Smartfool’s words Of wisdom (wow)

September 9, 2009

dumb and dumber

Filed under: 1 — smartfool @ 8:06 am

ah it has been a long time writing a post. In many ways, i thought I had lost the zeal to write but something that has been cropping on my mind for a while now.. I find blogging as a way to vent my thoughts, possibly a new pardigm for blogging instead of the usual “share your knowledge”, “get feedback from community / social network”.

Anyways, not to digress, think about this for a minute. Most of us are very good at triaging things, re-prioritizing items, choosing to neglect some while focusing on others and finishing things on schedule, at “work place related” stuff. I repeat at “work place related’ activities.

We are usually very good at doing things that impact us and things that we control really well. when I provide advice to someone at work, and the person chooses to ignore it, I cannot do much. I choose to be care about the few that I share thoughts but don’t thrust it down at all. Not because I dont care, but realize that people have their own thought process and making people do the “right” thing is subjective. Managers at work work a lot on this because they have a commitment to do this. one of my managers mentioned once “your success is your success and your failure is mine”. I would like to agree with the latter ;) , jokes apart think that people have clear streamlined vested interests making them effective at work place.

The place where I struggle is when I bring the same thought process to personal relationships. I try to think deeply when a near-and-dear one is seeking advice or going through a problem. I try to look at the item, the various causes, etc. For example, assume you know someone who is not happy with their job and is seeking a position change. Then you start asking the person, why he is not happy? What makes him happy? has he looked elsewhere? has he built a resume`? has he sent it out? etc you get the point. when you here the answer ‘nay’ to most of them, then the whole commentary is rubbish to me. once you know u want something, then you have to figure out the path, have a schedule and just make it happen. or give up on the “want”. Simple, is it not? In most situations, I find that in personal relationships be it close friends, parents, brother, wife, etc this thought process does not help at all :) . I find it difficult to ignore and move-on treating it like the “buddy at work who u cannot help” because of the personal bond. It gets really mind sapping, since the mindset for most of us is ‘your problem is my problem’. when you have a family business and u “envision” the logical well thought out roadmap both for the business and the folks running it, and the model does not execute there is mental strain too.

The more I think about it, people are people be it workplace or personal relationships. IMO, everyone needs to treat things the same way and choose to include and neglect things that make sense. End of the day, each of us is one person and need to triage accordingly. This is absolutely tough to practise but a mindset that will serve us well in the long run. Like how one book quoted “you dont control all things that happen around you; however u can control your reaction to it”.

here is another pivot, doing the right thing is very subjective. Intropecting, I think that some things are “right”, maybe the vision for a small business or how ppl should work together BUT the other person thinks i am wrong. Very natural , everyone thinks that they are right. in my case, the logical streamlined arguments might be “right” but they are right for me; they absolutely dont work for the other person and probably will never work for them. I am “dumb” to think it will work for them and to assume that the others are “dumber” than me. end of the day, each person has his own wiring in the head, how they react and do things. You can help people with nudging but people wont react unless they truly believe that you are saying the right thing. Maybe people managers at work understand this facet, today i dont. all this makes it all the more reason why I need to apply the same triage bar for all personal activities similar to that of work.

So my friends when u see “dumb and dumber” scenarios, become wise and triage. I am trying to.. maybe some day there will be a book “the Monk who sold his BMW” :) :)

take it easy

January 14, 2009

tracking time..

Filed under: 1 — smartfool @ 9:40 pm

Most of know how time goes by at work, our time is reasonably trackd well by the status reports, 1-1 sessions, meetings, conf calls, and what not. What slips by is how time flies outside work, weekends.. especially for someone like me who does not do anything :) :)

Interestingly this came up when I was talking to a buddy who was going over his outside work life and I began to wonder.. Uptil the next weekend, NFL was taking up a chunk of sundays and seinfeld on weekdays. but other than that, I dont know.

Do you ever think about this?

