Saturday, September 27, 2008

THE NO-NONSENSE CEO


PRUDENT GLEANINGS FROM SHIKHA SHARMA

As a young girl, Shikha Sharma was never treated as one at home. Maybe, this helped her succeed in a field which used to be a male bastion

Shubham Mukherjee & Shailesh Dobhal

SHE reached the venue of our meeting good 15 minutes ahead of the appointed hour, alone, without the customary corporate hangers-on, a rarity for a busy Indian CEO. But with a disciplined army kid upbringing and a father who would "be unhappy if I came second in the class," Shikha Sharma has never known pampering, at least not the sort that comes with being a first-born, a girl or a CEO now. "Being the first child, I bore all the expectations of my father. He never treated me as a girl. I was supposed to do as well as my (younger) brothers. The pressure was equal on all the three children," reminisces Sharma, MD & CEO, ICICI Prudential Life Insurance, as we settled down for lunch at the trendy Indian eatery Masala Art in the capital's Taj Palace hotel.
    This was supposed to be a no-work, informal get-to-know the person behind the job kinda interaction, but then given the current context of the US-manufactured global financial crisis, we couldn't resist the temptation of asking how she read the scenario where such venerable names like AIG and Lehman Brothers are falling like ninepins. "Some very foolish things have been done, like throwing basic caution to the winds. A contagion spreads and you have a disaster all around. I think what should happen now is that some of that cowboy behaviour will have to stop. People have to go back to the basics of risk management and much tighter inter-regulator coordination."
    A ICICI lifer, Sharma joined when it was still just a development financial institution, back in 1980 straight out of IIM-Ahmedabad. "I was clear that I wanted to be in finance, as I was good at maths and quantitative (stuff). Actually, at school I was best at physics and wanted to be a physics researcher." As it turned out, a bureaucrat uncle of Sharma's guided her towards Economics at Lady Shriram College, as he said that physics wouldn't land her a job.
    "I hadn't even heard of IIM before I went into my BA. Somewhere in the middle I decided that I was either going to go to the IIMs or get married. I was not going to do anything else." It turned out, she also met her would-be husband, Sanjaya Sharma there as he's her batchmate at IIM-A class of 1980.
Three-year mindset
Being a soldier's daughter, Sharma changed seven schools in as
many cities, finally finishing at Loreto Convent, Delhi. "Looking back, I realise I have this three-year mindset for everything." Though she has stuck to her first employer for 28 years now, Sharma says she's somehow had three-year stints in various ICICI departments — project finance, corporate planning, retail finance and securities. But she seems to have broken that three-year rule with life insurance, where she has been the head since inception in 2000. "Well yes, but even here, I have looked at the business in three-year cycles," she avers. "So probably a three-year cycle is (hardwired) in my brain."
    Sharma says that the two big things ICICI Pru's focusing on in the current three-year period are health and the rural market. "Rural is a little bit of an extension for business but it requires a different delivery so we are working on the technology and processes. Health is pretty much a white canvas. What is the right model for India? Is it advice? Is it wellness? That's the thing that consumes me and excites me (currently). The organisation needs to come up with something quickly,"says Sharma, almost in soliloquy.
    What's the secret of successful 'women of ICICI', once dubbed the 'petticoat brigade' by Mumbai's chauvinistic banking fraternity, as a two-year old article in the Fortune magazine put it? "One, ICICI never discriminated between men and women managers. And it always had an open culture," says Sharma, adding that even though the organisation was sensitive and accommodating of women managers' family priorities, the workload was the same for everyone. As a woman if you take a break, at ICICI "your job waits for you when you come back. I think women value that a lot. The guys valued that a lot less so they got attracted (out of ICICI) as the pay scales got higher (in the industry), but women stayed back."
    So this women-friendly culture explains her long innings at ICICI. But the moot point was if she knew she was going to go so far in a male-dominated financial world when she began as an ICICI trainee in 1980... "It was the background that I was from. It was like today you are in this school so you do your best, tomorrow you don't where you will be," says Sharma, coming back to her threeyear conditioning. "And honestly, the desire to be at the top existed at the time I joined. Lalita (Gupte, ICICI Bank's former joint MD) was the high profile lady in the projects department. And she was quite well established, well known, a kind of role model."

