Thus Management is a process in search of excellence to align people and get them committed
to work for a common goal to the maximum social benefit.
The critical question in every Manager's mind is how to be effective in his job. The answer to this
fundamental question is found in the Bhagavad Gita which repeatedly proclaims that 'you try to
manage yourself'. The reason is that unless the Manager reaches a level of excellence and
effectiveness that sets him apart from the others whom he is managing, he will be merely a face
in the crowd and not an achiever.
In this context the Bhagavad Gita, expounded thousands of years ago by the Super Management
Guru Bhagawan Sri Krishna, enlightens us on all managerial techniques leading to a harmonious
and blissful state of affairs as against conflicts, tensions, lowest efficiency and least
productivity, absence of motivation and lack of work culture etc common to most of the enterprises today.
The modern management concepts like vision, leadership, motivation, excellence in work,
achieving goals, meaning of work, attitude towards work, nature of individual, decision making,
planning etc., are all discussed in the Bhagavad Gita with a sharp insight and finest analysis to
drive through our confused grey matter making it highly eligible to become a part of the modem
management syllabus.
It may be noted that while Western design on management deals with the problems at
superficial, material, external and peripheral levels, the ideas contained in the Bhagavad Gita
tackle the issues from the grass roots level of human thinking because once the basic thinking
of man is improved it will automatically enhance the quality of his actions and their results.
The management thoughts emanating from the Western countries particularly the U.S.A. are
based mostly on the lure for materialism and a perennial thirst for profit irrespective of the quality
of the means adopted to achieve that goal. This phenomenon has its source in abundance in the
West particularly the U.S.A. Management by materialism caught the fancy of all the countries
the world over, India being no exception to this trend.
India has been in the forefront in importing those ideas mainly because of its centuries
old indoctrination by the colonial rulers which inculcated in us a feeling that anything Western is
always good and anything Indian is always inferior. Hence our management schools have
sprung up on the foundations of materialistic approach wherein no place of importance was given
to a holistic view.
The result is while huge funds have been invested in building these temples of modern
management education, no perceptible changes are visible in the improvement of the quality of
life although the standard of living of a few has gone up. The same old struggles in almost all
sectors of the economy, criminalization of institutions, more and more social violence,
exploitation and such other vices have gone deep in the body politic.
The reasons for this sorry state of affairs are not far to seek. The western idea of management
has placed utmost reliance on the worker (which includes Managers also) -to make him more
efficient, to increase his productivity. They pay him more so that he may work more, produce
more, sell more and will stick to the organization without looking for alternatives. The sole aim of
extracting better and more work from him is for improving the bottom-line of the enterprise.
Worker has become a hireable commodity, which can be used, replaced and discarded at will.
The workers have also seen through the game plan of their paymasters who have reduced them
to the state of a mercantile product. They changed their attitude to work and started adopting
such measures as uncalled for strikes, Gheraos, sit-ins, dharnas, go-slows, work-to-rule etc to
get maximum benefit for themselves from the organizations without caring the least for the
adverse impact that such coercive methods will cause to the society at large.
Thus we have reached a situation where management and workers have become separate and
contradictory entities wherein their approaches are different and interests are conflicting. There
is no common goal or understanding which predictably leads to constant suspicion, friction,
disillusions and mistrust because of working at cross purposes. The absence of human values
and erosion of human touch in the organizational structure resulted in a permanent crisis of
confidence.
The western management thoughts although acquired prosperity to some for some time has
absolutely failed in their aim to ensure betterment of individual life and social welfare. It has
remained by and large a soulless management edifice and an oasis of plenty for a chosen few in
the midst of poor quality of life to many. Hence there is an urgent need to have a re-look at the
prevalent management discipline on its objectives, scope and content.
It should be redefined so as to underline the development of the worker as a man, as a human
being with all his positive and negative characteristics and not as a mere wage-earner. In this
changed perspective, management ceases to be a career-agent but becomes an instrument in
the process of national development in all its segments.
Bhagavad Gita And Managerial Effectiveness
Now let us re-examine some of the modern management concepts in the light of the Bhagavad
Gita which is a primer of management by values.
Utilization of Available Resources
The first lesson in the management science is to choose wisely and utilize optimally the scarce
resources if one has to succeed in his venture. During the curtain raiser before the Mahabharata
War Duryodhana chose Sri Krishna's large army for his help while Arjuna selected Sri Krishna's
wisdom for his support. This episode gives us a clue as to who is an Effective Manager.
