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S.N. Chary, Independent Director, Bharat Earth Movers Limited, Bangalore, INDIA
ABSTRACT
A business biographical study was conducted by interviewing seven highly successful businesspersons of
India. A main objective was to investigate the aspects of leadership exhibited by these extraordinary
businesspersons. Additional biographical information was collected through available literature and
company information. The businesspersons involved were the IT czars Narayana Murthy Chairman of
Infosys Technologies, Azim Premji Chairman of Wipro Corporation , Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw the lady
pioneering Bio-technology industry in the country, Deepak Parekh Chairman of HDFC and who pioneered
the concept of housing finance in a constrained economy, Venu Srinivasan Chairman of the TVS Motors
whose quest for quality got him the Deming Prize, Mukesh Ambani Chairman of India’s biggest
petrochemical and petroleum industrial empire Reliance Industries and Verghese Kurien the Chairman of
the National Dairy Development Board who was the architect of the Operation Milk Flood in India
empowering millions of illiterate rural women.
It was striking to find that while each of these businesspersons was in a different field, they showed
certain common aspects to leadership. The most striking aspect has been the ‘transcendental’ nature of
their approach to leading the business. They were so committed to their goals that they transcended the
boundaries of self and their business companies, encouraging a second line of leadership within and/or
outside their organizations. Commitment to the final goal or task emerged as a very important factor of
leadership. The leaders exhibited a high Clarity of the vision of the goal/task. The leadership ‘style’ was
not a significant factor being only the intermediate step that would be manifested as per the needs of the
task at hand. Leadership phenomenon could also not be separated from the task at hand, since it was the
task that generated the high commitment level resulting in high leadership effectiveness.
1. INTRODUCTION
Leadership is a fascinating subject and various theories have been proposed to explain the reasons for
the effectiveness of the leaders. The earlier theories proposed various traits or characteristics of the
leader as responsible for the effectiveness. The later work revolved around the ‘style’ of functioning of the
leader that gives rise to the effectiveness. In general, two kinds of styles were perceived to operate: one
where the leader is authoritarian and another where he is relationship oriented. Thus, the leader was
thought to operate in predominantly one style or the other. In these theories there is permanency about
the leader’s predominant style of operation. George Washington and Napoleon Bonaparte operated in a
certain way while Mother Theresa operated in another way. Thus, while General Patton’s leadership is
put in one mould, the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi is put in another mould.
Narayana Murthy is credited to have started the IT industry revolution in India. He started Infosys
Technologies in one bedroom of his two bedroom apartment in 1981 with a capital of Rs. 10000 (less
than one thousand US dollars). Today, the company has multi-billion dollar sales turnover. More
importantly, when very few in India saw any potential in the computer software business, he doggedly
Azim Premji took over the reins of WIPRO at the young age of 21 and turned the company from a very
modest manufacturer of vegetable oil products to an Indian giant in computer hardware and software
among other businesses. Today, Premji is counted amongst the world’s richest persons.
Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw is the quintessential pioneer amongst Indian businesspersons. She led the
biotechnology business revolution in India from the forefront. She chose to do business in a new field
starting out from a garage in her house in Bangalore in 1983. In a country where R&D scenario on an
industrial level was very dull, she started a contract research organization. Today, her Biocon India is a
top biotechnology firm in India and she heads the Biotechnology Vision Group.
Deepak S. Parekh has been silently leading a financial services revolution in India. He passionately
followed the principle of customer service in HDFC during an era when customer service and service
industry itself was a rarity in India. He built HDFC to the present heights from a fledgling company in 1977
when he joined it.
Venu Srinivasan’s successful quest for ‘quality’ earmarks him as an exemplary achiever. He is in the
manufacture of ‘old economy’ products such as motorbikes, auto-components and other engineering
goods. But his approach to the manufacture is new, winning laurels world-wide for the quality of his group
of companies’ manufactured products. His is the rare Asian company outside of Japan that has won the
prestigious Deming award.
