How to sell ‘U’
14 May 2011 Leave a Comment
in Management Tags: How to sell you, personal branding
How to Sell ‘U’
by Kalyan Hariharan
Selling you in a highly aggressive and challenging market environment is very difficult; however a smart personal branding of yourself makes it simple. Personal branding means understanding what is unique about YOU. What are your strengths, skills, values which detach yourself from others. A smart personal branding helps to improve your visibility and presence to take up exciting assignments for achieving professional and personal goals. This will also enhance your abilities to thrive in a challenging market to expand your business area and expectations. So what is expected from YOU………………….
To know yourself, it is important to do an inventory of your personal assets so that you will know how to market them in a better way. Always think and start off with your brand attributes, the positive and powerful self attributes. Once you have identified your strength, understand your weaknesses, both professional and personal. If you find that you are a pessimist, introvert, not flexible and these traits get in the way of your success, then before doing anything, these weaknesses should be addressed.
To know your value, do you know your place in your company. Do you see visible effects in the form of monetary and non monetary appreciations for the work and efforts you put in. Your value in the work place is all about how much you are contributing to the company. If your departure will have little or no effect in the company, consider it to be low. So finally ask yourself, if your job allows you to use your strengths to their full potential, if it does not, it may be time to reassess what you are doing.
To place yourself in the market, think yourself as a product and your company as a market. How much are you worth and critical to your company. How much would people be willing to spend to get what you have to offer. So how can you increase your importance and daily attendance.
- Know your environment – You should start wearing many hats and take risks;
- Build a reputation – Do hard work and churn out consistent results;
- Promote yourself – You should be moderate and suitable to all changes;
- Self improve – To have update knowledge in your core area and to have an overall industry knowledge.
Finally what is precious? Gold coin or a can of tin? Of course it is the gold coin, so be a gold coin, make yourself a rare commodity and be desirable through hard work and a smart personal branding, soon others will realize that ‘YOU’ are ‘PRICELESS’
The author can be reached at kalyan.hariharan@gmail.com
Good to Great Companies
22 Apr 2011 Leave a Comment
in Management Tags: Good to great, Jack Collins
Summarized version of the book ‘Good to Great’ by Jack Collins
This book attempts to find out answers to the questions about how good companies might become great companies. This study was based on the performance of the companies in the stock market during the period from 1965 to 1995. These companies have returned more than 3 times to the stock market at least for 15 years. Filtering was done to eliminate the flash in the pan companies and ensured that the companies outperformed the respective industry growth. 11 companies matched these criteria and Jack Collins identified 8 factors as contributors for the achievement of these companies.
The companies identified are
1. Abbot Laboratories
2. Circuit cities
3. Fannie Mae
4. Gillette
5. Kimberly Clark
6. Kroger
7. Nucor
8. Philip Morris
9. Pitney Bowes
10. Walgreen
11. Wells Fargo
Key findings are
1. These companies were headed by what Jack Collins calls as “Level 5 Leaders”. These leaders are very humble at personal level but they have a great passion and drive to succeed. They have a strong will and commitment to drive their organization to the top.
2. These good to great leaders select the right people into their organization during the transition. This is done before they decide what is to be done. It is ensured that they select the right persons and they are prepared to wait for the right candidate. If you have the right people you need not motivate them, they will get motivated on their own. These companies are tough working places because of the high quality and hardworking mind set. The team members had a good sense of work life balance. A council of 5-12 people will help the CEO to get insight into the organization.
3. These leaders do not ignore reality and are willing to confront the brutal facts, which are relevant to their market. They collect the accurate information to ensure good decisions. Honesty is valued and healthy debate is encouraged. When results go wrong the issues and causes are analyzed and corrective action taken rather than blaming the decision makers or those who execute.
4. The “Hedgehog concept” means having a simple, extremely clear concept of what their business is. The hedgehog concept refers to a parable of a hedgehog and a fox where the fox knows many things but the hedgehog knows one big thing. Hedgehogs build good to great companies.
5. The business is like a three interlocking circles, which represent what you are passionate about, what you can make money at, and what can you be the best at. The best of these three concepts will bring in success.
