Business Today

Culture Begets Success

Strong values and ethos lie at the heart of the successful organisati­ons profi led in the book.

- BY SANDIP GHOSE

Culture eats strategy for breakfast,” says Karambir Kang of Indian (Taj) Hotels, who became a legend after the 26/11 attacks in Mumbai. Kang’s is, perhaps, the most defining quote in Shashank Shah’s 444-page seminal tome Win-win Corporatio­ns.

At the start, the book, overweighe­d by pre-publicatio­n endorsemen­ts, could be mistaken for a treatise on Corporate Social Responsibi­lity, now fashionabl­y called Stakeholde­r Relationsh­ip Management. A few pages down, one thinks it is probably an Indian version of Tom Peters’s In Search of Excellence and Jim Collins’s Good to Great and Built to Last fused into one. However, after going past the somewhat stretched and self-congratula­tory prologue, one realises its much wider sweep.

Shah’s book, unquestion­ably a product of passionate and painstakin­g research, sits at the intersecti­on of strategy, brand, vision and values. It is also about exemplary inspiratio­nal leadership. All these elements are tied together by the invisible and intangible glue called culture.

The companies that finally made to Shah’s shortlist have one distinguis­hing characteri­stic – they have all survived the test of time. The most interestin­g choice in the motley collection is Hindustan Unilever – a company this reviewer has been closely associated with for a long time. The selection can probably be explained by the words of one of its iconic chairmen, T. Thomas, who used to famously say: “We are an Indian company whose largest shareholde­r happens to be a multinatio­nal” (not quoted by Shah).

Till the early nineties, Hindustan Lever (as it was then called) continued to remain fiercely Indian and popularly referred to as the “jewel in the crown” (of Unilever). The chapter on HUL deals at length with how the company reinvented itself to retain ‘Day Zero’ slots at management institute campuses, while many of its contempora­ries faded into corporate oblivion. The answer, as you would guess, lies in its enduring profession­al values and culture.

HDFC Bank is a fascinatin­g story of value-based leadership and clarity of purpose. Though it has charted its future independen­t of the parent, it was founded upon one common family ethos – that of building and nurturing customer relationsh­ips. The bank benchmarke­d global best practices to be delivered in Indian conditions and at Indian prices. This called for customerce­ntric innovation leveraging technology with significan­t shifts in the business model, such as from branch banking to core banking, in which the front-end staff focused on customer service, while the back-end handled the process.

However, the real differenti­ator for HDFC Bank was “purpose-oriented banking” that sought to leverage emerging opportunit­ies to empower urban and rural communitie­s across socio-economic strata. Over 50 per cent of HDFC Bank’s nearly 5,000 branches are located in semi-urban and under-penetrated

rural markets contributi­ng around 20 per cent of its revenues.

At one level, therefore, the chapter on HDFC Bank is worth a read only for an insight into the leadership style of Aditya Puri. Puri, who does not carry a cell phone or wear a watch but leaves office at 5.30 pm on the dot everyday, has clearly made his place in the hall of fame of Indian banking.

The story of Taj Hotels is like a romantic time travel. The Taj may not be the most commercial­ly profitable hotel chain in the world, but in the true tradition of Indian hospitalit­y it has never not looked at immediate returns while receiving a guest. This has, probably, been the secret of its longevity through ups and downs and in the face of competitio­n from far more efficiency-driven internatio­nal chains. This “Tajness” could not have been better demonstrat­ed than during the Mumbai terror attacks.

Similarly, the stories of Larsen & Toubro ( L&T), TVS Motors and Bharat Petroleum contain many gems. TVS is a rare example where an Indian company has successful­ly used world-class quality and efficiency as an instrument of competitiv­e advantage. Apart from the commitment of the top management, it also requires a deep understand­ing of the challenges of manufactur­ing sector employees to create a culture of perfection. There is a joke in the constructi­on industry circle: L&T is the best example from the private sector of how a public sector corporatio­n should be run. Beneath this lies a deeper truth that is captured in Shah’s book. L&T combines its core competence in engineerin­g and skill building to partner in nation building.

In basing his research largely on company insiders past and present, Shah has, to some extent, fallen into the PR trap. Therefore, while the big hits have been diligently chronicled, some of the misses are conspicuou­s. Sometimes, mistakes hold more lessons than achievemen­ts filtered with 20:20 hindsight and packaged in fancy catchphras­es.

For example, it would have been interestin­g to know that HUL’S foray into drinking water and Taj’s low-cost brand were the brainchild of the same doyen – C.K. Prahlad, who was on the board of both companies. While HUL made a great business of Pureit, Taj’s handling of Ginger was not such a class act. Similarly, he does not mention that HUL’S Project Millennium, of which Pureit was a part, made many careers but most of the 20-odd business ideas it generated were buried without a trace.

The quote from Cyrus Mistry on The Taj may appear a bit ironical today without any discussion on corporate governance (the book must have gone to press before the Mistry controvers­y broke out). However, there is also no mention of A.M. Naik’s extraordin­arily extended tenure at the helm of L&T.

Shah’s biggest achievemen­t has been to make the book highly readable. Management lessons apart, he has the makings of a great business historian and biographer of business leaders. ~

The reviewer is a marketing profession­al and leadership coach.

 ??  ?? BY SHASHANK SHAH PAGES: 444 PRICE: 599 PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE Win-Win Corporatio­ns: The Indian Way of Shaping Successful Strategies
BY SHASHANK SHAH PAGES: 444 PRICE: 599 PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE Win-Win Corporatio­ns: The Indian Way of Shaping Successful Strategies

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