Attitude Towards Work
Three stone-cutters were engaged in erecting a temple. As usual a H.R.D. Consultant asked
them what they were doing. The response of the three workers to this innocent-looking question
is illuminating.
'I am a poor man. I have to maintain my family. I am making a living here,' said the first
stone-cutter with a dejected face.
'Well, I work because I want to show that I am the best stone-cutter in the country,' said the
second one with a sense of pride.
'Oh, I want to build the most beautiful temple in the country,' said the third one with a visionary
gleam.
Their jobs were identical but their perspectives were different. What Gita tells us is to develop
the visionary perspective in the work we do. It tells us to develop a sense of larger vision in one's
work for the common good.
Work Commitment
The popular verse 2.47 of the Gita advises non- attachment to the fruits or results of actions
performed in the course of one's duty. Dedicated work has to mean 'work for the sake of work'. If
we are always calculating the date of promotion for putting in our efforts, then such work cannot
be commitment-oriented causing excellence in the results but it will be promotion-oriented
resulting in inevitable disappointments. By tilting the performance towards the anticipated
benefits, the quality of performance of the present duty suffers on account of the mental
agitations caused by the anxieties of the future.
Another reason for non-attachment to results is
the fact that workings of the world are not designed to positively respond to our calculations and
hence expected fruits may not always be forthcoming.
So, the Gita tells us not to mortgage the present commitment to an uncertain future. If we are
not able to measure up to this height, then surly the fault lies with us and not with the teaching.
Some people argue that being unattached to the consequences of one's action would make one
un-accountable as accountability is a much touted word these days with the vigilance
department sitting on our shoulders. However, we have to understand that the entire second
chapter has arisen as a sequel to the temporarily lost sense of accountability on the part of
Arjuna in the first chapter of the Gita in performing his swadharma.
Bhagavad Gita is full of advice on the theory of cause and effect, making the doer responsible for
the consequences of his deeds. The Gita, while advising detachment from the avarice of selfish
gains by discharging one's accepted duty, does not absolve anybody of the consequences
arising from discharge of his responsibilities.
This verse is a brilliant guide to the operating Manager for psychological energy conservation
and a preventive method against stress and burn-outs in the work situations. Learning
managerial stress prevention methods is quite costly now days and if only we understand the
Gita we get the required cure free of cost.
Thus the best means for effective work performance is to become the work itself. Attaining this
state of nishkama karma is the right attitude to work because it prevents the ego, the mind from
dissipation through speculation on future gains or losses.
It has been presumed for long that satisfying lower needs of a worker like adequate food,
clothing and shelter, recognition, appreciation, status, personality development etc are the key
factors in the motivational theory of personnel management.
It is the common experience that the spirit of grievances from the clerk to the Director is
identical and only their scales and composition vary. It should have been that once the
lower-order needs are more than satisfied, the Director should have no problem in
optimizing his
contribution to the organization. But more often than not, it does not happen like that; the eagle
soars high but keeps its eyes firmly fixed on the dead animal below. On the contrary a lowly
paid school teacher, a self-employed artisan, ordinary artistes demonstrate higher levels of self-
realization despite poor satisfaction of their lower- order needs.
This situation is explained by the theory of Self-transcendence or Self-realization propounded in
the Gita. Self-transcendence is overcoming insuperable obstacles in one's path. It involves
renouncing egoism, putting others before oneself, team work, dignity, sharing, co-operation,
harmony, trust, sacrificing lower needs for higher goals, seeing others in you and yourself in
others etc. The portrait of a self-realizing person is that he is a man who aims at his own
position and underrates everything else. On the other hand the Self-transcenders are the
visionaries and innovators. Their resolute efforts enable them to achieve the apparently
impossible. They overcome all barriers to reach their goal.
The work must be done with detachment.' This is because it is the Ego which spoils the work. If
this is not the backbone of the Theory of Motivation which the modern scholars talk about what
else is it? I would say that this is not merely a theory of Motivation but it is a theory of
Inspiration.
The Gita further advises to perform action with loving attention to the Divine which implies
redirection of the empirical self away from its egocentric needs, desires, and passions for
creating suitable conditions to perform actions in pursuit of excellence. Tagore says working for
love is freedom in action which is described as disinterested work in the Gita. It is on the basis
of the holistic vision that Indians have developed the work-ethos of life. They found that all work
irrespective of its nature have to be directed towards a single purpose that is the manifestation of
essential divinity in man by working for the good of all beings -lokasangraha. This vision was
presented to us in the very first mantra of lsopanishad which says that whatever exists in the
Universe is enveloped by God. How shall we enjoy this life then, if all are one? The answer it
provides is enjoy and strengthen life by sacrificing your selfishness by not coveting other's
wealth. The same motivation is given by Sri Krishna in the Third Chapter of Gita when He says
that 'He who shares the wealth generated only after serving the people, through work done as a
sacrifice for them, is freed from all the sins. On the contrary those who earn wealth only for
themselves, eat sins that lead to frustration and failure.'