Letting go
Shikha and Sanjaya (currently CEO of Tata Interactive Systems) got married in 1982. "Five years after my marriage I conceived. But unfortunately, the doctor said (due to some complication) we had to abort it. Those two-three days were very traumatic. It was a big milestone in my life." It was the same when she left I-sec, a ICICI-JP Morgan joint venture she helped start in 1992. "Some of my best friends were made there. But once I left, for two years I never visited the I-Sec office. It was just like giving up the baby. It taught me the trauma of living life. It helped me (learn to) give up. Thereafter, giving up has been very easy," says Sharma. "That created a (sense of) detachment for me that while I am here I am fully committed, the moment I walk out, it's all over. Those two (events) were the defining things for me."
    Family remains Sharma's pivot in life. Whenever she travels within India for work, Sharma tries to keep it a day-trip, so that she can get back to be with the kids — a son, an undergrad at Carnegie Mellon, and daughter studying in class XII at Dhirubhai Ambani International School in Mumbai. "My daughter is really talented at singing. My husband's mother was an outstanding singer and she wanted the kids to learn too. After she died, I hunted for a music teacher. I knew they would not sit down and learn classical music so I decided to sit with them and learn classical music, but my primary motivation was to (help initiate) them into it."
    Sharma says that now classical music has become almost meditation for her, and her migraine attacks have reduced dramatically ever since she took up music seven years ago. A seafood freak, Sharma keeps in shape doing cardio and little bit of weight training at the gym three/four times a week. "Once a year family holidays, and specially driving and non-hotel stays excite me. Now we are planning to leave the kids and go to Angkor Vat in Cambodia."
    We wondered whether like her father, whether she also expects her children to top their class...There was nothing three-year about her reply, though. "The environment has changed a lot now. There are plenty of opportunities," she says. "So we genuinely want them to pursue whatever they want to so that they excel in that. They have to earn on their own. We'll fund their education, but they are not getting any inheritance from their parents!"



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Importance of respecting and protecting our women

RADHAKRISHNAN PILLAI

 Bhishma, the warrior hero of Mahabharata, had once advised Yudhishtira: "A society that does not respect women will perish." It was this lack of respect towards the fairer sex that caused the two great wars in our Hindu epics – the 18-day battle in Mahabharata itself after Draupati was humiliated in front of all men and, in Ramayana, the war in Lanka when Sita was kidnapped and taken there by Ravana.
    Even Chanakya refers to the priority women should enjoy in any emergency:
"From a dangerous situation he should move away with effort, after removing the womenflock" (7.5.46).
    In other words, even when one has to run away from a disaster or a dangerous situation – he should do so only after rescuing women. You may ask: Where is the need for such lessons when there's so much gender equality?
    Well, ask your own female friends and relatives whether they think equality has come in totally, or harassment towards them has ended completely.
    Base your own decision on their answer. And if you believe a change in mindsets is a must, read on to see how we can respect and protect women in our daily lives:

1) IN OUR WORK PLACES
Today, the number of working women has increased in all areas. Be it in the field of business, education or civil services.
    All of us have to interact with women. Remember that men and women think differently. It's a basic psychological difference.
    When men and women work on a common project together, they bring in different perspectives. Now if you are the boss, see to it that there is a gender mix in every project. If you are just an employee, inculcate not only a respect towards women but also a receptiveness to their point of views.

2) AT OUR HOMES
While a house is incomplete without a lady, the women in our family also have talents that need to be given wings.
    Identify it and give freedom to explore – whether it's our daughter, wife, sister or mother.
3) AS A NATION
Even though women have proved themselves in every field, we still have a long way to go. Just look at the amount female infanticides still taking place, a low girl literacy, prevailing practice of dowry, etc.
    No social work can be complete till women are empowered. We refer to our country as "Mother India", but hardly allow her to have any daughters.
    Swami Vivekananda had rightly said: "Educate the girl child and the nation will awaken."

