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Newsletter Sept- Oct Issue Final 11th-August such Heads, companies become complacent and do not...

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Book Review The VUCA Company Title : The VUCA Company Authors : Suhayl Abidi and Manoj Joshi Publisher : Jaico Publishing House, Mumbai, India (August 2015) ISBN : 978-81-8495-662-7 The global markets are more interconnected today but at the same time increasingly unpredictable, which is the so called VUCA environment. The acronym VUCA stands for Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity. Agility and resilience are the buzz words today and in the mind of every CEO. The reason is not far to see. Disruption is the new norm in business. The chances of failure in such a business environment not only increases manifold but is also larger in scale. To survive and grow in this environment, leaders need to have keen self-awareness and develop the skill for reflection on their actions and learn from them. They have to revisit assumptions, have flexible mind-sets and look at practices and tools on a regular basis to avoid complacency which is the first step of a fall. Since 1991, when India launched its economic reforms, the growth rate of the economy nearly doubled for more than a decade. This was a time, after decades of socialist economy, when the positive sentiment in the business community was at an all time high and when the Indian entrepreneurship really took off. New, as well as existing companies announced ambitious growth targets both within India and abroad, in existing line of businesses as well as diversification. This was especially in sunrise sectors such as retail, aviation, Public-Private infrastructure and telecommunications. Since large sums of funds were available globally, many Indian businesses, especially family-owned business houses, which were born after the economic reforms, went on an uncontrolled, undisciplined business expansion in multiple areas where they had no prior experience. These were greenfield, brownfield within India and abroad without being first fully conversant with the new line of businesses as well as the fast changing global environment. The authors observed that many such companies were unable to manage their fast growth rate for long and either went bankrupt or shareholders’ wealth eroded substantially under a heavy debt burden. The global recession accelerated their poor health. The authors studied 12 companies which in-spite of their early promise could not sustain their growth and suffered incalculable losses. These are not isolated examples as the increasing non-performing assets of Indian banks have shown and also the increasing number of companies which are under the CDR (Corporate Debt Relief ) schemes of The Reserve Bank of India. Some of the examples are Subhiksha which went on an uncontrolled expansion spree, Ranbaxy which suffered huge losses due to corporate governance issues, Shri Renuka Sugars and Wockhardt which acquired companies abroad in quick succession, Jain Irrigation which went on to diversify into several unrelated areas and Venkateshwara Hatcheries which acquired an English Football team to promote chicken products. Other failures 62 Issue 1 9 | September - October 2015 60
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Page 1: Newsletter Sept- Oct Issue Final 11th-August such Heads, companies become complacent and do not question their assumptions. Their mind-sets become fixed, clogged like cholesterol in

Book Review The VUCA Company

Title : The VUCA CompanyAuthors : Suhayl Abidi and Manoj JoshiPublisher : Jaico Publishing House, Mumbai, India (August 2015)ISBN : 978-81-8495-662-7The global markets are more interconnected today but at the same time increasingly unpredictable, which is the so called VUCA environment. The acronym VUCA stands for Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity. Agility and resilience are the buzz words today and in the mind of every CEO. The reason is not far to see. Disruption is the new norm in business. The chances of failure in such a business environment not only increases manifold but is also larger in scale. To survive and grow in this environment, leaders need to have keen self-awareness and develop the skill for reflection on their actions and learn from them. They have to revisit assumptions, have flexible mind-sets and look at practices and tools on a regular basis to avoid complacency which is the first step of a fall.Since 1991, when India launched its economic reforms, the growth rate of the economy nearly doubled for more than a decade. This was a time, after decades of socialist economy, when the positive sentiment in the business community was at an all time high and when the Indian entrepreneurship really took off. New, as well as existing companies announced ambitious growth targets both within India and abroad, in existing line of businesses as well as diversification. This was especially in sunrise sectors such as retail, aviation, Public-Private infrastructure and telecommunications. Since large sums of funds were available globally, many Indian businesses, especially family-owned business houses, which were born after the economic reforms, went on an uncontrolled, undisciplined business expansion in multiple areas where they had no prior experience. These were greenfield, brownfield within India and abroad without being first fully conversant with the new line of businesses as well as the fast changing global environment.The authors observed that many such companies were unable to manage their fast growth rate for long and either went bankrupt or shareholders’ wealth eroded substantially under a heavy debt burden. The global recession accelerated their poor health. The authors studied 12 companies which in-spite of their early promise could not sustain their growth and suffered incalculable losses. These are not isolated examples as the increasing non-performing assets of Indian banks have shown and also the increasing number of companies which are under the CDR (Corporate Debt Relief ) schemes of The Reserve Bank of India.Some of the examples are Subhiksha which went on an uncontrolled expansion spree, Ranbaxy which suffered huge losses due to corporate governance issues, Shri Renuka Sugars and Wockhardt which acquired companies abroad in quick succession, Jain Irrigation which went on to diversify into several unrelated areas and Venkateshwara Hatcheries which acquired an English Football team to promote chicken products. Other failures

