Management by Mantra
by Vikas Kumar
The Economic Times
June 1, 2007
(Original article requires login at http://epaper.timesofindia.com)
Through all the ups and downs in his career,
Sanjay Lalbhai has held been guided by the philosophy of nishkam
karma. When his company was teetering on the brink of bankruptcy
seven years ago, the managing director of Arvind Mills could possibly
have reached for Robert Andree's Art Of Negotiation or any of the
many other management books lining his office shelves. He was, after
all, trying to persuade 23 international banks to restructure over
Rs 2,000 crore of debt the company had raised for its new textiles
complex in Ahmedabad . But in his time of crisis, Lalbhai chose
to reach for an old book he'd read in his youth — the Bhagavad
Gita. "I was in an impossible situation and at that point,
the ideas of nishkam karma really helped me fight the stress and
find peace," he says. "Good and bad fortune are a matter
of time, the Gita tells us, and you need to stay driven while detaching
yourself from the outcome. It's a philosophy that has guided my
work."
Every year, around Diwali , the entire batch
of MBA students from Mumbai's SP Jain Institute of Management visits
Kayavarohan, an ashram on the outskirts of Vadodara in Gujarat .
There they spend two days listening to Swami Viditatmanandji, a
Harvard educated former chemical engineer from the US, who gives
them lessons from the Bhagavad Gita. Aptly called the 'Gita Shibir',
the programme explains the relevance of lessons contained in the
Gita to their personal and professional lives. Started 10 years
ago, the programme is optional, but everyone attends. "Many
of the students felt it's one of the best experiences we can get,"
says Manesh Shrikant, dean of SPJIMR, who teaches a course on lessons
from the Gita as applied to management. This year onwards, the institute
is planning to start a course on ethics based on the Gita.
As Indian business booms, academicians, consultants
and CEOs are increasingly turning to ancient texts like the Bhagavad
Gita and the Vedas, for inspiration. It's Western management coffee
with a dash of Eastern philosophy masala, and it makes for a heady
brew. Says management consultant Mrityunjay Athreya, who has been
making linkages between ancient texts and modern management for
many years now, "Vedantic texts collectively stress several
principles of great relevance to contemporary management. As societies
and organisations in the west have become more professional, democratised,
collegial and knowledge-based, some of them have realised the great
relevance, practicality and sustainability of these principles."
What also works in favour of old-world wisdom
is that it's told through stories and experiences, which helps get
the message across engagingly and effectively. "The best lessons
are learnt through stories. That's what's leading to this genre,"
says R Gopalakrishnan, executive director, Tata Sons, who's recently
written a book on management lessons from nature titled, The Case
of The Bonsai Manager.
The universality of old texts comes from the fact that they are
not restricted to religion, but speak of a way of life. Lalbhai,
for example, is a part of the Ram Chandra Mission, which is a lifestyle
as much as it is a philosophy."The sahaj marg system taught
by our guru requires 45 minutes of daily meditation, where you wish
away all the impressions gathered through the day, and interact
with the world afresh. I've always been spiritually inclined and
the sahaj marg has worked very well for me," he says.
Though management theories are not exactly been
abandoned by Indian CEOs, they sometimes may have their limitations.
They were modelled on practices that worked in other cultural contexts,
which makes it tougher to replicate them successfully across the
world. Ramnath Narayanswamy, professor of economics and social science
at the Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Bangalore, who teaches
a course on spirituality at the workplace, explains: "Management
as a discipline quite literally originated in North America against
the historical backdrop of Fordism and Taylorism. While its reach
is indeed universal, its origins are very North American and in
some respects, the discipline is still a prisoner of its historical
orientation. The excessive emphasis on analytical intelligence as
opposed to emotional and spiritual intelligence is a case in point.
The overwhelming predominance of "reason" and "science"
when in fact it's our daily experience that all life is based on
faith and sacrifice, is another. Or the importance accorded to tools
and techniques in MBA education at the expense of neglecting character,
values and attitude might be yet another."
