All
As an exception, I am posting this article. It is also especially important in 
disability perspective to take charge of our lives. This article can be 
benefitial.
This thread is otherwise closed.
Harish Kotian



WHO WANTS TO BE A CEO?
ALWAYS ON



WWhat does being entrepreneurial in a professional environment really mean? Why 
is it important for your employer and you? Bluntly put, the professional versus 
entrepreneur as a leader debate is over. Companies need people with 
entrepreneurial instinct.




Many examples exist of transformations that leaders with this instinct have 
unleashed. icia Bank Ltd transitioned from a semi-public sector bank into one 
of India's most powerful financial institutions. The same can be said of 
Mahindra and Mahinndra Ltd and Tata group. They got in young people, and walked 
away from the age-old Indian Administrative Service promotions-based-on-tenure 
mindset They created professional entrepreneurs.




This mindset is seen in people who have the willingness and passion to succeed, 
the courage to fail, and make it as a CEO. That's what differentiates them from 
professionals who toe the line, climb the slow ladder of corporate progress and 
inevitably ride into middle management oblivion.




You too can be a professional entrepreneur. Allow me to share a few things I 
learnt in my career as one.


Take ownership



This is the simplest, but biggest shift you need to make. Irrespective of your 
title or position in the hierarchy, act and behave as if you own the business. 
Start thinking like the owner. Nobody promotes a manager who does a good job. 
Don't be a manager of resources; be resourceful.




It doesn't matter whether you work for a multinational, an Indian corporate 
entity or a family-driven business. Your approach and commitment will be 
visible to stakeholders, and they will trust you when times get tough. That's 
where your journey to the top starts.


You don'tgo to work



You don't go to work any more. Remember that You are there to commandeer 
resources and build something bigger than you. So forget your peeves about 
peers, whether you are being paid the market salary, whether your cabin is big 
enough or whether you ought to be promoted early.




Winning professionals go to the front grab tough assignments with both hands 
and build a venture out of a project. Don't treat your next assignment as a 
task See whether you make it something that has a far-reaching impact on the 
organization. The results will follow.


Be aware, very aware



Alert, aware, always on. That's the mantra for entrepreneurial leaders. They 
don't work 9am to 5pm. They are always aware of every nuance of what's 
happening in the business. They spot inconsistencies, are constantly curious 
about competition, customers, regulators, trends and always trying to smell an 
opportunity or spot a crisis before it comes. They don't have a set formula. 
Instead, they are always ready to pivot and rework strategy to get ahead. Let's 
call this external awareness. Now you need to think how to develop this muscle.




Most of us settle into a nice title and cubicle.] built external awareness by 
cultivating unrest, of being uncomfortable, until I learnt more; until I knew 
more about what competitors were doing; until I knew what consumers were 
consuming; until I figured what is happening in the industry globally. Always 
watching, always learning.




Somebody is watching





Operate at all levels. Cut through the chain of command. An entrepreneur knows 
that to effectively steer his business, he needs to have his finger on the 
pulse of the business. He's not constrained by his cabin, but is on the shop 
floor. No job is too small or too big for him. He aims to inspire people he 
works with, not manage them. It sounds cliched, but the entrepreneur sees 
people as force multipliers. He empowers them to win.




Create your own clock





Outcome, outcome, outcome. Entrepreneurs don't care much about activity. They 
don't get lulled into thinking they had a productive day because they shuffled 
a few mails and attended a few meetings. They are their worst critics and 
ensure they do everything to move the needle. Think about yesterday-and examine 
harshly if you did something that actually moved needle for your firm and for 
you.




Break the rules





Entrepreneurs structure their businesses and teams around the problem, They 
refuse to live with hierarchy. Roles and responsibilities are assigned based on 
the demands of the business., where situations dictate the structure. But to 
solve a business problem, the organization needs to align itself around it. I 
call this internal awareness, where resources adapt to external realities.




Again, you will find your organization has built a method of approaching a 
problem. Sooner or later, these methods get out of sync with market realities 
and nobody notices. You need to be the one who watches out for myopia that's 
creeping into the place you work.




Know thyself





Develop your self-awareness muscle. All battles are first fought in the head. 
Take ownership of managing yourself, and only then try to manage others. The 
successful professional entrepreneur combines curiosity, humility and passion, 
and a willingness to try harder than the next guy.




If you don't want be a middle manager for the rest of your life, start behaving 
like an owner. Every company today wants people who can command their ships, 
and create a new future. But if you're stuck in a company that doesn't value 
these qualities, quit now and find one that does.





A longer version of this story is available on www.foundingfuel.com





Haresh Chawla was founding chief executive of Network18. He joined the firm in 
1999 when it had revenue of R15 crore. When he moved out in 2012, he had built 
it into a 3,000 crore media conglomerate He is now partner at India Value Fund, 
and mentors several start-ups.


HARESH CHAWLA
Partner, India Value Fund



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