6. These organizations create a culture of self-discipline. At the same time the employees are given freedom to act within the defined system. One approach to discipline is to have a “stop doing” list which contains activities which are not central to your business
7. Technology plays a major role to accelerate the change if it is executed well. But technology alone cannot change a company. It is not a differentiator but it enhances great companies.
8. The organization is like a flywheel and pushing the organization into one direction creates a momentum slowly but constantly. As it gains momentum the organization overcomes all obstacles.
The Leadership secrets of Collin Powell
14 Feb 2011 1 Comment
in Management Tags: Collin Powell
Colin Powell was born in Harlem to immigrant parents. He rose through the ranks of the U.S. military to become chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a steel-willed Desert Storm hero, and on to become Secretary of State.
Powell’s 18 leadership principles along with an explanation of how they apply to business, were the subject of an article in the December 1996 issue of Management Review by Oren Harari, a professor of management at the McLaren Graduate School of Business, University of San Francisco. Harari then expanded the primer into the current best seller, The Leadership Secrets of Colin Powell, published by McGraw-Hill, 2002.
Lesson 1
Being responsible sometimes means pissing people off.
Good leadership involves responsibility to the welfare of the group, which means that some people will get angry at your actions and decisions. It’s inevitable if you’re honorable. Trying to get everyone to like you is a sign of mediocrity: You’ll avoid the tough decisions, you’ll avoid confronting the people who need to be confronted, and you’ll avoid offering differential rewards based on differential performance because some people might get upset.
Ironically, by procrastinating on the difficult choices, by trying not to get anyone mad, and by treating everyone equally “nicely” regardless of their contributions, you’ll simply ensure that the only people you’ll wind up angering are the most creative and productive people in the organization.
Lesson 2
The day soldiers stop bringing you their problems is the day you have stopped leading them. They have either lost confidence that you can help them or concluded that you do not care. Either case is a failure of leadership.
If this were a litmus test, the majority of CEO’s would fail. One, they build so many barriers to upward communication that the very idea of someone lower in the hierarchy looking up to the leader for help is ludicrous. Two, the corporate culture they foster often defines asking for help as weakness or failure, so people cover up their gaps, and the organization suffers accordingly. Real leaders make themselves accessible and available. They show concern for the efforts and challenges faced by underlings-even as they demand high standards. Accordingly, they are more likely to create an environment where problem analysis replaces blame.
Lesson 3
Don’t be buffaloed by experts and elites. Experts often possess more data than judgment. Elites can become so inbred that they produce hemophiliacs who bleed to death as soon as they are nicked by the real world.
Small companies and startups don’t have the time for analytically detached experts. They don’t have the money to subsidize lofty elites, either. The president answers the phone and drives the truck when necessary; everyone on the payroll visibly produces and contributes to bottom-line results or they’re history. But as companies get bigger, they often forget who “brung them to the dance”: things like all-hands involvement, egalitarianism, informality, market intimacy, daring, risk, speed, agility. Policies that emanate from ivory towers often have an adverse impact on the people out in the field who are fighting the wars or bringing in the revenues. Real leaders are vigilant and combative in the face of these trends.
Lesson 4
Don’t be afraid to challenge the pros, even in their own backyard.
Learn from the pros, observe them, seek them out as mentors and partners. But remember that even the pros may have leveled out in terms of their learning and skills. Sometimes even the pros can become complacent and lazy. Leadership does not emerge from blind obedience to anyone. Xerox’s Barry Rand was right on target when he warned his people that if you have a yes man working for you, one of you is redundant. Good leadership encourages everyone’s evolution.
Lesson 5
Never neglect details. When everyone’s mind is dulled or distracted the leader must be doubly vigilant.
