Magazine 2012
- Journal 2012
- Journal 2012 – Index
- Banksb Growth With Advertisement And Publicity (10)
- Factors influencing success of Business Process Reengineering Implementation in Public Sector Banks (15)
- Consumptions and Savings Pattern In India : An Empirical Study (20)
- A Study of Financial Soundness of Mahanand Dairy, Mumbai (27)
- Study of Investors Perception Towards Investment In The Post Recession -era (34)
- Micro-Finance in India and Maharashtra (43)
- Regionalism versus Multilateralism in International Trade : An Overview of the on Going Debate (52)
- Different Aspect and Methods of Environmental Valuation (59)
- Aging Problem in India And Social Support For The Aged (64)
- The Indian Media and Entertainment Industry- ST Prospectives and Challenges in 21 Century (70)
- Perceptions Of Who Is A Good Language Teacher & A Case Study (77)
- Shock Stories : Writing as Resistance A Study of Selected Writings of Daniil Kharms and Mahashweta Devi (80)
- Of Poets, Poetry and Pedagogics : Teaching Gender And Cultural Studies In A Metropolitan Classroom Setting (84)
- Struggle for b Spaceb of Women in Orhan Pamukbs b Snowb (88)
- Journey Into The Self : Binodini Dasibs My Story and My Life as an Actress (92)
- Understanding Tidal Rhythms: Ecological Symbiosis in Amitav Ghoshbs The Hungry Tide and Dhruv Bhattbs Samudrantike (94)
- Ecocriticism : Initiating Eco -Consciousness (98)
- Inclusiveness and Individualized Instruction to Realize Potential in Large Classes (102)
- Gabriel Garcia Marquezbs One Hundred Years of Solitude: A Postcolonial Perspective (108)
- Gender Concerns In The Mission Of The Catholic Church (111)
- The Wind Done Gone: Postcolonial and Postmodern Revisionist History (115)
- A Study on Storage and Acceptability Of Weaning Food (119)
- The Rise of Medical Tourism- a Promising Sector (124)
- Hunger- A Curse on Mankind (128)
- Human Rights Education: The Collective Educational Struggle for Producing Change (134)
- Emerging Work Culture in Corporate World (137)
- Adalaj b Vavb b A Heritage Water Reservoir (176)
- Colonial Sanitarium in Mahableshwar Hill Station: Governorbs Summer Residence (180)
- A Mental Health Initiative (184)
- Emerging Concept of Live-In-Relation International and National Scenario (190)
- Sustainable Human Settlement Development in Urban Centres (196)
- Healthy Youth Our Best Resource (200)
- Social Enterpreneurship – The Way Forward (204)
- Gandhian Ideology : An Attempt to Reconstruct Industry and Society (207)
Emerging Work Culture in
Corporate World
Ms. Sharmila Jajodia
Ramniranjan Jhunjhunwala College, Mumbai.
Abstract
India as a nation has come a long way from an agricultural society to an information savvy society with nuclear
power. Globalisation, advanced technology, the vagaries of the world markets, innovations and emerging
concepts like intellectual capital, knowledge workers, e-business and so on are riveting the attention of managers.
So much has evolved and transpired in the business environment during the last decade that the work culture
is constantly and continuously being reshaped and re-embellished. Therefore, this paper is directed to analyse
the emerging work culture in the corporate world.
Research Paper
India as a nation has come a long way from an agricultural society to an information savvy society with nuclear
power. Globalisation, advanced technology, the vagaries of the world markets, innovations and emerging
concepts like intellectual capital, knowledge workers, e-business and so on are riveting the attention of managers.
So much has evolved and transpired in the business environment during the last decade that the work culture
is constantly and continuously being reshaped and re-embellished.
According to Keith Davis, b Organizational culture is a set of assumptions, beliefs, values and norms that is
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shared among the members of an organization.b
Therefore, work culture refers to the culture at the workplace, where the members of a group share a particular
system, a practice code to transact various types of business.