Mukesh Ambani presides over a huge industrial empire that he built along with his father and younger
brother, starting almost from nothing. Reliance Industries, of which he is the Chairman, is one of the
biggest industrial groups in India by way of the capital invested. He has the rare ability to get the industrial
projects – in fact, mammoth projects - implemented in record time. The modern petroleum refinery at
Jamnagar with an investment of nearly US $ 5 billion and representing 29 per cent of the total refining
capacity in India was built in 36 months flat and commissioned in the next 60 days.
Verghese Kurien is a multi-faceted personality. As a businessman, he has been the Chairman of National
Dairy Development Board (NDDB) since its inception in 1965 and the Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing
Federation (GCMMF) highly popular by its brand name AMUL. After the Green Revolution in India - of the
staple food grains production, it is Kurien’s White Revolution that is highly acclaimed. He has
revolutionized dairying and the concept of village women’s entrepreneurship in India.
Some of the excerpts of the interviews have appeared in a business biographical work (Chary, 2002).
There are certain aspects that are common among these legendary business leaders.
Deepak Parekh saw a vision of empowering the middle class and realizing their dreams of a house
through housing loans which was an unknown concept in India a quarter of a century ago when he took
charge of a fledgling company. The Indian government, with its socialistic moorings, did not approve of
banks lending money for buying property. Today, Deepak’s HDFC is listed on New York Stock Exchange.
Venu Srinivasan of TVS Group brought laurels for his company and Indian business worldwide when his
company won the most coveted Deming Prize for Quality a few years ago. In a way, he set quality
standards for the Indian industry. Verghese Kurien is the originator of the ‘Operation Milk Flood’ in India.
He popularized the concept of milk cooperatives starting with the Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing
Federation of which he was the founder Chairman. He taught as to how good business and social cause
can be combined together with large benefits to both the society and the business firm. His milk dairy at
Anand, a small town in India, and Kurien are legendary. He saw opportunities to empower the villagers of
India – particularly the illiterate, economically backward and socially shackled women of Indian villages –
through business in dairying. He knew the hurdles along the way too, and made preparations for them by
rallying popular support.
It is the sensitivity and the superior vision that distinguished these highly effective leaders. They had a
very creative mind that could visualize the coming opportunities. They did not wait for the opportunities to
mature and thus materialize. They seized these at the very nascent level. They could sense the
undercurrent of their times and the times ahead; at a broad level they could visualize as to what could
take place and what could be done. It is not that they saw the things in detail. That may not be important
for these visionaries. As Deepak Parekh says, “A leader should be a scenario painter, more than a
specific planner. He should be a problem predictor, more than a problem-solver.” It is not just the ‘seeing
woods and not the trees’ syndrome. What they see is a whole lot of new wood which most others fail to
see. They get a sense of the environment around them like no one else does and based on that sense
they paint a scenario.
Ambanis realized that in India the demand was constrained by the lack of supply and if the supply was
increased, the demand would automatically follow. Demand and supply were not two separate curves,
independent of each other, as is usually assumed. Had the Ambanis followed any of the usual forecasting
models to estimate the demand, they would not have invested the way they did.
Similarly, it takes a superior vision of Kurien to perceive the potential in the poor village women. They
neither have the capital, nor the disposable income. They neither have the modern skills nor the
technology. They do not have education. Most are illiterate. Conventional business theories would never
have bothered about them. What they have is the eagerness to better the condition of themselves and
their children. Only a leader like Kurien could sense that warehouse of potential.
Effective leaders have the ability to see logic much below the superficial, beyond the apparent. Leaders in
different domains have exhibited this characteristic. Abraham Lincoln could sense that the time had come
to liberate the energies of the black people. Even before the others could see, he could perceive the
changes to come in the future and the action that was essential in the present. At a time when no one
saw the huge reservoir of strength that the freedom movement could have from the illiterate village folk of
India, Mahatma Gandhi could see that potential clearly. Therefore instead of spending time in scholarly
debates and intellectual sessions on freeing India from the British – as the others did in the Indian
National Congress conventions generally held in the metropolitan cities - he set forth touring the entire
length and breadth of India and talking to the poor from the villages and city slums.
