GOING TO BAT WHEN YOU ARE 18|4 IS VERY DIFFERENT THAN GOING IN AT 200|1
Microsoft's Hyderabad-born
CEO, Satya Nadella, spoke at length to the TOI's Editorial Board on a range of
issues from his abiding passion for cricket to the absolute need for empathy
in business; his lack of envy at the success of a Google or an Apple to the
opportunities offered to India by the digital revolution. And, of course, his
delight at having Bill Gates on call
Not long ago, the big tech
giants were differentiated, Microsoft with enterprise, Google with cloud and
Apple with devices.In the age of mobile and cloud, everybody is trying to do
the same thing. How will you differentiate Microsoft?
I actually think we are all
very different. We create technology so that others can create more technology
. We don't celebrate our technology for technology's sake. We are a tool maker,
platform creator, whether it is Word or any of our tools. Even if it's a game
like Minecraft, we want a girl who is going to school to be introduced to STEM
education because of the open world nature of Minecraft. Our business model is,
in fact, dependent on others succeeding in creating something of value as
opposed to some two-sided market and getting in the middle of it. So we may
have some similar capabilities but we are different.
As someone of Indian origin
sitting in Silicon Valley, how do you look at the big digital transformation
happening in India and the role of Microsoft within that?
One of the things I am very
eager to see is how this fourth industrial revolution plays out in terms of
creating economic surplus in countries that didn't benefit as much in the
second industrial revolution. India is a great case in point. You now have a
new factor of production in digital or software which is most malleable and it
can impact health, education, manufacturing.Every part of Indian society and
the economy can be more productive. What is important, though, is the intensity
of usage of the new technology . Just having a smartphone doesn't do you much
good. Only if it is being used for a lot of things that are core to the economy
and society can it make a huge difference. When I think of our job, we are
mostly focused on how we can empower Indian companies, small, medium, large,
public sector, become more efficient.
Talking of your passion,
cricket, we heard you had a great time at Lord's recently?
It was fantastic. I had
never been to Lord's. It's one of those things you read about so much and then
you ultimately show up, and then you say, `Wow, this is the Long Room, and this
where you can hear the sound of the spikes.' It was awesome.
Did you account for the
slope at Lord's?
That slope is immense. It's
something like 5 feet or something. I never realised that for all the Indian
cricket greats, very few ever scored centuries at Lord's. I went to the
visitors' dressing room. They have the names of players who scored centuries at
Lord's up there. Vengsarkar's name was there. So was Azharuddin's. And, of all
the people, I found Ajit Agarkar!
Do you still follow cricket
as passionately?
I do. I read.
Unfortunately, I don't have the time to watch. I love Test cricket. The new
forms of cricket that have come, they all became popular much after I left.
You don't follow IPL much,
we guess?
No, I don't.
Who is your favourite
cricketer in this generation?
I think Virat Kohli is
someone who is very, very special. It is awesome to see the Indian pace attack.
Even the variety of somebody like Ashwin, I cannot believe... a guy who can
bowl six different balls in an over. Their fielding, their athleticism, their
professionalism is something else. It is fantastic to see Indians play like
Australians. Also, I love watching Rohit Sharma play. That follow through of
his, after he cover drives, for example, he reminds me a lot of, say, VVS. The
amount of time he has is tremendous. When he is on song, he is just glorious to
watch
Do you play cricket now?
No longer. Anil (Kumble)
was visiting Seattle the other day and he was telling me of the large number of
teams in Seattle...that they even had an IPL coach to come this summer because
there are so many South Asian kids learning to play cricket.
In your book `Hit Refresh',
you talk about how cricket has taught you life lessons... Would you please
elaborate?
There was one incident that
I recounted in the book which has been the most interesting. R S Swaroop, who
played both for Hyderabad and Baroda, was my school cricket captain. He was a
good off-spinner and I was a trashy one.One day, I was bowling real trash so he
switched me, took the wicket, got the breakthrough and gave the ball back to
me. I always wondered why he did that.Subsequently, I talked to him. And he
said, `Hey, you would be more useful to me if you have your confidence back',
and I thought for a high school captain to be that enlightened was something
else. That's what leadership is about.Obviously you have got to make the hard
calls and make the changes when you have to, but there is such a thing as being
able to persist, and I think you learn a lot from team sport.
Switching to education,
it's increasingly felt that single specialisation is not good enough. Gary
Hamel (American management expert) once said that if he has a student doing
mechanical engineering, he would suggest comparative religons as a second
subject, to somebody doing electrical engineering, English literature...
