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February 2016 Woman At Work Digital

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VOL 2/ISSUE 2/FEBRUARY <strong>2016</strong>/`50<br />

WOMAN AT WORK<br />

www.womanatwork.in<br />

In Conversation<br />

Raising The Bar<br />

Archana Sasan, ED, Dell India<br />

Special Feature<br />

Taking Charge, <strong>Digital</strong>ly<br />

Ritu Gorai, Founder of JAMM’s<br />

SDM/142/FEBUARY <strong>2016</strong><br />

The Indian Urban <strong>Work</strong>er is Rediscovering<br />

the ‘Success’ Troika of Mind, Body and Spirit


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FROM THE EDITOR<br />

t is hardly a surprise to anyone that stress is the number<br />

one lifestyle risk factor, ranking above physical inactivity and<br />

Iobesity, according to the inaugural Asia Pacific edition of the<br />

Staying@<strong>Work</strong> survey conducted by global professional services<br />

company Towers Watson. What is striking is that while Indian<br />

employers lead their regional counterparts in developing strategies<br />

to manage work-related stress, only 38 percent identified improving<br />

the emotional/mental health of employees (i.e. lessening the stress<br />

and anxiety) as a top priority of their health and productivity<br />

programs.<br />

A study by NIMHANS shows that 72 per cent of students in<br />

India are unaware of how to deal with stress and its ill-effects.<br />

Close to 11 per cent of college students and 7-8 per cent of high<br />

school students have attempted suicide. And it is not just students<br />

but employees or those in businesses who are burning out. 27.6<br />

per cent of IT professionals in the country are addicted to narcotic<br />

drugs, says the study. High expectations from family and children,<br />

peer pressure, ambition and social media visibility are all factors<br />

that contribute to the stress quotient.<br />

While India has long been an exporter of wellness programs to<br />

the world, Indians are waking up now to the reality that success<br />

and happiness are beyond materialistic achievements. Inner peace<br />

and harmony are necessary for a sense of fulfilment. Spiritual<br />

wellness and self realization is now an integral part of holistic<br />

living. Many of them, young achievers and global citizens, have<br />

now realised that it is indeed lonely at the top. The happiness they<br />

had anticipated to experience, on hitting the proverbial pot of<br />

gold, is a myth.<br />

The positive side of this awakening is that urban workers,<br />

young and old, are increasingly making spiritual wellness programs<br />

a part of their daily regimen. They have realised that they need to<br />

recharge and rejuvenate their body and mind to continue on their<br />

life pursuits. They need to stop, relax and refuel their life car to<br />

keep driving on the road to success. In this edition, we look at a<br />

few organizations, that are household names and are making holistic<br />

wellness a reality for millions of followers.<br />

As Laurette Gagnon Beaulieu rightly said,"Wellness<br />

encompasses a healthy body, a sound mind and a tranquil spirit.<br />

Enjoy the journey as you strive for wellness."<br />

Poornima<br />

Parameswaran<br />

Batish<br />

Editor-in-Chief<br />

Happy Reading !<br />

P.S We would be delighted to hear your<br />

December 2015 | 3


CONTENTS<br />

Cover Story<br />

16<br />

Spiritual Recharge<br />

The Indian Urban <strong>Work</strong>er is rediscovering the<br />

‘Success’ troika of Mind, Body and Spirit.<br />

The urban Indian worker is now focused on a better<br />

quality of life. She has now realised that to pursue or<br />

achieve her life goals, holistic wellness is key and the<br />

time for it is now.<br />

SIMPLY SUCESSFUL<br />

Passion.Talent. Success<br />

By Megha Johari<br />

This monthly series endeavours to showcase and celebrate<br />

the accomplishments of competent women leaders from<br />

diverse professions.<br />

IN CONVERSATION<br />

Raising The Bar<br />

<strong>Woman</strong> at <strong>Work</strong> speaks with Archana Sasan, Executive<br />

Director and Head of the Legal and Ethics team at Dell<br />

India, on her seamless journey from the Chambers of law<br />

to the C-Suite.<br />

SPECIAL FEATURE<br />

Taking Charge, <strong>Digital</strong>ly<br />

By Megha Johari<br />

Meet Ritu Gorai, founder of JAMM’s, a women’s digital group that<br />

is spearheading a revolution in the way dynamic women network,<br />

collaborate and create a helpline for themselves.<br />

TRENDSETTERS<br />

Recycl-E<br />

26<br />

10<br />

23<br />

34<br />

Dr. Deepali Sinha Khetriwal, Managing Director of Sofies India, is<br />

one of those rare professionals who has forayed into e-waste or<br />

electronic waste management.<br />

4<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


MaisonsDeluxe


37<br />

14<br />

09<br />

40<br />

25<br />

07<br />

08<br />

46<br />

45<br />

SOCIETY<br />

An Oasis of Growth:Payod Industries<br />

BY INVITATION<br />

Understanding Your <strong>Work</strong> Style:<br />

The Key to Peak Performance<br />

By Sayali Shende<br />

BRAND ‘YOU’<br />

Your Gravitas<br />

By Ruchi Suneja<br />

STARTUP SMART<br />

PROTECTING INDUSTRIAL DESIGNS<br />

By Anand Mahurkar<br />

OCCUPATIONAL HAZARDS<br />

OF A WORKING MOTHER<br />

By Manoj Wad<br />

HEALTH AT WORK<br />

By Shilpa Bhoskar & Sudha Thakur<br />

TECH AT WORK<br />

WHEELS AT WORK<br />

NETSETTERS<br />

WOMEN IN THE NEWS<br />

EDITOR IN CHIEF<br />

: Poornima Parameswaran Batish<br />

CONSULTING EDITOR<br />

: Suchismita Pai<br />

COVER PAGE & GRAPHIC DESIGN : P i x a m a t i c C o m m u n i c a t i o n s<br />

PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY<br />

: Sanjiivv B Batish on behalf of <strong>Woman</strong> at <strong>Work</strong> Media<br />

PUBLISHED AT : 5, Ganga Plaza, Off NIBM Road, Kondhwa, Pune – 411048<br />

PRINTED AT<br />

: Neha Creations, off Sinhagad Road, Pune<br />

For your feedback, ideas and suggestions, write to info@womanatwork.in<br />

Website : www.womanatwork.in<br />

Note to the Reader<br />

All images/photos have been given credit for as 'Courtesy xxx' from where they have been downloaded and checked for being royalty<br />

free based on details available publicly. Any omission is unintentional. For any queries or issues, please contact on info@womanatwork.in<br />

*All rights reserved. Reproduction in any manner without prior permission is prohibited. The views expressed in the articles are of the authors and not<br />

necessarily of the magazine. All efforts have been made to ensure accuracy of information in the magazine. But neither the editors nor the publisher<br />

can take responsibility arising out of errors or omissions in the information provided.


SmartBulb and a Speaker<br />

TECH AT WORK<br />

Featuring Toshiba's LED lighting tech, the Multifunctional Light can connect to your<br />

smartphone or Wi-Fi and can be scheduled to turn on as per your convenience. It also<br />

comes equipped with motion, temperature, humidity, and luminance sensors. It can sense<br />

when a user enters the room, and can automatically control the light as well as the TV or an<br />

air conditioner. The Multifunctional Light also doubles as a 5W speaker and a microphone.<br />

Courtesy: gadgets.ndtv.com<br />

Reliance Jio's First 4G Smartphone<br />

Reliance Jio has announced details of its first smartphone. The 4G smartphone will be<br />

available under the Lyf brand. Called the Lyf Earth 1, it runs Android 5.1.1 Lollipop.<br />

Courtesy: gadgets.ndtv.com<br />

Courtesy: gadgets.in<br />

Portronics <strong>Digital</strong> Cordless Skipping Rope<br />

Portronics launches wireless Skip, the new age cordless jump rope that gives you the opportunity<br />

to do short time-saving work outs, whenever and wherever. Wireless skip is a perfect<br />

integration of technology and utility giving you an ideal gadget to exercise effectively. It<br />

features a <strong>Digital</strong> Panel that measures the numbers of skips, effective workout time and<br />

calories burnt. It also allows you to preset the work out time as per your requirements and<br />

beeps you accordingly.<br />

Zoook ZB-Bullet Bluetooth Headset<br />

It claims to be the world’s smallest Bluetooth headset and is completely wireless. Featuring<br />

a multi-function button, now answer or end a call with just a tap. The LED indicator light<br />

allows for easy set up. No app is required. Connect to any of your Apple, Android or<br />

