"...keeping you great"
HEADLINES:
|
I rather you hate me for what I am than love me for what I am not.
|
| |
Narayana Murthy, Chairman Infosys |
Infosys Founder/Chairman Retiring
-- founded in 1981 by seven entrepreneurs (proves the power of multiple
founders), this $6 billion global IT services firm based in India takes 25%
of its revenue to the bottom line. A multi-award winning firm, it's been
named the best place to work in India several times and hosts the world's
largest corporate university for it's over 130,000 employees. Its famous
Chairman, Narayana Murthy, is retiring this coming Sunday, August 21st after
leading Infosys (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infosys) the last three decades. His
new title will be Chairman Emeritus.
Lessons Learned
-- Barrett Ersek, founder of Holganix (www.holganix.com),
forwarded Murthy's farewell letter. Below are some excerpts from his
farewell letter. My favorite is his comment of strategy: Strategy is
about ensuring sustained differentiation in a changing environment for
better net income margins. Differentiation without better net income margins
is meaningless. He goes on to say: In fact the best measure of
differentiation is the per capita free cash flow generated. Such cash flows
bring cash to invest in better people, research and development
infrastructure, training and better customer and employee confidence.
Fantastic KPI!!
Lessons on Leadership
-- Notes Murthy, Leadership is about taking bold and firm decisions with
incomplete information in an environment of uncertainty: Leaders who waffle
do not inspire confidence in their people. He cites his decision to
walk away from a Fortune 10 company when they contributed 25% of
Infosys revenue. Explains Murthy, It was a tough decision that was taken
so calmly and firmly that the head of sales at Infosys at that time thought
I was not bothered about the future of the company. I had to explain to him
that I did indeed agonize over it but that as a leader I could not be driven
by panic since such an important decision required a calm and composed mind.
Mental Model of Business
-- Murthy continues: Every leader must have a mental model of his or her
business with at best five to seven parameters that determine sensitivity to
revenue and net income. It is important to update that model suitably as the
business landscape changes. Any leader who cannot quickly do such
sensitivity calculation would not be able to take quick and bold decisions.
More Lessons Learned
-- here are the rest of the excerpts - take five minutes to scan for
important insights for your own business:
It was on one of those rare nights at home during the late eighties. I was
huddling with my young children, Rohan and Akshata, when Rohan, the most
mischievous child I have ever come across, asked innocently whether I loved
Infosys more than him and his sister. I got away from that embarrassing
situation by saying that I loved my children much more than anything else.
However, even today when we reminisce about the incident my children are not
fully convinced that I was telling them the truth. When I was spending 16
hour days in the office and was away from home for as many as 330 days in a
year it was hard for my children to believe in my commitment to the family.
There is no doubt that the Infosys journey has been an integral part of my
life. I have been the Number One actor in every major decision taken in the
company. I have rejoiced in every significant milestone of the company. I
have commiserated in every false step that this company has taken.
The best analogy that I can think of for this separation between Infosys and
me is that of ones daughter getting married and leaving her parents' home.
Yes, the parents will be there when she needs them and they will be happy
that she is starting a new life in an exciting new environment.
It is not easy for me to write my last article in the Annual Report of the
company. As I write this a mosaic of images from the past whizzes through my
mind. The list seems endless and it would be difficult to narrate them all
in this article.
So let me highlight a few of them.
The day we assembled in my tiny apartment in Mumbai to decide that
respect from every stakeholder was the most
valuable thing for us.
The day we convinced our first US customer to close his own operations at
SEEPZ and hitch his future with ours was a significant milestone for us.
The day we won the MICO data center contract, starting as an underdog and
going on to differentiate ourselves based on our advanced mathematical
modeling competence, was a day that boosted our confidence as engineers.
The day we inaugurated India's first software campus is still vivid in my
memory.
Distributing 27 per cent of the company's equity among our employees was a
proud moment for those of us who have always considered the idea of sharing
wealth to be an important part of our social responsibility.
