Facebook Pixel Learning The Ropes | Indian Management - Business - Read this story on Magzter.com
Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year

Try GOLD - Free

Learning The Ropes

Indian Management

|

February 2019

Front line leaders, often the largest leader population, play an incredibly important role in the organisation—impacting areas such as team productivity, employee engagement, and customer satisfaction.

- Amogh Deshmukh

Learning The Ropes

When a country like India has strong GDP growth rate, organisations—large or small—also enjoy hyper growth. And that is what the country has been witnessing for many years. In the early ‘70s and ‘80s, a person had to spend considerable time in a role before he/she moved on to the next role. That gave people exposure and the time to develop themselves. But since the mid-90s different sectors in India grew at unprecedented rates not in any particular order. In the last two-and-a-half decades we have seen massive growth in industries such as IT/ ITES, BFSI, telecom, automotive, healthcare, media, and startups. Not to mention that manufacturing and pharma too have seen some solid growth. This growth has crunched the timelines for promoting leaders. Most organisations that have survived since the mid90s have grown, both in terms of revenue and employee strengths, multiple times.

The new-age startups have shown aggressive growth over the last five to eight years and have employee strengths in thousands. Obviously, organisations have to promote their employees quickly to manage large workforces, which means that many young employees who are stepping into leadership or managerial roles for the first time are not ready enough, or are not ready at all. But still, organisations have to take some risks, promote such employees, and hope they do the job well. In fact, this unprecedented growth has given birth to a new concept altogether—we know this as ‘employee engagement’. This term, made way into the talent management discipline only in the mid-90s. The reason was simple—larger managerial teams were required to manage larger workforces. As a result, inexperienced managers—with poor readiness or no readiness at all—decide the fate of employees. This not just impacts the morale of the employees but also quality and customer engagement. In fact, a few other terms that became popular were attrition rate and retention me

MORE STORIES FROM Indian Management

Indian Management

Indian Management

Digital independence

From digital adoption to digital sovereignty, India is leveraging AI to recalibrate its power.

time to read

4 mins

Feb 2026

Indian Management

Creativity with consistency: Rewarding reinvention

Every enduring institution carries within it a paradox. The very strengths that create longevity can, over time, become constraints on renewal. Managing this paradox—remaining consistent in purpose while being creative in action—has become one of the most critical capabilities for organisations seeking to stay relevant in an uncertain world.

time to read

3 mins

Feb 2026

Indian Management

Indian Management

Building cultures of adaptability

In a world shaped by intelligent systems, the most successful organisations will be those that continually reinvent themselves.

time to read

5 mins

Feb 2026

Indian Management

Indian Management

Make your message stick

A simple story framework that every leader needs.

time to read

5 mins

Feb 2026

Indian Management

Indian Management

The real leadership risk

Ego isn't the problem; unconscious leadership is, opines Christie Garcia, founder and Ego Management expert, Mindful Choice and author, Your Ego is Showing: How Ego Management Unlocks Authentic Confidence & Meaningful Success.

time to read

4 mins

Feb 2026

Indian Management

Indian Management

Unconscious competence

Leadership is not taught in isolation; context shapes who becomes an effective leader.

time to read

5 mins

Feb 2026

Indian Management

Indian Management

Smarter care, lower costs

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is ushering in a new era in healthcare—providing transformative improvements across diagnostics, patient care, drug development, and health system efficiency. More than just a technological upgrade, AI has begun reshaping the cost structures of medical services, enabling more personalised care at reduced expense.

time to read

5 mins

December 2025

Indian Management

Staying Connected When It Matters Most: Why Communication Resilience Defines Modern Organisations

In a world continually reshaped by geopolitical volatility, technological progress, and rapid disruption, resilient communication is a foundational capability, one of the most crucial that an organisation can develop. Organisations stumble when information travels slowly, when teams operate with different versions of the truth, or when uncertainty creeps in.

time to read

2 mins

December 2025

Indian Management

Indian Management

From pushback to progress

Influence happens not when you push your idea, but when you open the space for others'.

time to read

5 mins

December 2025

Indian Management

Indian Management

Financial metamorphosis

The financial services sector is undergoing a profound metamorphosis, spurred by technological advancements, evolving customer expectations, and the emergence of innovative business models (Bueno et al., 2024).

time to read

6 mins

December 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size