Window devices using the Bluetooth technology.<br />

Courtesy: gadgets360.com<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 7


WHEELS AT WORK<br />

<strong>2016</strong> Chevrolet Beat<br />

Price: INR 4.28 LACS<br />

ONWARDS<br />

Noteworthy<br />

Equipped with a host of new on-board safety features,<br />

improved interiors and passenger conveniences, <strong>2016</strong><br />

Chevrolet Beat gets two new colors of Pull Me<br />

Over Red and Satin Steel Grey.<br />

Mahindra Gusto 125<br />

Price: NA<br />

Noteworthy<br />

The new derivative shares its platform with the 110<br />

cc model. Visually, the Gusto 125 carries forward<br />

its smaller engined siblings’s primary design<br />

elements but features enhancements like<br />

dual-tone color themes, contrast colored<br />

wheels and grab rail, new air vents on the<br />

front apron and unmissable Gusto<br />

125 badges on the engine<br />

cover.<br />

Mahindra KUV100<br />

Price: INR 4.42 LACS<br />

ONWARDS<br />

Noteworthy<br />

Powered by a 1.2-litre mFalcon G80 petrol and a<br />

1.2-litre mFalcon D75 diesel, the new Mahindra<br />

KUV100 has been officially launched in India.<br />

Mahindra KUV100 is the company’s first<br />

mini SUV, first petrol SUV and also<br />

their cheapest offering yet.<br />

@rushlane


BRAND ‘YOU’<br />

Your<br />

GRAVITAS<br />

In this monthly series, Ruchi Suneja, founder of Ikon<br />

Image Consulting and one of the leading Image Coaches<br />

in Western India talks to us about how to build one’s<br />

personal brand to standout in the crowd and carve a<br />

space for ourselves in our professions of choice.<br />

W<br />

hen I was a teenager,<br />

one day I was standing<br />

in front of the mirror<br />

and adoring myself, I heard the<br />

wavering voice of my grandmother<br />

whisper into my ears, “Soorat ke saath<br />

saath seerat bhi acchi honi zaroori hai<br />

(Your behaviour has to be as beautiful<br />

as your outward appearance).”<br />

Since then, that statement of hers<br />

has stuck with me and made me<br />

cautious of my behaviour. We always<br />

remember the behaviours of people<br />

more than their name, qualification,<br />

experience, profession or pedigree.<br />

Try to recollect a few instances and<br />

am sure you would be reminded of<br />

umpteen such occasions, both<br />

pleasant and otherwise. And if the<br />

above is true, then the same holds for<br />

us as well. People will remember our<br />

behaviours more than the<br />

qualifications we bring to the table.<br />

So it is important to be conscious of<br />

our behaviours because this is one of<br />

the key building blocks of Brand<br />

‘You’ along with confidence, self<br />

belief, verbal and non verbal<br />

communication which we have<br />

written about in the previous articles<br />

of this series.<br />

What exactly do we mean by<br />

behaviour? It means showing right<br />

etiquettes or mannerisms towards others<br />

when we interact and meet with them.<br />

Behaviours are social survival skills. The<br />

way you want to be treated by others is<br />

the way you should treat them. The way<br />

a person or an interaction “makes you<br />

feel” is what we call behaviour. Yes,<br />

there are written norms and standards for<br />

etiquettes, but how “I make the person<br />

feel” sets me apart from others and<br />

leaves a good or a bad taste.<br />

Remember your school teacher or<br />

parents telling you about 5 golden<br />

words- Sorry, Thank You, Please, May I<br />

and Excuse Me. Is that it? Someone<br />

might apologise to you with all the right<br />

words but her tone does not reflect that<br />

apology. Does that make us feel good? I<br />

bet not!<br />

Your behaviours also establish the<br />

levels of trust and comfort in a group.<br />

Termed Gravitas, this is voted by experts<br />

as the number one dimension that<br />

determines an employee’s Executive<br />

Presence in the company.<br />

“Your brand is what people say about<br />

you when you’re not in the room,” said<br />

Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon.<br />

Behaviour is an integral part of your<br />

brand and you have the power to build it<br />

the way you want it!<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 9


Raising The Bar.<br />

A tenacious focus towards her goals, an ability to adapt to a<br />

changing environment and readiness to face challenges has<br />

earned her a name among the coveted senior legal counsel<br />

leaders in India. <strong>Woman</strong> at <strong>Work</strong> speaks with Archana<br />

Sasan, Executive Director and Head of the Legal and Ethics<br />

team at Dell India, on her seamless journey from the<br />

chambers of law to the C-Suite.


IN CONVERSATION<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

During the years of your education, not many women would have looked<br />

at a career in law as an option. What inspired you to do so?<br />

My mother had always harboured a dream of being a lawyer. During her years,<br />

women were not accepted as professionals, so being a lawyer for her was<br />

impossible. I wanted to fulfil her dream and that motivated me to study law.<br />

That was the inspiration for me as I grew up. After graduating from Lady<br />

Shriram College (LSR) in English Honours, I decided to study law<br />

from Delhi University.<br />

How were the first few years as a lawyer?<br />

Right after I secured a degree in Law, I joined a private law firm. The initial<br />

years were more of settling down, where our seniors let us get acclimatized to<br />

the legal fraternity. Over a period of time, I realised that my inclination was<br />

more towards corporate law. With a lot of hard work and guidance from seniors,<br />

my career was moving in the right direction.<br />

How was it to take a sabbatical after a tenure of being professionally active<br />

and successful?<br />

I took a 5-year sabbatical to take care of my two children. Of course now<br />

they are grown up and are musicians by profession. Though I have the most<br />

beautiful memories of my life during this time, I must confess that I missed<br />

going to work. I loved spending time with my children, but I also wanted to<br />

be a part of the workforce sooner or later.<br />

When did you move back to an active career?<br />

It was in 1996 when I joined a law firm. I spent ten years with the organization.<br />

While it was a fulfilling experience to be back in professional action, the<br />

comeback had its own challenges. In those days, a career break meant that one<br />

would need to start afresh. One’s prior experience was not considered relevant.<br />

Though the top management was very supportive, transitioning into professional<br />

life wasn’t easy.<br />

Could you tell us about your shift towards a Corporate role?<br />

Yes, it was a big leap of faith. I am a person who likes taking up challenges,<br />

and knew that my prior work experience had laid a strong foundation for me.<br />

I wanted to pursue something new and explore how it is to be on the other side<br />

of the fence i.e. from being a private counsel to an in-house counsel. Thus I<br />

moved into my first corporate role as General Counsel with GE Money Financial<br />

Services. Post that, I moved to Airtel and then finally joined Dell India.<br />

Could you tell us about your current role and responsibilities at Dell India?<br />

I lead the Legal and Ethics team for Dell in India and am also the lead for the<br />

Asia Pacific Japan (APJ) region Employment Counsel. I have additional<br />

responsibility as the APJ Regional leader for WISE (Women in Search of<br />

Excellence) - an Employee Resource Group for women at Dell and a member<br />

of the APJ Diversity & Inclusion Council. Dell has a huge focus on gender<br />

balance at work and my role is help enhance that.<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 11


IN CONVERSATION<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

How are the two roles, that of a private counsel and a corporate legal role,<br />

different?<br />

As a private counsel, an opinion is provided with disclaimers. As an in-house<br />

counsel, you are on the spot and have to provide the decision which is in the<br />

best interest of the company. You may take advice from private practice lawyers<br />

but ultimately the final opinion has to be yours. It is both a huge responsibility<br />

and a great opportunity that pushes you to perform better.<br />

Who have been your pillars of strength?<br />

I would say my mother and my husband. My mother was always my inspiration<br />

for pursuing a career in law. I am lucky to have an absolutely remarkable spouse,<br />

who has always shared responsibilities. He has been around to help raise<br />

kids, juggling responsibilities at home and work.<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

WW<br />

AS<br />

What keeps you motivated?<br />

I am quite clear about my goals and responsibilities and I try my best to work<br />

towards them. When I look back, I am happy with the decisions I took, whether<br />

it was choosing my career or taking a break. I like to take up new challenges<br />

and it gives me immense satisfaction to be able to deliver on them.<br />

What is ‘me’ time for you?<br />

I practice yoga, watch movies, read books, and travel with family and friends.<br />

This helps me unwind and reconnect with myself.<br />

Can you share your leadership mantra?<br />

I draw my leadership skills from the basics of management. Be a team player;<br />

your team is often the key to your success. Secondly, be pragmatic and solution<br />

seeking. As an individual, you should figure out what you want, and then want it<br />

enough. You should set an achievable plan and a small time frame for it. There are<br />

some who want to achieve things far too quickly, which is when it usually results<br />

in failure. I would say that one should be balanced enough to know what can be<br />

achieved, and then go about trying to achieve it.<br />

What would be your advice to women who aspire to build successful careers?<br />

In my opinion, it is the perception that others have of you and most importantly<br />

your perception about yourself that bogs you down. Also, a lot of women have<br />

an inclination to prioritise family and child rearing over professional goals. It is<br />

okay to take a break for family reasons but if you are career-oriented, you must<br />

find ways to come back. If you miss a couple of years, it doesn’t matter, because<br />

ultimately you reach where you have to. The entry for second careers might not be<br />

the easiest but you can make up for it with your talent and passion over the years.<br />