October 25, 2008

Sri Hari Career Services

Filed under: Career — smartfool @ 10:19 pm

As many of might be knowing, my parents have been running the Hero Honda franchisee for years now – Sri Hari Motors. Hero group has had a training services charter since 2000, Hero Mindmine has been running successfully for the last 8 years in North and Western India. When they wanted to expand their charter in south India, we choose to take up the franchisee for training and thus was born Srihari Career services, starting operations in May 2008. We believe that education can really transform lives – here is the meaning from wikipedia:
“Education encompasses both the teaching and learning of knowledge, proper conduct, and technical competency. It thus focuses on the cultivation of skills, trades or professions, as well as mental, moral and aesthetic development”. So we are really hoping that our passion can make a true change in the training field.

One of the biggest goals for this timeoff was to spend quality time with my parents, help ramp up this business so that they are not overwhelmed when I leave back to the US next month.

I am now at the last phase of my timeoff, about 3 more weeks. Truth be said, I have made very little progress but it has been good.

So why am I telling you all this stuff? I need help in creating more business opportunities and leads. I need help in hiring a super business development & marketing person who can pitch our services to companies (part time might also work)

If you know the head of HR in some company or a school principal or a college HOD or a relative studying in a college or any other channel you think could help, please pass on the info. I am currently offering FREE pilot program (eg: will run for 2 weeks) for corporates and educational institutes, FREE 1 class for students.

www.sriharicareers.com will go live by Nov 10th. You can see the office address, directions, phone number and we will have a portal for students to get useful information.

Here is an overview that you could use:

Srihari Career Services – MissionImparting world class training helping individuals maximize their potential and fulfill their dreams.
- Hire and Develop best of the breed trainers to deliver world class content using software tools
- Deliver “Industry ready” candidates to corporate world
- Global presence, participation from the US

Our target customers
- Educational institutes such as schools and colleges
Coaching students and enhancing educational experience
Help in career counseling and placements
- Corporate: Training employees on Spoken English, communication skills and soft skills
Accent training for specific domain
Interview screening and hiring
- Professionals
In-job training for furthering career growth
Professionals moving abroad for jobs
- Students
Fresh graduates looking for getting a job
Graduates looking for higher studies abroad

Course Offerings
Spoken English (Levels F, A, B, C)
Corporates “Hire and Train”
Personality development
Interviewing tips
Call Center Training
IELTS training

Why are we unique?
* Evaluate student’s current level and then suggest programs to achieve his or her goals
* Good mix of theory, lab & “live” experiences delivered using software tools
* Additional software tools for pronunciation, reducing MTI, improving listening skills
* Certification from US universities
* Industry connection for placement opportunities

Resources
Phone – 4307 2827, 4307 2828
Address: 101 Arcot Road, Virugambakkam
Email: sriharicareers@gmail.com
SMS: 98401 87520
Visit www.sriharicareers.com

Thanks for reading and helping in any ways you can.

October 22, 2008

God’s own country, Kerala – kickass location

Filed under: 1 — smartfool @ 7:24 pm

last week went by in a flash. Kerala was terrific and we absolutely loved the time there. We had planned the trip to be 5 days and wanted to cover Allepey and Kumarakom. Then I read about the drive from Munnar -> Thekkady to be in the top 10 in the country and wanted to do it. so we dropped Kumarakom, yes it was a hard call but seemed like the right now.

The trip logistics was planned in a google doc (which still has a couple of more places before my vacation ends). We researched a bunch of online locations and did some estimations. I did not want to take these so-called packages which costed around 20K

http://www.uniquekerala.com/timedistance.htm
http://www.hotelskerala.com/talltrees/index.htm
http://www.indiahotelreview.com/buy-kerala-vacation-26/5-night-6-days-31.htm

Some folks suggested going to temples but I claimed this was a pure vacation thingy and no temples (that leg starts next week for a set of pilgrimage spots)

So finally this is what we did:

Oct 13th Monday 9 PM Allepy express 2nd class AC train ticket Price = Rs.2200 for 2 ppl

Oct 14th Tuesday 11 AM. Reached Allepey.

The plan was to take the rental boat and go around. You know what .. that day was a ‘hartal’ aka strike in allepey. All shops, boating was closed. We went to a temple that day :) , not sure if it was butterfly effect or the gods being angry that this was a “vacation” trip. Dasavatharam style message for me.. the temple was great, kerala temples have that divinity which i dont see elsewhere.

