Sunday, June 22, 2008

Lord Ganesha & Sloka Meaning

Ganapathy , the Elephant faced Lord is the ruler ( controller) of impediments. His large abdomen is a trasure of 'letters; and he is physical form of ' OMKAARA', hence known as 'Pravanaswaroopa'.
He is the primal lord, the bestower of Siddhi and Buddhi. He is the Lord of heavinly hosts ( Ganaas), who blesses us with power of speech, intellect and guides us to victory.
Lord Ganapathi is the primary GOD of adoration, the destroyer of obstacles, who rescues us from difficulties with his vital energy and his all pervading supremacy. It is a practice to pay obeisance to Lord Ganapathi and inovke his blessings to seek motivation and guidance, prior to commencing any ritual or event.
OM vakrathunda mahaa-kaaya
Koti-soorya sama-prabha
niribignam kuru may-dhevaa
sarva-kaaryeshu sarvadha
Meaning
( You ( Lord Ganesha) , the one with the twisted trunk and massive body, with the dazzle and radiance equal to those of a million of suns, lead me on the path devoid of obstacles or hindrances, clearing the way in all that I do, even and always )
Agajannan-padhmaarkam
Gajaajanamaharnisham
anneka-dhantham bhakthaa naam
ekadhantham upapsmahe
Meaning
The one who makes the lotus like face of Parvathi bloom with happiness, He,( Gajanana), is the savior at all times. he who has innumberable devotees, the Lord with single tusk, let us all worship , he who can bestow many boons upon us
Om Shri Ganeshaaya Namaha!
R.Ramakrishnan
22nd Jun 2008

Prayer

Prayer is a hear-to-heart communication with Super natural power ( God). When, we pray, we turn to God, to uplift our minds and hearts. When we pray, we are drawn closer to God, we derive strength and direction from the Supreme divine Energy. When we pray, we should pray with faith and God will respond to our prayers.
Prayer is a very personal experience. It fulfills our emotional and spiritual needs. It is also an acknowledgement that God, is always present and active in our lives. Hymns from scriptures and religious literature are a rich souce for prayer and contemplation on God.
" The human race was born free, and yet, everywhere he seems to be in chains!" . This race is perennially bonded in chains of misery and suffering, in greed and desire, in attachments and needs, in disease and death.... There seems to be no escape, but " Prayer & Faith" give the human mind great strength and confidence, a sense of well being, purpose and duty. Thus enabling one to face life and postively steer its course.
The effects of prayer are creative and cathartic to the mind. And the body as well. According to one particular study, those who visited places of worship or offered prayers at least once a week, were happier, and had about 40 % lower hypertension problems. While another study pointed out that regular visits to temples and places of worship and, participating in group prayers ( Bhajans) would boost the immune system and would also increase one's life span by seven to fourteen years !.
Conscious thoughts like- 'God protect us', 'God is watching us ', 'God is always guiding us' can make one lead a less stressful life. The therapeutic value of prayer can be experienced by praying with faith, sincerity, and devotion. 'Prayer' is the answer todisorders of modern culture and to experience Ananda, or bliss, leading to path of Bhakthi Marga to achieve salvation.
Let us move towards a Prayer with faith, devotion and sincerity. As mentioned Sri Sri Ravishankar - in Science the Knowledge comes first and faith follows , in Sprituality the faith comes first and knowledge follows.
"Words are symbols used to convey the reality and meaning of that which they define. By conscious devotional utterance, intonation and chanting of a sacred word ( Mantra) a diven vibration is awakened within our being"
Shri Lahari Mahashaya
'Mantra- A sanskrit word meaning- " Man " is mind. " thra' is to take beyond
Have a great prayer with Mantras to enhance your life
R.Ramakrishnan
22nd Jun 2008

Friday, June 20, 2008

Why do offer food to the Lord before eating ?

Indians make an offering of food to the Lord and later partake of it as prasaada - a holy gift from the Lord. In our daily ritualistic worship (pooja) too we offer naivedyam (food) to the Lord.
The Lord is omnipotent and omniscient. Man is a part, while the Lord is the totality. All that we do is by His strength and knowledge alone. Hence what we receive in life as a result of our actions is really His alone. We acknowledge this through the act of offering food to Him. This is exemplified by the Hindi words "tera tujko arpan"– I offer what is Yours to You. Thereafter it is akin to His gift to us, graced by His divine touch.
Knowing this, our entire attitude to food and the act of eating changes. The food offered will naturally be pure and the best. We share what we get with others before consuming it. We do not demand, complain or criticise the quality of the food we get. We eat it with cheerful acceptance (prasaada buddhi).
Before we partake of our daily meals we first sprinkle water around the plate as an act of purification. Five morsels of food are placed on the side of the plate acknowledging the debt owed by us to the Divine forces (devta runa) for their benign grace and protection, our ancestors (pitru runa) for giving us their lineage and a family culture, the sages (rishi runa) as our religion and culture have been "realised", aintained and handed down to us by them, our fellow beings (manushya runa) who constitute society without the support of which we could not live as we do and other living beings (bhuta runa) for serving us selflessly.
Thereafter the Lord, the life force, who is also within us as the five life-giving physiological functions, is offered the food. This is done with the chant
Praanaaya swaahaa,
Apaanaaya swaahaa,
Vaanaaya swaahaa,
Udaanaaya swaahaa,
Samaanaaya swaahaa,
Brahmane swaahaa
After offering the food thus, it is eaten as prasaada - blessed food.

Why do we wear marks on Forehead ( Pottu, Tilak)

The tilak or pottu invokes a feeling of sanctity in the wearer and others. It is recognized as a religious mark. Its form and colour vary according to one’s caste, religious sect or the form of the Lord worshipped.
In earlier times, the four castes (based on varna or colour) - Brahmana, Kshatriya, Vaishya and Sudra - applied marks differently. The brahmin applied a white chandan mark signifying purity, as his profession was of a priestly or academic nature. The kshatriya applied a red kumkum mark signifying valour as he belonged to warrior races. The vaishya wore a yellow kesar or turmeric mark signifying prosperity as he was a businessman or trader devoted to creation of wealth. The sudra applied a black bhasma, kasturi or charcoal mark signifying service as he supported the work of the other three divisions.
Also Vishnu worshippers apply a chandan tilak of the shape of "U," Shiva worshippers a tripundra of bhasma, Devi worshippers a red dot of kumkum and so on).
The tilak cover the spot between the eyebrows, which is the seat of memory and thinking. It is known as the Aajna Chakra in the language of Yoga. The tilak is applied with the prayer - "May I remember the Lord. May this pious feeling pervade all my activities. May I be righteous in my deeds." Even when we temporarily forget this prayerful attitude the mark on another reminds us of our resolve. The tilak is thus a blessing of the Lord and a protection against wrong tendencies and forces.
The entire body emanates energy in the form of electromagnetic waves - the forehead and the subtle spot between the eyebrows especially so. That is why worry generates heat and

Why do we do Namaste ?

Indians greet each other with namaste. The two palms are placed together in front of the chest and the head bows whilst saying the word namaste. This greeting is for all - people younger than us, of our own age, those older than friends, even strangers and us.
There are five forms of formal traditional greeting enjoined in the shaastras of which namaskaram is one. This is understood as prostration but it actually refers to paying homage as we do today when we greet each other with a namaste.
Namaste could be just a casual or formal greeting, a cultural convention or an act of worship. However there is much more to it than meets the eye. In Sanskrit namah + te = namaste. It means - I bow to you - my greetings, salutations or prostration to you. Namaha can also be literally interpreted as "na ma" (not mine). It has a spiritual significance of negating or reducing one’s ego in the presence of another.
The real meeting between people is the meeting of their minds. When we greet another, we do so with namaste, which means, "may our minds meet," indicated by the folded palms placed before the chest. The bowing down of the head is a gracious form of extending friendship in love and humility
The spiritual meaning is even deeper. The life force, the divinity, the Self or the Lord in me is the same in all. Recognizing this oneness with the meeting of the palms, we salute with head bowed the Divinity in the person we meet. That is why sometimes, we close our eyes as we do namaste to a revered person or the Lord – as if to look within. The gesture is often accompanied by words like "Ram Ram," "Jai Shri Krishna", "Namo Narayana", "Jai Siya Ram", "Om Shanti" etc - indicating the recognition of this divinity.
When we know this significance, our greeting does not remain just a superficial gesture or word but paves the way for a deeper communion with another in an atmosphere of love and respect.

Why do we light a lamp ?

In almost every Indian home a lamp is lit daily before the altar of the Lord. In some houses it is lit at dawn, in some, twice a day – at dawn and dusk – and in a few it is maintained continuously - Akhanda Deepa. All auspicious functions commence with the lighting of the lamp, which is often maintained right through the occasion.
Light symbolizes knowledge, and darkness - ignorance. The Lord is the "Knowledge Principle" (Chaitanya) who is the source, the enlivener and the illuminator of all knowledge. Hence light is worshiped as the Lord himself.
Knowledge removes ignorance just as light removes darkness. Also knowledge is a lasting inner wealth by which all outer achievement can be accomplished. Hence we light the lamp to bow down to knowledge as the greatest of all forms of wealth.
Why not light a bulb or tube light? That too would remove darkness. But the traditional oil lamp has a further spiritual significance. The oil or ghee in the lamp symbolizes our vaasanas or negative tendencies and the wick, the ego. When lit by spiritual knowledge, the vaasanas get slowly exhausted and the ego too finally perishes. The flame of a lamp always burns upwards. Similarly we should acquire such knowledge as to take us towards higher ideals.
Whilst lighting the lamp we thus pray:
Deepajyothi parabrahma
Deepa sarva tamopahaha
Deepena saadhyate saram
Sandhyaa deepo namostute
I prostrate to the dawn/dusk lamp; whose light is the Knowledge Principle (the Supreme Lord), which removes the darkness of ignorance and by which all can be achieved in life.