12<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


BY INVITATION<br />

Understanding Your <strong>Work</strong> Style:<br />

The Key to Peak Performance<br />

Sayali Shende is a Corporate Trainer and Founder of<br />

Crackerjack, a training & development solutions company. She<br />

has rich and diverse experience with corporate and academia<br />

in USA and India. She is a professional brand strategist, a<br />

prolific writer and a blogger. She likes to write and blog on a<br />

variety of subjects right from branding to emotional<br />

intelligence to women empowerment.<br />

t work and in the business<br />

world, we come across<br />

different people with varied Aideas and perspectives. People deal<br />

with their work with different<br />

attitudes and approach. Some take<br />

swift decisions, some stew in the<br />

pros and cons; some are reserved<br />

and others mingle effortlessly; some<br />

are big picture, some are micro and<br />

yet some may be both or neither!<br />

These differences can be<br />

refreshing, bring semblance, open<br />

our world to new ideas and make<br />

work better. But all too often these<br />

differences in ‘work styles’ can<br />

cause misunderstandings, gripes,<br />

mistrust and frustration. This leads<br />

to lower productivity, poor team<br />

dynamics and eventually poor<br />

performance. In many training<br />

workshops, the objective is to enable<br />

participants to understand one’s<br />

interpersonal and work styles and<br />

learn to adapt this style to match<br />

the team members’ styles.<br />

Based on the popular Social<br />

Styles Inventory, one can determine<br />

what one’s interpersonal and work<br />

styles are. These are based on 3<br />

dimensions:<br />

Assertiveness<br />

This measures the extent to which<br />

others perceive you to be persuasive<br />

and convincing of your point of view.<br />

Are you a good persuader and influence<br />

others directly or use other means to<br />

achieve your objectives? A person with<br />

less assertiveness could adopt other<br />

means like rolling out new initiatives to<br />

complete a task, get supportive data,<br />

mostly to justify their stand and present<br />

their arguments with people to achieve<br />

her objective. According to this model,<br />

more assertive people speak and<br />

respond quickly, have emphatic<br />

gestures and can convince others easily.<br />

People with low assertiveness express<br />

by first investigating others’ opinions,<br />

are generally reserved and have<br />

controlled gestures.<br />

Responsiveness:<br />

This is the level at which others<br />

perceive you to either control or express<br />

your emotions. Highly responsive<br />

people are easy to decipher and their<br />

body language resonates with their<br />

emotions. Low responsive people are<br />

more difficult to read and their gestures<br />

and facial expressions don’t give a clue<br />

of what‘s on their mind. They are more<br />

focused on facts rather than on emotions.<br />

14<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


BY INVITATION<br />

www.metaburbia.com<br />

Based on these two dimensions of<br />

Assertiveness and Responsiveness,<br />

4 types of style emerge.<br />

Courtesy: www.metaburbia.com<br />

Versatility/ Flexing:<br />

This third dimension is the ultimate<br />

aim of Social Styles training.<br />

Understanding one’s style and<br />

adapting it to suit a colleague’s style<br />

to enrich the interaction and thereby<br />

the performance, is what versatility is<br />

all about. Acute understanding of one’s<br />

work style and keen observation of<br />

others can enable one to do this with<br />

some practice and efforts. But once<br />

versatility is achieved, it’s a<br />

fascinating tool to extract peak<br />

performance from self and others.<br />

There is no right or wrong style, but<br />

higher versatility is always a bonus.<br />

This tool by itself is very versatile.<br />

Through training, this tool can be used<br />

by sales people to adapt their sales<br />

pitch according to their potential<br />

customer’s style, for managers to build<br />

trust and confidence in the team and<br />

for leaders to focus on style based<br />

strengths of employees rather than<br />

their weaknesses.<br />

Driver: High on assertiveness, low on<br />

responsiveness, Drivers are quick to<br />

take decisions, move fast and get short<br />

with people who can’t keep up with<br />

them; have aggressive gestures and a<br />

booming voice. Practical, focussed<br />

and demanding, they are hard to miss.<br />

Could be your boss!<br />

Expressive: High on assertiveness<br />

and on responsiveness, Expressive<br />

people talk freely and assertively<br />

about their ideas, are full of energy<br />

and are risk takers. They bring in a lot<br />

of perspective but sometimes are<br />

perceived as vague.<br />

Analytical: Low on assertiveness<br />

and responsiveness, these are micro<br />

in approach and cautious. All<br />

decisions and actions are taken<br />

after a lot of thinking.Precision,<br />

quality focussed and detached are<br />

the hallmarks of an analytical<br />

person.<br />

Amiable: Low on assertive and high<br />

on responsiveness, amiable people<br />

are people focused. They are<br />

considerate and supportive. They<br />

like to get everyone on board and<br />

then move ahead. They invest time<br />

in building rapport and nurturing<br />

relationships. A terrific customer<br />

service resource, an amiable<br />

employee is friendly and warm.<br />

www.crackerjack.in<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

15


Spiritual Rechargewww.womanatwork.in<br />

The Indian Urban <strong>Work</strong>er is Rediscovering<br />

the ‘Success’ Troika of Mind, Body and Spirit


COVER STORY<br />

In the middle of my little mess,<br />

I forget how big I'm blessed...<br />

-Francesca Battistelli<br />

When the popular<br />

American singer<br />

crooned these lyrics<br />

she had penned, it struck a chord<br />

with millions of listeners across<br />

generations. She had just stated<br />

the obvious. As everything around<br />

us becomes faster and smarter and<br />

life is going past almost at the<br />

speed of light, there are days when<br />

one feels overwhelmed by it all. In<br />

an achievement oriented society,<br />

where designations, money,<br />

luxury holidays are all metrics of<br />

success, the race for the top starts<br />

early.<br />

The "Aarogya Bharat" report by the<br />

Healthcare Federation of India<br />

(NATHEALTH) states, “With one in<br />

every five person in India suffering<br />

from some form of mental disorder,<br />

mental health-related costs would<br />

account for 20 percent of economic<br />

loss from non-communicable<br />

diseases (NCDs) between 2012 and<br />

2030. Management consulting firm<br />

Bain & Company estimated an<br />

economic loss of $6.2 trillion due to<br />

NCDs between 2012 and 2030 as<br />

reported in a Business Standard<br />

column.<br />

Mental illness or stress has<br />

not yet been given the status of a<br />

disease or an ailment. Hence most of<br />

the actions are reactive rather than<br />

preventive. But given the magnitude<br />

of the problem and its ramifications,<br />

it is now hard to ignore this malaise<br />

plaguing the urban worker. <strong>Work</strong>ing<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 17


COVER STORY<br />

women are now at a higher risk of<br />

cardiovascular diseases, infertility<br />

problems, depression and many such<br />

modern era ailments, most of which<br />

are attributable to high levels of<br />

stress.<br />

The challenge with mental illness<br />

or stress is that the ability to cope<br />

with it naturally, is based on the<br />

individual’s genetic and psychological<br />

makeup. Those with lower levels of<br />

emotional intelligence or poor<br />

adversity quotients are the first to<br />

succumb to this mind epidemic. But<br />

the good news is that these can be<br />

spiritual wellness. Women and men<br />

are now focused on a better quality<br />

of life. They have realised that to<br />

pursue or achieve their life goals,<br />

holistic wellness is key and the time<br />

for it is now. They have now woken<br />

up to the fact that it cannot be<br />

procrastinated to later years simply<br />

because one might not live to see<br />

them.<br />

India, as the world’s spiritual<br />

wellness capital, is coming of age<br />

on home turf. Birthplace of some of<br />

the world’s most popular wellness<br />

organizations, India is repackaging<br />

For Kirti Ugraonkar, who has<br />

been a part of one such organisation<br />

for 15 years, this is a way to<br />

replenish her soul and recharge her<br />

mind. “I am somewhat of an<br />

information seeker, so going inside<br />

and allowing myself to turn off the<br />

inflow has let things settle, given me<br />

time to reflect and make decisions.”<br />

Most of the popular organisations are<br />

modelled around a core belief and<br />

key principles. Many of them base<br />

themselves on the Eastern world’s<br />

proven methods of meditation,<br />

chanting, breathing or yoga. To give<br />

developed. Research has affirmed<br />

that greater self realization is key<br />

to resilience and that people can<br />

develop this over a period of time<br />

with practice and focus. Also a sound<br />

wellness regime is a constant source<br />

of recharging and replenishing one’s<br />

energies to be able to pursue life and<br />

work goals.<br />

So it is no surprise that 21st<br />

century India has rediscovered its<br />

spiritual roots. Be it the ancient<br />

system of yoga, medicinal prowess of<br />

ayurveda, breathing techniques or<br />

wellness sciences, modern India is<br />

cosying up to the modern avatar of<br />

its ancient wisdom to the stressed<br />

worker who wants to lead a ‘happy<br />

and peaceful’ life. And this time, it<br />

is the Indian who is the customer.<br />

Over the past couple of decades,<br />

many organisations and movements<br />

that have embarked on the mission<br />

to make people ‘happy’ and ‘well’<br />

are seeing greater acceptance in<br />

India. These organizations are<br />

offering the right blend of<br />

physiological, psychological and<br />

spiritual wellness so as to spread<br />

positive energy and inner harmony<br />

to their followers. And the urban<br />

educated worker is not complaining.<br />

it the rigour and discipline it<br />

warrants, these organizations have<br />

well defined structures and processes.<br />

Given that their members are<br />

tech-smart, almost all of the<br />

organizations have a strong digital<br />

presence. The ease of access,<br />

credibility and transparency, enabled<br />

by technology is making these<br />

organizations appealing to the urban<br />

worker. In this column, we take a<br />

look at a few of these foundations or<br />

organizations which have earned a<br />

strong reputation over the years and<br />

helped millions of women and men<br />

lead happier and peaceful lives.<br />

18<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


COVER STORY<br />

Soka Gakkai International (SGI)<br />

A great human revolution in just a single individual will help<br />

achieve a change in the destiny of a nation and, further, will<br />

enable a change in the destiny of all humankind.<br />

- President Daisaku Ikeda<br />

Popularly known as SGI, it was<br />

founded in 1975 but the<br />

movement has its roots in the<br />

Japan of 1930s and the struggle against<br />

the thought-control of the Japanese<br />

militarist government of that time. The<br />

Buddhism practiced by SGI members is<br />

based on the teachings of the 13thcentury<br />

Japanese priest Nichiren and his<br />

interpretation of the Lotus Sutra.<br />

The Lotus Sutra is considered by<br />

many in the Mahayana Buddhist<br />

tradition to be the fullest expression of<br />

the teachings of Shakyamuni, the<br />

historical Buddha who was born in<br />

present-day Nepal some 2,500 years<br />

ago. It is revered for its embracing<br />

message that all people, men and<br />

women, possess the Buddha nature. The<br />

image of the pure lotus flower growing<br />

in a muddy pond symbolizes how<br />

people can develop this enlightened<br />

state of life in the midst of their daily<br />

problems and struggles. The members<br />

embrace the fundamental aim of<br />

contributing to peace, culture and<br />

education. The practice is based on the<br />

ideal of world citizenship and protects<br />

the freedom of religion and religious<br />

expression.<br />

The core Buddhist practice of SGI<br />

members is chanting Nam-myoho<br />

-renge-kyo and reciting portions of the<br />

Lotus Sutra (referred to as gongyo), and<br />

sharing the teachings of Buddhism with<br />

others in order to help them overcome<br />

their problems. SGI discussion meetings<br />

are usually held on a monthly basis and<br />

the vast majority are held in the homes<br />

of members who make them available<br />

for this purpose. They give people the<br />

opportunity to develop the kind of<br />

relationships that are increasingly rare in<br />

contemporary urban environments<br />

where people may live for years as<br />

neighbours without developing any<br />

personal connections.<br />

The organisation has followers across<br />

continents, with more than 12 million<br />

members across 192 countries. In India,<br />

they have a following of a 100,000 plus<br />

members across cities and states. There<br />

is hardly a city where SGI members<br />

have not made their presence felt yet.<br />

Radhika Budhwar, a leading<br />

behavioural trainer, has been with the<br />

practice for the last 17 years and is one<br />

of the leading members of the Pune<br />

Chapter. "As a working woman<br />

straddling many roles, this practice set<br />

me on a journey of self-empowerment -<br />

a way to overcome obstacles in life and<br />

tap inner hope, confidence, courage and<br />

wisdom. It's ideals of equality and<br />

respect for all life have encouraged me<br />

to create value in my life, live and work<br />

in society and integrate it in my daily<br />

life,” says Radhika.<br />

For thousands of working women<br />

across India and the world, SGI’s<br />

practice and chants of ‘Nam-myoho..’<br />

have given sharing, positivity and<br />

happiness a greater and holistic<br />

meaning.<br />

Courtesy: bharatsokagakkai.org<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 19