Stayed at a relative place in Allepey.. one aspect of going there was to meet them. Good people, great hosts

Oct 15th Wed 9 AM.

We quickly re-adjusted plans and dropped Kumarakom. We rented a boat for 3 hrs at Rs.750 instead of taking a house boat. My dear friends.. you need to think about this. Why rent a house boat at 4.5K per day for non-AC and 7.5K for an AC room when you really sleep from 9 PM to 7 AM in 1 location. Thats what I thought… but for people who are actually going to be in a hotel this works well, you get accomodation, lunch, dinner and breakfast and sight seeing as 1 package. but again I was happy with the Rs.750 :)

We took a local bus to Ernakulum and then a bus from there to Chithrapuram, 10 kms from Munnar. We left Allepey at 1PM adn reached Ernakulum at around 2.30 PM. The bus fare per person was Rs.67 for travelling about 60 kms. Then we took the next bus to Chithrapuram at 3 PM. One small problem, this was the bloody local bus which stopped at every place and millions of people got into the bus at each stop. the smart fool that I am, I had sat on the side which was supposedly for ladies and had to get up (the chivalrous kind that I am) and was in the middle of the gumbal. I was thinking about why i made this trip because the driver was a crazy !@#$ who was slamming the brakes so hard every 2 mins. I was creating theories on “Middle class mentality” (more on this on a separate blog). but finally after paravoor, the traffic melted. i got my seat back… yay yay yay. Then we went to adimali and we are talking to the conductor confirming location about chithrapuram.. the bloke knows only malayalam and I have no clue if he is asking me to get down at adimali or if this bus will indeed go to chithrapuram. Luckily I catch hold of the resort manager who promises to stop the bus in front of the resort Go INDIA!! We reach the resort at 8 PM and crash.

Hotel stay per night = Rs.2000

Oct 16th, Thursday 10 AM

We asked for a cab to go around Munnar. Apparently the cost was Rs.1500 and i agreed. The hotel manager decided to drive in his own car and take us around (I thought did I pay too much… fast track charged Rs.10 per km and has the crazy 4hr 40kms Rs.400 and 8hr 80kms Rs.800 packages and decided this should be ok). Anyways the dude was an ex-army bloke about 40 yrs who had been at Kargil and entertained us with some stories. we saw a bunch of interesting places .. the usual suspects in Munnar – Mattupetty, Devikulam, Pothumedu, Kannan Devan & Tata Tea estates. we could not see the Nyayamakad waterfalls since there was an accident a couple of days back where someone slipped and died. Enroute we saw an elephant on the road and had a mini ride on the road. Subha did not like it initially but got convinced eventually. We spent Rs.500 in feeding the elephant with pineapples and corn (ride included). We did some shopping and kicked up interesting wooden trays and interesting hand work

We did about 100 kms of travel and settled for the day and returned to the hotel around 6 PM.

Oct 17th, Friday 10 AM

We took the car from Chithrapuram to Thekkady and decided to use the same car for sight seeing in Thekkady. The car was Rs.2200. I was watching Sehwag bat and did not want to leave at 10 AM but then Subha was not too keen to watch cricket in Chithrapuram :) . The drive was good but not sure why it was in the top 10 in the country. I guess seeing stuff in the NW has really set the bar high for us. we reached the hotel in Thekkady around 1.30 PM. We stayed at the Lake Queen Resort and took a non AC deluxe room at Rs.1300 per day. Good choice! NO need for AC in Thekkady and there was a super view from the hotel room window. The hotel was in Kumily junction which is the TN Kerala border, so everyone knows Tamil.

