Today, October 2, 2013, is celebrated as
Gandhi Jayanti in India. Without doubt, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1949),
popularly and reverently referred to as Mahatma Gandhi or Bapuji, is the
greatest leader India has ever produced. Mahatma Gandhi has few parallels even
internationally for several of his
unique attributes. He was both a transformational leader and transactional
leader, whose knowledge covered a whole range of domains including politics, economics,
religion, spirituality and philosophy. What distinguished Gandhi was that he
was highly principled and value-based in whatever he preached and executed. As a
result, he could inspire the elite as effectively as he could sway the masses. He
was a truly original thinker who brought concepts such as non-violence to centre
stage nationally as well as internationally.
Without Mahatma Gandhi, Indian independence would
have been a distant dream even now. Without his indomitable will and leadership,
the mighty British empire would not have been forced to accede to Indian
independence in an essentially non-violent way. Without his unique campaigns,
including, for example, the famous Salt March to Dandi, the nation would not
have been able to demonstrate the power of unity in diversity. There are so
many competencies and capabilities of Mahatma Gandhi that it would be difficult
for anyone to chronicle them in any order and to do any level of justice. This
blog post merely attempts to glean some lessons from Mahatma Gandhi’s
leadership that would have relevance to management and leadership in business,
and any organized activity or even to any individual endeavor.
Leadership by example
Mahatma Gandhi personified leading by example.
His thoughts, deeds and execution were clearly and completely aligned. If he
preached simplicity, he exemplified by adopting simple living, including
wearing hand-woven half-dress that identified
with the poorest of poor. He organized all his non-violent protests, including satyagrahas,
by being in the front rather than exhorting from behind. In terms of personal
possessions he had the barest of the minimum, forsaking all his wealth for the
good of the community. He emphasized effective time and resource management,
spinning cloth whether in his ashram or in prison.
Such extraordinary simplicity may not be
every leader’s wont in today’s times but certainly the essence of Gandhi’s
leading by example can be integrated in terms of avoiding extravagance, and
reflecting authenticity, transparency, genuineness and alignment in thoughts,
expressions and actions. Walking the talk and leading by example are the pivots
of effective leadership dynamics.
Leadership by thematic campaigns
The early 1900s had none of the communication
tools that the world has today. Yet Gandhi could galvanize an entire nation of
multiple languages and cultures onto one platform. He captured the imagination
of several hundred millions of people by enunciating, practicing and leading thematic
campaigns such as Khadi (hand-woven cotton dress) as a mark of social and economic
self-reliance and Satygraha (fasting) as a symbol of self-sacrifice,
self-denial and self-purification. His
non-violent movements such as non-cooperation movement, civil disobedience
movement, and quit-India movement, finally culminating in the India independence
movement reflect a thematic acumen to rally a nation of several million people
around.
Whether people belong to small teams or large
organizations, thematic campaigns are required to galvanize people of multiple predispositions
into one unified thought and execution process. Leaders faced with challenges of turnaround
and growth, as well as leaders in pursuit of competitiveness through safety,
quality and efficiency need such thematic drivers.
Leadership by persistence
Gandhi was the ultimate epitome of
persistence, tenacity, endurance, commitment, conviction. Whether it was facing
hostile white mobs in Durban, traveling to the coldest of the places like
London bare-chested, conforming to strict vegetarianism even on foreign shores,
walking hundreds of miles day and night, fasting for days together, or
accepting incarceration with selflessness, Mahatma believed in the causes he expounded
and overcame all daunting obstacles resolutely.
In civil life or business life, success is
not easy. The above five qualities which fired Gandhi’s dour and doughty spirit are very much a requirement of leadership. Conviction
in the causes of core leadership is the fundamental driver of the other four qualities
of persistence, tenacity, endurance and commitment.
Leadership by organization
Despite his extraordinary capabilities and
qualities, Gandhi never considered the movement for Indian independence as only
his one-person initiative. He aligned the Congress party and its machinery as the
organizational vehicle. In 1921 when he became a senior congress functionary,
he reorganized the party hierarchy and created a structure that is aligned with
the objectives. More importantly, he displayed the statesmanship and
stewardship to lead a team of exceptional leaders of their own right; Pandit Jawaharlal
Nehru, Rajaji, Jinnah, Gokhale, Sardar Patel, Rajendra Prasad and Baba Ambedkar,
to name a few.