COVER STORY<br />

The Art of Living<br />

Unless we have a stress-free mind and a violence-free society,<br />

we cannot achieve world peace.<br />

- Sri Sri Ravi Shankar<br />

Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, also known<br />

as Gurudev to his followers,<br />

founded this organization in<br />

1981 and started it as a humanitarian<br />

movement to alleviate stress and serve<br />

humankind. While the primary focus<br />

is to help women and men get rid of<br />

stress and achieve inner peace, the<br />

organization has spread it wings over<br />

the years. Today the foundation does<br />

diverse projects related to sustainable<br />

development, women empowerment,<br />

education, disaster relief and many<br />

others.<br />

meditation and offered them in a form<br />

that was and is relevant to the 21st<br />

century. Beyond reviving ancient<br />

wisdom, he created new techniques for<br />

personal and social transformation<br />

which include the Sudarshan Kriya,<br />

which has helped millions of people to<br />

find relief from stress and discover inner<br />

reservoirs of energy and peace in daily<br />

life.<br />

The Art of Living operates globally<br />

in 155 countries and has touched the<br />

lives of over 370 million people. It is an<br />

organisation with one of the largest<br />

space of health or education or conflict<br />

management, is run exclusively for<br />

women.<br />

The core practice of the Art of Living is<br />

the Sudharshan Kriya, which is a breathing<br />

technique and has tremendous benefits for<br />

mind and body. They also have programs<br />

on yoga and meditation which can be<br />

practised at home after due training. A<br />

practitioner of the Art of Living, Shampa<br />

Basu’s life changed after she was<br />

introduced to the practice in 2009. “Most<br />

Indian women are conditioned to give their<br />

hundred percent both at home and at work,<br />

Courtesy: artofliving.org<br />

Born in 1956 in Southern India, Sri<br />

Sri Ravishankar was a gifted child. By<br />

the age of four, he was able to recite<br />

parts of the Bhagvad Gita, an ancient<br />

Sanskrit scripture and was often found<br />

in meditation. His first teacher was<br />

Sudhakar Chaturvedi, who had a long<br />

association with Mahatma Gandhi. He<br />

holds degrees in Vedic literature and<br />

physics. It is said that he entered a<br />

ten-day period of silence in Shimoga<br />

located in the Indian state of<br />

Karnataka and during this period, the<br />

Sudarshan Kriya, a powerful breathing<br />

technique, was born.<br />

As a spiritual teacher, Gurudev<br />

rekindled the tradition of yoga and<br />

volunteer bases in the world. The<br />

international headquarters is located in<br />

Bangalore, India. Globally, the<br />

organisation operates as The Art of<br />

Living Foundation formed in 1989 in the<br />

United States of America and in<br />

Germany. Since then, local centres have<br />

been established across the world. In<br />

1997, he also founded the International<br />

Association for Human Values (IAHV)<br />

to coordinate sustainable development<br />

projects, nurture human values and<br />

coordinate conflict resolution in<br />

association with The Art of Living.<br />

The Foundation does extensive work<br />

in the space of women empowerment.<br />

Many of their programs, be it in the<br />

and this pressure sometimes creates a<br />

feeling of guilt in them. The Art of Living<br />

program gave me awareness about who I<br />

am, what I feel and what I want. Sudarshan<br />

Kriya gave me lightness and I started to<br />

wear a smile daily."<br />

The Art of Living organises workshops<br />

and programs across most cities in India<br />

regularly. Participants who also would like<br />

to give back, get trained as teachers and<br />

spread the reach of the programs far and<br />

- Brahma Kumaris<br />

wide.<br />

As The Art of Living celebrates 35<br />

years in <strong>2016</strong>, for Shampa and millions<br />

like her, the organization and its teachings<br />

have brought spiritual and mental wellness<br />

and positivity, literally to their doorsteps.<br />

20<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


COVER STORY<br />

Brahma Kumaris<br />

Repetition of positive thoughts leads to powerful thoughts.<br />

- Brahma Kumaris<br />

Prajapita Brahma Kumaris<br />

Ishwariya Vishwa Vidyalaya,<br />

(commonly known as Brahma<br />

Kumaris) was founded by Dada<br />

Lekhraj in the early 20th century after<br />

he experienced a series of visions. In<br />

October 1937, the organization was<br />

formally established. A spiritual trust<br />

was constituted with a committee of<br />

nine young women to administer it.<br />

Dada gave away all his wealth and<br />

property to the trust. It was probably a<br />

first in history that a man surrendered<br />

all his wealth to a trust administered<br />

by women.<br />

The primary teaching at Brahma<br />

Kumaris is Raj Yoga meditation. Raj<br />

Yoga meditation is one of the most<br />

effective forms of meditation to help<br />

replenish mental and emotional<br />

energies enabling individuals to create<br />

new attitudes and responses to life. It<br />

empowers individuals with a clear<br />

spiritual understanding of self and<br />

connection with the Supreme Soul.<br />

They also offer a multitude of courses<br />

for dealing with issues such as stress,<br />

failure in relationships, work-life<br />

imbalance and more.<br />

In 1952, Brahma Baba, as Dada<br />

Lekhraj had become known, being<br />

aware of the devastating scars the<br />

troubled independence process and<br />

partition had left on peoples’ lives,<br />

felt that it was time to share the<br />

knowledge that he had received, with<br />

the rest of India. He therefore sent a<br />

few young women members to<br />

Bombay and Delhi to establish study<br />

centres where the knowledge of Raja<br />

Yoga could be taught.<br />

Dada entrusted all the institution’s<br />

affairs to the dedicated women.<br />

Although primarily administered by<br />

women, it is an organisation in which<br />

both women and men participate<br />

equally. As Administrative Head of<br />

the Brahma Kumaris, Dadi Janki<br />

provides a working leadership model<br />

for all women and men who are<br />

seeking to integrate both male and<br />

female qualities into their personal<br />

and professional lives.<br />

Headquartered at Mount Abu in<br />

Rajasthan, Brahma Kumaris’ two<br />

institutions, Rajyoga Education and<br />

Research Foundation and Brahma<br />

Kumaris Academy for a Better<br />

World, are dedicated to the goal of<br />

establishing a value-based society.<br />

They focus on development of human<br />

potential, bringing harmony into<br />

human relationships and changing the<br />

attitudes and outlook of people to<br />

promote the spirit of brotherhood,<br />

love and co-operation. The institution<br />

is open to all irrespective of caste,<br />

creed, age and social, economic or<br />

political status. The institution<br />

recognizes the intrinsic spirituality of<br />

every human being and helps people<br />

rediscover the goodness within them,<br />

thus encouraging and facilitating the<br />

development of spiritual awareness<br />

through a process of lifelong learning.<br />

Since the fifties, the organisation has<br />

progressed leaps and bounds. In 1971,<br />

permanent centres were established in<br />

the UK and Hong Kong, which soon<br />

led to worldwide expansion and<br />

consistent growth, both geographically<br />

and in overall membership. The BKs<br />

consist of individuals of all ages and<br />

backgrounds who regularly attend<br />

classes at more than 8,500 centres of<br />

the Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual<br />

University located in 115 countries.<br />

One of the participants said this of a<br />

workshop she attended, “The<br />

workshop helped me to know more<br />

about myself and helped change my<br />

perspective in life. It helped me to<br />

strengthen my ability to deal with<br />

different people, accept things,<br />

understand the value of everything and<br />

learn the consequences of our actions.”<br />

Courtesy: babamurlis.wordpress.com<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 21


