#JamsetjiTata #JamsetjiTataPowerfulLearningsForCorporateSuccess #Bookreview #RGopalakrishnan #HarishBhat Archives - The MindWorks By Ramabadran Gopalakrishnan Tue, 08 Apr 2025 07:07:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 What Readers Are Saying: Reviews of ‘Jamsetji Tata: Powerful Learnings for Corporate Success’ https://themindworks.me/2025/03/18/what-readers-are-saying-reviews-of-jamsetji-tata-powerful-learnings-for-corporate-success/ https://themindworks.me/2025/03/18/what-readers-are-saying-reviews-of-jamsetji-tata-powerful-learnings-for-corporate-success/#respond Tue, 18 Mar 2025 05:45:22 +0000 https://themindworks.me/?p=5829 What Readers Are Saying: Reviews of ‘Jamsetji Tata: Powerful Learnings for Corporate Success’ “Jamsetji Tata: […]

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What Readers Are Saying: Reviews of ‘Jamsetji Tata: Powerful Learnings for Corporate Success’

“Jamsetji Tata: Powerful Learnings for Corporate Success” has struck a chord with readers from diverse backgrounds, proving its timeless relevance. From a Christmas gift recipient to seasoned corporate professionals, the book’s insights are proving both impactful and illuminating.
Sarthak Sahu , one of the winners of a Christmas gift campaign, shared his enthusiastic response: “I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. The idea of how you can build a culture through rituals and icons is something so simple yet profound. Even yesterday, while visiting the Kala Ghoda Arts Festival, I visited Bombay House and Horniman Circle, explaining to my friends the places and Parsi clubs mentioned in the book.” Sarthak also praised the writing style, noting, “Definitely added a few words to my vocabulary.” His experience highlights the book’s ability to connect with readers on a personal and cultural level, extending its reach beyond the boardroom.

Shailesh P Rau , a follower of mine on LinkedIn, delved into the book’s profound exploration of Tata’s core values. “We studied a chapter on Jamsetji Tata in our school days as a man who was a philanthropist, nation builder, nationalist and who had the highest standards of ethics, integrity and social conscience. This book reveals in depth the makings of the DNA of the TATA group.” He further emphasized the book’s detailed portrayal of leadership across generations, noting, “Every chapter throws light on the leadership demonstrated in difficult, challenging circumstances and yet the leaders did the right thing.” Shailesh’s review underscores the book’s depth and its ability to provide invaluable insights into the enduring legacy of the Tata Group.

Source to read full review- https://www.linkedin.com/posts/shairau_book-review-jamsetji-tata-by-r-gopalakrishnan-activity-7271761664759218176-9ILQ?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAByv2K0BXL4JV0bETVlmWGrnoyaUipae5XQ

 

Corporate Citizen Magazine , a respected voice in corporate affairs, offered a comprehensive assessment, declaring the book “a must-read, for it reveals the enduring success of TATA for so many years. It showcases how profit and social responsibility can align, how a businessperson can also be a social engineer.” The review highlighted the story of Sumant Moolgaokar and the creation of the Tata Motors plant in Pune, showcasing how “business and environmental welfare could combine.” The magazine also praised the book’s structure, organized around ten “P’s” – Philosophy, Purpose, Progress, People, Pioneering, Persistence, Principles, Profit, Perspectives, and Postscript – noting how each chapter “contains a lead essay and three stories that exemplify the theme.” They concluded that the book illustrates “the enduring power of the larger good.”

Source To read full review-

https://corporatecitizen.in/v10-Issue6/book-review-learnings-from-the-renaissance-man.html

The reception of ‘Jamsetji Tata: Powerful Learnings for Corporate Success’ has been truly gratifying, and I am particularly keen to hear further reflections from readers. Your insights, whether shared here on LinkedIn or via email at sharewithrg@gmail.com, are invaluable in understanding the book’s impact. I encourage you to delve into the pages and discover the enduring principles of Jamsetji Tata, and I eagerly anticipate the perspectives you’ll bring to the conversation.

These diverse reviews collectively affirm the book’s significance, showcasing its ability to inspire, educate, and provide practical guidance for leaders across all sectors.