Happiness defined by various people

" You will never be happy if you continue to search for what happiness consists of. You will never live if you are looking for the meaning of life "- By Albert Camus

" I don't know what your destiny will be, but one thing I do know:the only ones among you who will be really happy are those who have sought and found how to serve" - By Albert Schweitzer

Happiness belongs to the self-sufficient- By Aristotle

Action may not bring happiness always, but there is no happiness without action- By Benjamin Disraeli

You can never get enough of what you don't need to make you happy- By Eric Hoffer

Happiness comes when your work and words are of benefit to yourself and others- Buddha

When one door of happiness closes, another opens, but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one which has been opened for us - By Helen Keller

It is pretty hard to tell what does bring happiness. Poverty & wealth have both failed- By Kin Hubbard

What we call the secret of happiness is no more a secret than our willingness to chosse life-By Leo Buscagila

All seasons are beautiful for the person who carries happiness within- By Horace Firess

The foolish man seeks happiness in the distance, the wise grows it under his feet- By James Oppenheim

Happiness often sneaks in through a door you did'nt know you left open- By John Barrymore

Compiled by R.Ramakrishnan
20th June 2008

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Significance of Abhisekha Pooja

Many devotees and visitors to the Hindu pooja have many questions regarding the significance of Abhisheka. This procedure is very interesting to young children and sometime they innocently shout, "Swami is taking a bath". What is the symbolic significance of this ritual?There is a saying in Sanskrit
Vishnu AlanKara Priya
Shiva Abhisheka Priya
Sooryo Namaskara Priya
Devi Pradiskna Priya
Brahmano Bhojana Bhajana Priya
The Devatha Vishnu needs to be richly decorated, while abhisheka is very important to Lord Shiva. Numerous namaskaras are to be offered to Soorya bhagawan, while Mahaa Devi has to be circambulated. The Brahmins must absorb (by eating), the scriptures and sing the glory of the Lord. Lord Vishnu is the protective aspect of the Brahman and so acts like a King. A King always wears the right costume. Soorya bhagawan gives us the energy, and we have to be thankful and respectful. Devi in the aspect of Maya Sakthi wields us round and round, and only by going around and around in the right direction we can escape Maya. A Brahmin, a learned person has to absorb the scriptures and other sacred information, and broadcast the Divine glory to the entire world. A Brahmin is a person who is out of the slum of ignorance and helps others to get out of the slum of the ignorance. Shiva destroys our ego (Ahamkara - the "I" ness), and makes us pure. Shiva is adored as Satyam, Shivam, Sundaram. Only our mind can be made absolutely pure. Our body cannot be made absolutely clean. If that is possible, a fish or a frog is cleaner than any one of us. The mind can be made pure by single pointed devotion, dedication and honesty. This dedication, devotion and sincerity of the purpose are externally exhibited in abhisheka. Honesty is likened to soap, dedication to the dravyas used in abhisheka and prayers to the act of cleansing. Thus abhisheka is done using various materials - Dravyas - to Shiva. The material must be poured so as to form a continuous drip using a conch. However, Alan Kara and abhisheka can be done to any of the Devatha. There are no restrictions.The Procedure (based on Tantra Samuchayam - One of the authoritative AGAMA text)Simple Abhisheka
First, the four Rig Veda mantras are chanted (given under but must be learned through a Guru) and pure water from the Kalasa is used. Water from a flowing source (River) is considered preferable to well or pond water.
Apohishta Mayo Bhuva Sthana Oorjae Dhadhaa Tha Na: Maheraranaaya Chakshasae Yo Va Sshivathamo Rasa Sthassya Bhajaya Thehana: Usatheeriva Maathara:Thasma Arangama Mavo Yasya Kshayaya Jinvatha: Aapo Janayatha Cha Na:Dadhi Kravanno Akaarisham Jishnorasvasya Vaajina: Surabhino Mukhs Karath Praana Aayumshi Tharishath.
After this, the abhisheka can be continued by reciting Purusha Sooktham, then Sapta Suddhi mantras, the Moola mantra, the Ishta sooktha mantra (which are different depending upon the Devatha - Shiva, SASTA, Subrahmanya, Ganesha).Finally, abhisheka is done by reciting the Gayatri mantra three times. The water from these procedures is used for Theertha Prasadam.
Elaborate Abhisheka
On special occasion like Mandala pooja, Shivaratri and other festival poojas, elaborate abhisheka is performed using eleven or more materials .The common procedure is to use eleven dravyya to the Elevan Rudra Devathas. The number does not matter as also the mantra. What is absolutely required is sincerity of purpose, unflinching devotion, and complete dedication. Victor Hugo once wrote, "as for how you pray the words do not matter if they are sincere. Turn your page upside down and face the infinite". This is what Poonthanam Nambhoodiri did years before Victor Hugo was even born. Poothanam in his ecstasy and sincerity addressed the Lord as 'God of the trees - Mara Prabhu' instead of the correct pronunciation 'God of Gods - Amara Prabhu ' (See Sri Vishnu sahasra nama) . There is a well-known saying "It is only with the heart that one can see rightly. The essential is invisible to the eye'. And there is a common advice, "When you bow, bow deep down"Out of all the materials used for abhisheka, the water from the kalasa is most important and used last. 1, 3, 5 7 or 11 kalasas can be set up for abhisheka. Veda mantras are used to purify and sanctify the water (Apo Va Idaghum Sarvam… - water is the cause for emergence and sustenance of all life. Water as it is has no shape but take the shape of the container in which it is taken. The Brahman cannot be described with specific form or shape. However, the Brahman can be visualized in our mind with specific attributes - Saguna Brahman - the Devathas. This is one reason that yogis prefer 'Manasa pooja'- visualization of the Brahman in the mind and deep meditation, which ordinary persons cannot accomplish.The common dravyyas in order and their significance and the mantras are as follows:
Ganda Thaila (Scented Oil) - Well Being / relief from poison, fever - Purusha sooktham
Pancha Gavyam - Purity - Sapta Suddhi
Pancha-amritha (mixture of milk, yogurt, fruits, ghee & honey) - Victory over Ego and spiritual knowledge. Very popular for Subramanya abhisheka.
Ghee - Either prosperity or Moksha - Ultimate Liberation - Popular for SASTA.Thejo Asi Thejaanu Prehyagni-Ishtae-Thejo Ma Vinail. Agnair-Jvihvasi Subhroodevanam Dhamnae DhamnaeDevebhyo Yajushae Yajushae BhavaSukra Masi Jyothirasi Thejosi
Milk-Long life / wealth -Aapyayasva Samethu Thae Viswatha: Soma Vrishnnyam Bhava Vajasya Sangathae
Yogurt - Peace and contentment / good offspring -Dadhi Kravano Akaarisham Jishnorasvasya Vaajina: Subhino Mukhakaral Prana-Aayushim Thaarishath
Honey - relief from sickness / good voice -Madhu Vatha Rithayathae Madhu Ksharanthi Sinddhava: Maadhveernna Santhoshadhi: Madhu Naktha Muthoshasi Madhumath Parthivaghum Raja: Madhu Dhaurasthu Na: Pitha. Madhu Maanno Vanaspathirmadhumaghum Asthu Soorya: Madhveergghavo Bhavanthuna: Madhu Madhu Madhu
Sugar cane juice - Health & Strength - Purusha sooktham
Lime Juice - freedom from danger - Cleansing - Knowledge - Purusha Sooktham
Tender coconut water - happiness due to high position - Purusha Sooktham
Sandal wood paste- Patronage from authorities -Ganda Dwvaram Dhura Darshaam Nithya Pushttam Kareeshineem; Iswareem Sarva Bhoothaanaam Thamihopahva Sriyam
Turmeric Powder- Relief from debt- same as above
Rice flour - Relief from weakness- same as above
Cooked rice - All around prosperity - Devatha Ishta Mantra
Aamalakm (gooseberry, mango, banana, or other fruits) - Wealth & prosperity- Victory -Purusha Sooktham
Flowers - Relief from anger, agitation - Sapta Suddhi
Rose water- Spiritual knowledge - Sapta Suddhi
Sahasra Dhaara (a Plate having thousand small holes through which sacred water is used for abhisheka - used also during SASTA and Kanaka abhisheka ceremonies) - Prosperity and long life. Sri Rudram & Chamakam
Gold / silver - profit in business- Sri Rudram / Chamakam
Abhisheka using a conch called Valam Piri Conch (Right turning conch) - Nobility - Sri Rudram / Chamakam
Bhasma - Good life everywhere- Sri Rudram /Chamakam
Sharkara - Jaggery (white sugar should be avoided since in manufacture of white sugar activated charcoal from animal bones are used) - Freedom from sorrow, enemies. Sri Rudram / Chamakam
Kalasa Jalam - water from the kalasm - Victory in all endeavors- Fulfillment of desires. Sri Rudram / Chamakam especially "sanga mae. …- the third anuvaka"
The other mantras usually used for abhisheka are
Samavada Sooktham - The last stanza in Rig Veda. This is used for harmony between the community members, removal of enmity, and prosperity.
Bhaaghya Sooktham - For all around luck- especially auspicious for abhisheka for Devi.
Gopalam or Raja - Gopala mantra - For victory and success. Abhisheka for Maha-Vishnu / Sri Krishna/ Sri Rama. This mantra has also some historical significance. During the 17th through 19th centuries when the Hindus were persecuted and subjected to several hardships by alien invaders, this mantra became very popular to console and comfort the Hindus and thus they stayed together opposing forced conversion.
Dharma SASTA / Ayyappa Swami being worshipped as Hari-Hara putra, thus can be worshipped either by elaborate abhisheka or beautiful Alan Kara or both. In fact, both Vaishnava and Saiva mantras are used in all most all Ayyappa temples and Dharma SASTA worship. There is no strict demarcation. This again shows the cosmopolitan nature of Hinduism.
The Bhagavad-Gita reverberates this over and over.Some offer worldly goods, others offer sense restraint. Others submit their sufferings or take vows. Many offer knowledge by studying the scriptures while a few make offerings of meditation. Many worship by controlling their senses while others restraint their breath. All these, understand the meaning of service and will be cleansed of their impurities.
--- The Bhagavad-Gita 4: 28-30
What we need is sincerity and dedication. Now, how to get these if we don't have them at present. The Veda comes to help. We need to contemplate whenever we can to get the inner revelation. Attending poojas will be a start. Let us do that for a beginning.May my speech be in accordance with the mind.Let my mind be in accordance with the speech.OH! Self-shining Brahman! May Thou reveal Thyself to meLet my mind and speech enable me to grasp the truth revealed in the Sacred Vedas.May not my learning forsake meMay I contemplate this truth day and nightMay I think of truth in my mindMay I speak truth in my speechMay the Brahman protect meMay the Brahman protect my teacherOhm! Let there be Peace-Peace-Peace
Now why the devotes pour all these upon the Vighraha or upon the Siva Lingam? Can anyone imagine pouring these substances on their own body? Is there any rationale behind this procedure? The rationale is our Spiritual quest. The devotion, the noble action and the quest for knowledge are all combined here (Bhakthi –Karma and Jnana yoga). The Vighraha with a specific form is a symbol for the Brahman. The Lingam is also a symbol but without any specific form. God is Love ( Anpae Sivam - The Tamil devotees roar all the time)God is pure Love. The purity is stressed over and over ( Nithyaa Suddhaaya Digambaraya ; Nirmalayai nama: ; Suchi: ; Suddha Brahma Parakrama Ram; ) . Thus the devotee must be pure and over flowing with Love towards the Brahman , like the Ganga swiftly flowing to the ocean. The Ganga Maayi – the mother Ganga, on the head of Siva (and also on the feet of Maha-Vishnu ) represent that constant ,uninterrupted flows of devotion and Love. In the worldly level mother’s Love is considered very pure. Thus a pure devotee approach the Brahman like a mother approaching a small child. Worship of Maha-Vishnu as Bala-Krishna , Gopi-krishna , worship of Subrahmanya Swami as Kumara, Bala-Subrahmanya , Dharma SASTA as Ayyappa, Devi as Kumari ( Kumari Pooja during Devi pooja is obligatory ), Ganesha as Bala_Ganapathi, are well known feature in Hindu community. Symbolically this is the beginning of Spiritual endeavor. The Rig Veda mantra recited first during abhisheka , shows this idea “ Usatheeriva matara : like a mother who feeds her children , makes us worthy of imbibing the auspicious bliss ; surabhi no mukhakarath – make our face and body pure and fragrant . Sanctified water is a purifying agent . Thus water and kalasa sthapana are very essential.Milk stands for a mother’s Love. The First nourishment during the long journey of Spiritual quest .Intense Love – the solid , eternal love is denoted by Yogurt-Solidified milk.( In Ayurveda yogurt is considered very healthful which the modern scientific community has confirmed). The essence of Love – the essence of yogurt – the ghee is known in Sanskrit as ‘Sneha ’ , a word used also to indicate love. Scented oil or gandha thaila also stand for the same idea.In Love everything will be Sweet as honey. So honey, jaggery , pancha-Amritha and other sweet materials like Sugar cane juice are used for abhisheka. The sweetness if sincere will pervade , spread, diffuse in various direction. sandal wood paste, rose water, flowers, stand for this.The love and sweetness must linger on, without other egoistic feelings contaminating the mind. Illusionary effect must be cleansed off. Lime juice, Coconut water , Turmeric powder/ water are all well-known refreshing / cleansing materials . When ultimate purity is achieved , that state is indicated by Bhasma / vibhoothi abhisheka or abhisheka with Bilwa or Thulasi leaves. Absolute surrender to the Divine is indicated by lighting and offering of Camphor. Finally when the Spiritual knowledge is attained, lighting and waving the lamp indicate the state. Thus the God-The Brahman , the personification of Truth and Love can be realized through truthful dedication and sincere love. Mere saying will not do a thing. Visiting a car garage every day will not make a person a good mechanic. One must walk ,the walk to reach the destination. Ritualistic abhisheka sincerely done is one of the several ‘Walks’ available to the ardent Hindus
It is not enough to know-You must practice
It is not enough to pretend-you must ‘BE’
- The mother at the Aurobindo ashram
OHM TAT SAT ! OHM TAT SAT ! OHM TAT SAT
!

