Friday, October 16, 2009
Office is my home, err...is it?
My doubts were proven right. While my friend was expecting the organization to cheer him up even when the going was extremely tough, he seemed to have been left to fend on his own. With the employee spending close to 12 hours in office, it is but natural to expect ‘care’ from his employer. A quick look at news reports generated in the recent past indicate that organizations are increasingly focusing on growth at the expense of employees instrumental in driving this growth. As someone said, human brain is a social organ. Its physiological and neurological reactions are directly and profoundly shaped by social interactions. A challenge at a professional level might evoke the same response as a challenge at the personal level as the distinction is blurring today.
According to a research done at University of California at Los Angeles, it was found that although a job is often regarded as a purely economic transaction, in which people exchange their labor for financial compensation, the brain experiences the workplace first and foremost as a social system. When people feel betrayed or unrecognized at work — for example, when they are reprimanded, given an assignment that seems unworthy, or told to take a pay cut — they experience it as a neural impulse, as powerful and painful as a blow to the head. Most people who work in companies learn to rationalize or temper their reactions; they “suck it up,” as the common parlance puts it. But they also limit their commitment and engagement. They become purely transactional employees, reluctant to give more of themselves to the company, because the social context stands in their way.
On the other hand when leaders take initiatives to understand their people, make them feel good, clearly communicate what’s expected from employees, give latitude to make decisions, support people’s efforts to build good relationships, and treat the whole organization fairly, it prompts a reward response. Others in the organization become more effective, more open to ideas, and more creative. They notice the kind of information that passes them by when fear or resentment makes it difficult to focus their attention. They are less susceptible to burnout because they are able to manage their stress. They feel intrinsically rewarded.
An organization is today more like an employee’s home where he fosters certainty, each and everyone is treated fairly, caring is a given, and where freedom is not a choice. Every leader or employer should keep in mind that ‘home is where the heart is.’ Where is your employees heart?
Thursday, August 14, 2008
What’s common between Ford’s Model T and India’s IT service companies?
US - Henry Ford's 1908 Model T—the first mass-produced and affordable car—sparked the growth of highways, suburbs, and the middle class. Ripples from the Model T were enormous. With the cars came a nation that traveled more than ever before, that moved away from home that built an elaborate road system. The Model T also ended up spurring the growth of America's middle class. Since assembly line work was so tedious, Ford found it impossible to keep workers. So he boosted wages to at least $5 a day--significantly higher than what other manufacturing workers were making at the time.
India - IT services, outsourced by US companies, triggers development. The proliferation of IT and BPO companies empowered thousands of youngsters with substantial amount of disposable income. The burgeoning IT services industry simultaneous improved complementary sectors like travel and transport, real-estate, catering etc. With demand for job-ready technical professionals outstripping supply, wages of Indian IT professionals goes up significantly. It's hard to find any other piece of technology that had a greater impact than Model T Fords did in the 20th century. In their own way, they helped promote the growth of suburbs, distant shopping centers, freeways. It's hard to imagine now how they changed people's lives. It's quite common to hear parents of software engineers in India state something similar.
The Model T, which had only been made in black (suited for a speedy assembly line) since 1914, was eventually offered in other colors, but it was too late. In 1927, Ford stopped producing them. Late 2007 witnessed watershed events in IT outsourcing with US subprime. Continued focus and reliance on US companies for outsourcing projects has dented IT companies in India with several layoffs and conservative forecast of revenue guidance.
Ford may have dreamed up the first car for the masses, but he didn't realize that he had also created a new, more demanding consumer who would soon be searching for the next model and the newest look. Ford's biggest competitors, General Motors and Chrysler, adapted his revolutionary production methods, but they went a step further and began offering new styles, colors, and features. American companies like Accenture, IBM, HP etc are replicating India's outsourcing model but at a scale that's beyond cost arbitrage and relying more on intellectual arbitrage being leveraged across the world.
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
The Bridge that connects globalization and localization
The IT-led globalization, which has been propelling India's growth, has certainly taken a beating owing to recession in US. Did we see it coming? Of course we did. How do we get out of the rut then? Well, before we actually delve into possible solutions for future course, let's see how we benefited from the onset of IT-led globalization? At the outset, the low-wage workers entered the global economy -- initially through their involvement in export production and eventually evolving as a new class of consumers. Secondly, the proposition benefited rich nations of the developed world -- where consumers expanded their standard of living by buying low-cost, high-quality goods from poor countries and where workers were to gain from being involved in the production of more sophisticated products exported to increasingly prosperous developing economies.
