Human Power - Viral Thaker HRD blog Headline Animator

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Happy New Year!

Hi There,

Wishing you and your Family a Very Happy New Year (2009). God bless this year of the Bull with peace & prosperity to your Kith and Kin and everybody around the globe.

Regards,
Viral Thaker

P Consider the environment. Please don't print this e-mail unless you really need to.

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Wednesday, November 26, 2008

The Top 25 Signs of a Dysfunctional Workplace

Throughout time, people everywhere have engaged in the great tradition of complaining about the workplace. But as a boss or an HR manager, how do you know when job complaints are general venting and when there is really something wrong? Part of your job is to make sure that employees are happy and productive, and that can't happen in a dysfunctional environment.

If you're having a hard time separating hyperbole from legitimate complaints, it may be worth reviewing the top 25 signs of a dysfunctional workplace. Note that all the examples below — listed in no particular order — are taken from my recent real-world work experiences and situations, no matter how unlikely they might seem.

1. Nothing can get done without the boss's approval. Sure, the boss has the final say, but work should be delegated, with employees taking responsibility for tasks that do not require the boss's personal time and attention. The organization will be much more productive and empowered if the top dog doesn't have to sign off on every little thing.

2. Nothing can get done unless employees go behind the boss's back.
It's one thing if the boss is overly involved, but it's a serious problem if the boss is actually a roadblock to getting work done. It may be time to call in the consultants.

3. No one is sure who the boss really is.
The titles may be clear, but so many people are jostling for the top post that employees aren't sure who actually makes the final decisions. This can cause more than a little frustration.

4. No one is getting paid on time — or at all. This is very obvious sign that things are going poorly. Even at startups, employees need to be clear about their pay schedule to feel secure.

5. Cubicle mates IM (instant message) each other but never talk.
It's nice to have a quiet office, but some topics require face-to-face discussion. As with email, it's difficult to express tone via IM, opening the door to misunderstandings.

6. No one contributes in meeting because everyone is busy IM-ing or giving a "YES" chorus to boss's ideas. Meetings are for brainstorming ideas and discussing important topics, not for secret, snarky IM conversations about how boring the meeting is. Pull the plug.

7. Too many pointless meetings/concalls are being held.
If a meeting has no set agenda or is just being held to rehash previous discussions, axe it.

8. There's more than one "secret couple" on staff.
It makes sense that a lot of couples meet each other at work because that's where they spend a lot of their time. However, having "secret" couples on staff (some of which involve people that may be having an extramarital affair) can lead to workplace tension and drama.

9. Attorneys outnumber staff.
Perhaps your business practices should be re-examined?

10. Reward system? What reward system?
You can't have a stick and no carrot.

11. The IT head gets arrested for hosting porn on company servers.
This is a clear case of lack of supervision and not being in tune with what's going on with the staff.

12. IT rules are so strict that you're not allowed to know your own computer login. It's important to have IT security policies, but if the rules are too strict, employees can feel distrusted.

13. Your boss — an eccentric Internet millionaire — offers to pay your monthly salary in gold coins because "gold is more stable than the dollar." Although management and entry-level employees rarely live the same lifestyle, management should at least show some understanding about employees' financial needs.

14. Your manager was hired because she listed "whiskey" as a hobby on her résumé. Sure, having quirky staff members can liven up the workplace, but it's not a good idea to hire someone just because they'd make a good drinking buddy or golf partner.

15. Your co-worker decides to show, not tell, the visiting U.K. executive what a "wedgie" is at an office holiday party. Even at office parties, there should be some sense of workplace propriety. Getting drunk at an office event and misusing the photocopy machine is a similar sign of workplace dysfunction.

16. The boss takes pride in his "wall of shame," where employee mistakes are posted and circled in red for the entire world to see. Rewards can be public, but chastisement should be kept private.

17. The boss screams at the assistant when there's skim milk instead of half-and-half in the coffee. Just because the boss is in a position of authority doesn't mean that he or she can use that power to bully or intimidate employees.

18. Emergency drills are conducted without employees being told that it's a drill. In general, the more information you share with your staff, the more they will feel like a contributing member of a team. Hiding crucial information can lead to distrust and a depleted sense of value.

19. At least once per week, you hear quiet sobbing from an adjacent cubicle. One unhappy employee can ruin the morale of the entire office. Try to immediately address any employee issues before they spread.