The Ethical Mind

The Ethical Mind
It’s not enough to espouse high standards. To live up to them—and help others do the same—requires an ethical cast of mind that lets you practice your principles consistently.
A Conversation with Psychologist Howard Gardner Howard Gardner and Bronwyn Fryer If you’re running a large company, don’t expect the public to like you. Soaring executive pay packages, continuing rounds of layoffs, and the memory of ethical failures at firms like Enron, WorldCom, and Hewlett-Packard have raised public animosity toward corporate executives as never before. A U.S. Roper poll conducted in 2005 revealed that 72% of respondents believed wrongdoing was widespread in industry. Only 2% felt that leaders of large firms were “very trustworthy” (a drop from
3% in 2004), and the pattern is “not improving,” according to Kathy Sheehan, a senior vice president at GFK Roper Consulting in New York. Meanwhile, the public increasingly demands that companies take better care of their employees, communities, and the environment. It is now, more than ever, incumbent on business leaders to repair relations with customers and employees by stepping up to the ethical plate, says Howard Gardner, the John H. and Elisabeth A. Hobbs Professor of Cognition and Education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Gardner is an influential cognitive and educational psychologist, not an ethicist per se. But as a psychologist, he believes that his first responsibility is to understand how moral and
ethical capacities develop, or fail to develop. His reflection on ethical issues has deep underpinnings and a very long reach. In the seminal 1983 book Frames of Mind, he put forth his theory that individuals possess not one but multiple varieties of intelligence: linguistic, logical-mathematical, spatial, bodily-kinesthetic, musical, interpersonal, and intrapersonal. The theory, which Gardner continues to refine, has found broad acceptance in the educational community, and teachers around the globe tailor their lessons to the different kinds of intelligence. Gardner became personally embroiled in ethical issues when he observed how his ideas were being adopted by educators: Some schools and policy makers claimed that certain racial and ethnic groups were lacking specific intelligences. As the founder of the theory, he felt an obligation to denounce such distorted interpretations of his work. Later, when he taught a course at Harvard called “Mind, Brain, and Education,” he found himself thinking about ethical dilemmas, such as those involved in brain and genetic testing and whether it’s wise to share troubling test results with parents, particularly when no proven intervention exists. Gardner’s core insights into the ethical mind come from more than a dozen years of studying working professionals. Since 1995, he and teams of investigators at four universities have been researching the ways in which people aspire to do good work—
that is, work of high quality that matters to society, enhances the lives of others, and is conducted in an ethical manner. The researchers have also observed firsthand the ways in which good work is eroded by cultural, economic, and technological forces.
(For more on this long-term project, go to www.goodworkproject.com.) In his new
book, Five Minds for the Future (forthcoming from Harvard Business School Press in 2007), Gardner cogitates on what it takes to develop an ethical mind-set. In this edited interview with senior editor Bronwyn Fryer, Gardner offers his thoughts about what managers must do to develop and maintain high standards for themselves and their organizations.
What is an ethical mind?
In thinking of the mind as a set of cognitive capacities, it helps to distinguish the ethical mind from the other four minds that we particularly need to cultivate if we are to thrive as individuals, as a community, and as the human race. The first of these, the disciplined mind, is what we gain through applying ourselves in a disciplined way in school. Over time, and with sufficient training, we gain expertise in one or more fields:
We become experts in project management, accounting, music, dentistry, and so forth. A second kind of mind is the synthesizing mind, which can survey a wide range of sources, decide what is important and worth paying attention to, and weave this information together in a coherent fashion for oneself and others. [For more on the synthesizing mind, see “The HBR List: Breakthrough Ideas for 2006” (February 2006).
A third mind, the creating mind, casts about for new ideas and practices, innovates, takes chances, discovers. While each of these minds has long been valuable, all of them are essential in an era when we are deluged by information and when anything that can be automated will be. Yet another kind of mind, less purely cognitive in flavor than the first three, is the respectful mind: the kind of open mind that tries to understand and form relationships with other human beings. A person with a respectful mind enjoys being exposed to different types of people. While not forgiving of all, she gives others the benefit of the doubt.
An ethical mind broadens respect for others into something more abstract. A person with an ethical mind asks herself, “What kind of a person, worker, and citizen do I want to be? If all workers in my profession adopted the mind-set I have, or if everyone did what I do, what would the world be like?”
It’s important to clarify the distinction between the respectful and the ethical mind, because we assume that one who is respectful is ethical and vice versa. I think you can be respectful without understanding why: As a child, you might have respected your parents and grandparents because you were taught to. But ethical conceptions and behaviors demand a certain capacity to go beyond your own experience as an individual person. Once you have developed an ethical mind, you become more like an impartial spectator of the team, the organization, the citizenry, the world. And you may have to sacrifice respect for another person if your role as a citizen or worker calls on you to do damage control to protect an idea or institution you believe in.
Whistle-blowers display ethical minds. Many people might see a top manager doing something unethical, but they won’t do anything about it because they want to keep their jobs, and they feel that they must respect the boss. A whistle-blower steps back A person with an ethical mind asks, “If all workers in my profession…did what I do, what would the world be like?” from those concerns and considers the nature of work and the community in a larger way. He takes a mental leap past daily doings; his allegiance is to the workplace or the profession. He acts ethically even though it may cost him his respectful relation to his supervisor and, ultimately, his job and relation to his colleagues. He is able to do this because his own momentary well-being is less important than the broader mission he has endorsed.
It sounds as if the ethical mind is fundamentally more community focused than any of the other four minds. If that’s true, then how does the ethical mind develop?
An ethical orientation begins at home, where children see whether their parents take pride in their work, whether they “play fair,” whether they give the benefit of the doubt or are closed minded, and so on. Children absorb their parents’ religious and political values. As children get older, their peers have an enormous effect, especially in America. Just as influential is the behavior of the surrounding community toward its citizens. Are young and old people cared for? Beyond the necessary services, are there cultural and social events to learn from and participate in? Do parents take part in these “gluing” activities and expect their children to do the same? My favorite example of an ethical community is a small city called Reggio Emilia in northern Italy. Aside from providing high-quality services and cultural benefits to its citizens, the city provides excellent infant and toddler centers and preschools. Children feel cared for by the community. So when they grow up, they return this regard by caring for others. They become good workers and good citizens. The tone has already been set at such a high level that one rarely encounters compromised—that is,
qualitatively or ethically sullied—work. And in such cases, the ethical action taken by the community is to ostracize the compromised worker (in effect, if not by law) so he does not undermine community mores. This stance works as long as everyone sees that everyone wins.
What gets in the way of the ethical mind?
Sadly, even if you grow up with a strong ethical sense, the bad behavior of others can undermine it. A study conducted by Duke University recently found that 56% of students in the United States pursuing a master’s degree in business administration admit to cheating—the highest rate of cheating among graduate student groups. If you are a very ambitious MBA student and the people around you are cheating on their exams, you may assume that cheating is the price of success, or maybe you do it because “everyone does it.” You might even come to think of ethical behavior as a
luxury. A study we published in 2004 found that although young professionals declared an understanding of and a desire to do good work, they felt that they had to succeed by whatever means. When they had made their mark, they told us, they would then become exemplary workers.
As young people go into business today, the temptation to skirt ethics is mounting. We live in a time of intense pressure on individuals and organizations to cut corners, pursue their own interests, and forget about the effect of their behavior on others. Additionally, many businesspeople have internalized Milton Friedman’s belief that if we let people pursue their interests and allow the processes of the marketplace to operate freely, positive moral and ethical consequences will magically follow. I am not one to question the power and benefits of the marketplace in any absolute sense. But markets are amoral; the line between shading earnings and committing outright fraud s not always clear. The chief rabbi of the United Kingdom, Jonathan Sacks, said it
well: “When everything that matters can be bought and sold, when commitments can be broken because they are no longer to our advantage, when shopping becomes alvation and advertising slogans become our litany, when our worth is measured by how much we earn and spend, then the market is destroying the very virtues on which in the long run it depends.” Confidence in business is undermined; individuals distrust one another. Reggio Emilia seems light-years away.
Do you think it’s more difficult for businesspeople to adhere to an ethical mind than it is for other professionals?
Yes, because strictly speaking, business is not—nor has it ever been—a profession. Professions develop over long periods of time and gradually establish a set of control mechanisms and sanctions for those who violate the code. True professionals, from doctors and lawyers to engineers and architects, undergo extensive training and earn a license. If they do not act according to recognized standards, they can be expelled from their professional guild. In addition, mentoring is an understood component of regulated professions: A medical intern works with head residents or senior physicians who serve, in part, as ethical guides. But business lacks this model; you don’t need a license to practice. The only requirements are to make money and not run afoul of the law. Even if you start out with high personal ethical standards, it’s easy to wander off the proper path, because professional standards are a vocational option, not part of the territory. Certainly, there are businesspeople who act professionally, who feel obligated to serve their customers and employees and communities. Businesses can also voluntarily take on corporate social responsibility. But there are no penalties if they elect not to. And some economists argue that it is illegitimate for businesses to direct profits toward anything other than shareholders.
Would you say that compromised work is catching—in the same way that the emotional state of a leader affects others, as Daniel Goleman has observed? Employees certainly listen to what their leaders say, and they watch what their leaders and colleagues do even more carefully. Employees feel psychologically emboldened or pressured to emulate the bad behavior they see in leaders and others who “get away with it.” Alternatively, leaders who model ethical behavior, especially in spite of the temptations of the market, inspire employees to do likewise and thus win for their firms in the long run. Though hoary, the example of CEO James Burke of Johnson & Johnson is still useful. When Burke immediately recalled all Tylenol products during the scare in the 1980s, he exemplified what it is to be ethical in the face of odds. In the end, his company benefited: Twenty-five years later, Johnson & Johnson is rated in the top spot for corporate reputation among large companies. It matters enormously whether the various interest groups with a stake in the work
are in harmony or in conflict and whether the particular role models are confident about the hats they are wearing. When everyone is focused on the same thing, it’s easier to do good work. For example, in the late 1990s, our studies found that geneticists in the United States had a relatively easy time pursuing good work because everyone was focused on the same ends of better health and longer life. We found that journalists had a harder time pursuing good work because their desire to report objectively on the most important events clashed with the public’s desire for
sensationalism and the pressure from publishers to generate advertising dollars and avoid controversy.
Then the real test of an individual’s—or a company’s—ethical fiber is what In business, it’s easy to wander off the proper path, because professional standards are a vocational option, not part of the territory.
happens when there are potent pressures. How does one stand up to those pressures?
Well, if you are a leader, the best way for you to retain an ethical compass is to believe doing so is essential for the good of your organization. What are you trying to achieve? What are your goals, in the broad sense of doing good in the world? Once you understand these factors, you must state your beliefs unwaveringly from the first and tie rewards and sanctions to their realization. When everything is going swimmingly, it is easier to hold yourself and others to high standards—the costs are not evident. But when circumstances are tempting you to drop your standards, you have to practice rigorous self-honesty. Being ethical really means not fooling yourself or others. I recommend that you look in the mirror from time to time, without squinting, and ask yourself if you are proceeding in ways you approve of. The questions to pose are “Am I being a good worker? And if not, what can I do to become one?”
I also believe that individuals increase their chances of carrying out good work when they make the time and take the opportunity to reflect on their broadly formulated mission and determine whether they are progressing toward its realization. There’s a great story—possibly apocryphal—about James Bryant Conant, the former president of Harvard. When he was offered the presidency, he said, “I’m happy to take it, but I can’t come to work on Wednesdays, because I have to go to Washington.” The hiring committee agreed to this condition. In fact, Conant didn’t go to Washington on Wednesdays; he just took the time to be quiet and read. He felt he needed a day each
week to be alone with his thoughts. All executives ought to be able to step back and reflect and think about the nature of their work, develop new work projects, or solve work problems.
Another way to keep yourself on the ethical path is to undergo what I call “positive periodic inoculations.” These happen when you meet individuals or have experiences that force you to examine what you’re doing or to set a good example for others. A businessperson might be inoculated by the model of Aaron Feuerstein, the owner of Malden Mills, who kept paying his workers even after the mills burned down.
Feuerstein’s action might inspire a leader to do something beneficial for employees, like give them an opportunity to acquire a desired skill. Another kind of inoculation— call it an “antiviral” one—allows you to draw object lessons from instances of compromised work. When Arthur Andersen went bankrupt following the Enron scandal, for example, auditors at other firms took a hard look at their own practices.
But we’re all subject to self-delusion. Certainly, one needs a more objective gauge than oneself.
Yes, and that’s why it’s important that other knowledgeable and candid individuals be consulted. Two worthy consultants could be your own mother—“If she knew everything I was doing, what would she think?”—and the press. Michael Hackworth, the cofounder and chairman of Cirrus Logic, uses this personal temperature gauge: He insists that he will not do something that would embarrass him if it were printed in the morning paper. Even if the stock drops temporarily, he knows that his honesty with the mirror builds his credibility in the long run.
Ideally, business leaders ought to have three types of counselors who are prepared to speak truth to their power. First, they need a trusted adviser within the organization.
Second, they need the counsel of someone completely outside the organization, preferably an old friend who is a peer. Third, they need a genuinely independent board. If you actually listen to these three sources of information and act on the basis of what they say, then you cannot go too far wrong. George W. Bush is an example of a leader who has lacked—or at least disregarded—this kind of frank feedback. Franklin D. Roosevelt sought it regularly and was a far more effective president.
In hiring or promotion, are there ways companies can sort the wheat from the chaff?
It would be much wiser to admit people to business school who would never consider cheating—and there are some people like that—than to hope that at age 30, when they’re on the make, slippery characters can suddenly be converted into responsible paragons. That said, there is no substitute for detailed, textured, confidential oral recommendations from individuals who know the candidates well and will be honest. I don’t particularly trust written letters or the results of psychological tests. A single interview is not much help, either. A colleague of mine says “It takes ten lunches,” and I think there is truth in that.
I might also ask a young person about mentors. Our studies found that, across the board, many young professionals lack deep mentoring from individuals in authoritative positions. This was in contrast to veteran professionals, who spoke about important mentors and role models. So I might ask, “Who influenced you in cultivating a particular moral climate, and why?” The influence of antimentors—potential role models who had been unkind to their employees or who had shown behavior that others would not want to emulate—and a lack of mentors is something that we
underestimated in our studies. Negative role models may be more powerful than is usually acknowledged. Of course, one has to listen carefully to which traits are considered to be positive and which ones are critiqued. Sometimes the responses are surprising.
What if you are in a position to speak truth to power? How do you gird yourself for that task?
With the assumption of authority and maturity comes the obligation to monitor what our peers are doing and, when necessary, to call them to account. As the seventeenthcentury French playwright Jean-Baptiste Molière declared, “It is not only for what we do that we are held responsible but for what we do not do.”
It is not easy to confront offending individuals. But it is essential if you want to have an effective organization, be it a family or a Fortune 500 company. Two factors make it easier. First, you need a firm belief that what you are doing is right for the organization. Second, you don’t wait for egregious behavior. As soon as you—or others—see warning signs, you confront them, not in an accusatory fashion but in a fact-finding mode. If a person has been warned or counseled, it is much easier to take action the next time a wrong is identified.
As for confronting superiors, if that is impossible, you are not in the right organization. Of course, it is helpful to consult with others, to make sure that your perceptions are not aberrant. But if you are not prepared to resign or be fired for what you believe in, then you are not a worker, let alone a professional. You are a slave. Happily, in the United States, at least, most people have some options about where they work. In the end, you need to decide which side you’re on. There are so many ways in which If you are not prepared to resign or be fired for what you believe in, then you are not a worker, let alone a professional. You are a slave. the world could spiral either up toward health and a decent life for all or down into poverty, disease, ecological disaster—even nuclear warfare. If you are in a position to help tip the balance, you owe it to yourself, to your progeny, to your employees, to your community, and to the planet to do the right thing.

