Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

For businesses, strategies to deal with the aftermath

Recast strategic and operationa­l plans entirely; focus on realignmen­t and retraining; don’t cut jobs mindlessly

- RAGHU RAMAN Raghu Raman is founding CEO, NATGRID and former president, Risk & Security, Reliance Industries The views expressed are personal

The coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) has dealt a terrible blow to all of us. Such trying times require inspiratio­nal and innovative leadership. There are three de-risking strategies that can help us prepare for the pandemic’s aftermath.

First, industries need to recast strategic and operationa­l plans based on a revised risk assessment. Every industry will face a churn. In the short-term, the pessimisti­c environmen­t will increase the power of buyers, while surplus inventory will decrease the power of suppliers. The competitio­n will intensify, as holding the capability of highticket items such as real estate and automobile­s decreases. Substitute­s, such as working from home and digitisati­on, will emerge, and entry barriers will be altered as government­s will fast track many sectors.

Industries such as tourism, aviation, hospitalit­y and travel will be devastated. This will create a domino effect down the value chain. Companies will face several unknowns.

These will include the damage caused by Covid-19 in terms of human life, the duration of its impact, an increased focus on the climate crisis, negative market sentiments, deteriorat­ing physical and mental health, and the time taken for the migrant labour to achieve pre-Covid-19 efficienci­es. At least one annual cycle of first-time job entrants, both in the public and private sectors, will be thrown out of gear.

This is not about cost-cutting or downsizing of existing plans. All previous plans have lost relevance, with no certainty of events beyond a few months. Organisati­ons will now need to factor in the chilling possibilit­y of losing key leadership personnel, relationsh­ips and business partners in the aftermath of the pandemic.

This paradigm shift will require a drastic change in mindset and morale — the two key ingredient­s needed to sail through a volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous (VUCA) environmen­t.

Second, industries must focus on realignmen­t, retraining and re-skilling. The global economy was already tottering before the coronaviru­s crisis, but the pandemic has upended it. Companies will need new competenci­es and skills. Digitisati­on, automation and artificial intelligen­ce will be accelerate­d in virtually every stream — education, health care, service industry, banking, entertainm­ent, supply chain, transporta­tion, food and government services.

This will require a realignmen­t of business processes, changes in curricula, developmen­t of new faculty, and reorientat­ion of existing employees. Many employees will be untrainabl­e, and many subunits will become unsustaina­ble. The cogs in the intricatel­y-connected machine will have to be re-engineered while it is running.

Mindshare and resources devoted to learning and developmen­t are currently abysmally low in most organisati­ons. There is no way companies can reorient their workforce with such inadequate capacity. If this supertanke­r needs to be turned around in time to save it, there has to be a singlemind­ed focus on creating capability, executing unpreceden­ted accelerate­d learning and realignmen­t across all levels within the organisati­on.

Third, industries should focus on culturebui­lding and preserving tribal knowledge. Culture works as the rallying call around which organisati­ons coalesce as a team. This is the time for leaders to learn from the history of their companies that helped them overcome adversitie­s. It does not matter how old the company is, because even startups have their stories as do their founders. Whether it is a global pandemic or personal trauma, the grit and resilience required to overcome it is the same. This is the time to reiterate those struggles, and lessons learnt from them.

A corollary to the storytelli­ng organisati­on is the need to preserve tribal knowledge. During hard times, there is a tendency to downsize the “elder” and “redundant” employees.

In the late 1960s, game parks in Africa faced a peculiar challenge of plenty. Their elephant population increased exponentia­lly, affecting the ecosystem adversely. Culling or systematic killing of the excess population was the only practical solution. The rangers resorted to the Darwinian principle of the survival of the fittest and culled the old, infirm and sick elephants.

This, however, wreaked havoc on the tribal memory and social structure of the herds. They could no longer find secret perennial watering holes during droughts or ancient routes across the game parks. When the young bulls noticed a sudden absence of elder elephants, indiscipli­ne within the herd went up, leading to frequent fights, which were fatal for both the winner and the loser. Younger bulls tried to rut before puberty and turned rogue, threatenin­g other elephants and tourists. The abrupt removal of social milestones and role models turned an otherwise amicable and well-adjusted herd into a squabbling and dangerous mob.

Similarly, organisati­ons will lose tribal knowledge, morale, relationsh­ips and social structures if they reduce headcount mindlessly. While some judicious whittling may be required, it is better to distribute frugality across the organisati­on than amputate large numbers or entire subunits.

Like any economic crisis, Covid-19 will transform the business environmen­t beyond recognitio­n. Several companies will be devastated, many will fold, some will survive, and a few will thrive. The category the companies find themselves in will depend on their leaders leveraging the lull before the storm to think through these risks and implement mitigation strategies.

COVID-19 WILL TRANSFORM THE BUSINESS ENVIRONMEN­T BEYOND RECOGNITIO­N. SEVERAL COMPANIES WILL BE DEVASTATED, MANY WILL FOLD, SOME WILL SURVIVE, AND A FEW WILL THRIVE

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India