Narayana Murthy’s favourite quote is, ‘A good leader makes the impossible possible’. Murthy had his task
cut out, by himself, right from the beginning when he was a nobody. Venu Srinivasan is charged about
‘quality’ in the goods and services his companies provide. He speaks about ‘quality’ as a mission and has
worked towards it incessantly from the time he took reins of the business two decades ago. One has to
note this in the milieu in which the Indian industry has been for several decades – keeping the foreign
competition out and operating with licenses for running industries. It had been virtually a seller’s market
for the Indian industries. Therefore, quality never had much importance.
These legendary business leaders wanted to fulfill a task that was very different from the ordinary
considerations of profit and money. The latter was only a subsidiary goal. For instance, Kiran says, ‘I may
be worth millions on a piece of paper. That does not mean anything to me. I am so happy that I have
created this organization with such good people. That’s the pleasure I get. It’s not the money I get.’
Similarly, for Premji it is a process of nation-building that has been his mission. He says, ‘How do you use
at least a part of the wealth to help in the process of nation building? Because, the wealth has been
created in this country and so the country has the first claim on it’. Mukesh Ambani is obsessed with
‘world class’ industry and world class project execution. He keeps proving that ‘Reliance can do it. India
can do it’. For Kurien it is the poor woman farmer behind the dairy operation that is as important as the
customer. Emancipation of the illiterate and impoverished rural women folk is the mission behind his
AMUL dairy industry. Deepak Parekh has the mission of empowering the middle class people. He is
offering more and more services to them and that is what makes him really happy. When one speaks to
him he sounds like a messiah of the middle classes.
Commitment seems to be the most important factor in leader effectiveness. Whether it is Mother Theresa
or Adolph Hitler, they exhibit a common characteristic – that of a very high level of commitment to their
goal. To them that goal is their ‘mission’. To the Mother helping the poor, destitute, terminally ill and dying
people die a dignified death was a ‘mission’. To Hitler, ‘cleansing’ Deutschland and redeeming the honour
of the land was a ‘mission’. It must be stated again that leadership should not be seen in ‘good’ and ‘bad’
terms; similarly, ‘mission’ need not always be ‘holy’ as is popularly assumed. An extraordinary level of
commitment characterizes an extraordinary leader.
Commitment is the force or the flow of energy that comes through inspiration, through a resolve to getting
the job done – no matter what. It manifests in many ways: as drive, as steadfastness and courage against
stiff opposition, as tolerance and openness to various views and issues regarding the task and as
flexibility of approach to deal with various and varying aspects, alignments, orientations and scenarios
regarding the task over a period of time. The essence of Commitment is the force of the resolve to getting
the task done ‘come what may’. Murthy stuck it out with his Infosys Technologies through the thick and
the thin. During 1990 when even after several years of existence the business was not yielding results to
their satisfaction, his partners thought of selling the company. But, Murthy differed and offered to buy his
partners out. He held on and the rest is history.
The leader’s commitment is with respect to the mission and its component tasks. With a different ‘mission’
and/or task, the very same ‘leader’ may not exhibit the same level of enthusiasm as earlier. That is the
reason why someone very successful in one area of endeavor may not be successful in other area. If a
particular task does not ‘call’ the person, he may show little commitment towards that task. He would not
be a successful leader in that area. For instance by his own admission, Premji has no interest in politics
and holding a high office in government.
The clarity is regarding the final goal and not so much regarding the methodology or the package of
actions to achieve the goal. The goal and the process at any point should be clear but the entire road
map need not be. Because, the road map might change; the leader may decide to take a different road
depending upon the environment and other circumstances. However, the final goal or task to be achieved
should be clear in his mind. What that goal means and what its ramifications are should be clear. In fact,
he is the initiator, narrator and painter of the goal. The scenario that the leader paints should provide
sufficient guidance to the people who would follow him.
An effective leader is, therefore, one who has a high level of commitment towards the task at hand and
who also has a clear vision of the task/goal to be achieved. Commitment and Clarity of vision are the two
vital factors, the former being the more dominant factor. Leader effectiveness can be described based on
these two factors.