COVER STORY<br />

Patanjali Yogpeeth<br />

There should be firmness, not stubbornness; bravery, not<br />

rashness; compassion, not weakness<br />

- Baba Ramdev<br />

The Kripalu Bagh Ashram on the<br />

banks of the holy Ganges was<br />

built in 1932 by Swami Kripalu<br />

Dev Maharaj. He, alongwith another<br />

spiritualist Swami Shraddhanand,<br />

organized a renaissance of sorts where<br />

they sought to revive India’s history<br />

and rich spiritual heritage. It<br />

was Swami Ramdev, popularly<br />

known as Baba Ramdev who<br />

made the organization famous<br />

and reached out to millions of<br />

commoners across the country<br />

and outside and established the<br />

Patanjali Yogpeeth as a<br />

spiritual movement to reckon<br />

with.<br />

Baba Ramdev had spiritual<br />

leanings from his early years.<br />

<strong>At</strong> the age of 14, he studied<br />

Sanskrit and Yoga. Patanjali, as<br />

an exponent of Yoga, Sanskrit<br />

Grammar and Ayurveda<br />

continued to exert its influence on him.<br />

He then met Swami Balkrishna, who<br />

was a schoolmate and shared his<br />

ideologies. Together, the two of them<br />

embarked on the task of demystifying<br />

and popularizing Patanjali’s Yoga and<br />

restoring people’s faith in the efficacy<br />

of ayurvedic medicine.<br />

Patanjali Yogpeeth can be credited<br />

with the wider acceptance of yoga as<br />

countless people realized that their<br />

serious ailments were getting cured with<br />

the practice of Pranayam. Their ‘shivir’<br />

or camps are attended by thousands of<br />

people across the country. Today<br />

people of every age, section, caste and<br />

religion have made yoga part of their<br />

daily routine. As you go for your<br />

morning walk, it is hard to miss groups<br />

of people - young and old, men and<br />

women- in society gardens and<br />

community parks, practising Pranayam<br />

which is the core practice of the<br />

organization.<br />

"Several years ago I got a stroke and<br />

had multiple problems due to high<br />

blood pressure. I got introduced to<br />

Pranayama about 4 years ago through<br />

my neighbour. Within months of<br />

practising Pranayama daily, I was<br />

completely off all my medication for<br />

blood pressure, depression and sleeping<br />

disorders. Even my doctor could not<br />

believe the results and was surprised to<br />

see that everything was magically back<br />

to normal. Pranayama has been a<br />

miracle for me and my family. I<br />

continue to practice it daily and<br />

looking to get certified so I can help<br />

others get the benefit that I was able to<br />

receive,” says Babita Pardeshi who<br />

owns an IT Company. She says that it<br />

helped her not only to<br />

recover from her<br />

ailments but also calmed<br />

her down mentally.<br />

According to her, '“You<br />

see, it’s just not my BP,<br />

it helped me to cope up<br />

with my busy schedules<br />

too.”<br />

Baba Ramdev and his<br />

team has ensured that<br />

yoga and ayurveda get a<br />

complete makeover for<br />

modern day living and<br />

are flagbearers of sorts of<br />

‘Make in India’. They<br />

have democratized yoga and ensured<br />

that it is within the reach of all people,<br />

rich or poor. For millions of<br />

youngsters and middle aged working<br />

men and women, saddled with modern<br />

day illnesses, Baba Ramdev’s brand of<br />

yoga has been the Ram-baan (magic<br />

cure) they have been looking for.<br />

Courtesy: wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoga<br />

22<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


Taking Charge,<br />

SPECIAL FEATURE<br />

When the telephone directories have become obsolete, ‘yellow pages’ have dried grey,<br />

and traditional landlines have become a fixture of the past, then the best way to find<br />

people, places and products is through your smart phone. Using digital platforms and<br />

mobile apps, this women’s group is spearheading a revolution in the way dynamic women<br />

network, collaborate and create a helpline for themselves. Ritu Gorai, a mother and founder<br />

of this venture takes us through the journey of JAMM’s.<br />

by Megha Johari<br />

Journey About Mast Moms or<br />

JAMM’s, as it is called, is a<br />

support group for networking<br />

of Mumbai based mothers who want to<br />

be full time mothers or activate their<br />

dormant career graph. The core team of<br />

JAMM’s is a group of enthusiastic and<br />

dynamic mothers, managing over 6000<br />

JAMMies across social media platforms<br />

and apps like Facebook and WhatsApp.<br />

The founder of JAMM’s, Ritu<br />

Gorai, is a Mumbai based mother who<br />

conceptualised and rolled out JAMM’s<br />

in April 2014 purely to seek support for<br />

herself. “It was when I shifted back to<br />

Mumbai, this time as a mother, I<br />

realised I don’t have a support group to<br />

fall on. I found myself grappling with<br />

half baked information from unreliable<br />

sources. That is when I started<br />

networking in a small way among 25<br />

mothers, being one myself.”<br />

When a new mother joins JAMM’s<br />

she is added to the most suitable group,<br />

classified on the basis of the child’s age<br />

group. This makes it easier for the team<br />

to provide advice, solution and services<br />

for different needs of working or stay at<br />

home mothers based on their child’s<br />

stage. JAMM’s also uses the popular<br />

Facebook platform but is a by-invitation<br />

-only group where members get access<br />

only after joining through a referral<br />

process. This is important to keep the<br />

group clean, safe and secure.<br />

Ritu, who calls herself the Chief<br />

Connecting Officer (CCO) of JAMM’s<br />

is a pedigreed lady doing full justice to<br />

her lineage. Born to engineer parents, a<br />

doctor brother and wife of a celebrity<br />

chef Saby (Sabyasachi Gorai), Ritu<br />

brings freshness of talent to the endowed<br />

family. Besides being an NLP<br />

practitioner and corporate trainer, Ritu is<br />

a passionate Bharatnatyam dancer and a<br />

mystery shopper. She has been a<br />

performing artist and an instructor with<br />

some famous dance troupes in the<br />

country. She is also an expert advisor for<br />

a start up panel.<br />

Just like the founder, the philosophy<br />

of JAMM’s is discipline and tenacious<br />

focus towards the quality of services<br />

provided. To prevent digressing from the<br />

purpose, the group completely bans any<br />

kind of forwarding of jokes, images,<br />

videos or self promotion content for<br />

businesses. The group takes pride in its<br />

rules and rightly so. To respect privacy<br />

and appreciate families and their<br />

individuality, interaction on these groups<br />

are maintained within a 12 hour time<br />

frame for 6 days a week, 8am-11pm<br />

(Monday-Saturday).<br />

There are separate groups categorized<br />

based on the age group of the child like<br />

infants, toddlers, , a special group for<br />

single moms, professional groups for<br />

doctors, lawyers, HR & trainers,<br />

entrepreneurs, interest based groups<br />

like movie club, book lovers club and<br />

more. There is also a group for to-be<br />

mothers and grandmothers (senior<br />

citizens). JAMM’s is all about sharing<br />

best practices and initiating a thought<br />

process that allows mothers to think<br />

beyond ‘just being a mother’. From<br />

providing DIY tips, to kid friendly<br />

venues, health queries, career tips,<br />

school feedback, fun family events,<br />

one stop shops, vacation hotspots,<br />

recipes, maid issues, JAMM’s does it<br />

all.<br />

JAMM’s organizes weekday based<br />

themes. They invite experts,<br />

preferably moms, to speak on specific<br />

topics and answer online queries with<br />

respect to the themes. Some of the<br />

themes are Makeup shake up Monday,<br />

Guruwaar Gyaan, Full- on Friday and<br />

so on.<br />

In addition to this, the unique<br />

offerings of JAMM’s are its<br />

workshops and drive towards social<br />

causes. The team organizes workshops<br />

on various topics of interest to the<br />

group members. These workshops are<br />

usually complimentary and conducted<br />

in the vicinity, subject to availability<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 23