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Issue 19 | September - October 2015

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Page 2: Newsletter Sept- Oct Issue Final 11th-August such Heads, companies become complacent and do not question their assumptions. Their mind-sets become fixed, clogged like cholesterol in

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Issue 19 | September - October 2015

such as Kingfisher Airlines have already been extensively discussed in the media.Although it looks that these failures stem from unrelated causes, the authors have tried to reason that the basic cause of all these failures is the behaviour of the top management of these initially successful companies. Success breeds arrogance and hubris which has been the downfall of many successful leaders such as Napoleon and so was the cause of these companies. Under such Heads, companies become complacent and do not question their assumptions. Their mind-sets become fixed, clogged like cholesterol in the heart arteries, slowly taking its toll on the heart and body.The time where one strong leader such as Jack Welch, as he himself has rightly pronounced, can alone carry the organization is gone. The authors contend that leaders who will succeed are those with a keen sense of self-awareness. They are not overwhelmed by their past successes, but humble people who are constantly aware of their inadequacies and blind spots and not only work towards overcoming these but also try to seed the same traits in the organisation culture. They strive to create a learning organization where every member and not just the chosen star performers, are continuously broadening their knowledge horizon through curiosity and discovery, listening and comprehension, gather facts from diverse sources, separating opinions from facts, network across silos. Thus, they develop the skills of critical thinking and evolve to take their place in an empowered organization. Without excellence in thought process, there cannot be excellence in action. One cannot grow faster than the organisation’s ability to learn and embed the learning in its future plans. Considering that worldwide, only 30% of strategic initiatives succeed, there is all the more reason for developing a patient strategy as suggested in the book and highlighted by the cases. Such an organisation not only becomes agile, fast to respond to changing circumstances but has the resilience to bounce back from adversity. About the Authors- Suhayl Abidi is a Practitioner of Organizational Learning & Knowledge Management and Dr. Manoj Joshi is a Professor of Strategy, Entrepreneurship & Innovation at Amity Business School.Reviewed byLen D’CostaFormer President (HR)Piramal Group

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Reality Bytes - The Role of HR in Today's World by Aparna Sharma, our life member, has proved to be such a sought after ready reckoner by not only HR professionals but also Line Managers , Professors, Students & even Entrepreneurs that it has gone into a reprint within two months of its launch in March, 2015. Bombay Management Association (BMA) co-hosted the launch of the reprint with KitabKhana in Mumbai on May 22,2015. It was unveiled by Dr. Prasanth Nair, Managing Partner & Country Head at InHelm Leadership Solutions (Guest of Honour) and Mr. Bhaskar Joshi (BMA) who spoke on the occasion and commended Aparna's effort in making the tenets of HR more accessible to students, managers and professionals. A lively interaction with the audience completed the occasion.

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Issue 19 | September - October 2015

Book LaunchReality Bytes - The Role of HR in Today's World


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