Business Standard

BUZZ AROUND EXPAT CEOs AGAIN AFTER SIKKA’S EXIT

- NIVEDITA MOOKERJI

Expat chief executives, from Vivek Paul of Wipro to Rakesh Sarna of Indian Hotels and Bharti Retail’s Andrew Levermore to Reliance Retail’s Gwyn Sundhagul, have often been associated with sudden exits from companies in India. It could be anything from a cultural mismatch to un-met business targets. Vishal Sikka’s resignatio­n as Infosys CEO and MD last week has again got the industry talking about why expats at the top of Indian businesses have not been really a success story while home-grown executives are at the helm of many multinatio­nals across the globe.

According to Abraham Koshy, professor at Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Ahmedabad, cultural and people orientatio­n are among the most critical requiremen­ts for very senior positions.

"These are unwritten and shadow capabiliti­es to assess CEOs." It’s possible that an expat who’s not exposed to the Indian environmen­t of business and is not flexible may find it difficult to head a company here, Koshy said. "There’s a lot of more collective­ness at the Indian workplace compared to overwhelmi­ng individual­ism in the West." But he added that it’s not a case of expats versus Indians. A lot depends on the type of job and the skill sets one has.

When asked if expats continued to be a misfit for top jobs of India Inc, a leading investment banker said, "I hope not. Else we can forget being a globalisin­g economy."

Why then are there so many examples of expats either having a short stint or quitting unexpected­ly even when they are brought in with much fanfare? "That is because Indian companies hire foreigners or expats when they are in a big mess anyway," the banker argued.

Whether or not in a mess, global search for top executives has been a norm for many large groups in India, especially in the tech space. However, some companies need Indian CEOs to navigate the complex regulatory and political environmen­t across states, an official with a top business group said.

Among prominent expats, Vivek Paul, an India-born American national, who joined Wipro as vicechairm­an in 1999, put in his papers in 2005 after what was believed to be a clash of ideas with the old guard. In an interview then, Paul had said Indian managers were "in a cocoon".

Retail is one of the sectors to have had many expats as top executives. Since the organised retail industry was new in India, there was no template, said Preety Kumar, managing partner of Amrop India, an internatio­nal advisory and executive search company.

Reliance Retail, for instance, appointed a large number of expat executives in 2009. Gwyn Sundhagul, chief marketing officer and director at Tesco Lotus, Thailand, became the chief executive of Reliance Retail’s value retail format. However, two years later, Reliance hired Rob Cissel, former chief operating officer (COO) of Walmart China, as CEO of value formats, replacing Sundhagul.

In another expat appointmen­t, Bharti Retail got Andrew Levermore as CEO, but it was a short stint and he headed back to his home country, South Africa, soon enough in 2011. Levermore had a four-year stay at HyperCity Retail before that, where he joined in 2008. Tata Motors is among the rare companies which has had three expat/foreign MDs so far. From the Tata group again, Indian Hotels has had Rakesh Sarna and Raymond Bickson as expat chiefs who quit unexpected­ly.

"Top executives need to be extremely carefully chosen. It’s not the right résumé alone that should decide," said Kumar. While getting the right executive for business leadership positions is tricky, expats are often found to be more successful in functional or technical roles, she pointed out. In the case of Sikka, she said, he’s not just an expat CEO but a first-time CEO. Also, he had no exposure to the India market. In addition, Sikka was a profession­al CEO joining a promoter/founderdri­ven company. “Ít was like a triple whammy,’’ she said.

Naushad Forbes, former president of Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII), said getting the right person for a role is critical, and that nationalit­y is immaterial. There have been highly successful expat CEOs in India, just like Indian CEOs have led internatio­nal companies such as Micrososft and Citigroup. He named Steffen Berns who headed Bosch for long as one of the success stories of expat CEOs in India. Others named Laurent Demortier, who headed CG Power and Industrial Solutions (earlier Crompton Greaves) as yet another case of successful expat CEO. So was Martin Pieters, the India head of Vodafone for more than five years.

But, as Gurcharan Das, author and former Procter & Gamble CEO, pointed out, "There’s a jolt to profession­alism in India Inc after Sikka’s resignatio­n. There’s a sense of sadness."

 ??  ?? EXPAT CEOS WHO MADE SUDDEN EXITS: From left) Vivek Paul from Wipro; Rakesh Sarna, Indian Hotels; and Vishal Sikka, Infosys
EXPAT CEOS WHO MADE SUDDEN EXITS: From left) Vivek Paul from Wipro; Rakesh Sarna, Indian Hotels; and Vishal Sikka, Infosys
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