I remember one of the guys
I travelled with in my first week at Microsoft, he brought along a whole lot of
computer trade rags, and then he had TS Eliot. I asked him, `What is this?' He
said he read one for information and the other for inspiration.
Looking at the curriculum
in higher education, do you see scope for a big change in terms of a
multi-disciplinary approach?
More than curriculum, one
thing that is not emphasised enough, and which makes all the difference in real
life, is team work.Take any great product at Microsoft, it's a combination of
people coming from design, electrical engineering, computer science, all the
disciplines that are required. But what is common across all of this is not
just the discipline depth, but the ability to work in teams. Can you come in
with that open mind to be able to be influenced and influence? That is a soft
skill that is under-emphasised all over the world in terms of skills.
In Texas, 26 people were
killed. We find it incomprehensible that gun control is still a non-issue in
the US.
All senseless violence is
abhorrent, and we should, as a global community, do everything we can (to stop
it).Every country has its own particular set of issues which they have to work
through. The democratic process of our country, the United States, will help us
move forward. The sources of violence have to be tackled front-on.
Such incidents in the US
are happening with such depressing regularity. Is there something more
immediate that ought to happen but is not happening?
Each tragedy has to be
viewed for both what it is and what are the root causes, versus jumping to
complete generalisations. Yet, every one of those challenges has to be
tackled.And they are complex. This senseless violence is happening not just in
the United States but every part of the world. The good news is we don't have
the big wars that we had in the early 20th century . But we still have this
violence, civil wars in some countries.As someone said, how do we ensure we are
not just repeating history? We've got all the knowledge, all the progress, what
can we do? That's the real challenge in democracies. We do need social consensus
in order to tackle a lot of these.
Are you a Republican or a
Democrat?
(A big smile) I would
rather say I'm a believer in democracy .
You are here during the
first anniversary of demonetisation, which split the country deeply.
In all fairness, I'm not an
expert on the specifics of how it played out, the impact on the economy . But
if I step back and look at the idea that on a long-term basis you are going to
bring down transactional costs by using digital technology, I think it's
fantastic.For a country like India, it will create more economic surplus. If I
look at the core courage of the legislative process of this country, I admire
that. It's always hard for democracies to take non-linear steps, but sometimes
these are the steps you need to take by building consensus so that the country
as a whole can move forward.
You talk a lot about
culture.How difficult was it for you to change a culture that had leadership in
its DNA into that of a challenger?
The fundamental thing that
I have come to realise is that organisations that have been around for a while
have by definition been successful. They have gone from being a startup to a
successful company . You build your capability and culture around that
success.Now, the challenge is any new concept you've had ultimately runs out of
gas and that's when culture matters the most.Is the culture that got built
around your first idea capable of birthing a new idea? When somebody says here
is a new, admirable company growing 20% or 30% but they have never gone through
the cycle -there's not much I can learn from it. If a company's been able to,
time after time, hit refresh, that, to me, is impactful.
That's why culture is not
about whether I'm a leader or a challenger at any given point in time. If you
can have both those thoughts, you're going to be better off. It's not a
one-time transformation and it has to be a continuous process of renewal.
That's where I took inspiration from (psychologist and author) Carol Dweck,
about the growth mindset. Most people think growth mindset means all new
capability, but it's more us confronting the DNA, so to speak, which means
confronting our own fixed minds.
Were there times when you
felt incredibly lonely in attempting a difficult transformation, both business
and cultural? And who did you confide in?
A lot of people say that
when you become a CEO it's a lonely job, and there is a lot of truth to it. The
one thing that I had not understood, even one step removed, was how as a CEO
you see things 360 degrees and unlike anyone else who works for you or for whom
you work. Neither your board, nor your people see essentially the same playing
field as you do as a CEO.Yet both those constituents are going to pass judgment
on your judgment, which is a fascinating challenge.
I think that I've benefited
a ton from being able to talk to people outside and inside the company,
learning from Bill (Gates) and Steve (Ballmer) and Kevin Johnson (former
Microsoft staffer who's now CEO of Starbucks).
I've benefited from my
friends from my high school in India who happen to be CEOs--Shantanu Narayen
was a few years senior to me and he is CEO of Adobe and has done a fantastic
job there; Ajay Banga, who is the CEO of Mastercard, and Syed Ali, CEO of
Cavium Networks. The tough chal lenges are always going to be the things that
you have to decide -no one can decide for you, but being able to sort of look
at what other leaders have done when the chips are down...I always think about
what it means to go and bat when you're 18 for 4 and that's when it matters
your mindset.If I walked in when it was 200 for 1, it doesn't really matter.
You've written on how a
majority at Microsoft were disheartened but brilliant just before you took
over. Were you one of them?