Listing in India in 1993 pushed us to become leaders in corporate
governance.
The joy of being India's first software company to be certified at Level 4
of the Capability Maturity Model of the Software Engineering Institute at
Carnegie Mellon was clearly what enhanced our own belief in quality...
... NASDAQ listing, how important it is for an Indian company.
Opening ultra modern offices world over heralded our aspirations to be a
global company.
The inaugurations of our two education centres at Mysore were sound
reaffirmations of our long-held belief in the importance of education and
research.
Participating in the Billion Dollar Day function declaring several special
dividends and bonus shares, becoming part of NASDAQ-100, starting our
banking group, creating Infosys Consulting and Infosys BPO, building more
than 28 million sq. ft. of world-class development centers, winning several
prestigious global awards and establishing the Infosys Foundation are
milestones that brought us great pride.
There have been some moments of great dilemmas and
sadness too.
Bidding goodbye to perhaps the brightest of my co-founder colleagues early
in the journey was disheartening.
Refusing to accept unreasonable terms and walking away from business with a
Fortune 10 company was a test of our resolve.
Accepting the resignation of a senior colleague and dealing with the
instance where our code of ethics was jeopardized were tests of adherence to
our values.
Deliberating all alone on the resignation offer of a co-founder is not
something I would wish even upon my enemy.
Being accused of violating our own high standard of business ethics recently
made me lose several nights of sleep.
Occasional incidents of the organization turning bureaucratic the inability
of some of our leaders to take quick and firm decisions and the movement
company interface becoming less business-friendly from time to time are
things that make me sad.
But then this tapestry of happy and not so happy incidents is normal and
keeps life exciting
What have been the lessons from this extraordinary
marathon?
Assembling a team of extraordinary people who have displayed outstanding
capabilities through their value system competence,
low ego and high energy is crucial to the progress of any
institution.
The differentiation comes from ideas and ideas come
from bright minds. Therefore, good people are the primary assets of a
great organization.
It is essential to realize that even the best people may not be able to run
the entire marathon.
Different people run out of endurance and intellectual horsepower at
different points of time. Some people drop out of the marathon since they do
not see any value in an organization when their own time under the arc light
is over.
A leader's responsibility is to recognize this,
provide them opportunities outside the organization, and usher in suitable
replacements. Infosys' journey is replete with many such examples.
Many intelligent people possess a high ego and low
patience to deal with people less capable than themselves.
Leaders have to manage this anomaly very carefully; counsel these errant
people from time to time, and allow them to operate as long as they do not
become dysfunctional and start harming the organization.
If they do cross the threshold it takes courage to inform the individuals
that their time in the organization is over and that they have to leave.
However, one aspect that marks out a truly superior organization is the
ability of its employees at all levels to be driven by values and to ensure
adherence and compliance under any circumstance. No individual is high or
important enough for an organization to put up with non compliance.
Leadership by example is what creates trust in
people to follow a leader.
As long as a leader is able to show his or her sacrifice and commitment to a
cause others will follow him or her I am glad we decided on respect from our
stakeholders (customers, employees, investors, vendor partners, government
of the land and the society) as the primary objective of the company I have
seen hundreds of instances of such leadership-by-example at Infosys.
A sense of ownership among employees is extremely important to build a long
term future for a corporation.
Such ownership comes from fair merit based and generous sharing of wealth
and perquisites among each member of the company. This is my answer to many
of my friends who wonder why when Infosys was founded I took a small
percentage of my earlier salary while every other cofounder's salary was
increased by at least 10 per cent.
The same friends tell me that they do not know of any other instance where
as much as 10 to 15 per cent of the company equity was given to co-founders
who had just 12 to 18 months of work experience.