The disinterested work finds expression in devotion, surrender and equipoise. The former two are
psychological while the third is the strong-willed determination to keep the mind free of and
above the dualistic pulls of daily experiences. Detached involvement in work is the key to mental
equanimity or the state of nirdwanda. This attitude leads to a stage where the worker begins to
feel the presence of the Supreme Intelligence guiding the empirical individual intelligence. Such
de-personified intelligence is best suited for those who sincerely believe in the supremacy of
organizational goals as compared to narrow personal success and achievement.
Work culture means vigorous and arduous effort in pursuit of a given or chosen task. When
Bhagawan Sri Krishna rebukes Arjuna in the strongest words for his unmanliness and imbecility
in recoiling from his righteous duty it is nothing but a clarion call for the highest work culture.
Poor work culture is the result of tamo guna overtaking one's mindset. Bhagawan's stinging
rebuke is to bring out the temporarily dormant rajo guna in Arjuna. In Chapter 16 of the Gita Sri
Krishna elaborates on two types of Work Ethic viz. daivi sampat or divine work culture and asuri
sampat or demonic work culture.
Daivi work culture - means fearlessness, purity, self-control, sacrifice, straightforwardness,
self-denial, calmness, absence of fault-finding, absence of greed, gentleness, modesty, absence
of envy and pride.
Asuri work culture - means egoism, delusion, desire-centric, improper performance, work which
is not oriented towards service. It is to be noted that mere work ethic is not enough in as much
as a hardened criminal has also a very good work culture. What is needed is a work ethic
conditioned by ethics in work.
It is in this light that the counsel 'yogah karmasu kausalam' should be understood.
Kausalam
means skill or method or technique of work which is an indispensable component of work ethic.
Yogah is defined in the Gita itself as 'samatvam yogah uchyate' meaning unchanging equipoise
of mind.
Tilak tells us that performing actions with the special device of an equable mind is
Yoga. By making the equable mind as the bed-rock of all actions Gita evolved the goal of
unification of work ethic with ethics in work, for without ethical process no mind can attain
equipoise.
Adi Sankara says that the skill in performance of one's duty consists in maintaining
the evenness of mind in success and failure because the calm mind in failure will lead him to
deeper introspection and see clearly where the process went wrong so that corrective steps
could be taken to avoid such shortcomings in future.
The principle of reducing our attachment to personal gains from the work done or controlling the
aversion to personal losses enunciated in Ch.2 Verse 47 of the Gita is the foolproof prescription
for attaining equanimity. The common apprehension about this principle that it will lead to lack of
incentive for effort and work, striking at the very root of work ethic, is not valid because the
advice is to be judged as relevant to man's overriding quest for true mental happiness. Thus
while the common place theories on motivation lead us to bondage, the Gita theory takes us to
freedom and real happiness.
Work Results
The Gita further explains the theory of non- attachment to the results of work in Ch.18 Verses
13-15 the import of which is as under:
If the result of sincere effort is a success, the entire credit should not be appropriated by the
doer alone.
If the result of sincere effort is a failure, then too the entire blame does not accrue to the doer.
The former attitude mollifies arrogance and conceit while the latter prevents excessive
despondency, de-motivation and self-pity. Thus both these dispositions safeguard the doer
against psychological vulnerability which is the cause for the Modem Managers' companions
like Diabetes, High B.P. Ulcers etc.
Assimilation of the ideas behind 2.47 and 18.13-15 of the Gita leads us to the wider spectrum of
lokasamgraha or general welfare.
There is also another dimension in the work ethic. If the karm ayoga is blended with bhaktiyoga
then the work itself becomes worship, a seva yoga.
Manager's Mental Health
The ideas mentioned above have a close bearing on the end-state of a manager which is his
mental health. Sound mental health is the very goal of any human activity more so
management. An expert describes sound mental health as that state of mind which can
maintain a calm, positive poise or regain it when unsettled in the midst of all the external
vagaries of work life and social existence. Internal constancy and peace are the pre- requisites
for a healthy stress-free mind.
Some of the impediments to sound mental health are:
Greed -for power, position, prestige and money.
