Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

Monday, 16 July 1984

ESCALATOR - CULTURE

Synopsis: Communication For Productivity
Letters written to some 7500 Workers / Managers / Union Leaders, following a period of strike / Go slow / Murders (1979 - 1987), at Mumbai factory of Larsen & Toubro Ltd. This direct / open / honest communication led to a remarkable atmosphere of trust between Workers and Management, which, in turn, increased productivity at 3% per year (ave). 

16 July 1984

To:

Dear Friends

ESCALATOR - CULTURE
A few days back I was going through the shops and talking to the Shop-Representatives and the Shop-Supervisors about the pressing need to raise the productivity.
"Let us all work harder - and smarter", I was telling them.
At one shop, the Unit Manager proudly introduced to me the Shop-Representitive  and added,  "This shop  has  an enviable record of  improving the labour-productivity,  both after the 1979 Agreement  and the  1984 Agreement.  On  both occasions, the workmen have exceeded their productivity-targets".
I heartily congratulated the Shop-Representative for such an exemplary  performance.  I  said  I  was very  happy  to hear about this.
It was the Shop-Representative's turn to say something.
He said,                                            “but we are very unhappy".
When I composed myself, I asked.
"What for ?"
He said, "We are not getting promotion to a higher grade".
I did  not argue much  (shop-floor is  not an ideal  place to argue), but  I asked him to  carefully study  the "job classifications" which  have been  recently revised under  the new Agreement.
Whether  the workmen of  that shop  (or for  that matter,  any worker  anywhere in  Powai), deserve  to  be promoted  to  the next higher grade depends upon three  things:
1.  Whether a higher grade exists  in that particular "trade/ job", in a given area.
2.  Whether a particular worker  has already acquired sufficient proficiency  in  the specific  "skills/capabilities"     described in the job-classification of that higher grade.
3.  Whether,  in his  shop,  there is  so  much  work of  the     higher classification that, for atleast  6 hours out of 8     hours, he can be expected  to be doing such higher classification work.

Higher productivity  (doing more  in less time)  must not  be confused with higher "skills".

Everybody  is  capable  of  giving higher  productivity.   to produce  more   (in  less   time)  is  not   merely  a  moral responsibility  of all  who are  beneficiaries of  the recent Settlement.  It is equally  a matter of saving our jobs - our very existence as a company.
On the other   hand everyone is not  capable to acquire higher skills and  very often, higher  "skills" are  just not needed to perform certain tasks.   So the "grade" simply has to stop there.
Unfortunately, some  of us do not  understand this difference whereas some others  do not WANT to understand'.  If you have any doubt  about my  statement, please  read-on the following article of Bakul Tripathi.
Whether as an  individual or as a company,  if we want to get ahead of others, let us get rid of the "mental escalators!

H.C. PAREKH

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