Lake Queen Hotel, Thekkady, India
Address: Thekkady Junction, Kumily 685509, Thekkady, Kerala

Phone: 04869-222084, 222086. 09447000077 -Spoke to the guy called Shiva

AC- 2100 + tax,Non AC 1600+tax, normal 1300+tax

The areas around Thekkady, Kumily was simply great … it was raining but had the ideal hill station feel. I wanted to see the Periyar Tiger reserve in Thekkady and so we had lunch, freshened up and drove around in the car for a little while. i was in no mood for the plantations sight seeing. So we went to the jungle checkpost, paid the car and sent it away. The entry cost for the reserve was Rs.25 per person and Rs.50 for the car. If you are a foreigner then the cost is Rs. 300. There was a separate cost for still camera and video camera. we paid Rs.150 for the boat ride per person so that we get to sit on the bigger open boat on the top. The lake had some stunning views, some of the very best I have ever seen and believe me, I have seen some ones in oregon and California road trip which I thought were hard to beat. The boat ride was about 2 hrs and I have never hard any luck with sighting animals on these “safari” kind of trips. We saw some deer from the boat 100 yards away, a couple of elephants 200-300 yards away and thats it. I was disappointed and was hoping I can see a tiger , big hopes. The ride finished around 5.30 PM and we headed back to the hotel in auto rickshaw (Rs.50). If you have additional time, I recommend you stay 1 day at the Lake palace resort which is in the middle of the lake and I believe it will be a great experience. The tariff is around 3.5K per day

Oct 18th, saturday 12 PM

we checked out of the hotel at 12 PM, left our bags in the lobby office and walked through the junction road. we went to the wax museum which had 6 statues, we were the only ones in the museum and I was chatting with the person who created the statues. Each statue costs 6 lakhs and takes 16 months, each day 12 hrs of effort !! Then we went to the elephant ride area and I paid Rs.300 and took the ride within the plantation – checkout photos on facebook. We did a little shopping and picked up some bags. After lunch, we decided to head to the Kumily bus stop to catch a bus to Madurai.

We saw Kumily Soorya, an agent who was mentioning about the real estate condition in Thekkady. well I started the conversation on this topic anyways :) and he was suggesting to invest at least 5-7 lakhs in cardamom plantations. apparently 1 acre is 2.5 lakhs and generates about 1000 kilos of cardomom. At the minimum, the cost is Rs.600 per kilo ==> 6 lakhs per year. Even if total maintenance cost and labour is 3 lakhs, then profit is 3 lakhs which means you recover the profit. Good to hear. How many times ahve we seen these figures on paper which dont translate in real life. but still I am kicked because I like the area – will I buy an estate? I doubt it.. maybe not the right time now. if you are enthu, let me know.. will connect you with Kumily Soorya :)

We picked the 5 PM bus, the first 30 mins was very interesting.. curvy roads, vehicles blaring their horns and the bus driver was carefully wheeling the vehicle in those conditions. (I have a video taping of how close the roads were and a near accident :) ).

we reached Madurai bus terminus around 9 PM, and headed off to Madurai junction (train station) to catch the Ananthapuri express which leaves 11 PM in the night. We got into our AC II class cabin and crashed. Price of tickets = 1586 for 2 people.

We reached Chennai at 8 AM on Sunday morning.

Wow, what a trip!

October 9, 2008

3 weeks in chennai, still loving it

Filed under: 1 — smartfool @ 8:49 pm

It has been 3 weeks since I came to chennai… has been a lot of fun inspite of things like mad traffic, not-worse-yet-bad weather and other logistics stuff. Driving in chennai is quite an art, years back people used to complain about a lot of animals on the streets. It is not true anymore.. there are very few cows and stray dogs on the road. But then animals have started driving now.. thats a big problem. Try making a U-turn on any of the roads and you will find people all around you honking, everyone will strive to make it impossible for you to turn and keep going around you – wild animlas at their purest best.

I wish honking becomes a commodity … ie you get to sound horn for 10 times or maximum of 60 seconds in a 1 hr driving experience. After this the horn should be disabled for 30 mins — wow that will be something, is it not? I wish we build roads with lanes such that the lane width is equal to the width of the car or bike and has barricades on each side. I wish we have 3 story fly overs instead of one .. come on politicians, that is triple the profit you can make on the tar, stones usage :-) . I realized some of this while training choclate and sox, my cousin sister’s puppies.. animals need to be trained differently than humans and pitifully thats a large chunk of our driving population.