The first benefit is hard to dispute. India's standard of living, for example, has more than doubled during the past 15 years. The problem is with the second benefit. A sense of economic insecurity is creeping rapidly up the occupational hierarchy -- from software programmers and engineers to medical and legal professionals -- a palpable sense of shock is spreading rapidly into the knowledge-worker occupations that have long been shielded from economic adversity. This loss of confidence in the second benefit of globalization has led countries to swing from the theoretical promises of globalization to the self-interest of individual countries -- in essence, "localization."
What India is witnessing today is perhaps a result of the onslaught of localization. Wages could go up and corporate profits could come under pressure. Moreover, localization could also spell heightened risks of protectionism -- especially if the global economy slows and unemployment starts to rise. In this scenario, localization could ultimately give rise to accelerating inflation, higher interest rates, greater volatility in financial market etc. And, of course, the protectionist ramifications of localization could prove equally challenging for the beneficiaries of globalization's first win -- dynamic new companies in the developing world and the employment growth they generate.
No wonder then that we see companies making local announcements on the lines of investing in India for India. With a huge population of youth, India is a promising market and global companies don't want India to slip into a protectionist mode. Consider this, Generic Electric announced its focus on localized medical equipment for India; Philips stressed on localized products for India; IBM said it will lower center of gravity in India. An increasing number of companies are focusing on responding to local needs, languages and cultures to deliver variety of high quality goods and services, thus offering consumers more choices and better quality. For these companies, localization is not an option, it is an imperative. An examination of the revenues of just 2006 Global Fortune 500 companies that is known to be actively localizing their products or services yields annual total revenues of approximately $5.9 trillion (with profits of $365 billion).
Huh! So, what is in store for us? For starters, the phenomenon opens a window of opportunity for India as a country. As a leading CEO of a global PR consultancy puts it, transnationals need to make their brands relevant in ways that are faithful to the core attributes of the brand, yet flexible enough to accommodate diverse trading patterns, differing consumer tastes and behavior, and a variety of businesses, media and political cultures. The real challenge for PR is to help organizations bridge that which is global and that which is local. Unfortunately, there is no magic template for doing this. What there is, instead, is a steadily growing body of wisdom that comes from doing it, day in and day out, in numerous markets around the world.
People like us have been involved in doing such things day in and day out and the potential for us is enormous. Let's work towards building more bridges…
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Digitization and globalization
When I see the world from a technology perspective - am tempted to ask - is globalization a result of digitization? Well, that's not really what I would want to write about though as am sure several management luminaries would have shed enough light on the same. Not many organizations have an innovation DNA and not many of us have the adaptability DNA. And, this has become an imperative in today's digitized, globalized world. An increasing number of organizations are focusing on faster-innovation-to-market so as to generate competitive advantage. And, as these organizations propel themselves forward, employees unable to adapt to the changing landscape are left behind. What's also true is that in most cases it's the key resources that would be left behind leading to what management experts call reverse salient. It's upon the employees and more importantly the organizations to seamlessly move together. If any one fails, the growth of the organization would be at the expense of losing key resources that provide ammunition at regular intervals – like a rocket launch.
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
India win T20; enable globalization of cricket
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Towards better valuation
Friday, September 14, 2007
Step up PR efforts for India
Thursday, January 11, 2007
Threat of backward integration

Weigner might be a sole warrior but he is certainly masterminding a disruption. The information technology industry is set to witness watershed events in the near future. As in every industry, disruption will shake up the hitherto stable and continuously growing phenomenon, offshore outsourcing. With the vast majority of companies involved in offshoring focused on initiatives primarily aimed at sustaining current business, mostly by venturing into new niches and markets, the impending threat of backward integration from the customer is overlooked.
A recent report in CIO.com stated a non-profit organization, involved in sending work offshore, now gearing up to compete with Indian offshorers in all spheres viz., cost, efficiency, responsiveness, productivity and quality. The said organization is reportedly targeting a CMMI level certification, which will enable it to showcase clearly the quality, responsiveness and productivity of the in-house IT department to the business heads, thereby offering enough parameters for comparisons with offshore outsourcers. What have they done? A project management team to coordinate all midsize and large development projects to improve on-time performance plus an architecture group to standardize systems and applications to reduce costs and increase productivity. In short, all that an offshore outsourcing firm offers.