There is a realisation that management theory
has to be home grown and not just transplanted from the West. Satish
Pradhan, executive VP- group HR, Tata Sons, says, "Western
thinking has been dedicated to frameworks and metaphors, and the
poverty of these frameworks is revealing itself — it's not
intellectually robust." In constrast, says Pradhan, thinking
in this part of the world isn't linear, so one cannot simply take
ideas and replicate them. By the same token, this makes it difficult
for Eastern concepts to be understood or grasped fully by Westerners.
"It's much like how the Americans wondered, 'The Japanese are
hiding something' when they visited factory shopfloors of Japanese
companies to learn the secrets of their success in managing costs
and quality in the early '80s." That's because much of the
philosophy of management there is unarticulated yet ingrained in
the cultural psyche of the people.
As corporate governance and ethics take centrestage
in business worldwide, management theory is suddenly not enough
to run businesses. Deepak Ghaisas, CEO, iflex India, says corporate
governance can't be addressed through legal enforcement alone. "But
in the US, Clause 49 and Sarbanes-Oxley are doing just that,"
he says. "Laws are meant to tell people what not to do. But
for the first time the law is trying to tell us what to do. That
has been the job of religion." Ghaisas, who also regularly
teaches at various management institutes, explains how the principles
of the Vedas can be applied to different levels in the business
organisation: Rajayoga is suitable for CEOs who want to lead effectively,
Gyanayoga is for middle management who should acquire knowledge
to move to the next level, Karmayoga is about execution and is apt
for junior managers, while Bhaktiyoga or dedication is what the
blue collar worker is expected to demonstrate at work.
Ironically, the West has taken a lead in applying
learnings from the Gita to business. And several books are being
published on the subject. Nepalese author Pujan Roka, who lives
in America, has penned a book with a title that says it all: Bhagavad
Gita on Effective Leadership. He says, "The core leadership
message of the Gita is to lead by ideas, actions, and compassion.
Many contemporary leadership theories and practices are similar
to what was written in the Gita thousands of years ago. You will
find popular leadership concepts, such as emotional intelligence,
servant leadership, learning organisations, compassion, and many
others, discussed in the Gita. These concepts are discussed in a
spiritual framework, as management science – as we understand
today – did not exist then. The wisdom of the Gita attests
that the subject of leadership was profound in the ancient times
and its principles are still applicable to business and organisations
today."
It quite often happens that the business world
returns to the more basic, existential questions in times of trouble.
Business author Gita Piramal believes this is a cyclical phenomenon.
"It's the fallout of society's attitude to big business,"
she says.
Meanwhile, the business schools have climbed on board with courses
based on spirituality, taught by faculty with a spiritual bent of
mind. At SP Jain Institute of Management, Manesh Shrikant believes
that the concepts being taught so far are not designed for working
in the future. They need to take the interdependencies between business
and its stakeholders into account. Shrikant says there are two ways
of living a life — as a consumer or as a contributor. The
former is how companies today operate, with a relentless focus on
the bottomline. But they need to start thinking like the latter:
"The contributor approach recognises that I will be wealthy
but I must also think of others." He goes on to add: "Eastern
thinking was always about duties while Western thinking is about
rights. They are two sides of the same coin. You compete to excel,
but collaborate to increase the size of the pie."
Piramal is of the view that there is much more
to India than spiritual thinking — there are plenty of business
innovations happening in India that have not been tapped yet. "We
are the world's largest laboratory for new management thinking,"
says Piramal. She suggests that corporates adopt world-class thinking
tempered with the unique qualities that make them Indian.
"We have not been giving legitimacy and
respect to our own body of knowledge. But that's beginning to happen,"
says Pradhan. He suggests that Indian thought leaders must articulate
these theories in a manner that's "palpable but not tactile".
It could well mean less rigid and less defined frameworks, and more
unanswered questions: "Linearity doesn't work...it's got to
be a bit more fuzzy; it's got to be integrative and adaptive, and
never prescriptive," says Pradhan. "It will seem like
what the Japanese were supposedly trying to hide."
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