egyii blog

Archive for the ‘Current Events’ Category

Who’s missing in Davos this week?

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

Who’s missing in Davos this week? Sir Fred Goodwin, ex-CEO of RBS; John Thain, ex-CEO of Merrill Lynch; William Cayne, ex-CEO of ex-Bear Stearns; even Sam DiPiazza, CEO of PwC (who is in India looking into the fraud of B. Ramalinga Raju, CEO of Satyam). These and many other business titans represent the ‘old world’ of business, placed in the past tense by the economic crisis.

If we are to move into a ‘new world’ of business, we have to be able to see clearly. The old world of business focused on action and results which could be observed and measured. So long as people throughout the organisation took action that produced growth figures, it didn’t matter what was actually going on in their minds. As we now know, the kind of thinking that led to these actions and growth figures was an illusion. William Cayne was on the golf course while Bear Stearns burned. John Thain spent $1.2 million on re-decorating his office. And B. Ramalingam Raju was so envious of K.P.Singh staging India’s biggest IPO, the $2.5bn listing of DLF, the country’s largest property group, that instead of being happy with his outsourcing business, he immediately immersed himself in the property and infrastructure business, which led to disastrous financial results.

In order to see clearly in the new world of business, we need to go to the source of our emotions, behaviour and results: what is going on in our minds. Habitual thinking patterns, whether envy, grandiosity, acceptance or humility, lead directly to actions and decisions that create results. It is time for companies to put their people’s potential at the heart of business competitiveness, and in doing so show them how to get control of both their conscious and unconscious thinking.

In the old world of business, even suggesting that we focus on ‘the mind’ and ‘thoughts’ as means to produce business results would have met with derision and labels such as ‘airy fairy’, ‘psychobable’ and ‘effeminate’. There was no place for this in a culture reinforced by labels such as ‘macho’, ‘hard results’, and ‘tangible’.

Isn’t it time we grew up? Let’s start with a new set of leaders who understand the power of the mind and know how to harness it for the benefit of all stakeholders and society in general. Let’s then cascade their understandings and examples throughout our corporations so that in the new world of business people actually know what they are doing. Certainly, the hard business results couldn’t be any worse.

James Irvine, Team Egyii, Singapore

Standard Chartered’s Peter Flavel and the Ironing Board

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

 

peter-flavel

Hats off to Peter Flavel in his all out efforts to build a private banking arm for Standard Chartered Bank. Sixteen branches in 3 years. Talk about focused.

The recent FT article states that hs is a “stickler for detail.” What stands out is his passion for the business.

“This is a relationship business,” he says. “You need people skills. When clients arrive in our offices, the concierge offers them a coffee. Our relationship managers know where their children are being educated.”

Private banking is truly a relationship business.

For more on the ironing board….Stickler for detail…- FT 19 1 2009

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

How to improve employee engagement in a crisis

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

On 16 January the Singapore Business Times hit us with another ‘bad news’ article: ‘Employee engagement in Asia-Pac drops – survey’.

As if the economic downturn were not enough. Now motivation seems to be suffering in part because, as Mak Yen Teen, Director of the Asia Pacific Research and Innovation Centre at Watson Wyatt, says, the perception of fairness of rewards at this time is down. It seems people are unhappy about accepting reduced bonuses and lower pay to help avoid layoffs. He goes on to mention that in order to manage employees’ perceptions, companies must communicate the exact reasons for the changes being made and make sure that these are seen to be fair.

No doubt the perception of rewards does have an impact on employee engagement, as do many of the actions of management. In fact, events that happen to us, whether in regard to management decisions or economic influences or some other issue, will always have some kind of effect on our feelings about our work.

But can you imagine going through your entire 40-year career allowing your mood and motivation to be controlled by events over which you have no control? When things are going well for you personally or for the economy, you are fully engaged and positive, and when things take a turn for the worse you are miserable and unenthusiastic. What a hell to work and live in! And what a burden for companies to bear!

