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Daily Archives: December 16, 2007

Padmasree Warrior

16 Sunday Dec 2007

Posted by Prem Rao in People

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Cisco, Padmasree Warrior

A 47 year old Indian-American lady has just won one of the world’s most highly prized jobs. Now being called the geek queen, Padmasree Warrior, has been appointed as  Cisco’s Chief Technology Officer.

She fills a post left vacant since July when Cisco promoted former CTO, Charles Giancarlo to the post of chief development officer. Cisco Systems was ranked No. 11 in the 100 Best Companies To Work For in 2007 by Fortune.

Warrior was the highest-ranking female executive in Motorola’s near 80-year history, achieving the rank of corporate vice president and CTO. Cisco chairman John Chambers , to whom she reports, has already dubbed her the world’s technology visionary.

She was once ranked as the 11th most influential global Indian and called a “rising star” by Fortune magazine.

To her credit, while at Motorola, Warrior was acknowledged for the introduction of a blog, ‘Innovate’, on which the company’s 25,000 engineers were encouraged to share ideas and information. “The future belongs to the genius of the collaborative innovator. In the past we had this notion of engineers working by themselves in isolation and trying to come up with things. And that whole paradigm is changing,” Warrior said

Warrior holds a MS degree in chemical engineering from Cornell University and a BS degree in chemical engineering from IIT Delhi. In 2007 she was awarded Doctor of Engineering, Honoris Causa from New York’s Polytechnic University.

Another case of a lady making it to the top of her profession. Another case of an Indian-American executive making a name for herself in the corporate world.

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Am I a Friend or the Boss ?

16 Sunday Dec 2007

Posted by Prem Rao in A Step A Day

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A Step A Day, friendship, new manager

“Where do you draw the line?” asked Pratap. He was a young manager I was interacting with. “Most of my team members were my colleagues earlier. I was one of them. After my promotion, I am sometimes confused. They are still friendly with me but it is not like the old times.”

“It should not be like the old times” I said. “You have a new role to play. While maintaining good relations with your team members is crucial for success, remember that things have changed – in their eyes , if not in yours yet. You are no longer “one of the boys”. You may even be branded as being not one of us but “one of them.”

Have a strong, positive relationship with your old buddies but remember it is your organization and its clients who pay your salary- not your old friends. Your first loyalty is to your job role.

Some friends may be happy at your success, some others may be jealous of you. As Oscar Wilde said “Anybody can sympathise with the sufferings of a friend, but it requires a very fine nature to sympathise with a friend’s success.”!

Explain to them that you have not changed -your role has. Some aspects of your new role may seemingly be counter to what your team likes. As a team member, you always considered it the manager’s headache to resolve problems, arrange for resources and motivate the team. After all, you argued, wasn’t she being paid much more for that? Today, you are that manager.

The relationship with the boss is an important part of work life. Gallup research resulted in lines that have now become legendary. “People Join Companies. People Leave Managers”

Here are some thoughts for Pratap- and many others like him:

• Don’t make abrupt behavioral changes. Make gradual changes to incorporate newer elements in your conduct such as socialising less ( if necessary), communicating performance expectations more clearly and leading by example.
• Demonstrate leadership by being able to guide them in their work and resolving their problems. Show that the new responsibilities were earned based on your competence –not merely by chance.
• Involve the team in major decisions. Get the team’s “ buy in “ by using them as a sounding post for ideas you want to implement. Actively seek their ideas and recognize their contributions. Give credit where it is due.
• Be seen to be impartial. Don’t show special favours to old buddies at the cost of spoiling team morale. Don’t dispense favours indiscriminately. Everyone likes a boss who is perceived to be fair.

Sure, positive relationships are invaluable for team success. But don’t let fostering relationships shift your focus from the more important components of your role.

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Prem Rao

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Author, Book Reviewer, Coach, and Social Commentator based in Bangalore, India. View B P Rao's profile on LinkedIn
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