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Sunday, March 30, 2014

Re: [MTC Global] Leadership in Management Institute

I fully endorse the views of Mr. Kumaraguru who rightly said the Leadership Quality is 60% Inherent,I will put it 75% inherent,the rest depends on the keen observation by keeping our mind open and listen then analyse  and arrive at the right solution.The typical example as he pointed out is Dr. V.Krishnamurthy an icon of Modern Management.
 regards.
 R.Sethuraman
 DGM/BHELR&D{Retd.},
 Consultant/Cethar LTD.

 
     R.Sethuraman
On Saturday, March 29, 2014 8:09 PM, natarajan kumaraguru <natarajan_kumaraguru@yahoo.co.in> wrote:
Dear   All,
Leadership quality is 60% inherent quality remaining is environment and how much the individual using the environment positively.Our Chairman Padmabushan Dr V.Krishnamoorthy Ex  Chairman of Many Navarathnas like BHEL,SAIL,Maruthi is a good leader in our country.Currently is a active member of many Board and Chairman of many council in India &International bodies.
Regards,
N.Kumaraguru.
Head-Process.
KVCL-Cambodia.
On Saturday, 29 March 2014 5:07 AM, Prof. Bholanath Dutta <bnath.dutta@gmail.com> wrote:
Forwarded for good insights.
Best Regards.
Bholanath

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Fwd: Re: [MTC Global] Leadership in Management Institute
From: Satya Prakash Agarwal <spagarwal@gmail.com>
To: bholanath dutta <bnath.dutta@mtcglobal.org>,join_mtc@googlegroups.com
CC: D Nagabrahmam <dnagabrahmam@gmail.com>,subhash sharma <re_see@rediffmail.com>

Message forwarded for wider circulation.

                             S P Agarwal

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: D Nagabrahmam <dnagabrahmam@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Mar 26, 2014 at 12:29 PM
Subject: Re: Re: [MTC Global] Leadership in Management Institute
To: Satya Prakash Agarwal <spagarwal@gmail.com>


Dear SP,
Thank you very much. I do appreciate your unflinching interest as much as your concerns for B Schools and their leadership.
Thankfully, there is so much of talk about the role and kind of Directors. Hope all this gets on to action and some positive changes.
Let me take bit of time, hopefully to write about our own experience of making an institute.
Hope you are doing fine otherwise.
Warm regards,


On Wed, Mar 26, 2014 at 11:07 AM, Satya Prakash Agarwal <spagarwal@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear Subhash and Nagabrahmam:

There seems to a good deal of controversy about leadership in management institutes.

There are a series of mail. I too decided to add some views.

I am attaching it.

Perhaps you would like to contribute based on your experiences.

Trust all is well with you.

Warm regards.

                                               SPA



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Satya Prakash Agarwal <spagarwal@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Mar 25, 2014 at 12:54 PM
Subject: Re: Re: [MTC Global] Leadership in Management Institute
To: join_mtc@googlegroups.com
Cc: s_haridas@mitpune.com


Dear Friends:

I have been reading with interest the different view points and frustrations about Leadership in management institutes.

With over 1000 management institutes, let us admit that we will not be able to get ideal leaders as we need too many. Leadership is a function of our social upbringing and character. I find that as a society we prone to mediocrity, jealousy, disinclination towards learning, curiosity, hard work etc. We tend to be lazy and lack a spirit of creativity and innovativeness. We also tend to indulge too much in back-biting, organizational politics and back-biting. We also suffer too much with inferiority complex.

Since we may not always get an ideal leader, we will have to work together with the best that is available in the circumstances. This goes not only in management institutes but all kinds of institutions, organizations, departments, societies, etc.

I would like to give some examples of good (perhaps) excellent leaders. Ravi Mathai, the first Director of IIM Ahmedabad was only a BA(Oxon). He was not a PhD. In the beginning IIM Calcutta had better qualified faculty than IIM Ahmedabad. IIMC slowly fell behind. Ravi instituted the policy of a Director doing only one term of 5 years and then becoming an ordinary Faculty member, thereby diluting the hierarchical status of a Director. He was able to turn ordinary faculty members into excellent teachers. IN MY VIEW, HAD RAVI MATHAI FAILED, MANAGEMENT EDUCATION IN INDIA WOULD HAVE FAILED. Ravi, later was instrumental in starting Institute of Rural Management at Anand together with his cousin, Dr Verghese Kurien. Ravi, thus was an institution builder. He had industry experience, having worked with Macneil and Barry in the Marketing function.

Dr K S Basu, the first Director of Baja Institute at Bombay was the Personnel Director of Hindustan Lever. He was not an MBA or PhD but an MBBS doctor, who did excellent work --
MTC GLOBAL- Educate, Empower, Elevate
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