Envy -regarding others' achievements, success, rewards.
Egotism -about one's own accomplishments.
Suspicion, anger and frustration.
Anguish through comparisons.
The driving forces in today's rat-race are speed and greed as well as ambition and competition.
The natural fallout from these forces is erosion of one's ethico-moral fibre which supersedes the
value system as a means in the entrepreneurial path like tax evasion, undercutting, spreading
canards against the competitors, entrepreneurial spying, instigating industrial strife in the
business rivals' establishments etc. Although these practices are taken as normal business
hazards for achieving progress, they always end up as a pursuit of mirage -the more the needs
the more the disappointments. This phenomenon may be called as yayati-syndrome.
In Mahabharata we come across a king called Yayati who, in order to revel in the endless
enjoyment of flesh exchanged his old age with the youth of his obliging youngest son for a
mythical thousand years. However, he lost himself in the pursuit of sensual enjoyments and felt
penitent. He came back to his son pleading to take back his youth. This yayati syndrome
shows the conflict between externally directed acquisitions, motivations and inner reasoning,
emotions and conscience.
Gita tells us how to get out of this universal phenomenon by prescribing the following capsules.
Cultivating this understanding by a manager would lead him to emancipation from falsifying
ego-conscious state of confusion and distortion, to a state of pure and free mind i.e. universal,
supreme consciousness wherefrom he can prove his effectiveness in discharging whatever
duties that have fallen to his domain.
Bhagawan's advice is relevant here:
"tasmaat sarveshu kaaleshu mamanusmarah yuddha cha"
'Therefore under all circumstances remember Me and then fight' (Fight means perform your
duties)
Management Needs those Who Practice what they Preach
Whatever the excellent and best ones do, the commoners follow, so says Sri Krishna in the
Gita. This is the leadership quality prescribed in the Gita. The visionary leader must also be a
missionary, extremely practical, intensively dynamic and capable of translating dreams into
reality. This dynamism and strength of a true leader flows from an inspired and spontaneous
motivation to help others. "I am the strength of those who are devoid of personal desire and
attachment. O Arjuna, I am the legitimate desire in those, who are not opposed to
righteousness" says Sri Krishna in the 10th Chapter of the Gita.
The Ultimate Message of Gita for Managers
The despondent position of Arjuna in the first chapter of the Gita is a typical human situation
which may come in the life of all men of action some time or other. Sri Krishna by sheer power
of his inspiring words raised the level of Arjuna's mind from the state of inertia to the state of
righteous action, from the state of faithlessness to the state of faith and self-confidence in the
ultimate victory of Dharma(ethical action). They are the powerful words of courage of strength, of
self confidence, of faith in one's own infinite power, of the glory, of valour in the life of active
people and of the need for intense calmness in the midst of intense action.
When Arjuna got over his despondency and stood ready to fight, Sri Krishna gave him the
gospel for using his spirit of intense action not for his own benefit, not for satisfying his own
greed and desire, but for using his action for the good of many, with faith in the ultimate victory
of ethics over unethical actions and truth over untruth. Arjuna responds by emphatically
declaring that all his delusions were removed and that he is ready to do what is expected of him
in the given situation.
Sri Krishna's advice with regard to temporary failures in actions is 'No doer of good ever ends in
misery'. Every action should produce results: good action produces good results and evil begets
nothing but evil. Therefore always act well and be rewarded.
And finally the Gita's consoling message for all men of action is : He who follows My ideal in all
walks of life without losing faith in the ideal or never deviating from it, I provide him with all that
he needs (Yoga) and protect what he has already got (Kshema).
In conclusion, the purport of this essay is not to suggest discarding of the Western model of
efficiency, dynamism and striving for excellence but to make these ideals tuned to the Eastern
holistic attitude of lokasangraha -for the welfare of many, for the good of many. The idea is that
these management skills should be country-centric and not America-centric. Swami Vivekananda (an Indian saint)
says a combination of both these approaches will certainly create future leaders who will
be far superior to any that have ever been in the world.
See Also:
Holy Gita
Bhagavad Gita, is the most important and cream of all scriptural texts for
Sanadhana Dharma.
According to the Gita, true religion is that which is inherent in the soul. It can not
be changed, and it is universally the same for all living entities. The external faiths
are material reflections of the inherent spiritual quality of the soul.
The Essence
of Hindu Scriptures
The author, an eminent scholar of Hindu Vedas (scriptures) captures the
essence of Hindu scriptures into 51 principles.
Hinduism
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