20. Entire departments go to lunch together every day, leaving parts of the company completely unmanned for hours at a time. Workplace camaraderie is great, except when the network goes down and there's no one left in the IT department to fix it.

21. What matters is not what you've accomplished in a day, but how many hours you were seen "working." We all know at least one person who hangs around until everyone else goes home or shows up at 7 a.m. just to make a good impression with the boss. However, odds are they are only working seven hours of their eight-hour day. Reward productivity, not time spent at the office.

22. The accounting department has accumulated 23 weeks of paid vacation because no one there has ever taken a day off. People are not machines. Encourage staff to take vacations, or they just might walk out one day.

23. Managers are CCd on every company email, even when it's just about where to order lunch. This is called covering your back, and it usually happens when employees are not empowered enough to make decisions within their scope of authority.

24. The only way someone can get promoted is if a senior staff member dies. Hope is a powerful incentive to keep employees motivated and on task. If there is no hope of advancement, quality of work and enthusiasm will suffer.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Happy Diwali.


 

Regards,
Viral Thaker
Join me on LinkedIn - http://www.linkedin.com/in/vrlthaker
Visit my blog The Alchemist

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Monday, September 22, 2008

Logica introduces new facility at Chennai to expand operations

Chennai: UK-based Logica strengthens its foothold in India, by establishing a new facility in the country at Chennai. After rooting itself in Bangalore which houses its first facility in the country, the IT and management consultancy establishes the new facility to accelerate its global delivery model.

The new Chennai center will support the company's future offshore growth providing services in the areas of Business Process Outsourcing, Remote Infrastructure Management, and Application Services. It is spread across 120,000 sq ft with the capacity for 1,500 employees. The company has earmarked an investment of around eight million pounds to accelerate blended delivery and grow its offshore and nearshore centres. It plans to have 8,000 employees in these centers by the end of 2009.

The company expects to expand the facility, to which Abhay Gupte, CEO, Logica India, commented, "Our plan to double the headcount in our offshore and nearshore facilities by the year 2009 reiterates our commitment and dedication to strengthening our operations in India. We aim to partner with the city to ensure we are a good corporate citizen here in Chennai." Andy Green, Global Chief Executive, Logica, also adds on to it saying, "As the centre grows we will build specific competency areas based on client requirements. The investment climate, facilities and talent available in Chennai are excellent."

Currently the Logica facility in Bangalore houses about 3000 employees and provides the full spectrum of system integration and outsourcing services, including System Design, Applications and Product Development, Applications Management, Infrastructure Management and Business Process Outsourcing. India also plays a pivotal role in leading a comprehensive program to design and implement a group-wide innovation strategy.

U.S. based Logica has 39,000 people across 36 countries. It is listed on both the London Stock Exchange and Euronext (Amsterdam)

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Check out IN.com

Dear vrlthaker.hpower,

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Click here to accept the invitation

IN.com lets you discover the hottest news, music, videos and games, and you also get the coolest, shortest email address on the planet @IN.com.

By the way, my new email address is <viralthaker@in.com>. Please add this to your address book. If you add me as a friend, you can also send me personal messages on IN.com.

Thanks,
Viral Thaker

Friday, September 12, 2008

Never Stop Recruiting - ABC of Recruiting.

A couple of weeks ago I had penned an article comparing recruiting to dating. I recently had an experience of a different nature. I was on a plane returning from an engagement and a man named Balaji sat down next to me. He spent the next 90 minutes trying to save my soul.

This was a waste of time.

Not that my soul isn’t worth saving. But it was a waste because I am very firm in my religious beliefs and am not about to change them because of a 90-minute conversation with someone.

It was not an unpleasant conversation. He seemed like a delightful man and we laughed at times as we talked. He was not going to change my mind, but I did respect his commitment. His dedication. He did not let go. Our flight took off at 5:45 in the morning and he was in full swing. He started the conversation before he had his seat belt buckled and he kept it up even as people were deplaning.

He was recruiting.

I was impressed with his zeal. Then again, he is recruiting for a very important cause. It occurred to me that he probably started up these conversations whenever he traveled. He was always looking for recruits, and to put this in recruiting parlance, he is frequently looking for “passive candidates.” He never rests in his search, as there are always openings in his organization. Was he effective? Not with me, but I wonder how many people he has successfully recruited. Lots, I would guess, from the extent of his travels. He has been all around the country and all around the world. He finds people wherever they are. That’s his mission, and that’s what his organization needs.