Strategy equals execution. All the great ideas and visions in the world are worthless if they can’t be implemented rapidly and efficiently. Good leaders delegate and empower others liberally, but they pay attention to details, every day. (Think about supreme athletic coaches like Jimmy Johnson, Pat Riley and Tony La Russa). Bad ones, even those who fancy themselves as progressive “visionaries” think they’re somehow “above” operational details. Paradoxically, good leaders understand something else: An obsessive routine in carrying out the details begets conformity and complacency, which in turn dulls everyone’s mind. That is why even as they pay attention to details, they continually encourage people to challenge the process. They implicitly understand the sentiment of CEO leaders like Quad Graphic’s Harry Quadracchi, Oticon’s Lars Kolind and the late Bill McGowan of MCI, who all independently asserted that the job of a leader is not to be the chief organizer, but the chief disorganizer.
Lesson 6
You don’t know what you can get away with until you try.
You know the expression “it’s easier to get forgiveness than permission?” Well, it’s true. Good leaders don’t wait for official blessing to try things out. They’re prudent, not reckless. But they also realize a fact of life in most organizations: If you ask enough people for permission, you’ll inevitably come up against someone who believes his job is to say “no.” So the moral is, don’t ask. I’m serious. In my own research with colleague Linda Mukai, we found that less effective middle managers endorsed the sentiment, “If I haven’t explicitly been told ‘yes,’ I can’t do it,” whereas the good ones believed “If I haven’t explicitly been told ‘no,’ I can.” There’s a world of difference between these two points of view.
Lesson 7
Keep looking below surface appearances. Don’t shrink from doing so (just) because you might not like what you find.
“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” is the slogan of the complacent, the arrogant or the scared. It’s an excuse for inaction, a call to non-arms. It’s a mindset that assumes (or hopes) that today’s realities will continue tomorrow in a tidy, linear and predictable fashion. Pure fantasy. In this sort of culture, you won’t find people who proactively take steps to solve problems as they emerge. Here’s a little tip: Don’t invest in these companies.
Lesson 8
Organization doesn’t really accomplish anything. Plans don’t accomplish anything, either. Theories of management don’t much matter. Endeavors succeed or fail because of the people involved. Only by attracting the best people will you accomplish great deeds.
In a brain-based economy, your best assets are people. We’ve heard this expression so often that it’s become trite. But how many leaders really “walk the talk” with this stuff? Too often, people are assumed to be empty chess pieces to be moved around by grand viziers, which may explain why so many top managers immerse their calendar time in deal making, restructuring and the latest management fad. How many immerse themselves in the goal of creating an environment where the best, the brightest, the most creative are attracted, retained and most importantly, unleashed?
Lesson 9
Organization charts and fancy titles count for next to nothing.
Organization charts are frozen, anachronistic photos in a workplace that ought to be as dynamic as the external environment around you. If people really followed organization charts, companies would collapse. In well-run organizations, titles are also pretty meaningless. At best, they advertise some authority an official status conferring the ability to give orders and induce obedience. But titles mean little in terms of real power, which is the capacity to influence and inspire. Have you ever noticed that people will personally commit to certain individuals who on paper (or on the org chart) possess little authority but instead possess pizzazz, drive, expertise and genuine caring for teammates and products? On the flip side, nonleaders in management may be formally anointed with all the perks and frills associated with high positions, but they have little influence on others, apart from their ability to extract minimal compliance to minimal standards.
Lesson 10
Never let your ego get so close to your position that when your position goes, your ego goes with it.
Too often, change is stifled by people who cling to familiar turfs and job descriptions. One reason that even large organizations wither is that managers won’t challenge old, comfortable ways of doing things. But real leaders understand that, nowadays, every one of our jobs is becoming obsolete. The proper response is to obsolete our activities before someone else does. Effective leaders create a climate where peoples worth is determined by their willingness to learn new skills and grab new responsibilities, thus perpetually reinventing their jobs. The most important question in performance evaluation becomes not, “How well did you perform your job since the last time we met?” but, “How much did you change it?”
Lesson 11
Fit no stereotypes. Don’t chase the latest management fads. The situation dictates which approach best accomplishes the team’s mission.
Flitting from fad to fad creates team confusion, reduces the leader’s credibility and drains organizational coffers. Blindly following a particular fad generates rigidity in thought and action. Sometimes speed to market is more important than total quality. Sometimes, an unapologetic directive is more appropriate than participatory discussion. To quote Powell, some situations require the leader to hover closely; others require long, loose leashes. Leaders honor their core values, but they are flexible in how they execute them. They understand that management techniques are not magic mantras but simply tools to be reached for at the right times.
