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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, February 26, 2003 |
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FOCUS From the barrel of a gun!
KNOWING what to do when one gets that unfortunately common
commodity the pink slip is an art in itself! Today we have the
politically correct terms like right sizing, downsizing, and
retrenched. It all means, in greater or lesser degree, the action
of being fired! Actually, it is becoming increasingly common to
be `made redundant' by a management that at one time went on a
mad and generous hiring spree.
I remember a time four years ago when HR honchos paced the floor
outside convocation halls waiting for IT graduates to emerge.
When they did appear each graduate was snapped up in a trice and
shanghaied into a waiting car straight to the airport. Next stop,
Newark! The salaries were astronomical and industry at home, even
conventional industry began to hire and pay handsomely.
Then came the millennium bust and the bottom fell out of the
market. Life became tough and employees kept looking over their
shoulder wondering when, not if, the axe was going to fall.
People were retrenched by the horde and it is today a very
difficult task to find a mid-level manager who hasn't been
umm..strategi-cally outplaced!
The traditional Indian professional is not used to being
discarded like a used and tattered glove. It is not socially
accepted and is something that is only whispered about behind the
backs of sufferers. These unfortunate people have come to me, hat
in hand, to ask for advice on how to cope with the ignominy, for
that is what society has made it, and I find it difficult to
utter the home truths that rise to my lips. But what they are
worth here they are!
Cleanse
The first reaction of the fired is anger. No one likes to be
cheated, and that's the feeling most people have when they are
handed the pink slip. Of course there are some who are actually
happy at being released from the tension of wondering about the
axe falling! But it is essential that those with the anger must
not let it affect their judgement or behaviour.
Being glum and morose is all very well in private, but it does
more than knobble your chances in getting a new job, it will
ensure that you don't get it! So what do you do with all that
fury pent up in your system? Externalise it in words to a friend
or a relative. I don't mean you yell at whoever comes in your
way, but if necessary, moan about it to well-wishers, even to
other sufferers. They will tell you their pains and you tell them
yours.
Rant if you must, by all means rave, but once its out, let it
stay out! In the US of course there would be a support group,
back home we have family and friends! They'll rally around you
especially when you are the major breadwinner! When you go into
that interview, look forward and smile, not backwards at the
anger you had!
The bull by the horns
When you sit down at an interview are you worried what to say if
they were to ask you what happened in your last job? If you, for
instance were to confess all as you walked in it would leave them
nonplussed and interview panels have to be plussed all the time!
If you do say something like this your entire interview will be
adversely coloured by this unpleasant fact and the panel will
never be able to make a proper judgement about you. So what do
you do? Suppress the information?
Certainly not. Start first with the big plusses. Remember I said
they like to be plussed? The plusses are your special skills,
those you can transfer from your own experience to the benefit of
their bottom lines.
Show them that you have
S.RAMANUJACHARYA
professor1@sify.com
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