
trailblazers after who march successful men.
...
Focus
on the process with awareness of the error free end in the background,
with out unduly worrying about the result and anxiety for personal pelf
is the central teaching of the Gita
There
fore, since there is no other way for a dignified life, Arjuna, Get
up, fight and win, gain glory and enjoy power and wealth that success
brings. Gita 11-33
Can there be any better advice to today's manager?
War is the last resort after sama, dana, bheda and danda. But unless
one is battle ready one will not have the leisure, wits and self-confidence
for employing the earlier methods of conflict resolution. Strength,
tact, vigilance and the determination to win are the price of success.
"It is the striped one who survives in the corporate jungle"-
A judicious mix of collaboration, conciliation, manipulation and flexing
the muscles according the contingency of the situation is the right
solution.