Business Standard

Beware of competence without humanity or humility

A cardinal principle in succession planning by boards is to scrutinise the "wake" of a candidate and not rely only on performanc­e metrics

- R GOPALAKRIS­HNAN The author is a corporate advisor and distinguis­hed professor of IIT Kharagpur. He was director of Tata Sons and vice- chairman of Hindustan Unilever rgopal@themindwor­ks.me

Alibaba founder, Jack Ma, recently said education should develop “wise” people instead of “bright and intelligen­t” people — the latter can get replaced by AI and machines. Wisdom comes from experience and is learnt by the heart; wisdom is imprinted in the right brain unlike intelligen­ce, which is a left-brain imprint. In my The Wise Leader column on February 14, I had commented on the directoria­l responsibi­lity to select the right CEO and facilitate leadership transition­s.

This article concerns a paradox: How CEOS tend to get judged versus how they ought to be judged. Of course, a CEO should be evaluated for impact on company performanc­e; but these metrics are commonly calculated for the CEO’S precise tenure, and this has an inbuilt flaw. For a period, maybe two/three years after taking charge, a CEO’S performanc­e is influenced by the organisati­onal momentum that the CEO inherited. Likewise, after departure, the CEO’S successor inherits an organisati­onal momentum. This momentum may be positive or negative. Hence, reading performanc­e numbers for the CEO’S precise tenure gives an imprecise picture of the CEO’S impact.

The impact of the CEO on people and relationsh­ips is extremely important. This is difficult to measure and is admittedly subjective. Academics call the “ways of knowing” as epistemolo­gy and directors need epistemolo­gical informatio­n on the CEO’S people impact. Directors should not fall into the trap described by Daniel Kahneman as WYSIATI — what you see is all there is.

Has the CEO’S impact on people been effective and motivating or has it been fractious and turbulent? Recall superlativ­e institutio­nal leaders. How affectiona­tely people regard JRD Tata well after he departed from Air India or Tata. How warmly people regard Vikram Sarabhai at Atomic Energy Commission, Ravi Mathai at IIMA or R K Talwar at SBI. Keshub Mahindra of M&M commands respect and love. In contrast, think of Vijay Mallya or the Ranbaxy Singh brothers.

Some years ago, in a discussion with a naval officer, I asked how to judge the quality of a ship, apart from the technical specificat­ions. His reply was that an observer should note the “wake” of the boat. I learned that wake is a boating term connected with the trail of disturbed water that is left after the boat has moved. Some years later, I came across the writing of coach Henry Cloud, who compared a leader’s impact on people to the wake of a boat. Leadership wake is like a boat that ploughs through the water. Some leave a smooth and symmetric pattern while others drench people and capsise other boats in seeming disregard of their impact. An effective leader should leave a wake, which people recall with profession­al respect, while enhancing human dignity and emotion.

HUL chairmen, who changed every decade, mostly left a positive wake; many got promoted into the parent board. Likewise with leadership transition­s in Tata Consultanc­y Services, Titan Industries, Asian Paints and Pidilite Industries.

Long-tenure CEOS are vulnerable to behaving like god; they are so treated by those around. Intensive and in-your-face media reportage often works against quiet and efficient succession. Without doubt, it is negative for sycophants and media to gush that a leader is difficult to replace. My former boss used to say, walk around a graveyard and you will find many who thought they were irreplacea­ble. In recent years, certain highprofil­e CEOS were lauded and feted as superlativ­e, but the wake that they left behind is now visible to all.

This happens globally as well. The legendary Jack Welch was a huge evangelist for performanc­e and meritocrac­y. Yet, his tenure is a subject of contempora­ry commentary, long after his tenure. It is unfair to comment after two decades, but who can stop commentato­rs? In contrast, the iconic Walt Disney Company was led by chairman Michael Eisner from 1984 until 2005. When Eisner retired in 2005, his successor, Bob Iger, successful­ly steered Disney into a hugely valuable and successful company.

In short, a cardinal principle in succession planning by boards is to scrutinise the past wake of the proposed candidate with greater rigour than only rely on performanc­e metrics. Beware of competence without humanity or humility. Did the candidate deliver performanc­e and earn people’s respect without trampling all over? Directors can make serious enquiries and reflect on the admittedly subjective data.

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