Thursday, June 30, 2022

So long...

I have worked for several organizations, but this is the first time I am getting a formal farewell.
So, it seems kind of final and ‘this is it’ kind of feeling. But that is what life is all about, ends and new beginnings.

I waddled into education accidentally. Sometimes in 2005, we were invited at the Japanese Consulate. I started feeling unwell and asked my wife to drive us home. Halfway through, I told her to take me to the hospital. The hospital bed is a great equalizer. It helps you realize very quickly who you are.

As I lay there, I had an opportunity to think about lot of things. I had a very well-paid job – among the top in the industry, a fancy car a good house and my family was doing well. But something was missing. I was living my life quarter by quarter.

So, within a few months of getting out of hospital, I quit my job. I didn’t have a clue as to what I would do next but one thing I was sure of – I will stop the quarter numbers from defining my life.

As the industry got to know about my quitting, I started getting request from people to help them sort out some of their problems. One of the first was Hindustan Lever. The promised consulting engagement of one month extended to eighteen months. More such consulting assignments followed.

One day I met a friend and during our chat he mentioned that he occasionally taught in a business school. I found this idea very interesting and after a few phone calls, landed a teaching assignment. This was 2007. And I had finally found that missing piece.

When I started teaching, my goal was to impact the life of at least one student a year. I would like to believe that I have had some amount of success in this area based on the messages and calls that I keep getting from amongst the 10000 odd students who happened to be in my class sometime or the other. Sometimes I bump into them on flight or in a market. I sometimes cannot recognize some of them or remember their names, but they do.

During the eight years that I spent in my current role as the Director of this Institute, I have received a huge amount of love, respect regard and support from everyone irrespective of their job role. We did lot of things together – our team of staff, faculty, and executives. We were able to scale the numbers, introduce new courses & pedagogy. Bring in new technology and perspectives.

My style of working has largely been participative. Whenever I took a decision, I asked myself three questions – 1) is it good for the staff? 2) is it good for the organization 3) is it good for my internal & external customer. And I believe that either in the short term or in the long, all three questions have to be answered with a yes, otherwise it is not a good decision.

I am grateful to all of you for your prayers especially when both me & my wife were down with covid. I must take this opportunity to thank all of you for being part of my journey. A special thanks go out to Mr. Mark Clive & Joy Benjamin for believing in me, my immediate team – Poonam, Simmi ma’am, Angelina who was there for some time, Maujee, Jiyalal, Vir Bahadur, all the faculty members. My co-directors Mrs. Gupta and Mr. Maccune Mr Ashish Makkar, Mr Vineet Masih and Rajdeep Bhagat, Mr. Milton & his team for keeping us connected and everyone who made life possible. There are two people who are no longer with YMCA but I would like to mention them here – Arun Anthony and Christu John. My thanks goes out to them as well.

Before I end, I would like to share a small story. When Brezhnev, took over from Khrushchev he was handed two envelopes with the instruction to open envelope 1 when the first crisis happened and envelope 2 during the next. When the first crisis happened, he suddenly remembered the envelopes and he opened envelope 1. The simple instruction inside was – ‘blame everything on me’. He did just that and survived the crisis. And when he opened the other envelope during the next crisis, the advice inside was – prepare two envelopes.

I haven’t prepared any envelope because I firmly believe that Dr. Mehra would not need them. He brings with him his years of experience and wisdom to take this organization to the next level. I welcome him and wish him all the very best.

Thank you once again and god bless you.