of space. The workshops are organized<br />

on a wide gamut of topics, led by<br />

experts in those fields. Parenting Skills,<br />

Cyber Crime, Finance, Grooming,<br />

Food Safety, Health & Nutrition,<br />

Pranic Healing etc. are some of the<br />

highly appreciated sessions they have<br />

done so far.<br />

JAMM’s is very active on social<br />

causes. They received a lot of<br />

recognition for their exemplary work in<br />

collecting a huge sum of money for the<br />

Nepal Earthquake victims. Ritu<br />

emphasizes that the purpose of the<br />

group is not only networking on<br />

common grounds on women related<br />

issues but also to facilitate social<br />

service. The group undertakes a social<br />

service mission every 6 months.<br />

Recently the JAMMies rolled a drive<br />

named “Happy New Hair”, where they<br />

collected money from their members,<br />

which was then used to give haircuts to<br />

365 underprivileged children in a<br />

locality of Mumbai. Through<br />

JAMM’s, Ritu is trying to mobilize<br />

educated women in providing and<br />

aiding empowerment of the society in<br />

small but effective ways. As a part of<br />

another impactful and compassionate<br />

social cause, JAMM’s partnered with<br />

IContribute and rolled out an I-Light<br />

campaign to donate white canes and<br />

dark glasses and complimentary eye<br />

checkups for 550 visually impaired<br />

persons.<br />

JAMM’s has completed a year and<br />

a half and is poised for greater<br />

heights. The leaders at JAMM’s use<br />

social media as their eyes and ears,<br />

believe that it is individuals, who<br />

have the power to turn the media to<br />

be a boon or bane. A champion of<br />

work life balance, good quality of<br />

life, productive use of time and power<br />

of networking, Ritu Gorai has<br />

radicalized the way people view<br />

women’s groups on social<br />

platforms.<br />

JAMM’s was nominated for the<br />

‘Manthan Award’ in recognition of<br />

their impact and effort as digital<br />

innovators for social empowerment.<br />

The group has been gaining name<br />

and fame for its exemplary work.<br />

For those who thought that social<br />

media and apps were just for<br />

vacuous forwards and repeated<br />

jokes, here is a lady who has turned<br />

this into a positive platform and<br />

made a difference to the lives of<br />

thousands of mothers.<br />

jammsnetwork@gmail.com<br />

24<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

19


HEALTH AT WORK<br />

Fighting off the Calories<br />

Shilpa Bhoskar is a certified nutritionist and<br />

founder of Saundarya Nutrition with a<br />

mission to make millions of people happier,<br />

healthier, prosperous and positive.<br />

Obesity’ has become a reason<br />

of concern in recent years<br />

especially for working who<br />

don’t find the time for proper work out<br />

and follow proper diet schedules. As we<br />

all know that genetics, irresistible junk<br />

foods, certain medications, stress,<br />

increased sugar intake through tea and<br />

coffee or cold drinks and misinformation<br />

about health and nutrition are some of<br />

the main reasons which contribute to our<br />

weight gain.<br />

One of the biggest reasons for<br />

weight gain is poor nutrition. Indians eat<br />

carbohydrates all through the day,<br />

starting our breakfast with poha, upma,<br />

idli, dosa, paratha; then for lunch again<br />

we carry only roti-subji, for evening<br />

snacks we have samosa with tea and<br />

again for dinner we have dal-rice or roti<br />

– subji, or pasta or pizza and so on.<br />

There is very little amount of protein and<br />

too less fibre, vitamins or minerals in<br />

our diet. An average adult is<br />

expected to have at least 60 grams<br />

of protein everyday but we hardly<br />

consume 5-10 grams!<br />

So ladies, eat protein rich food<br />

in all your meals, include fibrous<br />

food and fruits in your daily diet<br />

and don’t forget to do some kind of<br />

cardio and weight training activities<br />

each day and see the kilos shedding<br />

off.<br />

A Naturopathy weight<br />

loss tip for you<br />

Mix<br />

1 cup warm water<br />

1 tsp cinnamon powder<br />

1 tsp organic honey<br />

1 tsp lemon juice (optional)<br />

Drink in the morning on<br />

empty stomach.<br />

Bust the Stress<br />

Research claims that Indian<br />

women are one of the most<br />

stressed on Earth.<br />

Over 85% of female population is<br />

struggling & squirming and most are<br />

discomfited to speak. While stress has<br />

seen a tremendous increase, so has<br />

societal pressure Women in general<br />

have a stronger genetic disposition to<br />

depression and stress. There could be<br />

multiple reasons like work pressure,<br />

trying to balance home and work,<br />

personal problems, hormonal<br />

fluctuations, PMS, Menopause or<br />

PCOS. Certain foods and drinks aid to<br />

bump up our happy hormones termed<br />

“serotonin” and lower the stress<br />

hormones “cortisol & adrenaline”.<br />

A good meal helps you pep up<br />

and makes you more energetic.<br />

Indulge in your favourites every once<br />

in a while keeping in mind any<br />

medical complexities. Keep yourself<br />

hydrated. It’s an all time antidote.<br />

Most of us forget to drink the right<br />

amount of water. It’s a natural<br />

booster.<br />

Love wearing fragrance? Did<br />

you know wearing your favourite<br />

perfume can uplift your mood<br />

tremendously? Try wearing it over<br />

your pulse points to intensify the<br />

effect. A scented candle helps you to<br />

unwind in the comfort of your home.<br />

Soothing scents bring in the<br />

tranquillity you need.<br />

Sudha Thakur (MISMA, NLP)<br />

is the Director of RIBDA, UK<br />

and specialises in Anxiety &<br />

Stress management .<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 19 25


SIMPLY SUCCESSFUL<br />

Passion.Talent.Success<br />

This monthly series endeavours to showcase and celebrate the accomplishments of<br />

competent women leaders from diverse professions. These women achievers have<br />

flourishing careers along with fulfilling personal lives. Meet these three fantastic<br />

women who are simply successful.<br />

by Megha Johari<br />

Malti Bhojwani<br />

Speaker.Coach.Author.<br />

When you enter a room and<br />

see senior executives rapt in<br />

attention listening to the<br />

speaker oblivious of their surroundings,<br />

you could be sure that the person on the<br />

other side would be Malti Bhojwani. A<br />

gifted speaker, professional coach, a<br />

facilitator and an author, Malti is<br />

amongst those people who surrender to<br />

their inner yearning and realise the<br />

higher purpose of their life and enable<br />

others reach higher levels.<br />

Malti is part of the South East<br />

Asian team of Aberkyn, a partnership<br />

of change leadership facilitators,<br />

co-founded by McKinsey & Co. She is<br />

trained in ontological coaching and is<br />

an expert in Neuro Linguistic<br />

Programming (NLP) which is like a<br />

software manual for the brain.<br />

But life was not a bed of roses<br />

always for her. A confluence of the best<br />

qualities of Indian parents born across<br />

the borders of India and a Singaporean<br />

birth and education, Malti grew up with<br />

an uncommon sense of survival and a<br />

drive to change her circumstances for the<br />

26<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


We affect our surroundings<br />

in a much bigger way than<br />

we can imagine<br />

better. After breaking out of a<br />

disempowering relationship,<br />

Malti was in a state of emotional<br />

upheaval. All she knew about her<br />

strengths was her art to connect<br />

deeply with people and her love<br />

for speaking. Making these<br />

strings an anchor, she strode in<br />

the direction of finding the beads<br />

to complete the rosary of life.<br />

For a lady who had never<br />

read a self help book, to charter a<br />

career in coaching was almost<br />

serendipity. “I attended a<br />

workshop by Tony Robbins and<br />

a Large Group Awareness<br />

Training in Asia, and this opened<br />

the doorway towards conscious<br />

transformation that I embarked<br />

upon,” recalls Malti. And that<br />

was the proverbial beginning to<br />

the career as a facilitator, coach<br />

and author.<br />

Facilitating masterfully is an<br />

art and Malti is a flawless artist.<br />

She believes facilitating is a<br />

pleasure and a privilege. The<br />

lineage of ancient wisdom<br />

supports us as we get our own<br />

egos out of the way and allow<br />

the magic to flow in the room of<br />

participants and in the space that<br />

we help create. She believes that<br />

circumstances often turn out the<br />

way we expect them to.Talking<br />

about one of her personal<br />

experiences at an experiential<br />

learning program that she had<br />

been a part of, she recalls “I had<br />

to climb up a ten meter telephone<br />

pole. The circumference of the<br />

pole was just 30cm. Sure, I was<br />

fully harnessed and it was in a<br />

perfectly safe zone with safety<br />

nets in place. But when I got up<br />

there and had to stabilize before<br />

jumping off, I felt that my world<br />

was shaking. The pole was<br />

shaking and I was petrified.<br />

Later, I realized that it was my<br />

own fear that caused me to<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 27