Cheap labour and the most painful experience… I signed up for Big TV from reliance. people promised to come at 12 PM and then after 50 phone calls from myself ended up at 4 PM. hey, comcast does give a 4 hr window (reminds me of the seinfeld episode) but then they turn up and get the job done. In this case, 2 clowns turn up and finish the dish installation but dont activate the connection. They promise to send another clown the next day to do it and no one comes.. it is apparently a holiday. “bloody fools, you just had to tell me that “, was my reply to them. I am not really hard pressed to watch this… india pounded by aussies on day 1,2 is no great treat. But wanna watch sehwag blasting his way through.

Anyway, not to digress Big TV experience has been a shame and I sent an email to them:

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Ramasubramanian Ramani <ramasubramanian.ramani@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Oct 9, 2008 at 10:22 AM
Subject: Big TV experience
To: info@bigtv.co.in

Hello:
I bought BigTV because it is backed by the Reliance brand and regret doing it. I have not had the chance to look at the quality of the telecast yet and thats the problem. Someone called me yesterday and asked me to wait at 12 PM and I waited till 4 PM when 2 people came in and installed the dish in our terrace and brought the wire to the TV. But the ACTIVATION was not done.
I am waiting for the next person to come and activate the setup. This is horrible experience. Maybe you people don’t care as well but I have to bring it your notice and if required all the way to your chairman. A company such as Reliance having a global presence cannot operate in this crappy manner – you have to be the model company for customer service for others to emulate. In my case, all that is required is to tell me a time when someone will come and install it. if they cannot keep that time, all that is required is a phone call so that I can do my work instead of sitting at home for 4 hrs.
If you dont listen to customers like us, I guarantee you will only be Big TV in name and not in your operations and business. we run a business and know the importance of customer service, even though we are much much smaller than you.
Regards
Rama
Valasaravakkam, Chennai


http://smartfool.wordpress.com/

I dont think they care but then my dear friends, I have to vent all these experiences somewhere.. :)
Inspite of all this, I am loving it here in chennai, feel free in mind, body and soul. Working for my dad and spending time with him has been great. So I would suggest you do the same, 3 mons unpaid is not bad after all, time is limited.
Enjoy.

October 1, 2008

Read a book, get a kick

Filed under: 1 — smartfool @ 11:46 pm

Not sure how many of you read and if so how often. I dont know if you read books of different genres and if you are a fast reader, who does not keep the book done unless you are done and finished reading. I dont know if you read specific categories like technology, management, astrology or whatever.

Well I read books pretty rarely and like books that give a kick.. a good feel that lets impacts your thinking, aspect that are actionable and reproduceable or ones that really give you a KICK / jolt requiring you to take stock of your life and make changes. I pick books or content usually when I am travelling during the long flights and sometime make some progress.

The latest one I have started is this book called “The Greatness Guide” and I am beginning to like it. Even though it has 100+ chapters, the chapters are 2 pages each. There is no context that needs to be carried over from chapter to chapter :-) and I can read at my own pace.

Check it out when you get a chance…..

September 20, 2008

And the time starts now….

Filed under: 1 — smartfool @ 12:06 am

Yay Yay Yay …..

My leave of absence has started as I write – taking 9 weeks off from work and spending time with family should do a world of good for all of us.

I have been thinking about the time off for a while. Life has been a mad rush .. high school à college à masters in the US à getting that first job à switching jobs after with a weekend break, man that’s crazy. So taking this time off helps firstly to slow down the pace, re-charge and think about things. 

The trigger to do it now was personal, getting my parents setup in Chennai in a manner that will help them make the regular US trips is definitely priority one. Secondly, it lets me work with my dad on our business ventures and help to ramp it up and learn the way things work in India. Thirdly, hoping to do some travel within India, go see interesting places and have unique experiences in this trip. It is also a wonderful opportunity to catch up with some old buddies and know things that they are upto.

If you have any recommendations on things I should do, I am all ears, after all I do have 9 weeks J

Welcome to India

Filed under: 1 — smartfool @ 12:05 am

I am in the Shamshabad airport, sitting in the gate ready to board the flight. The atmosphere is kickass, the airport is top-notch world class with the ambience on par with any airport in the world.

