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T H E H I N D U O P P O R T U N I T I E S A Guide to Better Positions and Better Performance Wednesday, November 07, 2001 |
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HRD COUNSELLING V. Kartikeyan, Director, Human Resources, Texas Instruments (India) Pvt. Ltd.
With the economic slowdown and the consequent cost cutting and
retrenchment, how have you adapted/changed your HR policies to
being more people friendly?
These are indeed trying times. More than ever before, there is a
need now to balance between employee needs and interests, and the
overall costs of running an organisation. Especially a research
and development organisation like ours where people-related costs
comprise a significant part of the total cost of operations.
However, while we are cutting down on all avoidable costs, we are
not retrenching. In fact, we are in line with our worldwide
strategy, actually hiring critical staff who will build the
necessary base to enable us to come out stronger when the
situation improves.
We have endeavoured to keep our policies people-friendly
regardless of theeconomic situation. For instance, we have always
had a flexi time policythat enables employees to contribute their
best. We have maintained a dress code that ``comfortable''. We
have cut down only on travelling permitting only business-
critical travel. Apart from this, we are keeping our base of
benefits constant and trying not to incur higher expenditure. At
the senior level compensation is being linked more and more to
performance, both individual and that of the company worldwide.
How effective are your internal communication systems to ensure
that you are constantly aware of the satisfaction/dissatisfaction
levels of your employees?
We have several forums of communication to do just that! The
simplest and most elegant way we have discovered in recent times
is to have snap polls on various issues using our intranet. These
could range from being satisfied with the cafeteria to gauging
employee interest in several initiatives. We also have a
quarterly site-wide town hall meeting where we communicate
matters of site-wide significance to employees. We also conduct
comprehensive surveys periodically that give us deeper insights
into employees' feelings. We are also planning to conduct regular
surveys of the level of engagement of employees within their
respective workgroups. We expect this to give us hard facts on
specific issues within the respective groups, which may impact
the extent to which employees feel engaged or disengaged at work.
Give a few reasons as to why a professional who wants to excel
should make Texas Instruments a destination in their career
journey?
TII is an institution of technological excellence, with 16 years
of successful existence in India. We have over the years,
consistently moved up the value chain - from lower end design and
tools related work to actually being architects of full products
for TI worldwide.
TII has firmly established separate career paths for thosewho are
inclined to grow as managers of technological organisations and
forthose who believe in growing as architects of the new
technology. This ```dual'' career path has evolved over years and
is clearly a competitive advantage for TII.
How do you deal with conflict, de-motivation and lethargy in the
work place?
The very nature of our work is challenging to such anextent that
we do not typically hear of issues of de-motivation or lethargy.
Conflicts, on the other hand do occur, and they are healthy to
some extent in any organisation. The question is how do we ensure
that it remains healthy and does not get out of hand. We have
recently begun a new OD initiative called ``Relationship
Reviews''. In this, teams get together typically once a quarter,
and (much like design or business reviews) review the nature and
quality of relationships within the team members. These reviews
are short, focussed and avoid the tedium and logistical spread of
having to do elaborate team building exercises. This enables the
members to examine the type of conflict and work towards
converting the conflict into a resource rather than a drag on the
team energy.
It is a well-known fact that attrition at Texas Instruments is
very low. How did you achieve this?
Controlled attrition is not a matter of chance. It requires
consistency of management practices and sustained effort. Our
guiding doctrine says, ``Great Work, Great Leaders and Great
Rewards''. Focussed attention to each of the elements of this
doctrine has enabled us over the years to keep our attrition at
manageable levels.
What are your future plans in India, both on the technology and
the HR fronts?
TI India has aggressive plans for expansion of its R&D
activities. We will be growing to nearly 1000 people in the next
3 to 5 years. The company has reoriented itself from being a pure
product development center to focus on developing complete
solutions for various end equipment markets that we serve such as
3 G wireless, broadband, internet audio etc. This trend will be
accelerated in the coming years with more end equipment solutions
being developed at TI India.
On the HR front, we have already begun a ``customer-facing''
model to increasingly align HR initiatives and actions with
business directions and flow. We see this process intensifying in
the future. We also see an increasing automation of HR systems
and processes. This would be necessary to support a growing
population. Finally, we want to focus on ``delivering HR to the
doorstep of each individual''. This means that human resources
will not just impact the whole organisation or distinct
workgroups, but will start impacting at a personal level. For
example, our ``executive coaching model'' will support not only
top performers in their growth but will include performance
enhancement plans for employees needing it. We champion change
for we believe in providing scope for people to achieve both
``synergy'' and ``strategy'' at work.
MALINI SURYANARAYANAN
maalini.mds@careercommunity.co.in
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