Successful social or business leadership
requires building and development of a world-class organization with a
structure that is aligned to strategy and vision, and a highly qualified and experienced
leadership team. A leader’s responsibility lies in developing the right balance
of alignment and creativity amongst a group of competent and passionate leaders.
Leadership by service
Gandhi exemplified servant leadership long
before it became a part of management lexicon. Gandhi saw himself as a servant
of the Indian people, even more particularly of the poor and downtrodden. He was
an extraordinary leader of people but made every effort to find oneness with
ordinary people. Several of his personal qualities such as humaneness,
humility, integrity, accountability, honesty, accessibility, equality,
morality, spirituality, trusteeship, mentoring and empowerment (and even
vulnerability to human failings) made Gandhi into a role model of servant leadership. His espousal
of independence on behalf of the people, his campaign for eradication of
untouchability and his readiness to serve the plague-diseased and war-injured
despite all the risks are enduring evidences of his servant leadership.
Business and organizational leaders are, in a
sense, servants of all the stakeholders, including but not limited to the
customers, investors, employees and the larger society. Business leadership
must see metrics of organizational performance in a perspective of trusteeship
for the greater good of the society. In some businesses, such as healthcare
industry the linkage could be obvious but even in other industries the service
dimension gets discovered by true servant leaders, leading to superior
performance.
Leadership by customers
Long before customer-centricity became a
buzzword in marketing and management, Gandhi made a highly profound statement
on customers as the core of any business. Gandhi stated, “A customer is the
most important visitor on our premises. He is not dependent on us. We are
dependent on him. He is not an interruption in our work. He is the purpose of
it. He is not an outsider in our business. He is part of it. We are not doing
him a favor by serving him. He is doing us a favor by giving us an opportunity
to do so.” Considering customers in the perspective that Gandhi has enunciated
could be seen as a logical extension of his service leadership.
Business leaders must consider whether
concepts of market leadership and customer loyalty are the right concepts to
feel comfortable about, in the context of the above perspective. Rather,
leaders must measure themselves and the performance of their organizations on a
holistic paradigm of customer service. This paradigm should be more than
fulfillment of customer orders; it could be in terms of lifelong customer
satisfaction.
Leadership by self-reliance
Although
the word Swaraj means self-rule, Gandhi gave it the content of an integral
revolution that encompasses all spheres of life. He stated, “At the individual
level Swaraj is vitally connected with the capacity for dispassionate
self-assessment, ceaseless self-purification and growing self-reliance”.
Politically, swaraj is self-government and it means a continuous effort to be
independent of government control, whether it is foreign government or whether
it is national. In other words, it is sovereignty of the people based on pure
moral authority. Economically, Swaraj means full economic freedom for the
toiling millions. His Khadi movement, with the Charak (the spinning wheel)
emerging as the symbol of economic power in the hands of individuals and the
passionate espousal of small and micro enterprises and rural employment are
sterling examples of his belief in economic self-reliance.
Indian business
may consider, somewhat erroneously, that in today’s globalized world
self-reliance is an obsolete concept. On the other hand, the business must note
that but for the emphasis of Gandhi-Nehru combine on self-reliance and the passionate
response of private and public sectors, India would have missed even this level
of industrialization. While, India did win its independence, economic
independence is still elusive. Gandhian economics in a contemporary format is
certainly called for.
Leadership by people
Gandhiji believed that the real power directly resides in
the hands of people. Gandhi said, “Power resides in the people, they can use it
at any time.” This philosophy rests inside an individual who has to learn
to be master of his or her own self and spreads upwards to the level of
his or her community which must be dependent only on itself. Gandhi said, “In
such a state, everyone is his own ruler. He rules himself in such a manner that
he is never a hindrance to his neighbour”.
While Gandhi was a great leader
he articulated that his leadership was based on factors that even ordinary men
and women could implement. He stated that by putting in the same effort and
attention as he has put in, any person could achieve all that he could achieve.