Seven Maxims in Life


Seven Maxims for Creating the Ideal Life!

EASY-TO-IMPLEMENT LIFE STRATEGIES

Let’s begin with the obvious question; what exactly is a maxim?

A maxim is a principle that carries the greatest weight or authority, and because of its universal approval needs no proof or argument; as the mere statement of which gives it authority.

In outlining this report, it was my intention to provide you with a set of easy-to-implement life strategies that would work for anyone, anywhere, and at anytime. The choice of the word maxim was deliberate as what you are about to read will provide you with a blueprint, for creating the ideal life. Right now, in this moment, you are capable of exponential growth. You can multiply your performance, rapidly improve your financial condition, boost your energy and physical well-being, and break through any self-imposed limitation. You can leapfrog right over the next level, and jump to an entirely different orbit.

You CAN create the ideal life!

You do not have to settle for current circumstances. They can change quickly and dramatically, but only if you are ready. You must embrace these seven maxims, along with the belief that life is prepared to give you a breakthrough experience. You haven’t been reaching your full potential. Heck, so far, you haven’t even come close. We both know that no matter how you wish to measure success, that you have barely scratched the surface of what you personally can accomplish. But maybe the time has come to change all of that. Maybe, you’re ready to make history, rather than repeat it. It’s my pleasure to present to you these seven maxims for creating the ideal life. I urge you to embrace, inhabit and make them your own,most importantly, begin to implement them TODAY!


I. Create a Bigger Bolder Future!

Make your future bigger, brighter, and bolder than your past. Your past is history; however the past offers great insights for creating the ideal life. Your past is rich with experiences that are worth thinking about in new ways, and these valuable experiences can become raw material for creating a masterpiece.

Approach your past with this attitude, and you will have an insatiable desire for even better, more enjoyable experiences. Use your past to help you create the ideal future, and you will separate yourself from situations, relationships, and activities that can trap you in the past.

Those who have accomplished much have been men and women with a spirit of boldness and adventure. They are those who are willing to challenge and constantly question even the existence of the comfort zone, they try new ideas, and are willing to attempt the seemingly impossible.

You don’t have to be a big shot to have a bigger, bolder future. Often the most normal people suddenly achieve great heights because they learn the power that lies in acting boldly. When David faced Goliath he was more than just the underdog: he was road kill. But you know how that turned out. David acted boldly, even though everyone else thought he had a screw loose and slew the mighty Goliath.

Continually use your past only as a foundation for what lies ahead, and you will move ever closer to your personal north star—your ideal life.


II. Create Contributions Into Other People’s Lives!

The ideal life must include a commitment to serving others. Create a habit whereby your contributions are bigger than your personal gain. We must individually and collectively replace the pursuit of success and materialism with the pursuit of contribution and generosity. For this to occur, the critical question must move from, “How can I become successful?” to, “What can I contribute that will significantly impact the mission, performance, and overall results of the institution or community I serve?” By focusing on what we can contribute, we automatically become successful.

Those who contribute their time, talents, networks, and personal experience will be rewarded. It may seem strange intellectually, but the world begins to conspire for you as who or whatever benefits from your contributions, wishes to respond.

The lawn wishes to grow, the muscle begins to strengthen, and as the student’s mind expands she will wish to repay you with her own success, accomplishments and contributions to others.

To create the ideal life, concentrate continuously on making ever greater contributions into the lives of your family, friends, associates, community and the world at large. Look for ways to empower the human spirit, and you will be richly rewarded.

III. Create a Learning Environment!

The creation of an ideal life is dependent upon your commitment to growth, learning and continuous implementation. Lifelong learning rests upon the twin principles of personal development and social service as the social and economic development of a country, a company, and a community is increasingly dependent upon the knowledge and skills of its citizens in the global knowledge economy. Those who have the lowest levels of skill and the weakest capacity for constant updating will find themselves uncompetitive and most likely unemployed. Therefore, it is imperative that everyone commit to becoming a student for life, is the knowledge we currently posses is not sufficient for capitalizing on future opportunities. Learning continually throughout life is vital if we are to make informed choices about our lives and the societies in which we live. Something new is always occurring as significant shifts in industries, technologies, and policies require interrogation and deeper understanding. This is only possible through a commitment to lifelong learning.

It would be foolish to ignore the call for lifelong learning as we discover more, and not less, need of new knowledge as we make progress. Lifelong learning rightly interpreted, can have no endings and is as inseparable from normal living as food and physical exercise. It must be supported and encouraged throughout the course of life as a fundamental discipline.