Today we have the opportunity to create a new world of business, with new approaches and new practices. Let’s start by making sure we enable our employees to feel enthusiastic and committed, if not passionate, about their work whatever outside influences may impact them. This doesn’t mean that companies have to ‘do’ anything to their employees. It’s a mistake to think that every every employee problem can be solved by doing something to them.

Rather, let’s take a step back and show our employees how to think about their lives and work in a way that is empowering for them. Once they learn that their happiness is entirely determined by how they individually respond to events that happen to them, then they have great power to change, and get control of, how they feel and work.

Responding doesn’t just mean saying to yourself  ’Oh, the economic crisis is actually fine’. It means learning to accept what is happening and allowing yourself to go through whatever feelings, including negative feelings, that you may have. When you simply accept events and don’t resist your emotions, then your anger and frustration lessen and you begin to focus on taking whatever action you need to in order to live in the present moment, within the crisis.

So help your employees to see this crisis and any future event with a new pair of eyes – eyes that enable them to deal with it in a positive, practical way, all the time realising that how they see the event is merely a thought in their own heads. And over this they have ultimate control.

James Irvine, Team Egyii, Singapore

Accept Uncertainty and Beat the Competition

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

You are probably aware of the story of the fraud committed by B. Ramalinga Raju, owner of Satyam Computer Services in India. He falsified accounts to make it appear that his company’s performance was actually much stronger than it really was. In this he was definitely a risk-taker, and this aspect of his personality may have been his downfall.

Yet the story of how he got his first business break, also through taking a risk, has some useful lessons for all of us. I quote Monday’s Herald Tribune:

“The founder of Satyam Computer Services, B. Ramalinga Raju, made a risky proposition to win his first big client, the tractor maker John Deere: If you don’t like our service, you don’t pay.

With that pitch, which is now the stuff of legend in India, he persuaded John Deere in 1991 to allow his computer programmers to work just across the street from the client’s U.S. headquarters, in a house Raju dubbed ‘Little India.’ Working only overnight shifts, with no physical contact with John Deere’s executives, the programmers got the job done – proving Raju’s theory that they could work just as well from India, and helping give birth to the country’s outsourcing industry.”

Imagine what it must have felt like setting up an office in a foreign country and working without any assurance that a result will come from it. The truth is, doing this without any guarantee most likely made the prospect of success even more assured.

This is the power of uncertainty. Let go of your tight grip on the future. Make a decision with no guarantee of the outcome and then take action and enter pure space. Accept. And pay attention to each moment, letting them flow through you. When you are comfortable with uncertainty, great courage and power will come to you.

So if you are a banker or another leader caught in the vicious cycle of thinking that goes “What specific results and I going to get if I take this action?” then my answer to you is, “I don’t know. But whatever it is, your chance of pulling yourself out of the situation you are in is better if you think carefully about your plan and then just take action with no guarantees, than if you sit tight on your hands and wait for the government, your clients, or your grandmother to do something to change your circumstances.”

My advice to you is “Don’t wait!” Take 100% responsibility for winning the game at this turbulent time, make a decision and enter the void. Now.”

James Irvine, Team Egyii, Singapore

Wealthy Investors Stage Revolt Against Advisors (WSJ)- What to Do?

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

 

The following posting is derived from an article in the  WSJ in September.  There are some appalling numbers and facts surrounding it.

“According to a new survey from Prince & Assoc., 81 percent of investors with $1 million or more in investible assets plan to take money away from their current advisor. An even larger number — 86% — plans to tell other investors to avoid their advisor. Only 2% plan to recommend their firm to other investors.”

For more, see:  WSJ-Revolt Against Advisors

So let me ask you a few questions…

If you are a “brand firm” what are you doing about this? Scrambling around for solutions?

If the institutions are not to blame, how will the individual advisors deal with the damage control?

What is it going to take to re-build the trust and relationship when clients are sick of having products pushed on them? (This was only successful during “good times” when no one noticed, when your portfolio was on the upswing)

 Isn’t it time for a change?

Shouldn’t the advisors and institutions be taking a different approach, as things have REALLY changed this time around?

Tell us what are you seeing out there?

Trip Allen, Team Egyii, Singapore

We want to hear from you! Let us know how we can improve your overall experience.