Deccan Chronicle

India the global home of cross-cultural managers

- Sanjayovac­ha India’s Power Elite: Caste, Class and a Cultural Revolution.

Every time that a person of Indian origin becomes the head of a global corporatio­n there is much celebrator­y reporting in the media in this country and much hand-wringing about the costs and benefits of talent migration. If more middleclas­s Indians are going up the managerial ranks internatio­nally than they are at home, it is because most Indian companies are still largely family dominated at the top.

Apart from the one odd Natarajan Chandrasek­aran heading the Tata empire or a Suresh Narayanan heading Nestle India, there are not many profession­als at the top of corporate pyramids in India. Even when such managers play important roles within firms, they remain below the radar and allow members of the business family all the glory of corporate success. So, for example, many may know the names of Mukesh Ambani’s children, but how many would have heard of P.M.S. Prasad, a graduate of Vivek Vardhini College, Hyderabad, who is among the elder Ambani’s top managers, providing significan­t leadership at Reliance Industries?

There is, however, an important reason why Indians are doing so well running global firms and this does not get enough attention at business schools and in the business media.

Within a few months after the Indian economy opened up to the world in 1991, I had a chance encounter with the head of Henley Management College, located at Henleyupon-Thames in Britain. He held forth about how he would like Indian managers to participat­e in their management developmen­t programmes that would prepare them for roles in global firms. India is going global, Indians will have to learn to deal with nonIndians in different business and managerial circumstan­ces, he said, and added that “cross-cultural management” is the key to success.

We in Britain, he told me loftily, have centuries of experience managing global business and understand cross-cultural management issues better than anyone else. From the Chinese in the East to Indians in South Asia to Africans across the continent, the British business elite have managed the most diverse cultures and so can teach a thing or two to Indians now seeking global careers.

While appreciati­ng his point, I reminded him that India already had long experience in cross-cultural management because we have firms in Kolkata run by Marwaris, in Mumbai run by South Indians and in South India run by Punjabis. India is itself a multi-cultural nation and large Indian firms are populated from the managerial top to the working-class ground level with people from across the sub-continent. The Indian civil service, I told him, is the best pool of talent of cross-cultural managers with a young Punjabi officer posted as a district collector in Kerala and suchlike, dealing with the millions around him. Clearly, I was not very impressed by his pitch.

The Henley College, originally the Administra­tive Staff College and set up in 1945 to train public sector managers, was the inspiratio­n for the Administra­tive Staff College of India (ASCI), at Bella Vista in Hyderabad. The ASCI was founded as the Indian equivalent and was meant to train middle management. India had an extremely large public sector where managers would have to have experience in cross-cultural management. A Tamilian or a Maharashtr­ian head of Bharat Heavy Electrical­s Ltd, running a huge firm with thousands of employees from across the sub-continent, could only succeed if he knew the art of cross-cultural management.

After my chat with the Henley head, I suggested to the then principal of ASCI, Hyderabad, that the college should offer the kind of course that Henley was offering and it may well attract managers from across Asia and Africa and not just from within India. If the head of a British institutio­n could claim better understand­ing of crosscultu­ral issues in management merely because Britain once had an empire on which the sun had never set, India could claim with equal pride that it has always been the original home of cross-cultural management. I have no idea what happened to that suggestion, and whether the ASCI has kept in step with the changing times.

Middle class India, from which the corporate sector draws most of its managers, is largely bilingual, often tri- and multi-lingual. Most urban Indians growing up in a cosmopolit­an social environmen­t learn to deal with different cultures from childhood onwards. This instils in Indian managers a much higher emotional quotient (EQ) that contribute­s to their success in cross-cultural management. Management experts identify the key elements of “emotional intelligen­ce” as “selfawaren­ess, self-regulation, motivation, empathy and social skills”. Middle class urban life offers a good environmen­t for developing such sensitivit­ies. That is the crucible in which the Chandrasek­arans, Suresh Narayanans and P.M.S. Prasads are schooled to then become top managers in large multicultu­ral managerial environmen­ts.

So, while it is true that the rise to the top of a corporate pyramid by a Satya Nadella, an Indira Nooyi and a Sundar Pichai may be on account of the open and supportive corporate environmen­t offered by the United States and its global firms, one must also recognise that their success in a global multicultu­ral corporate environmen­t also owes to their roots in the multicultu­ralism of our urban middle class life.

I have no idea if Henley College still runs that course. Britain has become far too insular and distant from a fast-changing world to have retained the skills of imperial management to be a relevant home for cross-cultural management education.

India is in fact a better place for managers from mono-cultural societies to learn to deal with multicultu­ral organisati­ons. When the Japanese and South Korean firms first set up a manufactur­ing base in India, they found their own nationals socially illequippe­d and lacking the EQ required to run their India operations. Many had to hire Indian CEOs.

It was perhaps no accident that Osamu Suzuki, chairman, Suzuki Motor Corporatio­n, was pleased with his two Indian CEOs, R.C. Bhargava and Jagdish Khattar, both drawn from a great pool of experience in cross-cultural management — the Indian Administra­tive Service.

If more family-owned Indian firms hand over their top management to profession­als, then India too would have its Nooyis and Nadellas staying home.

If more family-owned Indian firms hand over their top management to profession­als, India too would have its Nooyis and Nadellas staying home

The writer is an economist, a former newspaper

editor and was media adviser to former Prime

Minister Manmohan Singh. His most recent book

is

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