Lesson 12
Perpetual optimism is a force multiplier.
The ripple effect of a leader’s enthusiasm and optimism is awesome. So is the impact of cynicism and pessimism. Leaders who whine and blame engender those same behaviors among their colleagues. I am not talking about stoically accepting organizational stupidity and performance incompetence with a “what, me worry?” smile. I am talking about a gung ho attitude that says “we can change things here, we can achieve awesome goals, we can be the best.” Spare me the grim litany of the “realist”; give me the unrealistic aspirations of the optimist any day.
Lesson 13
Powell’s Rules for Picking People: Look for intelligence and judgment and, most critically, a capacity to anticipate, to see around corners. Also look for loyalty, integrity, a high energy drive, a balanced ego and the drive to get things done.
How often do our recruitment and hiring processes tap into these attributes? More often than not, we ignore them in favor of length of resume, degrees and prior titles. A string of job descriptions a recruit held yesterday seem to be more important than who one is today, what she can contribute tomorrow or how well his values mesh with those of the organization. You can train a bright, willing novice in the fundamentals of your business fairly readily, but it’s a lot harder to train someone to have integrity, judgment, energy, balance and the drive to get things done. Good leaders stack the deck in their favor right in the recruitment phase.
Lesson 14
(Borrowed by Powell from Michael Korda): Great leaders are almost always great simplifiers, who can cut through argument, debate and doubt, to offer a solution everybody can understand.
Effective leaders understand the KISS principle, or Keep It Simple, Stupid. They articulate vivid, overarching goals and values, which they use to drive daily behaviors and choices among competing alternatives. Their visions and priorities are lean and compelling, not cluttered and buzzword-laden. Their decisions are crisp and clear, not tentative and ambiguous. They convey an unwavering firmness and consistency in their actions, aligned with the picture of the future they paint. The result? Clarity of purpose, credibility of leadership, and integrity in organization.
Lesson 15
Part I: Use the formula P=40 to 70, in which P stands for the probability of success and the numbers indicate the percentage of information acquired.
Part II: Once the information is in the 40 to 70 range, go with your gut.
Powell’s advice is don’t take action if you have only enough information to give you less than a 40 percent chance of being right, but don’t wait until you have enough facts to be 100 percent sure, because by then it is almost always too late. His instinct is right: Today, excessive delays in the name of information-gathering breeds “analysis paralysis.” Procrastination in the name of reducing risk actually increases risk.
Lesson 16
The commander in the field is always right and the rear echelon is wrong, unless proved otherwise.
Too often, the reverse defines corporate culture. This is one of the main reasons why leaders like Ken Iverson of Nucor Steel, Percy Barnevik of Asea Brown Boveri, and Richard Branson of Virgin have kept their corporate staffs to a bare-bones minimum. (And I do mean minimum-how about fewer than 100 central corporate staffers for global $30 billion plus ABB? Or around 25 and 3 for multi-billion Nucor and Virgin, respectively?) Shift the power and the financial accountability to the folks who are bringing in the beans, not the ones who are counting or analyzing them.
Lesson 17
Have fun in your command. Don’t always run at a breakneck pace. Take leave when you’ve earned it: Spend time with your families. Corollary: Surround yourself with people who take their work seriously, but not themselves, those who work hard and play hard.
Herb Kelleher of Southwest Air and Anita Roddick of The Body Shop would agree: Seek people who have some balance in their lives, who are fun to hang out with, who like to laugh (at themselves, too) and who have some non-job priorities which they approach with the same passion that they do their work. Spare me the grim workaholic or the pompous pretentious “professional;” I’ll help them find jobs with my competitor.
Lesson 18
Command is lonely.
Harry Truman was right. Whether you’re a CEO or the temporary head of a project team, the buck stops here. You can encourage participative management and bottom-up employee involvement but ultimately, the essence of leadership is the willingness to make the tough, unambiguous choices that will have an impact on the fate of the organization. I’ve seen too many non-leaders flinch from this responsibility. Even as you create an informal, open, collaborative corporate culture, prepare to be lonely.