What’s your mission? Professionally speaking, what are you trying to accomplish? There’s a lot we can learn from Balaji. Are you constantly recruiting? Do you strike up conversations with people on planes, in malls, or at events? Are you always trying to meet new people? In the movie “Glengarry Glen Ross” the sales manager says selling is as simple as ABC: Always Be Closing. There are lots of similarities between selling real estate and recruiting, but that’s for another article.

Perhaps we need to create acronyms to remind us how to be successful recruiters. Maybe, if you’ve been finding yourself lax in the networking department, your ABC is “Always be connecting.” If your pipeline is drying up and you’re feeling frustrated, JKL - Just Keep Looking! Or NOP - Never Overlook Possibilities. But don’t compromise your standards. Remember PQR - Persistent Quality Recruiting. But be sure to MNO - Make Numerous Overtures if you’re going to EFGH - Effectively Find Good Hires. OK, I mean, okay, maybe I’m getting carried away, but we do need to remember that candidates don’t always present themselves neatly at our office door. We find them when and where we least expect them.

When I was a consulting human resource generalist for a small startup organization, I used to say that HR people never take off the HR hat. Whether you are at a meeting, on the phone, or at the holiday party, you are always on duty. Same goes for a recruiter. You never know when or where you are going to find that next great candidate. Balaji had no idea about my religious background, my views, or the depth of my belief. That didn’t stop him, and he never lost his good humor as we talked. He did get a little more earnest as we began our final approach because he realized that he had precious little time left to complete his mission.

We can follow his lead. It’s easy to get turned off by a candidate. If we stop recruiting at the first “not interested” from our candidates, we’re going to have a lot of short phone calls. Balaji didn’t give up. He made sure to get my business card early in the conversation, so I’ll be very surprised if I don’t hear from him. (Note: before I completed this article I had received e-mails from him.) He sincerely cares about what he’s doing. He’s good at what he does because he has a passion for recruiting. Do you? Do you find yourself getting burned out? Too many candidates, too many openings, or too many rejections?

I remember one time when a friend of mine was returning home from a college-recruiting trip. He did not usually take part in the college visits, as he was primarily an executive recruiter. His focus was management positions. But this trip included a couple of business schools from which his organization hoped to recruit people to be part of the management-trainee program as well as recruiting at other schools. So Krishnan went along for the whole trip. Now he was on his way back. He was tired, he was cranky (he always said that he didn’t care particularly for campus recruiting because it reminded him of how old he was) and he just wanted to put on his headphones, recline his seat, and close his eyes ’till he landed.

Well, you know what happened. The seat next to Krishnan was empty until just before the door closed. Krishnan was anticipating having a little extra elbowroom and then this guy came down the aisle carrying just a briefcase and a trench coat. He looked stressed out. Krishnan assumed it was due to his almost missing the flight. The man stashed his coat and case overhead and flopped into the seat next to Krishnan. Krishnan could sense that he wanted, or perhaps needed, to talk. Fighting every urge to close his eyes and pretend that he was listening to music, Krishnan removed his headphones and asked, “Rough day?” That was all it took.

His name was Raj and he was out of work. He’d been looking for about six months. He’d had a few leads but nothing had panned out and now he was returning home after a trip that he had hoped would result in an offer, but it didn’t look good. He had made this trip at his own expense to follow up on a lead and a phone interview. He thought that by making the effort and covering the expense of the flight, he might impress the company with his interest in the position and commitment to this opportunity. Raj wasn’t keen on relocating. He would rather stay in the Northeast, but he hadn’t been having any luck so he took a chance on casting his net a little further even if it meant uprooting his family.

But the interviews had gone terribly. The person he’d spoken with on the phone was too busy to spend more than a few minutes with him, he had to start from scratch with every person he met (hadn’t they prepared at all?) and several had no idea why they had been called in to meet with him. It was a frustrating day all around, and right now he didn’t have a particularly high opinion of the company he’d visited. He even said at one point, “I was going to pull my daughter out of the school she loves and away from all her friends for a company like this? Seems like this day was a total waste of time and, unfortunately, money too.”