Businesses are now more aware of offshoring and its impact. With the market perhaps at a certain level of maturity, companies are emphasizing on managing outcomes than managing operations, they are stressing on realizing business value than cost. Makes perfect sense for IT professionals in India – well, who doesn’t want to move up the value chain? With IT getting closer to the business person (than the CIO/CTO), the need for professionals with business and technology acumen is increasingly becoming an imperative. And, a large chunk of the work will have to be executed onsite for want of thorough market knowledge and understanding of business processes. While the Indian companies are initiating this transition by leveraging the now established coding skills and entrenched relationship with customers, the CIOs on the other side are fortifying their department to compete with the offshorers.
CIOs are nurturing a new breed of programmers. These are teams proficient in dexterously troubleshooting information related inefficiencies in order to enable senior managers to substitute automated monitoring for direct control. Usually, such jobs are not outsourced and even if it is, IT department has the competitive advantage over outsourcers on costs (assuming work’s done by a local person onsite because the nature of work is such), know-how (how does it work internally? Consultants rarely know) and motivation (the passion to go the extra mile is absent).
By creating a set of standard methodologies across the organization to increase productivity, enhance delivery times and to improve quality coupled with a team equipped with analysis, design and collaboration capabilities, the CIOs have begun a new game. Reduced to mere implementers of air-tight projects, offshorers are precariously positioned and gradually will be gobbled up by organizations outsourcing.
Well, it isn’t cricket in the US anymore. Offshorers better learn baseball and American Football.
Friday, January 05, 2007
Basic Instinct
What if the shop selling Sherwani knew Kevin's taste or his instincts? Intriguing, it may sound, but it's possible now. With an integrated supply chain they can get really early indications of consumer trends. They can do real-time trend analysis, data analysis on what customers are shopping for. The analysis gives them up-to-the-minute insight into buying trends. For instance, it can discover people's color preferences for clothes earlier than it could by just looking at data from a few specific stores. Consumers' buying behaviors over all the stores are tracked in real time, and the data is analyzed to predict future trends. In essence, the store can deliver what Kevin want before he knew he wanted it.
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Reverse Salient to impede India’s progress in IT
Reverse Salient to impede India’s progress in IT
IT’s happening
Post the opening of its markets several years ago, India has progressed from being an outsourcing destination with a business model primarily based on cheap labour to one based on intellectual arbitrage. Along with the burgeoning IT outsourcing market came the rapid strides of development in telecom, healthcare, education and manufacturing. Today, India isn’t just about cheap coders; it is an integral part of the global supply chains. While the IT Services sector has been expanding its footprints at a scorching pace, it has also caused a ripple effect of growth in other sectors as well leading to the emergence of a consumer class that is larger than the total population of US. The substantial investments pouring into the country towards various sectors reflect how bullish the world market is towards India.
Sustaining the growth
Milestone growth in FDI inflows during 2006-07. As of April-October, FDI flows touched $6.1 billion compared to $2.6 billion during the first eight months of the previous fiscal.The days have been bright hitherto. However, the unprecedented and unmatched growth seems to have overtaken India’s developmental process. India, as several reports suggests is bursting in its seams as issues pertaining to infrastructure and availability of quality human resources increase by the day. There was a time, in the distant past, when development took simple forms – tractors replacing bullock-carts, mobile phones reaching more people than land phones, cable television over satellite, e-mails gaining prominence etc. But development gets more complicated as it advances. The simple forms become more elaborate, and they begin to merge into ever more complex systems. Today, a lot of the developments undertaken form components of such large and complex systems, and its success can hinge as much on other components of the systems as on their own specific developmental qualities.Today, it has become imperative to not only understand the systems but develop foresight on how they're likely to evolve and how such an evolution can be leveraged to gain advantage.
Well, it is certainly difficult to develop foresight. However, the concept of “reverse salient,” can be effectively put to use to understand developments, the various components forming the developmental process, the larger ecosystem under which the development takes place and the repercussions of the ecosystem formation. The concept of “reverse salient,” is borrowed from military jargon, where it refers to a section of an advancing force that falls behind the front and hence slows the progress of the attack. All developments evolve in a similar fashion with advancement hampered by reverse salient that occurs in the developmental process, some components of it or in the larger ecosystem.