No. I've always felt that
we were victims of the caricature the world had of us. In fact, if anything, I
felt that we were much more capable.When we were “doing well“ everybody and
everything we did was great, and when we are not, everything and anything we
touched was not good.The reality is there are a lot of things that are good and
a lot of things we need to fix. Borrowing from Nietzsche, which is courage in
the face of reality, what is more important is courage in the face of
opportunity . Both of those have to be there all the time, and that, I think,
is one of the challenges.
You use the word empathy a
lot. Is that a new lexicon you're trying to bring in? Are you saying there
wasn't empathy earlier or the present world needs more? How is it different
from the traditional `consumer is king argument'?
They are all very connected
in my mind. What's the source of our innovation? It comes from our ability as
designers or product creators; our ability to meet the unmet and unarticulated
needs of customers. You're not going to do that unless and until you have some
deep sense of empathy .You can't go into work, say you're going to switch on
the empathy button and somehow start exhibiting that. In my case, it's not that
I was born with it. It's that life teaches you increasing levels of empathy . I
fundamentally believe in that concept ...Somebody said anthropology divides us
and empathy unites us.
A few years ago Microsoft
and empathy would have sounded like an oxymoron...
It's sort of again the
caricature versus the reality . I didn't drop from the sky . I grew up in
Microsoft. In fact, it's practically the only company I have worked for. And
having grown up there, how did I pick up all of these? I didn't from the
outside.
Does it bother you that
you're not in the GAFA (Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon) brigade? Would you
like to be there?
I want us to stay true to
our identity and I don't want to have any envy for anybody else's success and
any other model of innovation. Take any one of the four companies you
mentioned, they are very different. We are not a luxury goods manufacturer, we
don't try to put our brand in front of you, we are not a two-sided market
that's trying to extract rent. We are a tool maker, and that to me is the
identity of the company . I want us to be proud of us as opposed to defining
our success by others' success.
Delhi has played an
interesting role in your life. You romanced and proposed to your wife Anu here.
What are the recollections from the Lodhi Gardens days?
I have grown up in and
around Delhi multiple times. When I was very young, my dad used to work in
Mussoorie and we used to go through Delhi. I first watched television in Delhi
in 1971 or '72 and I lived in Delhi in the mid-70s. My first Test match was
between India and England in Feroz Shah Kotla. I remember Dennis Amiss getting
a century . India lost badly . I remember leaving and seeing Tony Greig on a
Lambretta. He was a character! I lived in Meena Bagh, right opposite Vigyan
Bhavan, and distinctly remember attending a lecture by Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
(future Nobel laureate). It was a beautiful time. Then much later, Anu and I
split.She came to Delhi and went to DPS and much later is when we met again and
I proposed in Lodhi Gardens.
As a CEO, how do you see
India as a marketplace? Indian SMBs (small and medium bsinesses) are finding it
difficult to cope with GST. Can Microsoft help?
To the second part, one of
the things that is helpful is if you have a digital record, as it helps you
keep track. If you look at the revolution that has happened in a lot of the
developed countries, whether in manufacturing or healthcare, they were able to
afford the IT sophistication which helped them gain productivity .
Unfortunately, the expense of IT sophistication for small business in a country
like India was just too immense. Now, the cloud has fundamentally transformed
it. You can just buy something on a subscription basis where they can
essentially have all of the same capability that the largest MNCs enjoy for the
price of pay-per-use. It is transformative in terms of the access and business
model. I do believe that SMBs have every ability to consume new technology and
they can deal with any opportunities and challenges.
As far as the first
question goes, we care about the long term. In the short term, we will have
challenges: some of them are structural challenges which is where the GDP
itself has to get to a certain point where the country is ready to consume some
of the technologies. I feel much better about that in 2017 than I ever did. And
now it's a question of us being able to do our part and policy frameworks that
are more conducive to technologies coming in.
Do you have any
recollection of your first interaction with Bill Gates? In the book, you
mention that you would like him to be a little more involved in product and
tech. Is that happening?
In fact, I distinctly
remember the first time there was an email exchange when someone put me on a
thread with Bill. It was something on XML transformation and Bill, like all
things, had a strong opinion about some work that was happening around my team.
It was fantastic to engage with him. It was more like a telegram. It had these
one-liners and then you kept going back and forth.He is one of the most
intellectually honest human beings you can ever run into. He has strong
opinions, but if you push back and you're right, he will be the first to admit
it. His involvement with the company is something that I encouraged. I feel
very good that Bill at this point in his life is still willing to engage as
deeply as he does. But I realise that it's for us to run the company. He is
very happy to contribute.
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