IV. Create Higher Standards!

To enjoy a better quality of life, you must first become a better person. If you want to be a better manager, become a better person. If you want to become a better parent, become a better person. If you want to be a better doctor, become a better person. If you aspire to greater spheres of influence, become a better person. You do this by expecting and demanding more from yourself and others.

One well-executed idea—or one person who’s attracted to you because of what you’ve become can change your life forever. So goal setting should primarily focus on yourself—becoming the best person you can possibly become so people are attracted into your life.

Creating the ideal life begins with a few questions:

• How should I live my life so that I am fulfilled and content?

• Am I becoming the person I was meant to be?

• In order for me to make more money, what habits must I begin to initiate?

• What should I begin doing today in order to leave a lasting legacy?

• Which behavioral vices must be removed and replaced with virtues?

• How can I increase my contributions and make myself more useful?

Answers to questions like these require an intense evaluation of your life.

No matter how much acclaim you receive, keep working to improve as the opportunity for growth and prosperity is unlimited. Continually work to surpass everything you’ve done so far, by continually raising your standards.

V. Create a Greater Appreciation for Life!

Creating the ideal life requires ongoing growth, and gratitude ensures growth. Gratitude heightens awareness and expands your interaction with the world, as once gratitude becomes part of your nature you
begin to see the connections between your success and creature comforts, and the talents and contributions of others. The simplicity of gratitude and the powerful effect it has on our lives is unequaled by any other practice of its kind.

There is a special kind of magic in gratitude for it raises our consciousness, recharges our energy, enhances our self-worth, and strengthens our spirit. It’s quite possible to attain great wealth, the best education, and an exceptional quality of life and still be unhappy. This occurs when people live with an absence of gratitude.

Success is a process that includes both peaks and valleys, but the one constant in a truly successful life is gratitude.

Practicing the fine art of gratitude is not only among our most important positive emotions, but one that links directly to physical and mental well-being. It’s in our self-interest to feel gratitude because it makes us better people.

When we consciously practice grateful living, happiness follows along with an ability to withstand negative events. An attitude of gratitude provides immunity to anger, envy, resentment, and depression. Continually acknowledge others’ contributions, and you will automatically create greater success and a greater quality of life.

You’ll continually be motivated to achieve even more for those who have helped you. Focus on appreciating and thanking others and the conditions will always grow for your increased success.

VI. Create a Joyful and Playful Environment!

The ideal lifestyle begins with an ideal emotional state. Your outlook on life is not determined by your circumstances, but by your focus. A joyful focus is joyful living. A greater sense of enjoyment and along with a playful spirit will automatically create a greater quality of life. Unfortunately, most people don’t enjoy life; they endure it. They think that they can’t be happy because of all their problems that life has to be perfect before they’re happy. A problem-free life does not exist, and if you’re staking your joy on the absence of problems, you’ll never be joyful.

If you’re ever going to learn to be joyful, you’ve got to do it in the middle of the problems of life. Joy is a choice. It’s not the absence of problems; joy is the attitude that you carry regardless of your problems.

Joy, compassion, love and respect are not side issues. They are THE issues. We are not to be a businesswoman who is joyful and compassionate. We are to be a joyful and compassionate person who is a businesswoman. Joy must once again become a core value, as it is the horse that pulls every aspect of your life or wagon. It needs to be incorporated into every decision you make, every relationship you enter, and every activity you engage in.

When asking the question, “Does this decision fill me with joy?” the answer must always be immediate and transparent.

VII. Create Discomfort!

Of all the maxims advocated, none is of more fundamental value than your willingness and ability to create discomfort. In a very real sense, it is a precondition to all the others. Creating the ideal life requires an enormous threshold of discomfort and inconvenience because of the many sacrifices involved. Therefore, always make your goals and dreams greater than your comfort.

Recognize that every act of creation is also a simultaneous act of destruction. The more positive, intentional, and comfort challenging the better. Inconvenience and discomfort are part of the foundational building blocks of success. Every person who has ever been legitimately successful has formed the habit of doing things that others don’t like to do. Unfortunately, our society has placed such a high premium on convenience and expediency that it has enabled weakness, while also creating an inability for many to perform at peak levels.
The acceptance of inconvenience and discomfort explains why people with every apparent qualification for success become disappointing failures, while others achieve outstanding success in spite of many obvious and discouraging handicaps. In other words, we’ve got to realize right from the start that success requires an unconventional approach and a much different philosophical view. True success is something that is achieved by the minority of people, and is therefore unnatural and not to be achieved by following our natural likes and dislikes, nor by being guided by our natural preferences and prejudices.

We have to accept that becoming uncomfortable is not a nuisance, but a necessity to growth, excellence and success.

Continually strive for higher goals and achievement continually place yourself in a position where you have to grow, learn and perform and life will always be an adventure. The relentless pursuit of the ideal life must continue throughout your life as you pursue the goal of just not meeting, but exceeding even your wildest expectations. Incorporate these seven maxims into your life, and share them with others so that you and they might be able to enjoy all that life has to offer

Call to Action Exercise

Take a few minutes right now to answer the question that follows each of the seven maxims.

I. Create a Bigger Bolder Future!
What could you do today to begin making your future bigger, brighter, and bolder than your past?

II. Create Contributions Into Other People’s Lives!
What could you do today to begin making contributions into other people’s lives?




III. Create a Learning Environment!
What specifically can you do to strengthen your commitment to growth, learning and implementation?

IV. Create Higher Standards!
What new standards will you set for yourself to raise your performance and quality of life?

V. Create a Greater Appreciation for Life!
What are you grateful for today and how can you demonstrate your gratitude?

VI. Create a Joyful and Playful Environment!
How can you approach everything you do with a joyful and playful spirit?

VII. Create Discomfort!
What are the specific areas of your life that you must change even though it would create discomfort?


By engaging in this exercise, you will improve your focus, and you will discover abundant opportunities for growth, progress, and achievement. Pursuing these opportunities will improve your life, your family, your Community and our world.



R.Ramakrishnan
31st Dec 2007




Benchmarking


When Benchmarks Don't Work
About Faculty in this Article:
Robert S. Kaplan is a Baker Foundation Professor at Harvard Business School.
Benchmarking certainly has its virtues. Comparing production time or the cost of a standard process to that of peer companies can yield important insights about your own efficiencies—and ultimately, competitiveness. But benchmarking also has its limits. When you ignore the differentiated output that internal support or shared services groups provide, such straight-across cost or numeric comparisons become meaningless. Today's successful support unit earns its keep by being a trusted partner to the business units it serves. So, comparing its results to those in a benchmarking survey is counterproductive. Companies should save the benchmarking surveys for commoditized processes or services.
Benchmarking became popular several decades ago as part of the total quality management movement. An IBM executive defined it as
" . . . the ongoing activity of comparing one's own process, product, or service against the best-known similar activity, so that challenging but attainable goals can be set and a realistic course of action implemented to efficiently become and remain best of the best.
In one dramatic benchmarking example, General Motors, in the early 1980s, learned that a Toyota assembly plant could change its stamping presses from one model to another in eight minutes, compared with the eight hours GM plants spent to change over the same basic equipment. Clearly a deviation of this magnitude between its current performance on a critical process and industry best practice served as a wake-up call for GM.
Benchmarking works well when the process being benchmarked is essentially the same at the multiple units (either internal or external) participating in the exercise. For example, it's useful to compare the cost of producing the same widget, taking the same kind of customer order, or processing the same type of paycheck or benefit claim across multiple companies. But benchmarking is not informative when it is used to compare fundamentally different processes or

products. For example, knowing that a Mercedes-Benz 450SL costs more to produce than a Mazda Miata is not a meaningful, let alone actionable, comparison. Similarly, although the cost of serving a customer who is purchasing clothing from a Wal-Mart store is likely far below the same cost for an Armani store, Armani would probably not benefit from studying Wal-Mart's selling process. The value proposition offered by the two clothing retailers is so different that one cannot learn much from comparing the aggregate cost of servicing customers at the two companies.
Armani would probably not benefit from studying Wal-Mart's selling process.
With these simple examples in mind, we can explore the limits of benchmarking when used to assess the performance of human resources, information technology, finance, and other internal support or shared services groups. In our forthcoming book, Alignment, David Norton and I devote a chapter to aligning support groups to corporate-level and business-unit strategies. The strategy map for a support unit typically includes a financial objective to improve its efficiency in supplying services to the enterprise. This objective is usually measured by the cost of services provided and a comparison of actual costs versus authorized or budgeted amounts. In setting targets for these financial measures, organizations may be tempted to turn to commercial benchmarking services, such as the Hackett Group's Best Practices surveys. Hackett regularly produces a "book of numbers" for finance, IT, and HR organizations. The headline numbers in these surveys indicate a range of expenses, typically measured by the cost of the support department as a percentage of total revenue or the number of full-time-equivalent (FTE) employees per billion dollars of revenue. Hackett presents summary statistics of "world-class" performance (which it does not define in the report) versus average departmental performance, using aggregate financial and personnel metrics.
Apples and oranges, or Armani vs. Wal-Mart
The notion of measuring the performance of an internal support service organization by its cost and personnel numbers brings to mind the old adage about the economist who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing. When the benchmark used to evaluate a department or a process is based on an aggregate financial metric, the assumption is that the department or process is not producing a differentiated output—that both the quantity and the quality of outputs are comparable among all participating entities. In our earlier Toyota/GM example, it was sensible
to compare the two companies' stamping press changeover times because their outputs were the same; the difference in changeover times could thus not be attributed to differences in either the quality or the nature of the output. But when a benchmarker like Hackett extends this methodology to support services or shared service departments, it assumes (without explicitly stating) that such departments are all offering identical services to their internal clients. That's like comparing Armani's selling expenses per transaction to Wal-Mart's, a comparison that deviates from benchmarking's original purpose: to perform detailed process comparisons across similar entities, as in the Toyota/GM example. Simplistic benchmarking using aggregate statistics is valid only for standardized processes that are intended to produce low-cost, nondifferentiated services for internal or external customers.
Perhaps many HR, IT, and finance departments do indeed strive to be low-cost suppliers of standardized services. But if so, they are not likely to remain internal departments for very long. After all, an outsourcer of these services enjoys economies of scale that virtually no internal support unit can hope to match. An outsourcer can shift operations to the lowest-cost regions of the world, such as India or China, to supply standardized services at the most competitive rates. That is why Dave Norton and I argue in our book that a low-cost strategy is unsustainable for the support units of most organizations.
The strategic differentiation of support units
We argue instead that an internal support unit should follow a customer intimacy (customer solutions) strategy, in which it earns its way by becoming a trusted partner and adviser to business unit executives.
Figure 1, below, shows a typical set of services that HR, IT, and finance units offer their internal clients. Consider first the HR unit. Can it benchmark the cost of developing competencies of employees in strategic job families to the business unit strategy?1 Of course not. One corporation in a Hackett database might report that it spends 0.2 percent of revenue on employee competency development, whereas your company spends 1.0 percent of revenue on this task. Is your HR group five times as inefficient as the "benchmark" HR group? Obviously, this is an absurd comparison. The HR group that is spending 0.2 percent of revenue is probably producing few employees with the skills required to implement its strategy, whereas your group has raised employee competencies to the highest level in the industry. The goal, then, is not to spend the least on an important differentiating service; it is to produce outcomes from the service that make the enterprise more competitive and much more valuable. The same holds true for leadership development or a performance management process that motivates employees to execute strategy effectively. The value of these programs is measured by the value they create in the enterprise, not by how little is spent on them.
An adequate technology infrastructure and standard transaction applications are usually not considered strategic differentiators for a company. While necessary, these capabilities do not determine competitive success. An IT department that provides only a basic foundation of technology infrastructure and a standard set of application programs may adequately assess its efficiency by comparing its costs and FTE complement to other IT departments that provide only such a basic infrastructure. But if this is all the internal IT group supplies, then the enterprise may soon determine that it can get these services better, faster, and cheaper through an IT outsourcer. The differentiation that an internal IT group offers comes from supplying such capabilities as analytic applications and a decision-support infrastructure that is customized to the business units' strategic needs. Differentiation also comes from being the trusted adviser to business units on how to achieve competitive advantage through leading-edge information technology and applications. If customized analytic and decision-support services and IT partnerships are part of the mission of the IT organization, it will by necessity be spending much more on IT than a supposedly "world-class" IT enterprise featured in a benchmarking database. And so it should, since the value of the differentiating IT group is measured by the increased value it creates for the line businesses, not by its success in reducing the costs of standard IT services.