Losing Edge
The proliferation of tier II and tier III IT companies in India have resulted in IT Services/ offshoring getting commoditized. With cost undercutting prevalent, Tier I IT companies are required to play the game differently and in came the strategy of scale-game. Companies are now ramping up operations by thousands of employees per week. Is India game for this? Well, a sneak-peek at the attrition levels of Tier I players reflect that all’s not well. The reverse salient here is that in a scale game, knowledge inventorying is overlooked, which will cost the company dear. With intellectual capital forming an integral part of any IT services company, retention of employees is a necessity as it enables institutionalizing processes, skills and knowledge. Hence, until and unless a company has a robust employee retention strategy in place, it is better to refrain from scaling up. Why not play the specialist?
The total direct employment in the Indian IT-ITES sector is estimated to have grown by over a million, from 284,000 in FY 1999-2000 to a projected 1,287,000 in the current fiscal (2005-06)
In addition to the nearly 1.3 million-strong workforce employed directly in the industry, Indian IT-ITES is estimated to have helped create an additional 3 million job opportunities through indirect and induced employment. Indirect employment includes expenditure on vendors including telecom, power, construction, facility management, IT, transportation, catering and other services. Induced employment is driven by consumption expenditure of employees on food, clothing, utilities, recreation, health and other services.
There’s perhaps only one resource that can beat the rising oil price – an Indian engineering graduate. India produces about 3 million students from its universities each year. According to a survey by National Association of Software and Service Companies, about 25 percent of them are engineering graduates. The number seems to be not enough, at least in terms of quality. The available quality resources come at a premium and their wage increase is creating waves not just in India but across the world. Last year, according to the Global Salary Planning Report, Indian wages grew more than and other Asia-Pacific country - by 13.5%. In the IT sector wages grew by almost 20%.The advantage of cost arbitrage suddenly seems to be diminishing. Another case of reverse salient. Having witnessed enormous growth in outsourcing, shouldn’t the country have had a team ensuring seamless growth by building a robust IT ecosystem? The reverse salient here is not only unavailability of quality engineers but number of engineers to cater to the IT industry’s requirements. A report by Nasscom-McKinsey suggests that India could come up short in the global outsourcing industry by about 500,000 professionals before 2010.
With the IT outsourcing market increasingly getting commoditized, feverish campaigning is on with Indian IT majors harping on “India Moving Up the Value Chain.” This will imply the need for Indian companies to “innovate” and develop software products. Does India produce graduates who can work on innovative software products? The answer is no. Out of the 350,000 engineers spewed annually by various colleges, less than 25% are employable in IT services companies. Software product development requires intensive research, understanding of the market place and a mind that is tuned to continuous innovation and unfortunately Indian engineering graduates does not measure up to that challenge. The need to nurture talent that can innovate is the reverse salient here.
Intellectual Arbitrage
That’s the new mantra today, a transition from labour/cost arbitrage to Intellectual Arbitrage. The idea is to focus on the numerator part of businesses and not restrict offerings based on denominator. One needs to be capable to change the mindset of existing/prospective clients from “lower price” mentality to “better/efficient outcome at the same price.” Vertical knowledge coupled with horizontal know-how is essential to take such a proposition forward? Can Indians do it? Well, revisiting the reverse salients and ensuring proper investment to get rid of such salients could enable India to change the battle ground where Intellectual Arbitrage will be the decisive factor.
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
Shift from newspapers to TV
For me the figures reflect an unhealthy development. Why is TV viewership increasing? Does it reflect lack of investment of time in reading or is it the advancement of technology so much so that news is better viewed than read? Quite startling is the fact that readership of english dailies has been stagnating, which makes me even more skeptical about the declining reading habits.Worse, what happens when an increasing number of people shift to news on the move? Imagine the complexity of controlling messages being disseminated...
Friday, July 21, 2006
World Cup 2006
Friday, June 23, 2006
Network Effect
Thursday, May 11, 2006
Elections sans PR strategy
Tuesday, May 09, 2006
PR ploy in politics
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
Dance Bars' brand equity
Tuesday, April 18, 2006
Can PR play a role here? Guess, the awareness levels amongst young Indians commanding high disposable income will have to significantly go up. Your thoughts...
Tuesday, March 07, 2006
Monday, February 06, 2006
I think, practitioners of this trade will have to come out of the "media" coccoon and weave their networking strength to encompass "word of mouth" and new technology application. Consider the mobile phone, blogs, movies, matches,competitions etc. Can't PR play a role in reaching directly to the TA? As long as the practitioners depend solely on journalists, they'll continue to receive brickbats.