Culture is something collective and includes the expectations of the group as a whole; a social product, always
idealized and having connections with the past. It has a boundary at work place so differentiates one organization
from the other. It gives a sense of identity, belongingness and enhances social system stability and facilitates
the generation of commitment to something larger than oneb s individual self-respect. It serves as a shaping
power, sense making and controlled mechanism as it helps hold the organization together by providing
appropriate standards, norms and values to the employees for their behaviour and actions. Thus it enhances
organisationb s commitment and increases the consistency in employeesb behaviour. It proves valuable for an
employee as it reduces ambiguity and enables the workforce to achieve its objectives. Therefore, some
organizations are more successful; touch the pinnacle; exist for decade; become the market leaders while
others are not so.
Mostly, the source of any culture is its founders and it is shared among employees in the form of stories,
anecdotes, rituals and languages. Thus organizational culture nurtures, encourages or discourages certain
type of behaviours among its members. In the past, workforce was treated as a commodity and was exchanged
for wages. They were considered as cogs in machine and hired and fired at will. Traditionally, organizations
were characterised by centralized decision making at the top; a rigid hierarchy of authority; well but narrowly
defined job responsibilities, especially at lower levels and extensive rules and regulations that are explicitly
conveyed to employees through written documents believing that it brings the greatest efficiency. In 1990 the
Denko Group had been suffering growing attrition as the number of mid and senior level managers were leaving
to join other MNCs although the (Denko) Group paid well and had increased salaries in the recent past. b But
outgoing employees cited stifling authority and layers in the decision-making process as major flaws.b 2
In the traditional pyramidal structure it seemed natural to use a carrot and stick approach based on material
incentives and penalties, but nowadays, due to increasing application of the behavioural sciences to labour
management relations, the decline in number of production workers accompanied by an increase in knowledge
workers is distorting the pyramid. So instead of Taylorism, total quality management, Kaizen or continuous
improvement and the direct participation of workforce is necessary. It was felt that organisational culture needs
to be one that values human resources and pervades the organization from top to bottom so that all members
of the organization work together with a shared purpose.
Japan and Sweden experimented with b democratization on jobb . Japan emerged as the number 2 in world
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economy, next to USA as it recognized the b human valuesb , developed the creative spirit of the employees by
empowering them. Thus it was proved that industrial climate and creative work culture play a decisive role in
economic growth.
Globalisation of economy and liberalization of trade have enlarged the scope and scale of operations of
organizations. Resultantly, multinational corporations emerged, which gave way to transnational corporations.
As the employees of such organizations form heterogenous groups belonging to different countries, dissimilar
culture, philosophy and value systems, the present culture is totally different from traditional culture.
A) Globalisation has brought following significant changes at the workplaces:
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. Flexibility of Labour: It can be qualitative or quantitative. The first affords multi-tasking and is achieved
through training of the most talented employees while the quantitative is achieved by engaging unskilled
temporary employees with little training to perform relatively simple tasks.
2. Outsourcing: Business process outsourcing has become the order of the global market as to remain focused
on the core business, the companies are converting their other divisions into independent businesses. It improves
performance and profitability of companies besides help them achieve operational excellences, leverage proven
methods and innovation technologies, beat competitions in the market; respond quickly to market demands;
tap experienced pool of global resources to achieve cost savings without compromising superior services ; and
ultimately, enable the companies realign core talent to market-distinction strategies. Thus outsourcing has
moved from being a niche technology management tool to a mainstream strategic weapon for many global
businesses. MAFoi, India Life Hewitt and Cross Domain Solutions are some of the companies which provide
outsourcing in some processes such as pay-roll and administration. AT& T Corporation outsourced its HR
functions to Chicago based Aon Corporation. Maruti Udyog Ltd. decided to retain its IT people, high skilled
employees by deciding to outsource its IT support and management to Compaq Computer Corporation now
known as HP. Noida based BPO Xansa has signed a mega deal with Llyods TSB to supply financial and
accounting services to the bank.
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. Lean and Mean Organisation: To tackle the global competition, companies are resorting to reduction of
hierarchical levels besides reducing the total number of employees. Consequently more and more responsibility
is being pushed down to the floor level and employees organized into autonomous task-teams.
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. Fading out of Fixed Business Hours and Places: With the setting up of plants in different countries to
maximize their production and market reach, the multinationals have resorted to multiple shifts. As a result, the
number of people working in each shift has also gone up. Similarly, trading hours have undergone a sea
change. Subsequently, the stress on full-time employees has increased in terms of extended hours of work,
excess travel, frequent changes in tasks, ambiguous goals and ultimately adverse impact on the private and
public lives of individuals.