The announcement to board the flight happens … there is a mad rush of people flocking to the gate. Then slowly the line builds both in the X and Y axis. The bus picks up the folks and gets us close to the aircraft, everyone wants to rush out as-if the airplane has space for 20 ppl only. I find my seat, take the set of magazines bought from the airport stall, leave them on the seat and take a minute to attend to nature’s call.

I return and the magazines are gone. The airhostess tries asking the cleaning staff, looks around and the magazines are GONE. Not sure if one of my co-passengers happily picked it up.

That was when my inner voice came on and said “Welcome to India” J

September 14, 2008

slinging from HYD

Filed under: 1 — smartfool @ 10:49 am

It is about 11.14 PM now, as sunday comes to an end, my wife is fast asleep. But my night has a longer end.. the NFL games begun and I am watching them from the sling player on the laptop. the sling setup is pretty cool and the streaming video is decent – worth keeping awake.

So if you have an India trip during the NFL season, stop freakin start slingin :-)

August 26, 2008

rediff post – dhirubhai words of wisdom

Filed under: 1 — smartfool @ 9:31 pm

http://specials.rediff.com/money/2008/aug/18slde1.htm

9 great management lessons from Dhirubhai Ambani

August 18, 2008

 
Dhirubhai Ambani, founder of the Reliance Industries, was no ordinary leader. He was a man who gave management a whole new “ism”.There is a new “ism” that I’ve been meaning to add to the vast world of words for quite a while now. Because, without exaggeration, it’s a word for which no synonym can do full justice: “Dhirubhaism”.

Inspired by the truly phenomenal Dhirubhai H Ambani, it denotes a characteristic, tendency or syndrome as demonstrated by its inspirer. Dhirubhai, on his part, had he been around, would have laughed heartily and declared, “Small men like me don’t inspire big words!”

There you have it – now that is a classic Dhirubhaism, the tendency to disregard one’s own invaluable contribution to society as significant.

I’m sure everyone who knew Dhirubhai well will have his or her own little anecdote that illustrates his unique personality. He was a person whose heart and head both worked at peak efficiency levels, all the time. And that resulted in a truly unique and remarkable work philosophy, which is what I would like to define as Dhirubhaism.

Let me explain this new “ism” with a few examples from my own experiences of working with him

Dhirubhaism No 1: Roll up your sleeves and help.

You and your team share the same DNA.

Reliance, during Vimal’s heady days had organized a fashion show at the Convention Hall, at Ashoka Hotel in New Delhi.

As usual, every seat in the hall was taken, and there were an equal number of impatient guests outside, waiting to be seated. I was of course completely besieged, trying to handle the ensuing confusion, chaos and protests, when to my amazement and relief, I saw Dhirubhai at the door trying to pacify the guests.

Dhirubhai at that time was already a name to reckon with and a VIP himself, but that did not stop him from rolling up his sleeves and diving in to rescue a situation that had gone out of control. Most bosses in his place would have driven up in their swank cars at the last moment and given the manager a piece of their minds. Not Dhirubhai.

When things went wrong, he was the first person to sense that the circumstances would have been beyond his team’s control, rather than it being a slip on their part, as he trusted their capabilities implicitly. His first instinct was always to join his men in putting out the fire and not crucifying them for it. Sounds too good a boss to be true, doesn’t he? But then, that was Dhirubhai.

Dhirubhaism No 2: Be a safety net for your team.

There used to be a time when our agency Mudra was the target of some extremely vicious propaganda by our peers, when on an almost daily basis my business ethics were put on trial. I, on my part, putting on a brave front, never raised this subject during any of my meetings with Dhirubhai.

But one day, during a particularly nasty spell, he gently asked me if I needed any help in combating it. That did it. That was all the help that I needed. Overwhelmed by his concern and compassion, I told him I could cope, but the knowledge that he knew and cared for what I was going through, and that he was there for me if I ever needed him, worked wonders for my confidence.

I went back a much taller man fully armed to face whatever came my way. By letting us know that he was always aware of the trials we underwent and that he was by our side through it all, he gave us the courage we never knew we had.

