Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Hail Stephen Covey



Stephen Covey is no more. This news must’ve made many of us turn back the pages of his tome. Or re-look at the notes we made about being effective, along the way.


Keeping the Indian workplace in context I would like to make a few suggestions that could make us more efficient professionals.


1) Be punctual: There are no statistics available for how much lack of punctuality costs us as a country but my guess is it should be a substantial amount. Lack of punctuality means every day, each one of us waits for someone to join the meeting who is held up somewhere else because that meeting did not start on time because someone came late there….. Long hours are spent at the work place but few of those are towards work on several days. And arriving late bothers very few people. Just yesterday a young gentleman was supposed to come and demonstrate his novel, internet promotion idea to us. We were there by 10:15 for the 10:30 meeting. There wasn’t a sound from him until 11:30 a.m. He simply explained that he was held up and he was on his way now. We tried to impress upon him that this was unacceptable. He was unfazed. We did not have the meeting. So in effect he spent four hours on the road and did not meet the potential client. Little wonder that so many of us are working virtually round the clock. This isn’t uncommon. Being ‘held up in traffic’ happens so regularly that I wonder if it is some sort of an epidemic condition

2) Be prepared: That was the motto for us as girl guides. It seems so relevant today. It is a pleasant surprise when the people you are going to meet are well-prepared for the meeting. Often enough a person saunters in with barely a clue of what the agenda is. He/she generally contributes throughout the conversation and confuses the matter till it is like a tangled ball of wool. More than once, the outcome of the meeting has been that we must come and meet the next person and repeat all this. There have been few occasions that what was mailed in advance has been opened and looked at at least cursorily. And often enough, the needs identified are not what we are eventually asked to train for

3) Dress effectively: Casualness in dressing is a recent development and it is being taken to an extreme. I am no prude on what people should wear but we mustn’t, at any point, forget that we are yet at work, no matter whether it’s Friday or a Saturday. It is yet not a beach day. Casual or poor dressing is reflective of our attitude towards our work and where we want to go. We may claim that this is superficial and dressing doesn’t matter. But do you think you will willingly let your daughter go out say, with a fellow with long, matted hair and painted nails? Sorry, but I had to exaggerate to make my point.

4) Be courteous: Good manners and courteousness for some reason are often misinterpreted as weakness. But being courteous and well-mannered just makes you more bearable. And talking with a sneer or with slang or expletives isn’t ‘cool’. It is annoying to anyone ten years older than you and doesn’t make you appear any more intelligent or ‘with it’.

5) Be formal: In the workplace it may be safer to err on the side of formality. Don’t get into backslapping mode the day you join from your MBA college. People may humour you but I strongly suggest that you should let the boss decide if you can abbreviate his name. In our language training experience we’ve had, not surprisingly for us, many incidents where international clients complained about such things. There’s a difference between being friendly and getting familiar. The former is appreciated, the latter isn’t.

6) Take responsibility: The issue seems to belong to no one. It is nebulous, in the Corporate Scenario, where the buck stops. So you can be shunted from one manager to another, getting no wiser about what’s to be done.

7) Keep upgrading: This should be a daily quest. The routine can never be made an excuse for not improving every single day. Every day, every month you should be able to at least explain to yourself why you should get paid better. Reading on the industry, on your subject, on varied interests is for self-development.


Of course this is only my list. Would love to know what piques and pricks you about being one of the links in this corporate world chain.

5 comments:

  1. via email:
    Dear Nirupama
    A couple of additional points if I may

    Be ethical- this is one item on the corporate agenda which has been cast out of the window- nobody believes in being ethical any more. I do not paint ethics as a virtue but as a way to stay out of trouble- issues regarding ethics and integrity can destroy a corporate career.

    Be professional in your decision making- base your decisions on facts not on opinions-weigh all pros and cons before giving decisions.- the quality of decision will determine your ascent in the corporate world.
    thanks and regards
    Col Warrier

    ReplyDelete
  2. 1. Listen attentively with an open mind even if the other person says things unpalatable to us.
    2. Reach out to adversaries; There are no permanent foes in life, and feuds must be forgoton. Every deal is a new deal.
    3.Introspect with total honesty and offer no excuses for failure.
    4. Learn from setbacks and be humble in victories

    ReplyDelete
  3. responses via email:

    Good One Mam!!!

    Regards,
    Yogesh
    Thanks for sharing nice article.


    Thanks and regards
    Manish Karle


    Really we miss him.. his book..7 habits created waves and still in the minds of people. Hail Steven Covey

    Venkatesh Padmanabhan


    Hi Nirupama

    I was reading your below email yesterday evening and must say that its a well written thing.

    Excellent blog.

    Appreciate it

    Regards

    Tamanna

    ReplyDelete
  4. response via email:

    Dear Nirupama

    Thanks for sharing.

    For me, “Active Listening” is an essential element to being an efficient professional. Very often I have seen people cut each other in a conversation and offer their opinions without listening to what the other has said. Besides being impolite, I find that it can be quite disrespectful.

    Best wishes from Munich
    Michelle

    ReplyDelete
  5. By making his principles central to our life we can transform our country India creating a fair place for both employer and the employed, Stephen Covey son has followed up with the tome on TRUST which is clearly the building block for all change

    ReplyDelete