While it reflects his humility, it also reflects his belief in the capability
and power of the people.
Leaders have to retain the connectivity with the people. The
more power is concentrated in a leader the less successful will be his or her
organization. That said, it does not mean laissez faire for all people of an
organization. The key emphasis must not only be on decentralization and
empowerment but also on accountability to dedicate the same effort, and accord
the same attention, as the leader would put in. That would be the true
embodiment of grassroots leadership.
Leadership by universality
Gandhi studied and lived abroad. He travelled abroad in
the face of misplaced strife against him and defying the power of a world
empire too. In doing so, he discovered his ethical traits, developed his tools
of leadership and honed his personality. He preached and followed Hinduism as a
devout Hindu but equally understood and respected other religions, Christianity
and Islam. He firmly believed in the universality and co-existence of multiple
cultures and religions. His viewpoints, no doubt, established the foundations
of a secular, independent India.
In today’s globalized world, characterized by
multinational corporations of diverse host national origins, it is tempting for
leaders or team members, and headquarters or regions to make fallacious assumptions
on competencies and attributes through the prisms of individual cultures. The moment
leaders and individuals start appreciating the universality of competence, true
global leadership emerges. And, leadership is a continuous discovery of what
is, and what can be, good for the organizations.
Leadership by engagement
Gandhi could galvanize the people by engagement. Even in those
days of manual and physical communication, Gandhi never tired of engaging with
the people. His personal meetings with people who called on him were short and
concise but pointed and effective. He provided all the attention, he listened
well and made all his visitors feel really important and cared for in the brief
personal meetings. When he addressed public gatherings, he always had the pulse
of the people. With his sublime personal traits personified by his ethical and
honest conduct on one hand and the inspiring thematic connectors such as Satya
(truth), Swaraj (self-rule), Satyagraha
(peaceful protest) and Ahimsa (non-violence), Gandhi always engaged with the
millions of Indians, rich or poor, effectively.
Leadership’s greatest trap and fallibility is the
distance that develops between leaders and the larger population. Some leaders
mistakenly distance themselves, some leaders are separated by interlocutors and
intermediaries and some others are kept at a distance by people themselves out
of fear or reverence. It is important for leaders to stay in touch and make the
people feel connected genuinely.
Mahatma Gandhi leadership model
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi has truly been an
exceptionally great leader. While his achievements have been spectacular in the
political and national arena, his having been the Father of the Indian Independence,
the principles of humanism and leadership he embodied transcend all domains,
and are applicable to organizational leadership, whether business or
administrative, and whether for-profit or not-for-profit. The ten facets of Mahatma Gandhi’s leadership
model brought out in this blog post, namely leadership by example, leadership
by thematic campaigns, leadership by persistence, leadership by organization,
leadership by service, leadership by customers, leadership by self-reliance,
leadership by people, leadership by universality, and leadership by engagement together
constitute a holistic model of humanistic leadership.
While several decades have passed, Mahatma Gandhi’s
leadership model remains as relevant today as it was in his lifetime. It would
continue to be applicable at all times in future, and in all cultures and
nations in a fundamental manner. As with
any model, Gandhi’s humanistic leadership model has to be absorbed and implemented
contextually, and with wholehearted conviction. It is a model not merely for
leaders, current and prospective, but also for all people at large. It would be useful to recall once again Gandhi’s
statement that even ordinary persons would achieve the same results and impact
if they exert the same effort and attention as Gandhi himself has dedicated for
human welfare and development. That brings
us to one of the most profound quotations of Mahatma Gandhi: ”Be the change
that you wish to see in the world”.
Posted by Dr CB Rao on October 2, 2013 on the occasion of
Gandhi Jayanti.
3 comments:
Leadership attributes for change management from an organization transformation and health perspective is a evolving and ongoing need.
Attributes can be built in or is in built, remains a paradox or contextual
will wait for next write-up
Great post and amazing stuff! Thanks a lot for sharing this information. . .
packing and moving in pune.
Gandhi believed you are in control as to how to react to people and events. That was the most critical part that affects the outcome.
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