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. Shortage of Human Talent: Human talent is reported to be falling short of demand. Although capital is
readily available for investment, matching technical and managerial talent to manage such investments is found
wanting. This phenomenon has driven companies like IBM to commit investment for primary and secondary
education all over the world. As per an HBR survey, education has become the top social priority universally.
Depending on the complexity of the market, in-house education has become the critical input for sustaining
growth.
B) Besides, this age of information and communication technology with its emphasis on telecommunication
has transformed workplaces in such ways:
1. Electronic Organisation: The advanced technology has converted business organizations into e-organisations
and e-business is the current trend, and the emerging wireless technology is likely to bring about further
advances.
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. Virtual Organisation: Here groups working together through networked computers are on increase.
Outsourcing is increasingly resorted to and organizations operate only in areas where they have distinctive
competence as it gives them a competitive edge. For instance, Mahindra and Mahindra utilize outsourcing and
vendor upgrading as their manufacturing strategy.
3. Telecommuting or Teleworking: It is a flexible work arrangement especially for women and disabled whereby
the employee does work from a location other than the workplace, typically from home or from a remote place
by using computers, telephones, facsimiles and other equipments. So offsite workplace is fast emerging as
business reality. b AT & T, Ernst & Young, IBM and many other forward looking companies have embraced
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telecommuting as a true workplace alternative.b It deceased job hopping.
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. Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge sharing has become easy with the help of internet, intranet and extranet.
So a culture of fostering knowledge dissemination through encouragement and rewarding knowledge workers
for information sharing is gaining attention as it gives organizations a competitive edge through enhanced
member performance. For example, Buckman laboratories and Texas Instruments have seen enormous gain in
revenues while Dow Chemical and Chevron have reported tremendous savings on pioneering knowledge sharing.
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. Learning Organisation: E-learning promotes the ideals of learning organizations- where the members have
the capacity to adept and change on a continuous basis are frequently cited-for their capacity for growth even
under adverse economic conditions. The employees have a common vision for the organization. They realize
that old methods of problem solving do not work and have to be discarded and replaced with new ones. They
are also aware of the interconnectedness of all activities in the system, openly communicate with one another
and sublimate self-interest to those of organizational goals. The organizations are committed to change and
innovation and willing to break down the departmental boundaries by creating a decentralized structure to
facilitate free exchange of information and knowledge among members at a workplace. Risk taking, rewarding
creativity despite unavoidable failures and learning are encouraged in such systems.
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. High Performance Organisation: They have as their hallmarks-total quality management (TQM)- where
continuous improvement and satisfaction of customer needs assume priority; quality circles- where members
meet regularly to improve quality; organizational learning; knowledge workers; self-directed work teams; process
reengineering-where obsolete processes are done away with and a fresh start is made. Tata Engineering and
Locomotive Company, now renamed Tata Motors started reengineering and right-sizing organizations in 1997.
C) Innovative and Imaginative Approaches weave work with leisure to keep the employees stress free and
motivated, to raise their morale, to give them job satisfaction, sense of identity and belongingness besides
inner connect.
1. Concierge Services: It ranges from travel arrangement to restaurant advice, attending to any kind of mundane
requests, virtually all lifeb s distraction at work likeb booking flight/rail tickets, house keeping to managing events-
birthdays/parties, laundry chores of the employees. It reduces their distractions and helps to maintain a good
work-life balance. It also reduces absenteeism and employee turnover; retains talents. Indian companies like
Infosys, Wipro, IBM, Godrej, TNT, Purvankara Group etc. also have concierge help desks in their premises.
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. Better Work Environment: Industry research has proved that a good working environment can make for an
almost 10 to 25 % difference in an employeeb s productivity. They are not only content and comfortable at work
but also have a sense of pride to step into a state-of-the-art facility. It was also endorsed by a recent Hewitt
Associates Best Practices study conducted in the US, covering close to 43000 IT employees. So most IT
companies ITES, BPO companies like Oracle, Daksh try to blend better facilities with fun which reveal vibrant
work culture and a strong emphasis is on colour co-ordination, designer and ergonomic furniture, relaxation
facilities like gymnasium, yoga centres, libraries, locker rooms for personal storage, 24/7 cafeteria in a round-
the-clock environment, home pick-up and drops etc. Some of the companies have even invested in state-of-the-
art fitness centres, bathrooms and building separate ramps for disabled.