#JamsetjiTata #JamsetjiTataPowerfulLearningsForCorporateSuccess #Bookreview #RGopalakrishnan #HarishBhat

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Learning to learn at Dheerga Ayush companies https://themindworks.me/2025/04/08/learning-to-learn-at-dheerga-ayush-companies/ https://themindworks.me/2025/04/08/learning-to-learn-at-dheerga-ayush-companies/#respond Tue, 08 Apr 2025 07:07:31 +0000 https://themindworks.me/?p=5835 There has been a hammer and tongs debate about how many hours per week a person should work. Leaders who spoke did so within a context.

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By R Gopalakrishnan*

*The writer is an author. His latest book, JAMSETJI Tata—powerful learnings for corporate success, coauthored with Harish Bhat, was published in July 2024. His ID is rgopal@themindworks.me

Who does not wish to set up and nurture institutions with a long life? Dheerga Ayush or flourishing multi-generational companies nurture engaged employees. Many executives cease to keep their curiosity alive as their career progresses. When you cease to learn, you lose engagement with work. Employee engagement data over thirty years shows a temporal decline across companies and regions. That is why Dheerga Ayush companies like Tata, Castrol Hindustan Unilever track their employee engagement regularly.

Professor Barry Schwartz, a noted American psychologist and academic, has written and spoken about ‘Why We Work’. According to him, Adam Smith opined that human beings are lazy and would not do anything unless the employer made it worthwhile: this led to the factory system with a focus on the number of hours worked.

There has been a hammer and tongs debate about how many hours per week a person should work. Leaders who spoke did so within a context. I have no intention of stoking the dying embers of this fire.  Rather, I wish to explore what work is, especially knowledge-based work. Presumably all our ancestors did not enjoy work, though many of them led a fulfilling life. We work because we desire a ‘fulfilling’ life. Well, what is a fulfilling life?

Fulfilment presumes that there is some deep ambition and a personal purpose. It may be prosaic like feeding your family, or philosophical, like providing music as soup for the soul. Why should anybody assume that the next generation—they are described through alphabets like X,  Z, and Alpha—not be like our ancestors insofar as they too wish to work to fulfil their purpose. When a purpose is fulfilled, work is enjoyed, and the number of hours doesn’t matter.

When I began work six decades ago, I wanted to write computer code, a desire that changed with time and experience. At my interview, Hindustan Lever asked me whether I would consider a career in marketing instead of systems and programming. I was bold—or foolish–enough to decline. A future chairman, T Thomas, told us during our induction in a matter-of-fact manner, “If you are not buying, manufacturing, or selling, you are not in operations.” It was mandatory to learn the grassroots of operations irrespective of the stream of work.

So, I landed up selling Surf in Nashik, Erasmic Cup Soap in Nagpur, and dispatching goods from Mumbai’s Sankli Street warehouse for several months. Thereafter, I was packed off to the factory to study how to plan production so that all six colors of Lux would be available for consumers simultaneously. Was it ‘fascinating’ to visit forty grocery shops every day to transact orders after studying physics and computer science?  Or to watch how the soap packing machines had to be cleaned for several hours for every color change? Gosh no. But did help me to understand how to analyze the system and write code for a better outcome.

What was my lesson? That you enjoy work when you are learning new things. And that you learn new things when you are curious and respectful about work. Learning means personal growth, which nudges you towards your purpose. The employee must be curious, and the employer must provide the employee with work that converts natural curiosity into relevant learning.

There is no place for number of hours in this formula!! That is what start up founders call passion, that is what top-class musicians call riyaz, that is what sportsmen call relentless practice. There are so many paths for a top-class cricketer, for example, to develop. Some have relentless coaching and others like K Srikkanth and Varun Chakravarti were largely self-taught. It is the individual who defines what the criterion of success is.

Our older generations never treated their next generation as ‘immature, wayward, or indolent.’ If they did, our generation would not have surpassed our parents’ in accomplishments and advancements. The narrative, therefore, is not how many hours but what fulfils. And fulfilment and purpose evolve with experience.

I close with a recent narrative about a person called Mr Tamil in Nilgiris. Yes, that is the name his parents gave him, long before MK Stalin made a virtue of Tamil in relation to Hindi. He studied in a convent school, graduated with a B Com from a college, both in Nilgiris, and secured a bank job for two years. Following bereavements in the family, Tamil felt his ‘purpose’ was to be at home with his lonely, ageing father. Upon return to his home, he could only get the job of a car driver. It enabled him to look after his father and achieve what he considered his purpose. I have not met a happier person than Tamil. He was not counting his hours of work, rather he was fulfilling his purpose.

Employee engagement is essential for Dheerga Ayush companies. It is not a human resources issue; it is a leadership issue.

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