Dhirubhaism No 3: The silent benefactor.

This was another of his remarkable traits. When he helped someone, he never ever breathed a word about it to anyone else. There have been none among us who haven’t known his kindness, yet he never went around broadcasting it.

He never used charity as a platform to gain publicity. Sometimes, he would even go to the extent of not letting the recipient know who the donor was. Such was the extent of his generosity. “Expect the unexpected” just might have been coined for him.

Dhirubhaism No 4: Dream big, but dream with your eyes open.

His phenomenal achievement showed India that limitations were only in the mind. And that nothing was truly unattainable for those who dreamed big.

Whenever I tried to point out to him that a task seemed too big to be accomplished, he would reply: ” No is no answer!” Not only did he dream big, he taught all of us to do so too. His one-line brief to me when we began Mudra was: “Make Vimal’s advertising the benchmark for fashion advertising in the country.”

At that time, we were just a tiny, fledgling agency, tucked away in Ahmedabad, struggling to put a team in place. When we presented the seemingly insurmountable to him, his favourite response was always: “It’s difficult but not impossible!” And he was right. We did go on to achieve the impossible.

Both in its size and scope Vimal’s fashion shows were unprecedented in the country. Grand showroom openings, stunning experiments in print and poster work all combined to give the brand a truly benchmark image. But way back in 1980, no one would have believed it could have ever been possible. Except Dhirubhai.

But though he dreamed big, he was able to clearly distinguish between perception and reality and his favourite phrase “dream with your eyes open” underlined this.

He never let preset norms govern his vision, yet he worked night and day familiarizing himself with every little nitty-gritty that constituted his dreams constantly sifting the wheat from the chaff. This is how, as he put it, even though he dreamed, none of his dreams turned into nightmares. And this is what gave him the courage to move from one orbit to the next despite tremendous odds.

Dhirubhai was indeed a man of many parts, as is evident. I am sure there are many people who display some of the traits mentioned above, in their working styles as well, but Dhirubhai was one of those rare people who demonstrated all of them, all the time.

5. Dhirubhaism: Leave the professional alone!

Much as people would like to believe, most owners (even managers and clients), though eager to hire the best professionals in the field, do so and then use them as extensions of their own personality. Every time I come across this, which is much too often, I am reminded of how Dhirubhai’s management techniques used to be (and still remain) so refreshingly different.

For instance, way back in the late 1970s when we decided to open an agency of our own, he asked me to name it. I carried a short list of three names, two Westernised and one Indian. It was a very different world back then. Everything Anglicised was considered “upmarket.”

There were hardly any agencies with Indian names barring my own ex-agency Shilpi and a few others like Ulka and Sistas. He looked at the list and asked me what my choice was. I said “Mudra”: it was the only name that suited my personality. And the spirit of the agency that I was to head.

I was very Indian and an Anglicised name on my visiting card would seem pretentious and contrived. No further questions were asked. No suggestions offered, just a plain and simple “Go ahead and do it.” That was just the beginning.

He continued to give me total freedom — no supervision, no policing — in all my decisions thereafter. In fact, the only direction that he gave me, just once, was this: “Produce your best.”

His utter trust in me was what pushed me to never, ever let him down. I guess the simplest strategies are often the hardest to adopt. That was the secret of the Dhirubhai legend. It was not out of a book. It was a skillful blend of head and heart.

6. Dhirubhaism: Change your orbit, constantly!

To understand this statement, let me explain Dhirubhai’s “orbit theory.”

He would often explain that we are all born into an orbit. It is up to us to progress to the next. We could choose to live and die in the orbit that we are born in. But that would be a criminal waste of potential. When we push ourselves into the next orbit, we benefit not only ourselves but everyone connected with us.

Take India’s push for development. There was once a time our country’s growth rate was just 4 per cent, sarcastically referred to as the “Hindu growth rate.” Look at us today, galloping along at a healthy 7-8 per cent.

This is no miracle. It is the product of a handful of determined orbit changers like Dhirubhai, all of whose efforts have benefited a larger sphere in their respective fields.