SIMPLY SUCCESSFUL<br />

tremble and shake, which in turn<br />

caused the pole to shake. We affect<br />

our surroundings in a much bigger<br />

way than we can imagine.”<br />

With fifteen years of<br />

experience in coaching and<br />

facilitating, it has been an<br />

extensive journey for Malti. A<br />

personal mentor, a dynamic<br />

leader, a patient listener and a<br />

focused guide, Malti feels<br />

coaching is an incredible<br />

experience. It is an empowering<br />

feeling to be so trusted. “As a<br />

coach I have no answers. I just<br />

have some questions to support<br />

them in getting to their truths and<br />

help them understand themselves<br />

and their roadblocks better,”<br />

explains Malti. Describing the role<br />

and professional life of a coach,<br />

she says one needs to be prepared<br />

to attract a lot of steel wool when<br />

you pursue your goal. Like steel<br />

wool makes your pots and pans<br />

shine again, these are the people<br />

who will come into your life and<br />

challenge you to polish you.<br />

Sharing one such experience, Malti<br />

says candidly, “I had this<br />

experience with the HR head of a<br />

company I was doing workshops<br />

and coaching for I felt like a kid<br />

being smacked on her wrist for not<br />

doing her homework and being<br />

sent back to the drawing board.<br />

But that was exactly what I<br />

needed. Don’t let them get to you,<br />

on the contrary, be grateful.<br />

Constructive criticism is useful, it<br />

helps to polish up your own act in<br />

order to improve and achieve<br />

more.”<br />

As a personal coach and<br />

facilitator having control over your<br />

own emotions and keeping<br />

yourself inspired and motivated<br />

may not be an easy task. But daily<br />

mediation and tapping into the<br />

universal consciousness is the key<br />

to keep your individuality and<br />

objectivity intact.Malti, a devout<br />

yoga and Transcendental<br />

Meditation practitioner says,<br />

“Spirituality and discipline help<br />

me to become a better observer of<br />

my thoughts, reactions and beliefs.<br />

I feel I am able to see myself and<br />

choose empowering responses<br />

rather than react impulsively to<br />

stimuli.” She is also deeply<br />

inspired by authors and books like<br />

Mike Dooley’s Infinite<br />

Possibilities, Viktor Frankl’s<br />

Man’s Search for Meaning, Echart<br />

Tolle’s Power of Now and the<br />

words of Abraham and Esther<br />

Hicks.<br />

Some people write books to<br />

chronicle their lives and<br />

achievements, while some others<br />

write as a reference material for<br />

their work. But Malti became an<br />

author to leave a legacy of joy<br />

when she is gone. And what better<br />

than books to outlive her message<br />

of compassion and joy in the<br />

minds of the readers. She is an<br />

acclaimed author of many books -<br />

Thankfulness, Appreciation<br />

Gratitude, Don't Think of a Blue<br />

Ball and The Mind Spa – Ignite<br />

Your Inner Life Coach.<br />

Having lived in many countries<br />

like Australia, Spain, Indonesia,<br />

India and Singapore, Malti has<br />

seen a multi cultural spectrum of<br />

clients and organizations as a<br />

coach. While coaching and<br />

mentoring had become a part of<br />

leadership curriculum across many<br />

countries, it has picked pace in<br />

India in the recent past. She<br />

observes that there is a clear need<br />

for well tailored coaching and<br />

facilitating programs in India Inc<br />

but people are often looking for<br />

cheap and quick fixes. “The real<br />

stuff takes years of commitment<br />

and humility to learn and to<br />

become good. It also requires<br />

extensive training. Trying<br />

to find shorthand to leadership gets<br />

the soul out of coaching,” she rues.<br />

<strong>At</strong> the same time she is excited and<br />

hopeful with the changing mindset<br />

of millennial India. She sees a<br />

commitment towards transformational<br />

leadership and executive mentoring<br />

in India and this could be a good<br />

breakthrough, Malti foresees.<br />

Celebrating her achievements<br />

and professional accomplishments<br />

with Malti is her author-daughter,<br />

Drishti. A strong supporter of<br />

working flexibly, from home or<br />

from anywhere that helps your<br />

creative juices flow, Maltiis a firm<br />

believer that to get the desired<br />

output out of work, one needs to<br />

enjoy it. A strong champion of<br />

equality, Malti advocates a<br />

growing family system that would<br />

benefit men and especially women<br />

in their professional pursuits.<br />

Growing families would benefit<br />

from having parents who can be<br />

around more. Men as well as<br />

women would evolve quicker if<br />

they weren’t boxed in and could<br />

both take on active roles equally in<br />

bringing up kids. She outlines her<br />

views on flexibility and efficiency<br />

as, “remaining firm to your values<br />

but flexible in how you embody<br />

them and how you get there.”<br />

Just like a manuscript changes<br />

multiple times by the time it<br />

goes to final print, Malti believes<br />

she outgrows herself with every<br />

experience and evolves to better<br />

insights. Looking forward to<br />

the journey ahead, she plans to<br />

facilitate smaller retreats for<br />

entrepreneurs and young<br />

Presidents. She wants to design<br />

programs and retreats where,“a<br />

default setting of joy will create<br />

organizations and communities<br />

which smile more than they frown<br />

and express gratitude more than<br />

they complain.” A perennial<br />

optimist at work!<br />

28<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


Kavita Jain<br />

Needlewoman.Entrepreneur<br />

My soul is fed<br />

with needle<br />

and thread<br />

Roaming on the streets<br />

of London, a devout of<br />

Lord Krishna, Kavita<br />

carried his idol with her<br />

everywhere. Nestled<br />

comfortably in a stylish bag,<br />

swaying in her arms, the adobe<br />

of the lord earned Kavita many<br />

appreciative glances and some<br />

very encouraging remarks on<br />

the bag. This bag was designed,<br />

crafted and stitched by Kavita<br />

herself.<br />

When love and skill work<br />

together, expect a masterpiece.<br />

And in Kavita’s studio in<br />

Bangalore, the masterpieces<br />

are the handcrafted bags made<br />

of cotton, jute and minimal<br />

synthetic leather. The designer<br />

turned entrepreneur, Kavita<br />

Jain is the face, spirit and<br />

colour behind her own venture,<br />

Needle Doodle. With a sewing<br />

machine, colourful fabrics,<br />

carefully chosen<br />

embellishments and of course<br />

needles, she creates visually<br />

stunning bags. And what adds<br />

to the appeal of the bags is<br />

their attention to detail and the<br />

unique blend of colour, fabric,<br />

interesting shapes and the<br />

intricate dance of the needle<br />

around the bag.<br />

Born and bought up in the<br />

scenic milieu of Meghalaya,<br />

Kavita was blessed with<br />

golden fingers, a gene she<br />

inherited from her mother. “I<br />

have grown up seeing my<br />

mother doing creative things.<br />

And my childhood was also<br />

filled with art, craft, colour and<br />

music.” As a child she had<br />

been taught to sew, and often<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 29


SIMPLY SUCCESSFUL<br />

found herself creating beautiful<br />

apparels for herself. A carefree<br />

childhood filled with lot of<br />

outdoor activities gave Kavita a<br />

chance to explore many talents.<br />

While an expert in all forms of<br />

art, she is also an ace swimmer<br />

and a tennis player. “If I had not<br />

gravitated to being a designer, I<br />

would have probably been<br />

playing tennis,” says Kavita, with<br />

a bountiful smile.<br />

An alumnus of NIFT<br />

Bangalore, Kavita has trained<br />

under John Lewis in UK, worked<br />

on bespoke products, designer<br />

patterns, and state of the art<br />

sewing machines. The talented<br />

Kavita along with her two<br />

colleagues was featured on the<br />

cover page of the John Lewis<br />

Magazine ‘Chronicle’ for their<br />

creative work on the Easter<br />

theme. The two year stint in UK<br />

was one of the most professionally<br />

enriching periods for her. She<br />

also pursued a retail course while<br />

at UK. “It is the learnings that I<br />

got during my stint there coupled<br />

with an innate sense of business<br />

and art which has helped me<br />

setup my own enterprise,”<br />

explains the bags expert based<br />

out of Banaglore. What started<br />

as a hobby in her childhood, took<br />

the shape of a successful venture<br />

and for Kavita, it was a dream<br />

come true. “The bags that I made<br />

for myself received tremendous<br />

appreciation wherever I carried<br />

them and that is when my<br />

husband suggested I embark on<br />

an exercise to create hundred<br />

bags and track market response,”<br />

she says recollecting the trigger<br />

to her foray into this field. And<br />

the rest, as they say is history.<br />

One after the other, orders started<br />

pouring in. As the demand<br />

increased so did her range.<br />

Kavita has a huge<br />

catalogue of bags like totes,<br />

laptop bags, watch cases, piggy<br />

banks made of felt, children’s<br />

backpacks, shoe bags, laundry,<br />

and theme based bags for kids.<br />

She has myriad other knickknacks<br />

like hair accessories for<br />

little girls, candies packaged<br />

beautifully in butterfly-shaped<br />

packs, toy-storage bags etc.<br />

The Cherie Blair<br />

Foundation of UK, has selected<br />

Kavita among one of the 27<br />

Indian entrepreneurs for doing<br />

innovative work while pursuing<br />

their passion. The foundation<br />

provides mentors to the budding<br />

women entrepreneurs like<br />

Kavita to help them become<br />

better at their business and meet<br />

their long term and short term<br />

professional goals. Kavita<br />

underwent rigorous selection<br />

criteria before being chosen by<br />

the prestigious foundation. She<br />

has been awarded with a mentor<br />

who is a senior business leader<br />

from Africa.<br />

The initial investment was<br />

not much and most of it was<br />

done by her husband, Mayank,<br />

who is the biggest propeller<br />

behind giving life to her talent.<br />

The high in demand handcrafted<br />

handbags are usually sold on<br />

social media platforms or<br />

exhibitions and word of mouth.<br />

The business runs on minimal<br />

overheads, with no excess<br />

inventory, as the bags are<br />

always made on demand. The<br />

usual suspects which incur<br />

expenses are the raw material,<br />

transportation, labour and<br />

power. Taking the business to<br />

the next level and handling<br />

excess demand, Kavita employs<br />

contractual labour to stitch the<br />

bags, but handwork i.e. the<br />

needle and thread effect is<br />

always done in-house by the<br />

designer herself. Her every<br />

creation has a story to tell, and<br />

Kavita enhances the emotional<br />

and visual appeal of the bags by<br />

adding her touch of finesse and<br />

style by the creative<br />

manoeuvring of the needle. On<br />

publicity and promotion, her<br />

needle and thread leave a trail in<br />

the customer’s mind, thus her<br />

art does its job of reaching<br />

places.<br />

The one woman army,<br />

Kavita puts her heart into every<br />

piece she creates. She believes<br />

she has two other partners and<br />

a few stakeholders in her<br />

business. “My twins, a boy and<br />

a girl of five years are my<br />

partners. They are my fountain<br />

head of creativity.” She recalls<br />

how the children were her<br />

inspiration behind one of the<br />

aeroplane theme based bag she<br />

created for kids. Her husband<br />

and her parents fill in whenever<br />

she needs them. Their stake is in<br />

the form of faith and support.<br />

Kavita reminisces herself as<br />

an ambitious girl who wanted to<br />

make a mark for herself.<br />

Motherhood does lovely things<br />

to people, just like it did to her<br />

when she had her twins. She<br />

then channelled her ambition<br />

into her venture where she<br />

could pursue her dreams and<br />

also enjoy their childhood. Her<br />

kids help her ideate and test<br />

her bags for strength and<br />

detailing. “A lot of times, I have<br />

created a bag and made my<br />

kids use it to understand the<br />

detailing and utility angle<br />

before putting it up for sale,”<br />

says the proud mother.<br />

Kavita is a sum of passion,<br />

dedication, creativity and<br />

needle doodling. “My soul<br />

is fed with needle and thread,”<br />

says the needle woman.<br />

30<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


As much as words dissolve<br />

perimeters, I always believe<br />

deadlines are sacrosanct<br />

Shilpi Kakkar-<br />

Madan<br />

Writer.Model.Fashionista<br />

When her pen meets paper,<br />

the letters turn magical.<br />

The cauldron of the lady<br />

with the magic pen is filled with rich<br />

insights, enchanting words,<br />

captivating phrases, incisive<br />

observations and impeccable<br />

articulation; all this dressed up in<br />

words which directly connect with<br />

the mind of the reader. A superlative<br />

and prolific wordsmith, Shilpi<br />

Kakkar-Madan believes she was born<br />

to write.<br />

Growing up among heaps of<br />

books and the smell of printed paper,<br />

Shilpi descends from a family of<br />

voracious readers who run the British<br />

Book Depot, the oldest and most<br />

exhaustive store of literature in the<br />

heart of Lucknow. A writer with over<br />

a decade of experience in shaping<br />

the written word, Shilpi started<br />

penning articles for The Pioneer and<br />

Hindustan Times in her first year of<br />

college. Having lived a relatively<br />

sheltered life in Lucknow, it was her<br />

arrival in Mumbai and subsequent<br />

post graduation in Social<br />

Communications & Media from<br />

Sophia Polytechnic that formed her<br />

training ground. She recalls, “My<br />

faculty (at Sophia) Jerry Pinto's,<br />

constant objective criticism<br />

functioned as a timely surgical<br />

correction.” Shilpi explains how she<br />

had to unlearn her style of writing,<br />

making a departure from long<br />

subjective runs, to brevity and the art<br />

of precluding discursive information<br />

that shrouds the core of issues. That<br />

was the bedrock of her training of<br />

newspaper reportage. Growing from<br />

strength to strength, Shilpi kept<br />

honing her writing under the able<br />

mentorship of icons including<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 31