As Milind Jadhav, the vice-president of human resources at Patni Computer System says, b A happy worker is a
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good worker.b
Padmaja Krishnan, the director, marketing and business development at Xansa, India agrees and adds: These
centres of excellence and the continuous initiatives by companies to enhance their employeesb sense of belonging
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will be the key to success for employee retention, attraction and performance.b
3
. Flexible Work Options: It plays a key role in maintaining balance between professional and personal life of
the employees, addressing the different and unique needs of the individuals working in an organization. It
means all types of employment practices other than the conventional b 9:00 a.m to 5:00p.m.b jobs.
(A) Flexible Location: It includes working on move using laptops, notebooks, palmtops, desk top replacement
PCs and other types of portable computers; working from home and telecentres or satellites offices.
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B) Flexible Time: It includes flexi-time (work for a fixed number of hours during any part of the working day);
annualized hours(where employer and employee agree upon the total working hours per annum excluding
public holidays and annual leave); zero hours/on call arrangement (employees are called for work when required);
time accounts(a flexible form of compressed working week or annualized hours and employees can take
compensatory leave against the extra time they had worked for); restructured hours(a compressed work week
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option, wherein an employee has to work for 10 hours for 4days and gets off on 5 day. Other forms of reduced
work hour options include part-time (working for a few hours per day/week), job sharing (two or more employees
share one job), phased retirement (an option offered to employees a few years before retirement, when they
would start working for fewer hours per day and postpone the date of retirement. The flexible time work options
include maternity/paternity leave, sabbatical (for upgrading oneb s skills either academic or technical), bereavement
and marriage leave.
Hewlett Packard India offered all types of FWOs. Sameer Wadhwan, G.M., HR explained: The issue is not
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control, but facilitation and of motivating our independent knowledgeable and creative employees.
Besides Indian companies P&G India, ICICI Prudential, Global Corporations, IBM, JC Penny, AT&T, PacTel, US
West, Pedigree Petfoods also offered FWOs.
4) Unconventional & Mobile Conferencing: These conferences break off from conventional venues and move
out into the outdoors, spiced up with interesting themes and spruced up with team building activities, especially
to break away from the drudgery of work and to make it more interesting. Ranjit Raina , COO, Encompass, a
Delhi based Entertainment Solution Provider, says-a sales conference was organized for ICICI Prudential on the
INS Vikrant. For employers, it is a work; and for the employees,it is a fun. Mobile conferencing is also gaining
popularity. It includes cruise liners and luxury trains equipped with state- of-the-art amenities including business
centre, cyber cafC) and conference coach and the USP of the coach can be converted into a disco-cum-pub
after the conference is over. Other trends are skiing holidays in Himalayas, sponsoring on an Africa Safari,
clubbing overseas destination with some kind of entertainment or an event on tour like shopping carnival,
Formula one event. So adding fun with team building activities make a conference perfect. Get Lionel recently
organized a sales conference in Kaula Lumpur to coincide with the formula one event.
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) Succession Planning: Succession planning and life time employment are no more a prevalent practice.
Kumar Mangalam Birla the young business leader also discouraged succession planning and life time employment
when he took over the charge of Aditya Birla Group. Tenured and contractual appointments are taking its place.
Generally the person who puts in maximum tenure with the company was appointed as the next-in-command
but today there is an aberration to this practice. Two big giants Nissan and Sony have hired expatriates from the
West to help them reinvent themselves.
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) Employee Recognition: It boosts employee morale, performance and commitment. Traditional recognition
awards- jewellery, clocks, tableware or flatware do not appeal to the employeesb sense of satisfaction. Rather
greeting personally each employee and offering a cup of coffee, appreciation for their work, paid holidays,
sponsorship for their higher education, seminar, power and cash incentives are the best possible ways to
motivate. Increasingly companies use stock options as a reward tool but b ESOPS: A Case Study on IT firmsb that
stock options are no longer a matter of interest to the employees, the reason being people need more free
cash today rather than ESOPS. Companies innovate methods like presenting a T-shirt with a company logo at
one side and an encouraging caption such as-b The Achieverb on the other. Price Water House Coopers rewards
its employees with b scratch and win ticketsb for quality work, best innovation and best suggestion.
