It was almost 30 years ago. Interning with
Mahindra Tractors as an apprentice, I was getting my first taste of
the industry, trying to learn the ropes of real engineering. We were a bunch of newbies each in our early 20s going around the factory, feeling
important and giving an onlooker the impression that it was we who really made
the tractors roll.
The progressive Mahindra
management decided to put us all through a 10-day Management Development
program, where we would take classes in an on-campus seminar room.
Experienced honchos from the organization would come to lecture us on
various aspects of management.
One of the sessions of those
times has lingered with me, and keeps making an impact time and again.
A manager who came to teach us leadership
qualities had devised a game. Three teams would compete to assemble a
disheveled bunch of loose papers into three neatly ordered books, each
identified and serialized by page numbers.
Eager to get into action, I volunteered to be the leader of one of the teams. The teams were given 10 minutes to discuss and plan their strategy. The competition took off at the whistle, and sheets of paper rustled around in a frenzy. One by one the teams submitted their three organized books.
Eager to get into action, I volunteered to be the leader of one of the teams. The teams were given 10 minutes to discuss and plan their strategy. The competition took off at the whistle, and sheets of paper rustled around in a frenzy. One by one the teams submitted their three organized books.
To my dismay, my team finished
last, taking almost twice the amount of time as the second slowest team.
What had gone wrong?
The other teams had put one team-member in charge of each book. The sheets would be handed over by all to the respective book owner, who would quickly organize his book serially.
I had however led my team on a horrendously inefficient path. I the leader took upon myself to personally assemble every book. The rest of the team had to just stand by hand me the sheets of paper. The process went on and on and on.
The management gurus were nice people. No one branded me a failed leader.
Piecing together the events of the day, the differences between our team and the others stood out stark.
Other
teams planned together. Five heads put together spawned the plan and made it
work. Our team plan was the chief's plan alone. Others needed to follow suit.
The other teams split the work; each intelligent member in charge of assembling his book. All books got ready concurrently. Our team leader trusted only himself to do all the work.
Other
teams took up the challenge as a team. For our team the whole thing was the
leader’s baby, the leader’s making; and as it turned out eventually, the
leader’s debacle :)
Those loose sheets of paper taught me a lesson of teamwork that I will cherish.
I quietly smile at the wet-behind-the-ears, 20 something boy from not so long ago.
Those loose sheets of paper taught me a lesson of teamwork that I will cherish.
I quietly smile at the wet-behind-the-ears, 20 something boy from not so long ago.
Words of wisdom ...
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