(The author is a 'strategic management' trainer and consultant, and is the Director of SPM Foundation, the vision of which is to bring back ancient Indian knowledge in modern day applications. He can be emailed at rchanakyapillai@spmfoundation.in)








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Tuesday, September 9, 2008

[Ways2Insurance] Now, register for a free terrorism cover

For full article Click Here 

MUMBAI: IN the wake of rising terrorist threats across the country, click2insure.in — a portal launched by Optima Insurance Brokers in alliance with New India Assurance Company, a leading public sector non-life insurance provider — is offering a terrorism cover free of cost. 

   


Eddie Izzard  - "Never put a sock in a toaster."


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Posted By Ways2live to Ways2Insurance at 9/09/2008 07:43:00 PM



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Akbar Jiwani
9867700066
9323500008
Clifford Stoll  - "The Internet is a telephone system that's gotten uppity."

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NGOs come together, launch directory for women in distress

Mumbai: Alarmed at the increasing levels of crimes against women, NGOs have launched an exhaustive resource directory that lists the contact details of 75 women helplines in the city. Titled '1298 Women's Resource Directory', the detailed guide was released by master blaster Sachin Tendulkar in the presence of Mumbai sheriff Dr Indu Shahani, Dial 1298 For Ambulance CEO Shweta Mangal and Nandita Shah of the NGO Akshara at the HR College in Churchgate on Tuesday. 

    The directory, which will be available in English and Marathi, can be obtained free of cost from Times Response offices across the city and by calling 1298, which is a helpline for women. 
    According to the statistics available with the national crime records bureau, every hour 18 women face violence, harassment and sexual abuse. 
    Dr Shahani said that the directory is an effort to provide easy access to information and assistance to women in distress. "We have received more than 3,000 calls since the helpline started in January. While most of the callers are educated women, we hope to reach out to the un
educated from the lower strata of the society,'' she said. 
    "Domestic violence is not restricted to the poor, it is common among the upper classes too. Women are the backbone of our society. If we see a woman being abused, we must report the incident so that appropriate action can be taken,'' said Tendulkar. 
    On calling 1298, also an ambulance number that can be accessed from a mobile phone as well as land line, women are directed to relevant NGOs which counsel and provide assistance. In case a women needs assistance immediately, the call is diverted to 103, which is the police helpline number. On an average, the helpline receives 20 to 22 calls each day. 
    The NGOs are listed under nine categories based on their location and the primary service they provide. These categories are: support for women in distress, counselling services, short stay homes/women hostels, legal support groups, health support groups, support groups for de-addiction, information and advocacy groups, support for senior citizens and helpline for children. The directory has been compiled by 1298 and Akshara and is supported by the police helpline.

BATTING FOR WOMEN: Sachin Tendulkar and Mumbai sheriff Indu Shahani at the launch of 1298 Women's Resource Directory
Marcel Marceau  - "Never get a mime talking. He won't stop."

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Monday, September 8, 2008

Fixing ‘antiques’ - Mind Your Body

Fixing 'antiques' - Mind Your Body, The Straits Times (Thursday, 14 August 2008)

Dr Reshma Merchant, 37, is a consultant geriatrician in the Department of Medicine at National University Hospital. She tells SAMANTHA ENG why she finds working with old people intellectually stimulating

Last year, Dr Reshma bagged the Dean's Award for Teaching Excellence given out by the Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore. — LIM SIN THAI/THE STRAITS TIMES

I decided to specialise in geriatrics because…

I began to enjoy geriatrics when I was a medical officer in Britain. I found it an intellectually stimulating specialisation and allows me to deal with complex patients.

I liked it too because it is person-specific instead of site-specific, allowing me to address patients as a whole.

Most importantly, it is a very special privilege to be able to help patients at their most vulnerable.

Jane Wagner  - "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool."

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