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) Employer of Choice Effort : Indian Companies are fast joining the EOC bandwagon. EOC is used by
recruiters to categorise a company that is considered to be a great place to work in due to its reputation and
status. According to Ashok Pande, CEO, NetAfford Technologies, an IT executive search firm, b The expression
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.
. . on the whole signifies corporate character and culture.b
Reducing employee turnover and becoming employer of choice are the two immediate goals of companies
today because both these aspects impact their bottom line.
A recent research done by Grow Talent on 180 companies and 24,750 employees had employed a unique
employee centric methodology to measure the levels of trust, pride and b camaraderieb in the organization.
Work places were ranked on a point scale in combination of quantitative and qualitative data based on the
options of employees. b The first 5 includes Federal Express, Sapient Corporation, National Thermal Power
Corporation, Honeywell Technology Solutions Lab Pvt. Ltd. and RMSI Pvt. Ltd. 14 of the top 25 firms are
privately held. 13 MNCs figure in this list. 16 companies offer flexible work hours, 4 offer fully paid sabbaticals,
and 13 offer paternity leave and 9 companies have a profit sharing plan. 13 companies offer telecommuting
8
options.b
Thus by becoming an EOC, company is capable of attracting a more productive and talented category of
employees ensuring a right fitment as well.
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. Spiritual Connect: Big corporate organizations have also realized that business and spirituality canb t be
140)
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segregated at all as spiritual connectivity makes workplace much happier and healthier. Thus, to inculcate
body-mind-intellect-spirit phenomenon has become the part and parcel of leading organizations. Therefore the
organizations are conducting workshops and sessions on yoga therapy, power of positive thinking, personal
energy management to create self awareness and spiritual connectivity besides stress and time management.
This results in the change of employeesb inner outlook, better work environment; creation of spiritual culture in
the organization as it enhances the inner connect as well as interconnect; it raises the morale of the employees
and leads to betterment of organization including its workforce at all fronts because quality work, quality
product, quality service and most of all higher quality of life are its output. Recently, T-Series also arranged a 4
day trip to Vaishno Devi Pilgrimage for its staff.
Besides these techniques, modern appraisal methods-Management By Objectives,360 degree feedback, BARS,
running Assessment and Development Centre, HR Process Mapping, Balanced Scorecard Approach, using
various Competency Mapping Models- MBPI, MAP, KIEI are the renewed approaches for selection, promotion,
diagnosing, training requirements, downsizing, development, job analysis, information and performance analysis.
FedEx Corporation has risen phenomenally due to its PSP (People Service Profit) philosophy and HR Practices
such as Survey Feedback Action and Personal Records Information Systems in the areas of recruitment, selection,
training and development and performance appraisal.
Traditional approaches fail because they are flawed in implementation, de-motivate staff and are often perceived
as forms of control, which are inappropriately used to b policeb employeesb performance while the new work
culture, adopted by many pre-eminent organizations, proves that in this mechanical age too, there are increasingly
hopeful signs that men can use machine to relieve his burden of physical and mental drudgery without making
it his master. In addition to this, it transforms the relationship between managers and workers; workers and
workers; workers and machines into a new and more satisfying relationship.
To conclude, the new work culture, like its counterpart the traditional work culture, has also its pluses and
minuses. However, it tends to present itself as employee-friendly and humanistic and facilitate employees to
scale the ladder of their potentials.
Notes:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
. Nair N.G & Latha , Personnel Management and Industrial Relations, p.486
. Business World, Special Collectorb s Issue, April 2004, p.91
. HRM Review, March 2006, p.12
. <http://www.expressitpeople.com/20030609/cover.shtml>
. ibid.
. Reddy Sumati, Human Resource Management: Best Practices and Cases, p. 114
. Power Jobs, The Hindustan Times, Mumbai, Tuesday, 14 February2006, p.1
. ibid.
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b "
b "
Atthreya, N.H. Spiritual Culture in the Corporate Drama, Vijay Foundation & The Indian Centre for
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Nair N.G & Latha , Personnel Management and Industrial Relations, S. Chand & Company Ltd., New
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b "
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b "
b "
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th
The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, Macropaedia, Vol.19, 15 Edition.
< http://www.expressitpeople.com/20030609/cover.shtml>
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