the indian manager

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    The Indian managers resilience, adaptability, analytical skills, ability to manage complexities and

    stretch the extra hours has caught the worlds attention in recent years. The Indian executives in

    Silicon Valley have done their bit to bring our talent centrestage. Vishal Arora finds out why the world

    is increasingly seeking Indian Managers.

    The 19th century witnessed an export of mainly unskilled workforce from India, followed by an exodus

    of low-skilled workers in the 20th century. Following suit were high-skilled engineers and information

    technology (IT) professionals towards the end of the last century. Most recently, it is Indias managers

    who are heading to greener pastures.

    The recruitment figures of one of Indias top B-schools, the Indian Institute of Management

    Ahmedabad (IIM-A), also reflect this emerging trend. In the institutes final placements of 2007,

    around 30 per cent of the students accepted offers by firms abroad. And a majority of them were

    given jobs in developed economies. While close to 50 per cent were taken by firms in the UK, around

    30 per cent were offered positions by companies in the US. To top it all off, the highest acceptancesranged from $2,25,000 to $3,00,000 per annum. Even the average entry-level salary stood at

    $1,15,300, a rise of around 25 per cent compared to last year.

    As a matter of fact, among the beneficiaries of plum postings being offered are not only IIMs. For

    instance, an MBA student, Nair Shyamkumar Haridas, from the Holy Grace Academy of Management

    Studies in Kerala state bagged a salary of Rs 1 crore from Frontier Airlines, Australia this year,

    reported the Business Line financial daily.

    In addition, this trend is not marked by entry-level positions only. Many are opting for foreign

    positions in their mid careers. For example, Nishant Upadhyay resigned from Citibank in New Delhi toleave for the US to join as a Portfolio Manager in one of the biggest financial trading firm located in

    the West Coast in 2005. I moved to the U.S. as it is the hub of financial activity, especially in my

    specific niche, which is fixed income, he says.

    Vikas Khanna, who accepted an offer to be a Senior Systems Analyst in Unisys in Chicago in North

    America says, In a developed economy, like in the US, there is a better professional work

    environment besides growth opportunities, more exposure to new technologies and a better salary.

    Khanna, who worked in NIIT in New Delhi earlier, adds that a better lifestyle was also a strong reason

    for him to work in the US.

    Niche Areas

    What are the niche areas for Indian managers? Diwakar Nigam, managing director of Newgen

    Software Technologies Ltd., says young managers are being offered various consulting and investment

    banking jobs. In 2006, close to 400 students of IIM-Bangalore were offered jobs in these two sectors.

    And the placement that year witnessed an average international salary touching $90,000.

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    According to a recent survey by AT Kearney, India and China are competing almost neck-to-neck vis-

    -vis the US. The study shows that 59 per cent of the 300 US and European executives polled think

    their competition would come from China and 45 per cent say it would come from India.

    Working in complex and diverse scenarios has given Indian managers more exposure besides making

    them resilient and adaptable. Not only this, they are known for their hard work. According to the

    Grant Thornton International business report in May 2007, Indian senior managers spend 57 hours at

    work every week more than those in the US and China. They work harder to keep up with the

    global competition, remarked the report.

    Its no wonder that when Indian professionals move to developed nations they fare better than even

    the citizens of those nations. For example, according to the US Census Bureau, the Indian median

    family annual income stands at $60,000, as against the national average of $38,885. Besides, it is

    estimated that about one-third of the engineers in Californias Silicon Valley are of Indian descent,

    while over seven per cent of valleys high-tech firms are led by Indian CEOs.

    No Place for Mediocrity

    However, not all Indian managers are perceived as world class, but only the crme de la crme of

    the industry. Says Prof. Guptara: The average Indian manager, for example in a government office,

    is hopeless from a global point of view. But the best Indian commercial and business managers are

    world class. That is because they have drive and creativity combined with real world experience in a

    difficult and unclear environment. So they can do better than most Western managers in such hazy

    and undefined environments, for example in China or Russia or Africa or Latin America.

    A recent study substantiates Guptaras view. According to a survey of over 4,000 firms across the UK,

    continental Europe, the US and Asia by the Centre for Economic Performance, McKinsey & Company

    and Stanford University (conducted in mid-2007), only one in every 50 business establishments in the

    US can be described as very badly managed, but more than one in five firms in India falls in this

    category.

    Hot Destinations

    Nigam of Newgen Soft says Indian managers have been going out for a long time to emerging

    countries of Africa and Middle East. More recently, they have been going to developed economies to

    work in the MNCs (multi-national companies) where they were employed in India. Citibank, Bank of

    America are great examples of this trend. The likes of Vikram Pandit, Rana Talwar and Gurcharan Das

    were great and widely experienced managers, he adds.