In a small way, I too have experienced the thrill of changing orbits with Mudra. In the 1980s, we leapt from the orbit of a small Ahmedabad ad agency to become the country’s third largest ad agency — in just under a decade.

However, when you change orbits, you will create friction. The good news is that your enemies from your previous orbit will never be able to reach you in your new one. By the time resentment builds up in your new orbit, you should move to the next level. And so on.

Changing orbits is the key to our progress as a nation.

7. The arm-around-the-shoulder leader

I have never seen any other empire builder nor the CEO of any big organisation do this (why, I never adopted this myself!).

It was Dhirubhai’s very own signature style. Whenever I went to meet him and if on that day, all the time that he could spare me was a short walk up to his car, he would instantly put his arm around me and proceed to discuss the issues at hand as we walked.

With that one simple gesture, he managed to achieve many things. I was put at ease instantaneously. I was made to feel like an equal who was loved and important enough to be considered close to him. And I would walk away from that meeting feeling so good about myself and the work I was doing!

This tendency that he had, to draw people towards him, manifested itself in countless ways. This was just one of them. He would never, ever exude an air of aloofness and exclusivity. He was always inviting people into sharing their thoughts and ideas, rather than shutting them out.

On hindsight I think, it must have required phenomenal generosity of spirit to be that inclusive. Yes, this was one of the things that was uniquely Dhirubhai — that warm arm around my shoulder that did much more than words in letting me know that I belonged, that I had his trust, and that I had him on my side!

8. The Dhirubhai theory of Supply creating Demand

He was not an MBA. Nor an economist. But yet he took traditional market theory and stood it on its head. And succeeded.

Yes, at a time when everyone in India would build capacities only after a careful study of market expectations, he went full steam ahead and created giants of manufacturing plants with unbelievable capacites. (Initial cap of Reliance Patalganga was 10,000 tonnes of PFY way back in 1980, while the market in India for it was approx. 6000 tonnes).

No doubt his instinct was backed by years and years of reading, studying market trends, careful listening and his own honed capacity to forecast, but yet despite all this preparation, it required undeniable guts to pioneer such a revolutionary move.

The consequence was that the market blossomed to absorb supply, the consumer benefited with prices crashing down, the players increased and our economic landscape changed for the better. The Patalganga plant was in no time humming at maximum capacity and as a result of the plant’s economies of scale, Dhirubhai’s conversion cost of the yarn in 1994 came down to 18 cents per pound, as compared to Western Europe’s 34 cents, North America’s 29 cents and the Far East’s 23 cents and Reliance was exporting the yarn back to the US!

A more recent example was that of Mukesh Ambani taking this vision forward with Reliance Infocomm (which is now handled by Anil Ambani). In India’s mobile telephony timeline there will always be a very clear ‘before Infocomm and after Infocomm’ segmentation. The numbers say it all. In Jan 2003, the mobile subscriber base was 13 million, about 16 months later, shortly after the launch, it had reached 30 million.

In March 2006, it has touched 90 million ! Yes, this was yet another unusual skill of Dhirubhai’s — his uncanny knack of knowing exactly how the market is going to behave.

9. Money is not a product by itself, it is a by-product, so don’t chase it

This was a belief by which Dhirubhai lived all his life. For instance when he briefed me about setting up Mudra, his instruction was clear: ‘Produce the best textile advertising in the country,’ he said.

He did not breathe a word about profits, nor about becoming the richest ad agency in the country. Great advertising was the goal that he set for me. A by-product is something that you don’t set out to produce. It is the spin off when you create something larger.

When you turn logs into lumber, sawdust is your by-product and a pretty lucrative one it can be too! It is a very simple analogy but extremely effective in driving the point home. Work toward a goal beyond your bank balance.

Success in attaining that goal will eventually ring in the cash. For instance, if you work towards creating a name for yourself and earning a good reputation, then money is a logical outcome.

People will pay for your product or service if it is good. But if you get your priorities slightly mixed up, not only will the money you make remain just a quick buck it would in all likelihood blacklist you for good. Sounds too simplistic for belief? Well, look around you and you will know exactly how true it is.

 

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