Figure 1
Strategic Information Technology Portfolio
Analytic and decision support applications
Transaction processing applications
Technology Infrastructure
Strategic HR Service Portfolio
Strategic competency development
Organization and leadership development
Performance management process
Strategic Finance Service Portfolio
Transactions, controls, and processing
External compliance and communication
Planning and decision-support services
The same issue arises with the finance organization. For standard transactional applications, such as accounts receivable, accounts payable, payroll processing, travel expense reporting, and monthly accounting statements, comparing costs against the world's lowest-cost finance processors provides a useful benchmark. The finance group must also provide standard, compliant reporting to shareholders, tax authorities, and regulators, so it would be sensible to benchmark the cost of these standard processes as well, in order to identify opportunities for cost reduction. Few companies, however, attempt to seek competitive advantage by lowering the cost of any of these standard processes. No matter what, these tasks must be done cheaply, reliably, and in a timely fashion. The opportunity for value creation comes when finance professionals partner with line executives to help them better understand the cost, revenue, and profit implications of their decisions. Some finance groups spend more by investing in, say, activity-based cost systems that calculate the profitability of

each of the company's thousands of products and customers. Such spending raises their costs above that of finance groups that do not produce such profitability analysis. But the returns from an important analytic application can be ten times its cost. Similarly, finance groups might spend more to upgrade the skills of their professionals so that they become better business partners with line executives. Finance spending as a percentage of revenues will increase, but the profit impact from these partnerships can repay the additional spending many times over.
These examples collectively reveal the dangers of simplistically benchmarking corporate services, especially those that strive to serve a greater strategic purpose than their counterparts in the benchmarking pool. Benchmarking can be informative for standard processes—those processes that are comparable across organizations, and that do not create differentiation and value for the enterprise. However, service units whose goal is to provide differentiated services and to upgrade the skills and capabilities of their professionals will necessarily spend more. They are not less efficient than their low-cost counterparts; rather, they expect to create even more value for their enterprise. Their strategy is fundamentally different.
Is it possible to evaluate differentiated services?
The question remains: how to evaluate the effectiveness of service units that offer differentiating outputs? Dave Norton and I argue that the cause-and-effect linkages in a service unit's strategy map and Balanced Scorecard will describe how the unit's investment in people, systems, and culture will drive improvement in processes that create specific, tangible value for its internal customers, the business units. Ultimately, the effectiveness test is whether profit-oriented business-unit leaders recognize this value. Should the desire to benchmark remain, a service unit should seek counterparts at other companies that are following roughly the same strategy. They can check each other's strategy maps and scorecards to confirm that they are, in fact, attempting to offer similar services. Through site visits, the benchmarking companies can identify best practices within those processes to learn how to become more efficient and effective in them.
Benchmarking can be beneficial, but it has limitations. Be sure that when you subscribe to a benchmarking service, you limit your comparison to basic, commoditized services. Do not expect to gauge what you spend on differentiating services by comparing your costs to entities that are not offering customized solutions. Spending on differentiated services is more like an investment than an expense—an investment meant to yield benefits that exceed its cost.
Footnote:
1. Some jobs have a much greater impact on an organization's strategy than others, which has implications for its HR development programs, among other things. Strategic job families are those categories of job whose required competencies can have the biggest impact on enhancing the organization's critical internal processes.
About the author
Robert S. Kaplan is the Baker Foundation Professor at Harvard Business School and chairman of the Balanced Scorecard Collaborative.

Work -life Balance

Life-Work Balance -Work-Life Balance: A Different Cut -Stephen R. Covey
The challenge of work-life balance is without question one of the most significant struggles faced by modern man. I've surveyed thousands of audiences about their greatest personal and Professional challenges. Life balance is always at or near the top.Much of my teaching and writing in this area has focused on the power each one of us possesses to: 1) take responsibility for, and become the creative force of, our lives; 2) decide what's most important in our whole lives--developing a vision and deep commitment to the "first things" of life and; 3) to then put those first things first and organize our lives around our priorities. For something that seems so self-evident to most people, it's remarkable how many of us struggle to translate our intellectual awareness into day-to-day practice and decision-making.Many people simply conclude that they are not disciplined enough. My response to that idea is that it's usually not a discipline problem at all. The problem is more often that the person has not yet sufficiently paid the price to get very clear about what matters most to them. Once you have a burning "yes" inside you about what's truly important, it's very easy to say "no" to the unimportant. However, when you get beyond the personal, there is another profoundly pervasive cause for work-life imbalance. It is to be found in the painful and surprisingly ineffective way most organizations work. In no way is this pain more clearly or practically manifest than their inability to focus and execute on their highest priorities. Using what we call the xQ (Execution Quotient) Questionnaire, Harris Interactive (nasdaq: HPOL - news - people ), the originators of the Harris (nyse: HRS - news - people ) Poll, and FranklinCovey recently polled 23,000 U.S. residents employed full time within key industries and in key functional areas. Consider a few of their most stunning findings:
Only 37% said they have a clear understanding of what their organization is trying to achieve and why.

Only 1 in 5 were enthusiastic about their team's and organization's goals.
Only 1 in 5 workers said they have a clear "line of sight" between their tasks and their team's and organization's goals.

Only half were satisfied with the work they have accomplished at the end of the week.

Only 15% felt that their organization fully enables them to execute key goals.

Only 15% felt they worked in a high-trust environment.

Only 17% felt their organization fosters open communication that is respectful of differing opinions and that results in new and better ideas.
Only 10% felt that their organization holds people accountable for results.
Only 20% fully trusted the organization they work for.
Only 13% have high-trust, highly cooperative working relationships with other groups or departments.
The data is sobering. It matches my own experience with people in organizations of every kind all around the world. Despite all our gains in technology, product innovation and world markets, most people are not thriving in the organizations they work for. They are neither fulfilled norexcited. They are frustrated. They are not clear about where the organization is headed or what its highest priorities are. They are bogged down and distracted. Most of all, they don't feel they can change much. Can you imagine the personal and organizational cost of failing to fully engagethe passion, talent and intelligence of the workforce? Can you imagine the waste of time, energy and resources?
The bottom line is, when people are crystal clear about the most important priorities of the organization and team they work with and prioritized their work around those top priorities, not only are they many times more productive, they discover they have the time they need to have a whole life. We have found there are four keys or organizational/team disciplines that produce this kind of freedom and productivity
Discipline 1: Focus on the Wildly Important. This means you need to narrow your focus down to the one, two or three most important goals you must achieve. These goals are so important that if you don't achieve them, nothing else you achieve really matters much.

Discipline 2: Act on the Lead Measures. After you've narrowed your focus to the few key goals you must accomplish, you need to select the few key activities that are predictive of goal achievement and that you can influence on a weekly basis. These are called "lead measures." These lead measures are 80/20 activities--that is, 80% of the results come from 20% of these activities. The 80/20 rule is also known as the Pareto principle.

Discipline 3: Keep a Compelling Scoreboard. Once you've defined your goals and measures, you need to put them on a scoreboard so everyone knows all the time whether you're winning or losing.
Discipline 4: Create a Cadence of Accountability-a rhythm of team-based engagement and accountability.
Want balance in your life? Then sure, get your own act together, but don't forget four powerful disciplines of execution in your team and organization. You'll not only produce results, you'll create your own freedom.

Compiled by R.Ramakrishnan
30th May 2008


Truths about Fear


Truths about fear

All of us have fear
We fear being alone
We fear crowded.
We fear the doctor
We fear living with health problems
We fear the opposite sex
We fear not knowing the opposite sex
We fear making decisions
We fear of not making an impact
We fear problems
We fear opportunities
We fear failure
We fear success
We fear job interviews
We fear unemployment
We fear asserting ourselves
We fear not asserting ourselves
We fear being pushed
We fear being pulled
We fear breaking up a relationship
We fear staying in the relationship
We fear meeting someone
We fear meeting no one.

Wow! Talk about a crazy list of contrasting fears! The truth about fears is they are crazy and irrational. What fears do you experience which you think are unique to you? What are the fears that drive you crazy?

As you’ve seen in the beginning of this article, we fear one side of the story while at the very same time we can fear the other side of the story. It is possible to fear talking to someone new, and fear not meeting new people, at the same time because fear hides the truth.

The experiences fear gives you are a smoke screen. It makes you irrational. Fear hides the truth from you. Literally, the acronym for fear is False Evidence Appearing Real. Fear doesn’t want you to know the truth about itself and yourself.

The fears we experience are immobilizing. They paralyze us from taking action and achieving what we want. We can want something, but fear sends what seems like the equivalent of a massive electromagnetic pulse through our body as it shuts down our physical functioning.





According to Susan Jeffers, Ph.D. in Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway, there are five truths about fear. Whatever it is you fear, provided that the fear is not physically dangerous like doing drugs, the following five truths apply:

Truth #1

The fear will never go away as long as I continue to grow.

Our ancestors experienced fear because they were threatened from dangerous animals or life threatening environments. Fear has its evolutionary purpose as it serves to protect. Whatever it is you fear, the fear tricks you into thinking it is danger. It tells you the thing you fear will cause pain. It tricks you into thing you won’t be able to handle it.
It is far more comforting and exciting to experience growth and live in fear than to live paralyzed by fear.

Don’t be one of those people who expect to live a fearless life. As Thomas Leonard so bluntly and wonderfully put it, “Fear is natural. Be with it.” Fear can, and will, diminish in the things which you immerse yourself. However, once you explore new unknown territory, new fears will arise. I know it isn’t nice to hear that, but I’m hear to tell you the truth about fear that fear doesn’t want you to know. It is far more comforting and exciting to experience growth and live in fear than to live paralyzed by fear.