I do not know of any Indian company that has given away as much as Rs 50,000
crore (at current stock prices) of stock options to employees. Today, every
Indian employee at every level who joined us on or before March 2010 is a
stockholder of Infosys. The point I would like to make is that such acts
demonstrate that our leaders walked the talk in sacrifice and commitment.
Strategy is about ensuring sustained differentiation
in a changing environment for better net income margins. Differentiation
without better net income margins is meaningless.
In my opinion operating margins and earnings before
taxes depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) are not appropriate measures.
In fact the best measure of differentiation is the per capita free cash flow
generated.
Such cash flows bring cash to invest in better people, research and
development infrastructure, training and better customer and employee
confidence.
The famous Harvard historian Niall Ferguson says in his book
Civilization: The West and the Rest
that the six attributes that have made Western
civilization dominant during the last five hundred years are
competition, science, property rights, medicine,
consumption and a good work ethic.
I have been saying for many years now that the factors that differentiate a
corporation from its competitors are an enduring value system, open
mindedness, pluralistic and meritocratic approach and practicing speed,
imagination and excellence in execution.
Leaders have to focus on creating such an environment.
Leadership is about taking bold and firm decisions with incomplete
information in an environment of uncertainty: Leaders who waffle do not
inspire confidence in their people.
My decision to walk away from a Fortune 10 company when they contributed 25
per cent of our revenue was one such example of decision making under
uncertainty. It was a tough decision that was taken so calmly and firmly
that the head of sales at Infosys at that time thought I was not bothered
about the future of the company. I had to explain to him that I did indeed
agonize over it but that as a leader I could not be driven by panic since
such an important decision required a calm and composed mind.
Every leader must have a mental model of his
or her business with at best five to seven parameters that determine
sensitivity to revenue and net income.
It is important to update that model suitably as the business landscape
changes. Any leader who cannot quickly do such sensitivity calculation would
not be able to take quick and bold decisions.
Even today I carry and update the mental model of our business in my mind.
Generosity is an essential part of a leader. It is the foundation on which
teamwork is built.
The ability to share the limelight with ones colleagues, the ability to step
aside and give opportunity to younger people when they want that fame, power
and glory: and the ability to provide a safety net of advice for them is an
important aspect of strengthening the future of an organization.
I must say that Infosys has done a good job in bringing two such transitions
before I leave the portals of this company.
Scalability is the true test of the endurance of an
organization.
The ability to grow successfully without losing quality, productivity,
employee, investor and customer satisfaction and the spirit of a small
company is what makes Infosys a great company.
We have grown from 50 customers to 620 customers from 10 projects to 6,500
projects from 100 employees to 130,820 employees from 100 sq ft to 28
million sq ft of built up space and from 100 investors to over 450,000
investors.
Such a scalability exercise has been successful thanks
to our PSPD model of operation.
PSPD stands for Predictability of revenues,
Sustainability of such predictability,
Profitability of such realized revenues and
Derisking.
Predictability happens because of a good
forecasting system that derives realistic data from the trenches and tempers
it with the wisdom of senior business leaders.
Sustainability refers to the systems that help
the efforts of sales people beating the pavement and meeting customers to
make the prediction true, the efforts of our delivery people to deliver
quality products on time within budgets, and to the efforts of our finance
people raising the invoice on time and collecting money on time.
Profitability refers to the systems that help
our people make value-based sales, follow rigorous budgeting exercises,
control costs, get best value for money and ensure the agreed-upon
profitability.
Derisking refers to systems that identify risks
in various dimensions of our operations - people, geographies, technologies,
application areas and services - collect periodic data, review the risk
levels and mitigate them.
Innovation is the best instrument for creating
sustained differentiation.
However it must be accepted that revenues for a corporation come from well
understood ideas and business models.
For example, most of a bank's revenues will come from borrowing money at a
certain rate and lending it at a higher rate. Part of the profits from such
models will be used for research and development to generate new ideas.
