Anyone foloowing India's political scene will know:
The world largest democracy gave mandate to one and only Narendra Modi
A clear majority and full support to the new government..
Here is my tribute:
Management Lessons from Narendra Modi's Victory
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Sunday, May 18, 2014
Wednesday, May 07, 2014
If President Obama Can Get Home for Dinner, Why Can’t You?
If President Obama Can Get Home for Dinner,
Why Can’t You?
No matter how challenging your job may be, it is surely dwarfed by the pressures of the U.S. presidency.
No matter how many vacations they take or how much they exercise, presidents seem to visibly age faster than other people; among the White House staff, there’s frequent talk of burnout leading to turnover.
The president-Obama has a strict 6:30 time for dinner with his family, and it’s pretty much inviolate.
Facinating, Isn't
it...
Read the Full Article
Below by Harvard Business Review by Dan McGinn
In her 2012 book “The
Obamas,” New York Times correspondent Jodi Kantor offers an unusually detailed
account of how the Obamas tried to maintain a sense of balance even as they
moved to Washington. They’ve maintained the same loyal network of friends, stuck
to disciplined diet and exercise regimens, eschewed the Washington social scene
to spend time with their children, and kept a raised eyebrow at some of the pomp
and privilege that comes with the presidency. HBR asked Kantor what C-suite
executives might learn from how the First Couple deals with one of the world’s
most stressful jobs. Excerpts:
Your book contains rich detail on how hard the Obamas worked to preserve
a sense of normalcy when they moved to the White House. Why was that so
important to them?
I started covering the Obamas in 2007, so I watched their transformation.
They very quickly went from being the sort of parents who dropped their kids off
at school to being president and first lady. Their change in status was so
extreme — normally in politics and in business, people rise slowly and pay their
dues. When they got to Washington, they really tried to preserve as sense of
normalcy, but that’s almost impossible in the White House, which is a
combination museum, office, residence, and secure military compound. In the
business world, even the most public CEO still has a place he or she can retreat
to that’s out of the public eye. That’s not true for a president.
Today more executives avoid relocating their families when they change
jobs, so we’re seeing more commuter marriages. In your book you note that until
he moved to the White House, Obama had never lived full-time with his
family.
That’s true — he’d commuted to Springfield and Washington as a state
senator and U.S. senator, while the family stayed in Chicago. In fact, one of
the most surprising things I found out while reporting the book was that
Michelle Obama initially considered not moving to the White House in 2009 — she
considered having their daughters finish out the school year in Chicago. To me
that’s a story that shows both how naïve and how wise Michelle Obama was about
the presidency. On the one hand, it was naïve to think the country would have
accepted a commuter first lady. At the same time, it showed that even though
Mrs. Obama was new to politics and to Washington, she instinctively knew that
living in the White House was not going to be easy, and the demands on her
family (including her children) were going to be enormous. While the business
world does have the concept of the “corporate spouse” who may play an important
role in social events, it’s still really unusual for a CEO’s children to become
involved — they’re generally off the hook.
In 2012, Sheryl Sandberg told a reporter she leaves her office every day
at 5:30 pm to get home for dinner with her family, and it started a big debate
over how executives set limits on their workdays. What did you observe about how
Obama sets limits?
One of the details in my book that people react most strongly to is that
the president has a strict 6:30 time for dinner with his family, and it’s pretty
much inviolate. He’s willing to miss dinner twice a week, but that’s it. That’s
very unusual for a president. It limits his fundraising trips to the West Coast.
It limits his outreach to Congress. I’m not suggesting that he’s remiss for not
doing those things—I’m only noting it’s an unusual approach. For CEOs, I think
it raises the interesting question of how far you’re willing to go [in setting
boundaries]. Especially in light of CEOs’ outsized pay packages, is it okay to
say ‘If it’s after 6:30 pm, I can’t do that?’
Sheryl Sandberg also says that choosing the right spouse is the single
most important career decision someone can make. Do you see Michelle as
unusually vital to Barack Obama’s career?
I don’t think Barack Obama would be president without Michelle, for both
practical and psychological reasons. The practical reason is that he was a
newcomer to Chicago who needed to become not just a politician, but a black
politician in a new city. He had an unusual background and no roots there.
Michelle Obama provided those roots when they married. From a psychological
perspective, Mrs. Obama always had a very elevated sense of who her husband was.
She talked about how he was not like other politicians, and that influenced his
own self-image.
You provide vivid descriptions of the First Lady gently teasing the
president, of “puncturing” the pomp around him. Why is this dynamic
important?
One of the dilemmas of being the spouse of someone who has a ton of
responsibility—whether it’s a president or a CEO—is knowing when you support and
console, and when you speak truth to power. When your spouse comes home, you
don’t want to say ‘I really think you could have handled that meeting
differently.’ But on the other hand, you can have tremendous influence and
arguably a moral duty to use it, to prevent or fix problems where you can. We
have a whole literature about presidential marriages—we know a lot about the
Adams, the Roosevelts, the Clintons—but I’ve never seen research into CEO
marriages, and how spouses influence CEO decision-making. That could be a
fascinating area for research.
Last year was especially difficult for the Obama administration. When
things aren’t going well, do you have the sense that the president puts in
longer hours, or is he able to maintain a sense of balance and
perspective?
It’s really hard to tell. Aides are constantly trying to present an image
of the president as cool and unruffled by what’s going on around him. At the
same time, there is a sense that he works incredibly hard—for instance, he’s
known to pull all-nighters, especially when writing big speeches. The bigger
question for me isn’t the workload but how presidents deal with the
psychological pressure. The decisions they make are just so monumental,
particularly during times of war and economic struggle. So many of us worry
about having an outsized degree of anxiety about jobs where the stakes are
relatively low; what can learn from people who’ve served in really high
office?
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