It has to be understood that the leader operates with the environment around him. That includes the
people other than him. We need not term them as ‘subordinates’ or even as ‘followers’. High levels of the
factors of commitment and clarity of vision can result in a better orientation of these ‘other’ people. The
absolute levels of orientation would depend upon the already existing orientation of these people. That is
why we have instances where some visionaries are said to have been ‘much ahead of their times’.
It appears that the highly effective business leaders believe that the leader and his organization have to
be like a large banyan tree - sending hundreds of offshoots that also take root and thrive. They transcend
the narrow concerns about themselves and their organization. They think, ‘Let every one of them thrive
and grow big’. They cross the distinctions of ‘them’ and ‘us’. Their mission overrides everything else.
‘Profitability is important, but as a sub-set of a larger goal’, says Venu Srinivasan. There is not too much
of a difference between these business leaders and the reformers who work for a social cause.
Venu’s statement sums it all up very well. He says, ‘Every great leader has had a firm belief in a force or
power greater than himself’. For him, it appears, the quest for quality is a way to get closer to that higher
force.
Such thinking can offer tremendous freedom to the leader. A free unbound mind can think of several
creative ways of achieving the mission. The effectiveness of the leader would, therefore, further increase.
A highly committed leadership takes the form of transcendental leadership. The leader ceases to see the
distinction between the ‘leader’ and the ‘led’ in terms of their potential. The distinction between the
ordinary and the extra-ordinary gets more and more blurred. The highly effective leader is a
transcendental leader who perceives the extra-ordinary in the ordinary. The ‘Long March’ of Mao Zedong,
the fourteen years of enduring the bitter war in Viet Nam, the resilience of the Jewish community in Israel
would not have been possible if the respective leaders had a personal agenda behind it all. Unlike his
predecessors in the Congress party, Mahatma Gandhi had very little personal agenda. He gave his one
hundred per cent to the cause of the real freedom – economic, social and political - of the Indian masses.
Signifying his relinquishing his personal goals – however small – he gave up wearing even a shirt; a loin
cloth was his only garment. It is no wonder that Gandhi became a leader in India unequalled in his
effectiveness and durability.
Many of the business leaders quoted above have, in a small measure, imbibed this concept. Whether it is
Murthy, Premji, Venu, Deepak, Kiran or Kurien, they all exhibit this quality of ‘simplicity’ i.e. detachment of
the personal needs. Their dress is simple. Until just four years ago, Murthy lived in three-bedroom
apartment in a middle class locality of Bangalore. He used to send his son to school in a shared auto-
rickshaw. Premji does not have a personal parking slot for himself at the office. Venu, Deepak, Kiran and
Kurien are simple folk in terms of their needs, their walk and talk.
Would Mahatma Gandhi have become a phenomenally effective leader had the task been different?
Perhaps not. He had failed miserably in his legal practice in India despite acquiring the best of legal
qualifications in those days, the Bar-at-Law from England. It did not simply call for his commitment. It was
a frustrated lawyer Gandhi who went in search of a job in South Africa where he stumbled upon his
mission. Would Deepak have become a business leader of this level had he continued in his job as a
chartered accountant? Would Kiran have achieved the same heights of effectiveness had she not faced
the gender discrimination and instead got a job as a brewery master in one of the breweries? After all,
she had trained in Australia as a brew master. The point is this: Leader effectiveness has much to do with
the task at hand, one’s commitment level towards that task and the clarity of vision regarding that task.
The analysis and findings from the present leadership study would be quite useful in the incubation of
entrepreneurs, in the selection of business leaders and managers, and in the design of programs for
organizational effectiveness. Transcendental nature of leadership, the task at hand and the two important
factors of commitment and clarity with respect to the task at hand may be applied in situations of business
start-up and project implementation. Transcendental leadership could be a useful tool for organizational
renewal and in Human Resources selection, recruitment and development.
AUTHOR PROFILE
Prof. S.N. Chary, currently a Director on the Board of Bharat Earth Movers Limited, Bangalore, India
obtained his MBA at University of Rhode Island in 1972 and his MS in Engineering at the same university
in 1971. He was a professor at Indian Institute of Management Bangalore for over 25 years and was the
Director of Kirloskar Institute of Advanced Management Studies. He has led a number of nationally
important management consulting projects and is an author of several books.