“Leadership is the art of accomplishing more than the science of management says is possible.”
How to deal with criticism – Tim Ferriss
13 Feb 2011 Leave a Comment
in Management Tags: four hour work week, how to face criticism, Tim Ferriss
Dealing with negativity can be tough. Tim Ferriss, the author of The Four Hour Work Week, tells you how to learn to love haters. He offers you advice on how to deal with negative feedback. Ferriss takes the concept a step further with advice on how to contend with — and benefit from — criticism across all platforms. Following are his seven principles for dealing with criticism.
1. It doesn’t matter how many people don’t get it. What matters is how many people do.
2. 10% of people will find a way to take anything personally. Expect it.
3. “Trying to get everyone to like you is a sign of mediocrity.” (Colin Powell)
4. “If you are really effective at what you do, 95% of the things said about you will be negative.” (Scott Boras)
5. “If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid.” (Epictetus)
6. “Living well is the best revenge.” (George Herbert)
7. Keep calm and carry on.
Top 10 traits of highly successful people
07 Jan 2011 Leave a Comment
in Management Tags: secrets of success, traits of successful people
1. They work hard
Yes, they play hard too. They get up early or go to bed very late, they rarely complain, they expect performance from others, but they expect extraordinary performance from themselves. Repeated, high level success starts with a recoginition that hard work pays off.
2. They are incredibly curious and eager to learn
They study, ask questions and read – constantly. An interesting point, however while most of them did well in school, the difference is that they apply or take advantage of what they learn. Repeated success is not about memorizing facts. its about being able to take information and create, build, or apply it in new and important ways. Successful people want to learn everything about everything.
3. They network
They know lot of people and they know lots of different kinds of people. They listen to friends, neighbours, co-workers and bartenders. They dont have to be “the life of the party”. infact many are quiet, and even shy, but they value people and they value relationships. Successful people have a rolodex full of people who value their friendship and return their calls.
4. They work on themselves and never quit
While the “over night wonders” become arrogant and quickly disappear, really successful people work on their personlity, their leadership skills, management skills, and every other detail of life. When a relationship or business deal goes sour, they assume they can learn from it and they expect to do better next time. Successful people dont tolerate flaws; they fix them.
5. They are extraordinarily creative
They go around asking “why not?”. They see new combinations, new possibilities, new opportunities and challenges where others see problems or limitations. They wake up in the middle of the night yelling “I have got it”. They ask for advice, try things out, consult experts and amateurs, always looking for a better, faster, cheaper solution.
6. They are self reliant and take responsibility
Incredibly successful people dont worry about blame, and they dont waste time complaining. They make decisions and move on. Sometimes they are criticised for taking this to extremes – Jimmy carter carried his own brief case and a president ‘should not do that’. Extremely successful people take the initiative and accept the responsibilities of success.
7. They are usually relaxed and keep their perspective
Even in time of stress or turmoil, highly successful people keep their balance, they know the value of timing, humor and patience. They rarely panic or make decisions on impulse. Unusually successful people breath easily, ask the right questions, and make sound decisions, even in a crisis.
8. Extremely successful people live in the present moment
They know that ‘now’ is the only time they can control. They have a ‘gift’ for looking people in the eye, listening to what is being said, enjoying a meal or fine wine, music or playing with a child. They never seem rushed, and they get a lot done. They take full advantage of each day. Successful people dont waste time, they use it.
9. They look over the horizon to see the future
They observe trends, notice changes, see shift, and hear the nuances that others miss. A basketball player wearing Nikes is trivial, the neighbour kid wearing them is interesting, your own teanager demanding them is an investement opportunity. Extremely successful people live in the present, with one eye on the future.
10. Repeatedly successful people respond instantly
When an investment is not working out, they sell. When they see an opportunity, they make the call. If an important relationship is cooling down, they take time to renew it. When technology or a new competitor or a change in the economic situation requires an adjustment, they are the first and quickest to respond.


