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View Full Version : Good Article....an eye opener...


dhandars
June 28th, 2006, 09:59 PM
Dear all Jatlanders,

I have got this article sometime in past.. I wish to share it with you. It will perhaps help a lot to people, who are ambitious to raise quickly on the scale of success:

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Mr. Gopalakrishnan succeeds Mr. Ratan Tata as Chairman of Tata Sons Ltd., the holding company for many of the Tata Bluechips like Tata Steel, Tata Motors,Tata Power, Tata Chemicals, Voltas, etc., Possibly he is the first non-Tata person to head the Tata Empire. The below article is really interesting!

The grass isn't always greener on the other side !! Move
from one job to another, but only for the right reasons. It's yet another day at office. As I logged on to the marketing and advertising sites for the latest updates, as usual, I found the headlines dominated by 'who's moving from one company to another after a short stint', and I wondered,why are so many people leaving one job for another?

Is it passe now to work with just one company for a sufficiently long period? Whenever I ask this question to people who leave a company, the answers I get are: "Oh, I am getting a 200% hike in salary"; "Well, I am jumping three levels in my designation"; "Well, they are going to send me abroad in six months".

Then, I look around at all the people who are considered successful today and who have reached the top - be it a media agency, an advertising agency or a company. I find that most of these people are the ones who have stuck to the company, ground their heels and worked their way to the top. And, as I look around for people who changed their jobs constantly, I find they have stagnated at some level, in obscurity!

In this absolutely ruthless, dynamic and competitive environment, there are still no short-cuts to success or to making money. The only thing that continues to pay, as earlier, is loyalty and hard work. Yes, it pays! Sometimes, immediately, sometimes after a lot of time. But, it does pay. Does this mean that one should stick to an organisation and wait for that golden moment? Of course not. After a long stint, there always comes a time for moving in most organisations, but it is important to move for the right reasons, rather than superficial ones, like money, designation or an overseas trip.

Remember, no company recruits for charity. More often than not, when you are offered an unseemly hike in salary or designation that is disproportionate to what that company offers it current employees, there is always an unseen bait attached. The result? --- You will, in the long-term, have reached exactly the same levels or maybe lower levels than what you would have in your current company.

A lot of people leave an organisation because they are "unhappy". What is this so-called-unhappiness? I have been working for donkey's years and there has never been a day when I am not unhappy about something in my work environment-boss, rude colleague, fussy clients etc.
Unhappiness in a workplace, to a large extent, is transient.
If you look hard enough, there is always something to be unhappy about. But, more importantly, do I come to work to be "happy" in the truest sense? If I think hard, the answer is "No". Happiness is something you find with family, friends, may be a close circle of colleagues who have become friends.

What you come to work for is to earn, build a reputation, satisfy your ambitions, be appreciated for your work ethics, face challenges and get the job done. So, the next time you are tempted to move, ask yourself why are you moving and what are you moving into?

Some questions are:

* Am I ready and capable of handling the new responsibility? If yes, what could be the possible reasons my current company has not offered me the same responsibility?

* Who are the people who currently handle this responsibility in the current and new company? Am I as good as the best among them?

* As the new job offer has a different profile, why have I not given the current company the option to offer me this profile?

* Why is the new company offering me the job? Do they want me for my skills, or is there an ulterior motive?

An honest answer to these will eventually decide where you go in your career- to the top of the pile in the long term (at the cost of short-term blips) or to become another average employee who gets lost with time in the wilderness?


"DESERVE BEFORE YOU DESIRE" - Dr. Gopalkrishnan, Chairman TATA Sons
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Best of luck

captkalkal
August 27th, 2006, 09:51 PM
Excellent !!

No other words to praise this .

proactiveswat
August 28th, 2006, 01:35 PM
It is excellent no doubt and do have points that are very apt and realistic.....
It lit the bulb of my mind to think over those lines ......


:)
Swati

dhandars
September 5th, 2006, 04:08 PM
Good that many people have gone through the article...hopefully many will get the real inspiration behind it...that is what is the purpose of the putting a post here.

best wishes!!

friend4u
September 18th, 2006, 06:30 PM
The article is simply brilliant.
:)

kharub
September 19th, 2006, 01:41 AM
I do agree with him on ceratin issues .. but his opinion that work is not a place to look for happiness is seriously at fault .......

Whatever work one does .. he/she seek a certain satisfation or reward from that job .. and this reward related to happiness ........ only a person who is not dedicated to his/her work would do to work just to "get the job done" .... and he/she is not the right person for that job .......

We (or some of us) do not work just to learn and get the job done .. but to put ourselves heart and soul into that work and set new standards ... doing this we seek a feeling of self-satisfaction .. a feeling of internal joy and pride .. and this is happiness ..........satisfaction stems from happiness ......... and so stating that a work place has nothing to do with happiness is a serioulsy flawed idea .......

I do agree with a lot fo other things though ............

rameshlakra
September 19th, 2006, 10:38 AM
An enlightning advice, though VJ Khrab has a valid point in contradicting the "unhappiness theory". But i guess the author has specifically meant that for the people who get disturbed by small office hassles and take that as unhappiness. He is true when he says that one find happiness with freinds, family and nature.

dhandars
September 19th, 2006, 08:18 PM
i would rather not like to debate much about the happiness issue as pointed out by Mr. Kharab.

The author has written specifically and i quote "Unhappiness in a workplace, to a large extent, is transient". So that is what it is all about. As ramesh (and i hope most of us) has understood it clearly - this issue has been raised more or less in term of office working environement.

anyway Mr. Kharab would be agreeing to most of the points and essence of the article, i suppose. that is more important.

best of luk

ashwani
September 21st, 2006, 05:13 PM
Dear Rakesh

Thanks for posting an interesting article with enlighting views from an intellectual person.

However in today's changing and vibrant businees environment, culture of changing jobs at times also helps in rising up the ladder.