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INTERVIEW — SATISH PRADHAN
‘Balancing
pay, personality needs of women execs can ensure retention’
Tarun
Narayan in Mumbai
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| Satish Pradhan,
executive VP, group HR, Tata Sons, addressing a seminar
on “Women in Management: Challenges and Opportunities”
held in Mumbai |
Performance betterment can also be initiated
with a humanistic strategy instead of getting caught solely
in the measurable aspect of work. This could be all the more
relevant with women managers. The human resource structures
and policies, therefore, according to Mr Satish Pradhan,
executive vice-president, group HR, Tata Sons Ltd., should
address the issues from a macro societal dimension. In an
interview with The Financial Express, Mr Pradhan elucidates
some of the frameworks that HR systems need to draw-up in
order to integrate women managers and professionals with core
functions of the corporate enterprise. Mr Pradhan recently
addressed a seminar on “Women in Management: Challenges and
Opportunities”, held in Mumbai. Excerpts:
How should an organisation play a pro-active role in
acknowledging and growing the career of the women workforce?
Organisations should operate on a mutually profitable
relationship of trust and understanding, a certain limitation
beyond the work life. All the guidelines and processes should
be communicated with clarity. Convincing norms should be evolved
and employees told as to how these systems are to align with
the core vision and purpose of the organisation. Honesty,
clarity and a culture of sharing and mutual respect are the
pro-active guidelines to consolidate the talent pool of women
professionals in the organisation.
What are the compensation structures that can enable an
integrated retention system for women managers?
Compensation structures here should not be guided by the
concepts of performance-driven pay, variable pay, maternity
benefits etc. Monetarily charted out plans can never solve
the problem of women attrition. The amount of responsibility,
power, challenge and exploration the job lends to a given
pay system will define the stay or attrition of women executives.
Striking an equilibrium between the pay and personality needs
can ensure a relevant retention system in the organisation.
But what are the factors that lead to women talent deciding
to withdraw from corporate life?
The thought process does not merely end with the women
alone. Some of the traditionally established social conditioning
is the major drawback the system confronts. Despite that,
the larger paradigms that guide women against having a corporate
career is the inability to create an equilibrium where life
space is an equal sum of home space and work space. If work
space is higher than the home space it is always regarded
by the women as a compromise rather than commitment, thereby,
leading to total withdrawal from the workfront. The fact that
the women have not tried to take a hard look at the totality
of the organisation and the personal life accordingly customise
their approach to work. They should nurture a self-driven
thinking that walking out of a job and hopping in after a
timespan at a not-so-desired role is a fresh beginning and
not belittling of expectations and self ego.
What are the motivation models that you suggest to retain
women professionals?
The corporate work profile should create an atmosphere
that communicates adequate flexibility for the women in straddling
the two worlds. Work has to be clearly evaluated on target
centric objectives. It should not fall into the trap of bureaucratic
time schedules and rigidly defined rules of attendance. This
implies: make work a co-relation to the goals rather than
a slight proportion to the time and office schedules.
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