In the fairy tale version of this story, Raj was perfect for a hard-to-fill position that Krishnan was working on. No, that didn’t happen, but they did exchange cards and Krishnan met with him back in New York. Krishnan didn’t have an opening, but he was very impressed with Raj’s strategic approach to finding a job, his clear analysis of the organizations with which he had met, and his insightful manner of summing up a complex situation, looking at it from all perspectives. Krishnan referred him to a colleague who was recruiting for someone with Raj’s skills, and he succeeded in securing a position. Krishnan succeeded as well. Raj always had good things to say about Krishnan’s company. The recruiter to whom Krishnan referred Raj has become a more valuable part of Krishnan’s network, referring several good candidates, a few of whom Krishnan has hired.

There’s a lot we can learn from Balaji, and from Krishnan. Never stop recruiting, wherever you are, no matter how tired you are, no matter what time of day it is. You never know where that next great candidate will be, or who will lead you to that person. Would you have caught the signals that Krishnan picked up on? Guy comes on a plane looking stressed, carrying nothing but a trench coat and briefcase, dressed in a suit appropriate for an interview — this might be a guy worth talking with. Maybe it’s just someone who needs to talk, not someone we can hire or refer. It never hurts to hone our networking skills.

To best serve our organizations we need to be constantly on the lookout for talent, and we can never predict where we’re going to find it, or when. Very often candidates will present themselves when we least expect it. By keeping an open mind we increase our likelihood of success. Maybe not immediate success, but somewhere down the line. Gary Player used to say, “The more I practice, the luckier I get.” I tell people, on both sides of the interview table, that the only way to get good at interviewing is to interview. The best way to keep our recruiting antennae honed is to constantly look for signals and indicators, then to test our assumptions. The more we practice the more we’ll succeed.

And don’t close yourself off the next time someone plops down next to you on a plane. It might be your next great hire, or it might be Balaji. Either way, you’ve got something to learn and possibly a lot to gain.

You may not save a soul, but you may help someone and you may even fill a job. And for a recruiter, that’s a pretty good day.

 

 

Regards,

Viral Thaker

Practice Lead – IT

 

 

Ikya Human Capital Solutions Pvt. Ltd.,

#2, 5th Floor, Alsa Towers

186-187, Poonamalee High Road,

Kilpauk, Chennai - 10 

 

Hand Phone: +91 98403 31171

Office Tel: +9144 4227 4240

www.ikyaglobal.com

 

Join me on LinkedIn - http://www.linkedin.com/in/vrlthaker

For Industry and Manpower related news visit our blog Human Power

 

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Monday, September 8, 2008

PE firms eye BT's stake in TechM

As British Telecom (BT), who has 31 percent stake in Tech Mahindra (TechM), a solution provider in the telecom space, planning to sell its 21 percent stake, many private equity players are now eyeing to acquire those stakes.

Sources said, "BT is learnt to be keen in retaining 10 percent stake in venture, post transaction, given that it has committed $2 billion in business to TechM."

 

A part sale of 21 percent in the company would value the transaction at over Rs. 1,850 crore at Thursday's closing price of Rs.771.40 on the BSE.

"BT is not looking at a total exist from Tech Mahindra. While Tech Mahindra is no more a strategic investment for BT, it has substantial and long term business interest in the Indian company," sources said to The Economic Times.

Sources also mentioned that the sale will help it at a time when its profitability is on the slide, while also helping it earn a good return on the residual stake when there are limited attractive investment options in the market. By retaining some stake BT would prefer to have board representation.
An industry sources commended that the 20 percent stake on offer makes a strategic investment by any other Indian IT company such as Infosys or Wipro unlikely.

"Even if they get BT's entire stake, the question is whether any of them will be a partner in a JV where the Mahindras have the major stake. In contrast a private equity player could look at it only from a 4-5 year investment horizon," source added.

"Even if they get BT's entire stake, the question is whether any of them will be a partner in a JV where the Mahindras have the major stake. In contrast a private equity player could look at it only from a 4-5 year investment horizon," source added.

The actual transaction is expected to take place in a month. In most joint ventures, the first right of refusal in case of sale is with the other partner. However a company official said, "Our official stance is unchanged. The statement we issued earlier still holds good."

Sanjay Kalra, President, Tech Mahindra said, "As a strategic partner of BT, we have enjoyed a great relationship with BT over many years and will continue delivering on long term contracts and winning new business."

On the other hand, BT says, "India remains a critical market both for BT and our customers, and we expect to continue developing both the operational network and service presence that we have established over years."