Truth #2

The only way to get rid of the fear of doing something is to go out and do it.

Truth number two sounds contradictory to truth number one, but be assured that both truths are still truths. Fear will always exist in your life, but it doesn’t have to exist in the things that you do. When we do the thing we fear, whether it was a facade or not, we come to build confidence in our ability to handle the situation. Fear decreases.

We fear because uncertainty looms in our ability to handle what gets delivered to us. “Fear comes from uncertainty.” said William Congreve. “When we are absolutely certain, whether of our worth or worthlessness, we are almost impervious to fear.”

Anthony Robbins said, “Do what you fear, and the death of fear is certain.” Action will conquer fear any day of the week, month, and year of your life. By acting in the face of fear, you transform the uncertain into the certain as the unknown becomes known.








Truth #3

The only way to feel better about myself is to go out and do it.

When filled with a fear, we reason to ourselves that we will take action when we feel better about ourselves. “When I’m ready, I’ll…” “If I can… then I’ll…” “I’ll wait till I’m…” Stop waiting for whatever it is you want to change. Change your ability to take action.

While self-esteem boosts you ability to take action, go the quicker and more direct route: take action to boost your self-esteem. The feelings of confidence will then build on themselves, like a good financial investment, leading to more and more positive feelings about you & Self. Stop wanting to be a fearless public speaker before doing public speaking. Do public speaking to be a fearless public speaker.

The myth of truth number three, “I’ll feel better about myself before doing it”, is reverse thinking to the truth. You will not feel a better person, or have more self-belief in your ability, until you do the thing which you fear. It is when you dive into action that you begin to feel good about yourself; not the other way around.

Truth #4

Not only am I going to experience fear whenever I’m on unfamiliar territory, but so is everyone else.

We fear because uncertainty looms in our ability to handle what gets delivered to us.

It is very comforting and reassuring to hear truth number four. Reassuring statements have a danger to delude one from reality and the hard truth. Nonetheless, it is truth that everyone else experiences fear in unfamiliar territory. Every public speaker and writer I have known suffers, or suffered, from fears and insecurities of the judgments of others.

Fear is hardwired into the human mind. Fear wants you to think that your fears are unique psychological problems. Fear is an educational problem. Draw comfort from knowing that those around you, and those who you envy, also experience or once experienced the very fear you feel is unique to you. It is the insecurities we feel and deem unique to us that unite us.

Truth #5

Pushing through fear is less frightening than living with the underlying fear that comes from a feeling of helplessness.

Although fear encompasses uncertainty, the certainty of living a fearful life is scarier. The fear of being ill is scarier than seeing a doctor. The fear of having a divorce is scarier than addressing a tough relationship problem. The fear of having no friends is scarier than approaching someone. “Courage is not the absence of fear,” said Ambrose Redmoon, “but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear.”

Repeat each of these truths at least 20 times every morning and night. When you continually affirm the truth, you will accept it as truth. You will no longer be tricked by fear. I’m excited to have finally revealed the truth about fear to you.

Don’t let fear fool you. It is after all False Evidence Appearing Real. Follow the five truths in this article and you will see the light which fear hides from your eyes. The truth exists, you just need to see it. Live a fear-filled life!


An extract from HBR article

Compiled by R.Ramakrishnan
14th June 2008

Bhagavatgita & Management

Bhagavad-Gita and Management
IntroductionManagement has become a part and parcel in everyday life, be it at home, office, factory, Government, or in any other organization where a group of human beings assemble for a common purpose, management principles come into play through their various facets like management of time, resources, personnel, materials, machinery, finance, planning, priorities, policies and practice.
Management is a systematic way of doing all activities in any field of human effort. It is about keeping oneself engaged in interactive relationship with other human beings in the course of performing one's duty. Its task is to make people capable of joint performance, to make their weaknesses irrelevant -so says the Management Guru Peter Drucker.
It strikes harmony in working -equilibrium in thoughts and actions, goals and achievements, plans and performance, products and markets. It resolves situations of scarcities be they in the physical, technical or human fields through maximum utilization with the minimum available processes to achieve the goal The lack of management will cause disorder, confusion, wastage, delay, destruction and even depression. Managing men, money and material in the best possible way according to circumstances and environment is the most important and essential factor for a successful management. Managing men is supposed have the best tactics. Man is the first syllable in management which speaks volumes on the role and significance of man in a scheme of management practices. From the pre-historic days of aborigines to the present day of robots and computers the ideas of managing available resources have been in existence in some form or other. When the world has become a big global village now, management practices have become more complex and what was once considered a golden rule is now thought to be an anachronism. Management Guidelines from The Bhagavad Gita
There is an important distinction between effectiveness and efficiency in managing. Effectiveness is doing the right things and Efficiency is doing things right. The general principles of effective management can be applied in every fields the differences being mainly in the application than in principles. Again, effective management is not limited in its application only to business or industrial enterprises but to all organizations where the aim is to reach a given goal through a Chief Executive or a Manager with the help of a group of workers.
The Manager's functions can be briefly summed up as under :
· Forming a vision and planning the strategy to realize such vision.
· Cultivating the art of leadership.
· Establishing the institutional excellence and building an innovative organization.
· Developing human resources.
· Team building and teamwork.
· Delegation, motivation, and communication and Reviewing performance and taking corrective steps whenever called for.
Thus Management is a process in search of excellence to align people and get them committed to work for a common goal to the maximum social benefit. The critical question in every Manager's mind is how to be effective in his job. The answer to this fundamental question is found in the Bhagavad-Gita Gita which repeatedly proclaims that 'you try to manage yourself'. The reason is that unless the Manager reaches a level of excellence and effectiveness that sets him apart from the others whom he is managing, he will be merely a face in the crowd and not an achiever. In this context the Bhagavad-Gita Gita expounded thousands of years ago by the Super Management Guru Bhagawan Sri Krishna enlightens us on all managerial techniques leading to a harmonious and blissful state of affairs as against conflicts, tensions, lowest efficiency and least productivity, absence of motivation and lack of work culture etc common to most of the Indian enterprises today. The modern management concepts like vision, leadership, motivation, excellence in work, achieving goals, meaning of work, attitude towards work, nature of individual, decision making, planning etc., are all discussed in the Bhagavad-Gita Gita with a sharp insight and finest analysis to drive through our confused grey matter making it highly eligible to become a part of the modem management syllabus. It may be noted that while Western design on management deals with the problems at superficial, material, external and peripheral levels, the ideas contained in the Bhagavad Gita tackle the issues from the grass roots level of human thinking because once the basic thinking of man is improved it will automatically enhance the quality of his actions and their results.
The management thoughts emanating from the Western countries particularly the U.S.A. are based mostly on the lure for materialism and a perennial thirst for profit irrespective of the quality of the means adopted to achieve that goal. This phenomenon has its source in abundance in the West particularly the U.S.A. Management by materialism caught the fancy of all the countries the world over, India being no exception to this trend.
Our country has been in the forefront in importing those ideas mainly because of its centuries old indoctrination by the colonial rulers which inculcated in us a feeling that anything Western is always good and anything Indian is always inferior. Hence our management schools have sprung up on the foundations of materialistic approach wherein no place of importance was given to a holistic view. The result is while huge funds have been invested in building these temples of modem management education, no perceptible changes are visible in the improvement of the quality of life although the standard of living of a few has gone up. The same old struggles in almost all sectors of the economy, criminalization of institutions, more and more social violence, exploitation and such other vices have gone deep in the body politic. The reasons for this sorry state of affairs are not far to seek. The western idea of management has placed utmost reliance on the worker (which includes Managers also) -to make him more efficient, to increase his productivity. They pay him more so that he may work more, produce more, sell more and will stick to the organization without looking for alternatives. The sole aim of extracting better and more work from him is for improving the bottom-line of the enterprise. Worker has become a hirable commodity, which can be used, replaced and discarded at will. The workers have also seen through the game plan of their paymasters who have reduced them to the state of a mercantile product. They changed their attitude to work and started adopting such measures as uncalled for strikes, Gheraos, sit-ins, dharnas, go-slows, work-to-rule etc to get maximum benefit for themselves from the organizations without caring the least for the adverse impact that such coercive methods will cause to the society at large. Thus we have reached a situation where management and workers have become separate and contradictory entities wherein their approaches are different and interests are conflicting. There is no common goal or understanding which predictably leads to constant suspicion, friction, disillusions and mistrust because of working at cross purposes. The absence of human values and erosion of human touch in the organizational structure resulted in a permanent crisis of confidence. The western management thoughts although acquired prosperity to some for some time has absolutely failed in their aim to ensure betterment of individual life and social welfare. It has remained by and large a soulless management edifice and an oasis of plenty for a chosen few in the midst of poor quality of life to many. Hence there is an urgent need to have a re-look at the prevalent management discipline on its objectives, scope and content.
It should be redefined so as to underline the development of the worker as a man, as a human being with all his positive and negative characteristics and not as a mere wage-earner. In this changed perspective, management ceases to be a career-agent but becomes an instrument in the process of national development in all its segments. Bhagavad Gita And Managerial Effectiveness
Now let us re-examine some of the modern management concepts in the light of the Bhagavad Gita which is a primer of management by values. Utilization of Available Resources
The first lesson in the management science is to choose wisely and utilise optimally the scarce resources if one has to succeed in his venture. During the curtain raiser before the Mahabharata War Duryodhana chose Sri Krishna's large army for his help while Arjuna selected Sri Krishna's wisdom for his support. This episode gives us a clue as to who is an Effective Manager.
Attitude towards Work
Three stone-cutters were engaged in erecting a temple. As usual a H.R.D. Consultant asked them what they were doing. The response of the three workers to this innocent-looking question is illuminating.
'I am a poor man. I have to maintain my family. I am making a living here,' said the first stone-cutter with a dejected face. 'Well, I work because I want to show that I am the best stone-cutter in the country,' said the second one with a sense of pride.'Oh, I want to build the most beautiful temple in the country,' said the third one with a visionary gleam.
Their jobs were identical but their perspectives were different. What Gita tells us is to develop the visionary perspective in the work we do. It tells us to develop a sense of larger vision in one's work for the common good. Work Commitment
The popular verse 2.47 of the Gita cited above advises non-attachment to the fruits or results of actions performed in the course of one's duty. Dedicated work has to mean 'work for the sake of work'. If we are always calculating the date of promotion for putting in our efforts, then such work cannot be commitment-oriented causing excellence in the results but it will be promotion-oriented resulting in inevitable disappointments. By tilting the performance towards the anticipated benefits, the quality of performance of the present duty suffers on account of the mental agitations caused by the anxieties of the future. Another reason for non-attachment to results is the fact that workings of the world are not designed to positively respond to our calculations and hence expected fruits may not always be forthcoming.
So, the Gita tells us not to mortgage the present commitment to an uncertain future. If we are not able to measure up to this height, then surly the fault lies with us and not with the teaching.
Some people argue that being unattached to the consequences of one's action would make one un-accountable as accountability is a much touted word these days with the vigilance department sitting on our shoulders. However, we have to understand that the entire second chapter has arisen as a sequel to the temporarily lost sense of accountability on the part of Arjuna in the first chapter of the Gita in performing his swadharma. Bhagavad Gita is full of advice on the theory of cause and effect, making the doer responsible for the consequences of his deeds. The Gita, while advising detachment from the avarice of selfish gains by discharging one's accepted duty, does not absolve anybody of the consequences arising from discharge of his responsibilities. This verse is a brilliant guide to the operating Manager for psychological energy conservation and a preventive method against stress and burn-outs in the work situations. Learning managerial stress prevention methods is quite costly now days and if only we understand the Gita we get the required cure free of cost. Thus the best means for effective work performance is to become the work itself. Attaining this state of nishkama karma is the right attitude to work because it prevents the ego, the mind from dissipation through speculation on future gains or losses. It has been presumed for long that satisfying lower needs of a worker like adequate food, clothing and shelter, recognition, appreciation, status, personality development etc are the key factors in the motivational theory of personnel management. It is the common experience that the spirit of grievances from the clerk to the Director is identical and only their scales and composition vary. It should have been that once the lower-order needs are more than satisfied, the Director should have no problem in optimizing his contribution to the organization. But more often than not, it does not happen like that; the eagle soars high but keeps its eyes firmly fixed on the dead animal below. On the contrary a lowly paid school teacher, a self-employed artisan, ordinary artistes demonstrate higher levels of self- realization despite poor satisfaction of their lower- order needs.
This situation is explained by the theory of Self-transcendence or Self-realization propounded in the Gita. Self-transcendence is overcoming insuperable obstacles in one's path. It involves renouncing egoism, putting others before oneself, team work, dignity, sharing, co-operation, harmony, trust, sacrificing lower needs for higher goals, seeing others in you and yourself in others etc. The portrait of a self-realizing person is that he is a man who aims at his own position and underrates everything else. On the other hand the Self-transcenders are the visionaries and innovators. Their resolute efforts enable them to achieve the apparently impossible. They overcome all barriers to reach their goal.
The work must be done with detachment.' This is because it is the Ego which spoils the work. If this is not the backbone of the Theory of Motivation which the modern scholars talk about what else is it? I would say that this is not merely a theory of Motivation but it is a theory of Inspiration.
The Gita further advises to perform action with loving attention to the Divine which implies redirection of the empirical self away from its egocentric needs, desires, and passions for creating suitable conditions to perform actions in pursuit of excellence. Tagore says working for love is freedom in action which is described as disinterested work in the Gita. It is on the basis of the holistic vision that Indians have developed the work-ethos of life. They found that all work irrespective of its nature have to be directed towards a single purpose that is the manifestation of essential divinity in man by working for the good of all beings -lokasangraha. This vision was presented to us in the very first mantra of lsopanishad which says that whatever exists in the Universe is enveloped by God. How shall we enjoy this life then, if all are one? The answer it provides is enjoy and strengthen life by sacrificing your selfishness by not coveting other's wealth. The same motivation is given by Sri Krishna in the Third Chapter of Gita when He says that 'He who shares the wealth generated only after serving the people, through work done as a sacrifice for them, is freed from all the sins. On the contrary those who earn wealth only for themselves, eat sins that lead to frustration and failure.' The disinterested work finds expression in devotion, surrender and equipoise. The former two are psychological while the third is the strong-willed determination to keep the mind free of and above the dualistic pulls of daily experiences. Detached involvement in work is the key to mental equanimity or the state of nirdwanda. This attitude leads to a stage where the worker begins to feel the presence of the Supreme Intelligence guiding the empirical individual intelligence. Such de-personified intelligence is best suited for those who sincerely believe in the supremacy of organizational goals as compared to narrow personal success and achievement. Work culture means vigorous and arduous effort in pursuit of a given or chosen task. When Bhagawan Sri Krishna rebukes Arjuna in the strongest words for his unmanliness and imbecility in recoiling from his righteous duty it is nothing but a clarion call for the highest work culture. Poor work culture is the result of tamo guna overtaking one's mindset. Bhagawan's stinging rebuke is to bring out the temporarily dormant rajo guna in Arjuna. In Chapter 16 of the Gita Sri Krishna elaborates on two types of Work Ethic viz. daivi sampat or divine work culture and asuri sampat or demonic work culture. Daivi work culture - means fearlessness, purity, self-control, sacrifice, straightforwardness, self-denial, calmness, absence of fault-finding, absence of greed, gentleness, modesty, absence of envy and pride.
Asuri work culture - means egoism, delusion, desire-centric, improper performance, work which is not oriented towards service. It is to be noted that mere work ethic is not enough in as much as a hardened criminal has also a very good work culture. What is needed is a work ethic conditioned by ethics in work.
It is in this light that the counsel 'yogah karmasu kausalam' should be understood. Kausalam means skill or method or technique of work which is an indispensable component of work ethic. Yogah is defined in the Gita itself as 'samatvam yogah uchyate' meaning unchanging equipoise of mind. Tilak tells us that performing actions with the special device of an equable mind is Yoga. By making the equable mind as the bed-rock of all actions Gita evolved the goal of unification of work ethic with ethics in work, for without ethical process no mind can attain equipoise. Adi Sankara says that the skill in performance of one's duty consists in maintaining the evenness of mind in success and failure because the calm mind in failure will lead him to deeper introspection and see clearly where the process went wrong so that corrective steps could be taken to avoid such shortcomings in future.
The principle of reducing our attachment to personal gains from the work done or controlling the aversion to personal losses enunciated in Ch.2 Verse 47 of the Gita is the foolproof prescription for attaining equanimity. The common apprehension about this principle that it will lead to lack of incentive for effort and work, striking at the very root of work ethic, is not valid because the advice is to be judged as relevant to man's overriding quest for true mental happiness. Thus while the common place theories on motivation lead us to bondage, the Gita theory takes us to freedom and real happiness.
Work Results
The Gita further explains the theory of non- attachment to the results of work in Ch.18 Verses 13-15 the import of which is as under:
If the result of sincere effort is a success, the entire credit should not be appropriated by the doer alone. If the result of sincere effort is a failure, then too the entire blame does not accrue to the doer.
The former attitude mollifies arrogance and conceit while the latter prevents excessive despondency, de-motivation and self-pity. Thus both these dispositions safeguard the doer against psychological vulnerability which is the cause for the Modem Managers' companions like Diabetes, High B.P. Ulcers etc.
Assimilation of the ideas behind 2.47 and 18.13-15 of the Gita leads us to the wider spectrum of lokasamgraha or general welfare.
There is also another dimension in the work ethic. If the karmayoga is blended with bhaktiyoga then the work itself becomes worship, a seva yoga.


