Leadership Lessons-Straight from the Heart: Turnaround Strategy
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About this ebook
Dr M S Phogat
Dr M S Phogat M.Com Ph.D in Management, CAIIB and associate member of Indian Institute of Banking and Finance in India. He has retired as General Manager in top Executive grade of Bank of Baroda, a public sector bank in India after a service of 37 years in various grades. He has handled various positions in senior and top management in Bank of Baroda like Chief Executive Bank of Baroda Seychelles for four years, Regional Manager and Deputy Regional Manager in Bank of Baroda. He was the Chairman of Baroda Rajasthan Kshetriya Gramin Bank, a Regional Rural Bank in India for three years.
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Leadership Lessons-Straight from the Heart - Dr M S Phogat
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Points to ponder
• Do your home work properly
• Be confident of achievement
• Do SWOT analysis first
• Identify the problems
• Involve staff in identifying the problems
• Get feedback from all concerned
• Do not afraid of problems
• Find opportunities in challenges
• Focus on your strengths first
• Search for the niche
• Field work is a must
• Strong will to find the way
• SWOT analysis has the key to solutions
• Brain storm in staff meetings
Chander belonged to a rural family in farming community of Punjab. His father had died when; he was a small child of two years. His mother again married to his uncle. He did not get full love and affection from his parents. He was admitted to school in a small village and studied upto third standard only and started working with his uncle in the farm. One day, he left his home with one of his friend, without any information. These two boys caught a train without ticket and went to Lahore in search of work. While sitting in a park, they met a person who was an agent of the British government to recruit people for the British army. The man asked them, if, they would like to enroll themselves in the army. He would get a commission from their enrolment and give them a part of his commission back. Both of them agreed for the same and went along with the agent. He took them to the officer for recruitment. Their physical and medical test were conducted and ultimately recruited in the army. The agent got his commission and paid to these boys, seven rupees each as agreed by him. They were sent to an army camp and ultimately they had to go for support in the Second World War. They boarded a ship along with some other recruits and left for Italy. Ship went through many countries and they were enjoying a new world. After getting training, he was deployed in medical corps of the Indian army. After five years his uncle came to know that he was in Italy and he started asking him to come back to India. After a lot of pressure from his uncle, he decided to go back to India. He left Italy and came back to India. He again started working with his uncle and doing a job of a loader in the grain market along with transportation of goods by bullock cart. He got married and blessed with four sons and four daughters. They were living in a village of Punjab. Vikram was the eldest son. Chander sold a small piece of land near the city and purchased eleven acres of land in a village which was eight kilometers from the city. Farm land was very fertile and irrigated. Chander started getting good return from the sale of crop and the family started leading a prosperous life. Two elder sister of Vikram could not be sent to school as they had to help their parents in the farm. As, the distance of the farm was approx 8 kilometers from their house, they had to start early morning from their house to reach the farm in time in the morning. Vikram’s mother was a very laborious lady. She would wake up at 2.30 am and grind five kg of wheat floor by her hand. Prepare and pack the meal for the family and start for the farm at 4 o clock in the morning. They had a bullock cart and a pair of bullock. Life was very difficult but the family was enjoying it. Land was irrigated from a canal and once in a week, they will have their turn for irrigation for one or two hours, usually in the night. Chander will take clock to see the time of his turn, a lantern, a torch and a spade and move to the farm in the night. There was a big risk of snake bite or wild animals like jackal or fox at night. But still it was being enjoyed.
Some of the other neighbors were also engaged in the same type of work. Chander was more hardworking man than his peers. There will be a lot of work during the ripening of a crop. Entire family had to camp in the farm during at least 25 days. They will prepare their food on the farm and work whole day till late in the evening to remove the grains from the corn. There were no thrashers at that time and the entire process was being done manually with the pair of bullocks, they will reap the crop and make small bundles so that it can dry. Wet plants cannot be put for removal of the grain. After drying the bundles, they will collect entire crop material at one place in a round circle. Pair of bullock will start moving on the crop to crush it. For wheat and gram crop, a roller of stone called Girdi had to be bound with a rope behind a pair of bullock and whole day; it will keep on making rounds on the dry plants with corn. One person had to follow the bullock. It was a very tiring job. During the day, it will be very hot, but the job had to continue for 15- days to properly crush the dried plants so that grains will be removed from it and after that it will be collected together in a heap. Then they will start winnowing. Grain will be separated through natural air by throwing the thrashed plants. One person was needed to use broom to remove straw falling on the grains while fodder will fly away and fall a little away from the grain. Then the grain will be put in the bags for transportation to home. There will be a crop of 100 quintals’ of gram and 150 quintals of wheat. After selling it, a good money was made, though the price at that time was very low. When Vikram was hardly six years old, his father planted cotton in their farm. It was to be picked up manually. Once, he accompanied his mother to pick up cotton in the farm. They started early in the morning on foot. Farm was about eight kilometers from their home. Whole day they picked cotton from the field and in the evening again started back on foot. So, it was 16 kilometer journey and whole day moving in the farm for picking cotton. He was so tired that he asked his mother not to grow cotton in future. After some time, his father sold this agriculture land with intention to buy some other land near their village. He could buy only four acres against the earlier land of eleven acres. Some of the sale proceeds of the land were spent on other items and the poverty started showing its results on the family.
Vikram had already started going to school. It was a government primary school. Fees were negligible. After completing primary level, he was admitted to a higher secondary school. It was also a government school and fee was less than one rupee per month. He was a normal student. He was very healthy and his friends used to call him mota i.e. a fat boy. His mother would prepare some good sweet with deshi ghee (local clarified butter) during winter for him to be healthy and strong. He used to play wrestling with the students and usually win from the boys of his age. He was a player of hockey and football as well. When, he was a student of tenth class, he used to do yoga and race for at least one hour in the morning. It kept his health very well. He passed his higher secondary securing only fifty percent marks. His parents were not much concerned about his studies. They were of the opinion that he is doing his studies reasonably well. Financial position of the family was very fragile and many times, he thought to leave his studies and start working. Once, his father gave him an electricity bill of their tube well at the farm which was amounting to rupees eleven and asked him to write an application for disconnection of electricity connection, as, there was no money with them to pay the bill. This incident made lifelong impact on him and he realized their poverty for the first time. During his days at school and college, he used to assist his parents. Just after coming back from college, he will go to their farm and assist his father. He knew, how to repair the diesel engine of their tube well. So, whenever, there was any problem with the engine, he will open its nuts and bolts, bring a spare part from the market and repair it.
After higher secondary, he was admitted to a nearby college. Payment of fee was always a problem. His father will ask one of his relative Mr. Prabhu, who was a driver at Municipal Committee to lend rupees two hundred to pay for the admission fee of Vikram. After selling the crop, the money will be returned without any interest. It was a big relief to his father. In the first year at college, he found that mathematics was a tough subject. There were many students at the college. The college was under Punjab University. Many students used unfair means during the exam and the university took a very tough stand. Many students, who used unfair means, were identified from their answers papers and cases of unfair means were registered against them. They were debarred for three years. Those who did not use unfair means, were given very tough marking and many such students failed. Vikram failed in the first year of his college. It was a big shock to him as well as his parents. Next year, he did a lot of hard work and now the mathematics had become a very interesting subject for him. He stood first in the college. His base had improved a lot and he was the topper of the college, continuously for three years. Apart from studies, he was a very good speaker, member of drama team, music team, hockey team, athletics teams, and Under Officer of National Cadets Corps at his college. He had a big passion to be an army officer. He passed the written test but could not be selected in army/navy/ air force. He along with some of his friends formed an Arya