    Says Sunaina Shivnani, a Delhi-based consultant at Stanton Chase International, what started as an

    export to mainly the US, and also the UK, is now moving to the South East Asian region countries

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    like Singapore and Thailand. Dubai is also becoming a hot destination for Indian managers. Even

    China is beginning to appear on the export map given that many BPOs are coming up in that country

    now. Managers want China in their resumes, she adds.

    Will the Demand Sustain?

    But, is the demand for Indian managers sustainable? While the reason behind the great demand is the

    outstanding performance of Indian managers in global companies, the major responsibility is to

    ensure that managers from India continue to be considered the best, said NASSCOM (National

    Association of Software and Services Companies) President Kiran Karnik to the MBA Universe portal

    recently. They have to not only maintain the reputation but also enhance it, and for this they need a

    global mindset, he added.

    There are some other shortcomings in the Indian manager, noted IIM-A professor T.V. Rao in his

    working paper. Short temper, open-mindedness, and inability to build juniors are the most frequentlymentioned areas needing improvement. Vision, values, strategic thinking, decision making skills, risk

    taking, innovativeness, ability to learn from mistakes, learning orientation and self renewal efforts,

    and cross cultural sensitivity are other qualities lacking in Indian managers, he said.

    Gain or Loss for India

    Export of good managers is inevitable, thinks Arun Seth of BT India. Talent has no passport as we

    live in an era of distributed intelligence and hence today as the world is getting flat, organisations are

    going where they find the right skill set and capability, he says. And Guptara thinks the export of

    good managers, which is a double-edged thing, will benefit in the long run.

    On the one hand, our best managers get global exposure - they contribute to as well as learn from

    the best in the world and that can't be bad. On the other hand, we don't have the benefit of having

    them at home in our own country! But I guess in a globalising world, the export and import of

    managers (exactly as with the import and export of commodities, products and services), is inevitable

    in the first place and, in the long range, it will be beneficial - even if there are significant short-range

    disadvantages. And we must not forget that India too has been getting good managers from the West

    since the British days (during the British rule in the 19th and 1st half of the 20th century) learning

    from them was certainly one thing that contributed to our producing some of the best managers in the

    world actually at least from the 1930s onwards.

    Besides, many global organisations, which offer global career paths to their managers, see internal

    movements as a retention strategy rather than a loss.

    Says Ajoyendra Mukherjee, VP & Head, Global HR, TCS (Tata Consultancy Services): The middle

    management is an important asset for a knowledge organisation like ours it offers a unique

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    combination of skill and experience. Understanding the aspirations for this segment of the talent pool

    and creating growth opportunities in the organisation that meet their aspirations is the key to the

    success of our retention strategy for our managers.

    We have built global mobility into the career path planning of our employees. International

    assignments, global opportunities and challenging engagements in the forefront of global technologies

    are a key value proposition we offer to TCSers.

    Mukherjee adds that the TCS focus on grooming managers across the organisations network for

    global leadership positions allows them to offer continual opportunity for upward mobility to their

    managers. Ambassador Corps, for example, is a comprehensive learning and development program

    for managers to move into global roles in sales, he adds.

    History of Talent Export

    The export of Indian workforce has its roots in the British taking Indians as indentured labour to

    countries like Fiji, Mauritius, Guyana, Trinidad, Surinam, Malaysia, South Africa, and Sri Lanka in the

    19th century. In the 20th century, after the World War II, Indian labour and professionals in large

    numbers left to meet the demand for workforce in European countries, which had faced damage due

    to the war. Later, a large chunk of low-skilled labour moved to the Middle-East, followed by an export

    of high-skilled professionals, mainly engineers and those in the IT (information technology) sector, in

    developed countries like the US, Canada and Australia. And now, it is the managers who are leaving

    the country.

    It is estimated that today there are over 25 million overseas Indians in 110 countries. According to theMinistry of Overseas Indian Affairs, that there are 851,000 in Canada, 1,500,000 in Saudi Arabia,

    1,200,000 in the UK, and 1,678, 765 in the US.

    Signs of Reverse Brain Drain

    Amid the emerging trend of professionals leaving the country, one can also notice what is termed as

    the reverse brain drain. Says BT Indias Seth: It is noteworthy that there is a reversal of the brain

    drain, where Indians who had moved abroad for better lifestyle, work environment and salaries are

    heading back home as the prospects in Indias booming economy is par excellence.

    Nigam agrees with Seth, saying, Today I see great opportunities in India and the migrating managers

    must consider the India option as well. It may be less paying, but they will reap an enriching

    experience that will be much more meaningful in the long run.