A few of these ideas will be seeded and some of them will become mainstream
revenue earners. Therefore, it is very important for a leader to focus on
innovation particularly when the times are good.
Customers put food on our table.
Therefore, we have to have a laser focus on exceeding their expectations,
being open and honest with them, and ensuring that they look good in front
of their customers.
Employees are the only instruments we have to make our customers and
investors succeed.
Therefore, we have to create an environment of openness, meritocracy;
fairness, transparency, honesty and accountability amongst our employees.
Our investors understand that businesses will have
their share of up and downs.
They want us, the management, to level with them at all times. Therefore,
"when in doubt, please disclose" is a good policy for a corporation.
Society provides customers, employees, investors, bureaucrats and
politicians. Therefore, earning the goodwill of every society that we
operate in is extremely important for us.
Global benchmarking is a powerful instrument that helps us to improve our
self-confidence, compete with the best global competitors and serve our
customers better.
We are our main enemies
There is no external enemy. Our failures are because of our lack of
commitment to our cause, our inability to accept meritocracy and our
indifference to honesty and want of a good work ethic amongst our leaders.
Performance alone is the key differentiator.
This stems from my belief that performance leads to recognition, recognition
brings respect and respect brings power.
We have demonstrated that businesses can be run legally and ethically that
it is possible for an Indian company to benchmark with the global best and
that any set of youngsters with values hard work, team work and a little bit
of smartness can indeed be successful entrepreneurs.
I have realized that humility, grace and courtesy are
genuine only when you have power and glory. That is why the leaders
at Infosys have practiced this time and again.
Humility provides us the strength of
mind to learn from people better than us. Grace and courtesy make us worthy
competitors.
The crucial things we have to do in the future are to recognize our
weaknesses; be open-minded about learning from people better than us; learn
from our mistakes and not repeat them; be humble, honest and courteous;
benchmark with the best in every dimension; use innovation to perform at
global levels; and create a worthwhile vision and improve every day.
This is how our mantra of focusing on speed, imagination and excellence in
execution will take this company very far.
This is my prayer .
I rather you hate me for what I am than love me for what I am not..
EDUCATION:
Growth Summit
2011
Fortune Growth Summit
October 25 - 26, 2011
Mastering the Rockefeller Habits
Fall Workshops 2011
Austin, TX - September 20
Colorado Springs, CO - September20
The Netherlands - September 20-21
Midland, TX - September 21
Las Vegas, NV - September 21
Milwaukee, WI - September 22
Halifax, NS Canada - September 27
St. Louis, MO - October 5
Dallas, TX - October 11
Atlanta, GA - October 11
Portland, OR - October 12
Boston, MA - October 13
Philadelphia, PA - October 18
Vancouver, BC - November 2
Ft. Lauderdale, FL -November 3
Chicago, IL - November 8
Montreal, Canada - November 8
Cedar Rapids, IA - November 9
The Netherlands - November 9-10
Phoenix, AZ - November 17
San Antonio, TX - December 1
Nashville, TN - December 7
Princeton, NJ - December 8
Seattle - January 10
India Tour 2011
Mumbai - 7 September
New Delhi - 9 September
Go for Growth - Four Key Decisions
to Drive Revenue and Profits
Sydney - 20 September 2011
Adelaide - 21 September 2011
Brisbane - 22 September 2011
Summits & Conferences
Great Game of Business with Jack Stack
Gazelles DVD/Online Learning
Products
-- Gazelles.tv
PEOPLE
Whats the Secret to Providing World Class Customer Experience
Topgrading
STRATEGY
High Stakes Negotiations
The Art of Advantage
EXECUTION
Mastering the Rockefeller Habits
Execute Without Drama
Did
you miss previous insights? - read here (http://verneharnish.typepad.com/growthguy/archives.html)
Read
Verne's Insights on Kindle http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B003SX13YI
Sign up for Verne's Weekly Insights
(http://www.gazelles.com/executive_ceo_newsletters.html) |