Cos seek diversity to boost
innovation
Workforce
Drawn From Different Cultures And Regions Widens India Inc’s Talent Pool
Mumbai:A decade ago, Punebased Cummins faced a peculiar situation which
probably a lot of other companies may still be facing. Almost 99% of its
professional workforce was Maharashtrian. It was not by design but by
virtue of Cummins being based in western India that it attracted talent
predominantly from this region. Like any progressive organization, Cummins,
too, believed that it should have a diverse mix of professional workforce
because diversity brings about a mingling of different thoughts that can
lead to innovation.
It is a well-documented fact as to why diversity,
not merely in terms of gender, but even ethnicity, region and age is
important for the growth of an organization. Over the years, Cummins drove
hard the message of regional diversity across the organization. To begin
with, Cummins expanded its recruitment drives across all four regions. This
resulted in a positive outcome, with almost 50% of its professional
workforce hailing from other regions of India.
A regionally diverse team, Cummins believes,
assists in ideation and leads to better performance. “Our teams scout
around for people across regions. Today, we are seeing people moving from
Jamshedpur to Phaltan (where part of Cummins’s manufacturing is based) and
even from Indore to Phaltan,” said Nagarajan Balanaga, VP (HR), Cummins
Group, in India.
“It’s good to have diverse people sitting around
the table and thinking — people who are differently wired, think
differently,” said Balanaga. Part of Cummins Inc, Cummins in India is a
group of eight legal entities with a combined turnover of approximately Rs
10,500 crore and it employs close to 14,500 people across 200 locations in
the country.
Cummins is not the only company gunning for
diversity of its workforce. The Aditya Birla Group, where the top deck at
one point was largely of Rajasthani origin, has over the years seen a
transformation with leaders of other communities joining to create adiverse
mix. This was driven more by changing circumstances brought about by
economic liberalization. Ethnic diversity came about at the group as growth
outstripped the supply of people from the ethnic social network.
Historically, even large corporate houses such as
the Tatas, Godrej and Reliance were seen to be attracting talent from a
particular community. Over a period of time, as more jobs and posts got
created, they saw talent flow from other communities.
Among the newer homegrown companies, the intent of
starting with an open diverse culture appears to be upfront. Marico
believes its culture of openness, transparency and empowerment plays a
pivotal role in the sustenance of innovation. “At Marico, innovation does
not happen only in labs but also through dialogues occurring in different
parts of the organization and through interactions with consumers and
thought leaders,” said Harsh Mariwala, CMD, Marico.
“We look at diversity through a ‘fish-eye’ lens and
nurture it in several ways — beyond gender and age diversity which everyone
knows and talks about, we also practice domain diversity. Thus, when a key
project calls for a task force, we instinctively look for adiverse domain
group. A typical task force for a brand-related project would be a
crossfunctional team that comprises people from various domains — research,
creative, media and PR. Some of these may be people who do not otherwise
work on that brand. Their newness to the brand fetches a unique ‘outside
in’ perspective. Such diversity spurs out-of-the-box thinking. It also
keeps our thought processes fresh. It is then just logical that we should
often find newer ideas to succeed,” said Mariwala.
Frans Johansson, founder and CEO, said, “Those
companies that purposefully create a diversity culture have a better chance
of coming up with something innovative and outstanding. Given its diversity
in culture and ethnic groups, India has a very big opportunity to be
innovative. It can leverage this diversity because it has the raw material
for it.”
Johansson cited the example of Michigan-based Menlo
Innovations, where CEO Richard Sheridan started making employees work in
pairs on a single computer screen. The pairs switched every Monday, in
effect making intersections and driving innovation through ideas. “It is
important to create diverse teams working in an organization because you
increase your chances for unexpected insights, connections and ideas. It’s
these unexpected instances that will distinguish you from a competitor,”
said Johansson.
Johansson, who was in Mumbai in connection with
Medici Institute, which is driving innovation in India, pointed to IBM. The
company has undergone innovations in hardware and software through an
incredible focus on diversity in terms of culture, race, gender, countries
and ethnicity.
EMPLOYING A GOOD MIX
• Cos believe diversity of gender, ethnicity, region and age is vital for
an organization’s growth
• Inter-mingling in a workforce with a rich mix of backgrounds can lead to
innovation
• Analysts believe cos have ready ‘raw material’ in India’s diverse culture
& ethnic groups
• Move got boost after liberalization when one community or region couldn’t
keep up with needs of expanding businesses
Namrata
Singh TNN TOI121221
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