Friday, December 28, 2007

From industrial relations to human resources, GCPL has tried hard, and is still making efforts...

If you look at the HR structure at that time, we had people whose basic qualification was in IR, who were experienced in IR and labour laws and that’s the way we used to work. I think as a progressive group, what Godrej has done much before other organizations have, is to have chalked out plans and define where we wanted to see ourselves in the coming future. This was coupled with a propagation of the core values...”

In this regard, Godrej conducted an exercise in 1995, which according to Mitra –“Defined the way our core values would be. The process that we used was termed a large scale interactive process where every employee was made part of the decision-making process.” Quiz him on the changes that he has witnessed after the accomplishment of the exercise, and Sumit reveals, “If you look at it (HR) today, the functions have changed. Today, the HR team would hardly have anyone really majoring only in labour laws or IR. Today we have a much leaner structure with just about four to five persons and all of them are MBAs in HR.”
For Complete IIPM Article, Click here

Source: IIPM Editorial, 2006
An IIPM and Management Guru Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri's Initiative

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

New machines, waiting in wings

The Defence Minister, A. K. Anthony, has finally given a thumps-up to augment the fast-depleting combat readiness of the Indian Air force (IAF). In a few days, India is expected to set into motion the procurement process for the purchase of 126 multi-role combat aircraft (MRCA) from the international market. The floating of this biggest ever global tender for arms procurement by India is necessitated by two reasons. Firstly, the indigenous aircraft development programme has simply been unable to attain cruising heights (The much touted Light Combat Aircraft project continues to move at a snail’s pace, due to the absence of a quality engine and of course, a general lack of aviation R&D expertise in the country). Secondly, the aging and accident- prone fleet of MIG 21s is also a major cause of concern for the security establishment. The Indian government has sanctioned 45 squadrons for the IAF to maintain. However, the current situation is so dismal that the paucity of hardware has caused the squadron strengths to come down from a peak of 39 to 30. If this situation continues, the day is not far, when the IAF may be operating only about 25 squadrons, with ageing machines incapable of meeting the security threats facing the country.
For Complete IIPM Article, Click here

Source: IIPM Editorial, 2006

An IIPM and Management Guru Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri's Initiative

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Why India has no answer to the Pakistan issue?

But with that dream going sour, like the Kashmir dream, a desperate Pakistan has let loose all its fangs in all corners of India. Now that it finds it difficult to continue with the mayhem in Kashmir, given the near huge deployment of CRPF, BSF and army, it is paying back the defeat of 1971 by making Bangladesh its new pawn. In the recent blasts in Malegaon and in Mecca Masjid in Hyderabad, there has been clear evidence of the involvement of the Bangladesh based radical Islamic group HUJI. In the same league, there is enough evidence to believe that Naxalites and ULFA, who otherwise are diagrammatically opposite the Islamic ISI in terms of ideology, are getting much monetary and technical support from across the border.
For Complete IIPM Article, Click here

Source: IIPM Editorial, 2006

An IIPM and Management Guru Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri's Initiative