Manager's Mental Health
The ideas mentioned above have a close bearing on the end-state of a manager which is his mental health. Sound mental health is the very goal of any human activity more so management. An expert describes sound mental health as that state of mind which can maintain a calm, positive poise or regain it when unsettled in the midst of all the external vagaries of work life and social existence. Internal constancy and peace are the pre- requisites for a healthy stress-free mind. Some of the impediments to sound mental health are:
· Greed -for power, position, prestige and money.
· Envy -regarding others' achievements, success, rewards.
· Egotism -about one's own accomplishments.
· Suspicion, anger and frustration.
· Anguish through comparisons.
The driving forces in today's rat-race are speed and greed as well as ambition and competition. The natural fallout from these forces is erosion of one's ethico-moral fibre which supersedes the value system as a means in the entrepreneurial path like tax evasion, undercutting, spreading canards against the competitors, entrepreneurial spying, instigating industrial strife in the business rivals' establishments etc. Although these practices are taken as normal business hazards for achieving progress, they always end up as a pursuit of mirage -the more the needs the more the disappointments. This phenomenon may be called as yayati-syndrome. In Mahabharata we come across a king called Yayati who, in order to revel in the endless enjoyment of flesh exchanged his old age with the youth of his obliging youngest son for a mythical thousand years. However, he lost himself in the pursuit of sensual enjoyments and felt penitent. He came back to his son pleading to take back his youth. This yayati syndrome shows the conflict between externally directed acquisitions, motivations and inner reasoning, emotions and conscience. Gita tells us how to get out of this universal phenomenon by prescribing the following capsules:
· Cultivate sound philosophy of life.
· Identify with inner core of self-sufficiency.
· Get out of the habitual mindset towards the pairs of opposites.
· Strive for excellence through work is worship.
· Build up an internal integrated reference point to face contrary impulses, and emotions.
· Pursue ethico-moral rectitude.
Cultivating this understanding by a manager would lead him to emancipation from falsifying ego-conscious state of confusion and distortion, to a state of pure and free mind i.e. universal, supreme consciousness wherefrom he can prove his effectiveness in discharging whatever duties that have fallen to his domain. Bhagawan's advice is relevant here :
"tasmaat sarveshu kaaleshu mamanusmarah yuddha cha" 'Therefore under all circumstances remember Me and then fight' (Fight means perform your duties)
Management Needs those Who Practice what they Preach
Whatever the excellent and best ones do, the commoners follow, so says Sri Krishna in the Gita. This is the leadership quality prescribed in the Gita. The visionary leader must also be a missionary, extremely practical, intensively dynamic and capable of translating dreams into reality. This dynamism and strength of a true leader flows from an inspired and spontaneous motivation to help others. "I am the strength of those who are devoid of personal desire and attachment. O Arjuna, I am the legitimate desire in those, who are not opposed to righteousness" says Sri Krishna in the 10th Chapter of the Gita.
The Ultimate Message of Gita for Managers
The despondent position of Arjuna in the first chapter of the Gita is a typical human situation which may come in the life of all men of action some time or other. Sri Krishna by sheer power of his inspiring words raised the level of Arjuna's mind from the state of inertia to the state of righteous action, from the state of faithlessness to the state of faith and self-confidence in the ultimate victory of Dharma (ethical action). They are the powerful words of courage of strength, of self confidence, of faith in one's own infinite power, of the glory, of valour in the life of active people and of the need for intense calmness in the midst of intense action.
When Arjuna got over his despondency and stood ready to fight, Sri Krishna gave him the gospel for using his spirit of intense action not for his own benefit, not for satisfying his own greed and desire, but for using his action for the good of many, with faith in the ultimate victory of ethics over unethical actions and truth over untruth. Arjuna responds by emphatically declaring that all his delusions were removed and that he is ready to do what is expected of him in the given situation. Sri Krishna's advice with regard to temporary failures in actions is 'No doer of good ever ends in misery'. Every action should produce results: good action produces good results and evil begets nothing but evil. Therefore always act well and be rewarded.And finally the Gita's consoling message for all men of action is : He who follows My ideal in all walks of life without losing faith in the ideal or never deviating from it, I provide him with all that he needs (Yoga) and protect what he has already got (Kshema). In conclusion the purport of this essay is not to suggest discarding of the Western model of efficiency, dynamism and striving for excellence but to make these ideals tuned to the India's holistic attitude of lokasangraha -for the welfare of many, for the good of many. The idea is that these management skills should be India-centric and not America-centric. Swami Vivekananda says a combination of both these approaches will certainly create future leaders of India who will be far superior to any that have ever been in the world.

Compiled by R.Ramakrishnan
14th June 2008