SIMPLY SUCCESSFUL<br />

Anil Thakraney, P.Sainath, Sonal<br />

Shah and many other individuals and<br />

organizations where she has worked<br />

over the years.<br />

A dreamer and an observer,<br />

Shilpi thrives on drama. She enjoys<br />

categorizing her thoughts, which later<br />

act as a fuel to her creativity and in<br />

certain cases breathe life into a great<br />

piece of writing. An incorrigible eye<br />

for mistakes, and agog to inhale every<br />

bit of literature worth reading, Shilpi<br />

has strode her way to eloquence, with<br />

determination and an uncanny ability<br />

to adhere to deadlines. “As much as<br />

words dissolve perimeters, I always<br />

believe deadlines are sacrosanct,”<br />

says the lady with the golden nib. The<br />

ability to ferret out details while<br />

making insightful observations and<br />

conducting exhaustive interviews<br />

have made Shilpi a stellar performer<br />

in her career.<br />

In the capacity of a journalist, she<br />

has worked with Behram “Busybee”<br />

Contractor at Afternoon D&C and<br />

says, “I consider myself extremely<br />

lucky to have trained in print<br />

reportage under his hawkful eye.”<br />

She has written number-crunching<br />

cover stories for Mid day's ad world<br />

specific, erstwhile publication “The<br />

Brief”, been a columnist with Mumbai<br />

Mirror, tracked the shifts in the ad<br />

world for xchange4media.com and<br />

more.<br />

Before she began establishing<br />

herself as a journalist, a writer, a<br />

philologist and a curator of articles<br />

worth a million emotions, she was<br />

also perfecting her poise in the world<br />

of modelling. Shilpi finished as first<br />

runner up at the Gladrags Supermodel<br />

Contest in 1996, and subsequently<br />

worked on various Indian and<br />

international modelling assignments<br />

for two years. She feels it is her stint<br />

as a model that has gifted her a degree<br />

of finesse and panache, an intrinsic<br />

part of her persona. Her time in the<br />

modelling circuit gave her a natural<br />

inclination towards lifestyle and<br />

fashion. As a part of the industry both<br />

from the pavilion as well as the field,<br />

Shilpi developed a keen eye for detail<br />

and leaning towards the lifestyle beat<br />

was a natural progression. Her work<br />

as a fashion and luxury journalist<br />

involves a great degree of interaction<br />

with celebrities, visiting new places<br />

and telescoping trends.<br />

Having worked with many<br />

publishing houses in the lifestyle<br />

space, including Living Media, Ogaan<br />

Publications and currently, Burda<br />

International, Shilpi brings with her a<br />

wealth of expertise. Her repertoire<br />

spans exclusive one-on-one with<br />

achievers, the latest trends in the field<br />

of luxury, travel, gourmet gospels,<br />

health and fitness and cutting edge<br />

fashion, playing compere at stylish,<br />

celebrity studded literary gatherings,<br />

ghost writing for filmstars on their<br />

endorsed products, and innovative<br />

articles laced with pivotal keywords<br />

targeted at bang-on search engine<br />

rankings for online biggies.<br />

From anchoring the release of<br />

maestro Zubin Mehta's biography for<br />

a handpicked audience, gliding in as<br />

the face of the account at JWT-IPAN<br />

Knowles for the debut season of<br />

Lakme Fashion Week in Mumbai, to<br />

conversing with motorcycle brand<br />

ambassadors like filmstar John<br />

Abraham and luminaries like actress<br />

Aishwarya Rai-Bachchan, authoring<br />

the “Top 100 Restaurants & Cafes in<br />

Mumbai 2007-08” with Living<br />

Media, playing the crusader columnist<br />

for Mumbai Mirror, plugging in solo<br />

with international haute brands as<br />

senior executive producer for luxury<br />

television channel Voice of India<br />

(Triveni Media), fuelling the lifestyle<br />

segment of internet majors including<br />

msn.com and yahoo.com, liaising<br />

with and spotlighting stellar<br />

non-celebrity achievers for the<br />

Accenture powered vaahini.com to<br />

crafting corporate<br />

brochures for Embarq, JnNurm,<br />

Pidilite, Tanaaz, Leela Kempenski<br />

and more, Shilpi has been immersed<br />

in the world of glamour and<br />

journalism, literature and luxury, up<br />

and close.<br />

Shilpi is associated as<br />

Contributing Editor with Travel +<br />

Leisure India & South Asia, Better<br />

Homes & Gardens, Child and<br />

Discover India and also works on<br />

independent projects. A cosmopolitan<br />

traveller, an avid reader and a keen<br />

observer, it is her stimulating sense of<br />

humour that acts as a magical<br />

leveller, especially when work gets<br />

crazy. “It is the quintessential<br />

mommy act, struggling to balance<br />

work and family, working at crazy<br />

hours, fitting in social niceties, and<br />

then some,” she smiles. Does she<br />

encounter what we famously call 'the<br />

writer's block'? “Of course! There<br />

are insane moments when you feel<br />

burnt out, and that's when a beatific<br />

weekend getaway breathes in a balm.<br />

A complete therapy in itself, with no<br />

cell phones and iPads,” says the<br />

radiant powerhouse of knowledge,<br />

words, articulation and experience.<br />

“It is a double-edged sword. Though<br />

when I am off social media for a day<br />

or two, I start getting withdrawal<br />

symptoms,” admits Shilpi.<br />

Having shaped stepping stones<br />

out of stumbling blocks, the<br />

inveterate achiever and dreamer<br />

hopes to go on air with a personal<br />

chat show on the television soon.<br />

What we also await is a riveting book<br />

from the emphatic writer, which she<br />

reveals will be ‘part real, part fiction’.<br />

Shilpi is the perfect example of a<br />

successful life shaped on the<br />

foundation of hardwork,<br />

determination and oodles of talent.<br />

Her's is a dream carved out of a<br />

hobby and the power of perseverance.<br />

A compulsive writer, as she calls<br />

herself, Shilpi Madan is an epitome`<br />

of word and worth in her work.<br />

32<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


TRENDSETTERS<br />

RECYCL-E<br />

What do<br />

you do when<br />

you need to<br />

dispose off your old<br />

mobile phone, TV, laptop or<br />

such electronic and electrical<br />

gadgets? Dump them in a dark corner<br />

of the closet or abandon them to the<br />

neighbourhood scrap collector? While it may be<br />

the most convenient way of getting rid of the old<br />

machines, it certainly is not the best way of doing www.website.com<br />

so.<br />

<strong>Woman</strong> at <strong>Work</strong> speaks with Dr. Deepali Sinha Khetriwal,<br />

Doctorate in Economics, Research Associate at the United<br />

Nations University and the Managing Director of Sofies<br />

India, who is one of those rare professionals who has<br />

forayed into e-waste or electronic waste management.


TRENDSETTERS<br />

WW: Could you tell us what e-waste<br />

means? And what items or products<br />

qualify as e-waste?<br />

DK: E-waste is a popular, informal<br />

name for electronic products nearing<br />

the end of their ‘useful life’. Though it<br />

is often imagined as only old<br />

computers and mobile phones, they are<br />

only the ‘poster boys’ of e-waste. In<br />

fact, things like broken or unused<br />

electronic toothbrushes and razors,<br />

battery operated toys, toasters,<br />

washing machines, air conditioners,<br />

TVs, microwaves, servers, UPS and all<br />

kinds of things that work on electric<br />

view to do my master thesis on the<br />

topic, and ever since, it has also<br />

become my profession. Of course, the<br />

economics background still helps in<br />

understanding the market dynamics of<br />

e-waste, economic instruments for<br />

improving e-waste management,<br />

volatility in commodity prices and<br />

more. What is interesting about the<br />

e-waste as a topic is that it is so<br />

interdisciplinary in nature.<br />

WW: How does e-waste affect us?<br />

DK: The electronic and electrical<br />

equipments (EEE) are manufactured<br />

environment. These toxic metals get<br />

absorbed by the air or soil at the<br />

treating site and enter our ecosystem<br />

in an unstable and unhealthy way.<br />

WW: Where does Sofies come into<br />

the picture?<br />

DK: Sofies is a boutique consultancy<br />

working on a range of sustainability<br />

topics including e-waste, alternative<br />

fuels, cleaner production and<br />

sustainable planning and<br />

development. We are headquartered<br />

in Geneva, with offices in France and<br />

India. We work with international<br />

power are e-waste.<br />

WW: How did an economics<br />

doctorate student enter this niche<br />

field of e-waste management?<br />

DK: Totally by co-incidence! I was<br />

doing a Masters in International<br />

Management, and wanted to do my<br />

thesis related to sustainability. Just<br />

then, there was an opportunity for an<br />

internship on a Swiss funded project<br />

supporting e-waste management in<br />

several countries, including India. I<br />

applied for the internship with the<br />

with a complex mix of materials. Their<br />

components contain precious metals<br />

like gold, silver and copper, as well as<br />

hazardous substances such as cadmium<br />

and mercury. The problem arises due<br />

to the inefficient recycling of the EEEs<br />

to recover the precious metals. The<br />

informal or local scrap recyclers use<br />

basic processes such as open burning<br />

of the equipment to recover targeted<br />

metals like copper, aluminium, iron<br />

and steel. This leaves hazardous<br />

residues at the processing sites, causing<br />

an explosion of pollutants in the<br />

organisations, governments,<br />

companies and foundations among<br />

others in providing technical<br />

expertise, doing training and capacity<br />

building, technology transfer,<br />

supporting innovation and process<br />

improvements and more. In India,<br />

we are very strong in the<br />

e-wastesegment and sustainable<br />

planning and development,<br />

especially in the urban development<br />

context.<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 35


TRENDSETTERS<br />

WW: What is your role at Sofies?<br />

DK: As the Managing Director of the<br />

India office, I am responsible for its<br />

operational and strategic direction.<br />

My key role is to manage sales and<br />

marketing in addition to client<br />

interaction and ongoing project<br />

deliveries. I also provide oversight to<br />

operational aspects.<br />

WW: Could you tell us a little about<br />

your educational background?<br />

DK: I did a Masters in Economics<br />

from Pune university, post which I did<br />

a Masters in International Management<br />

from University of St. Gallen in<br />

Switzerland. I have a Doctorate in<br />

Economics, with specialization in<br />

Diffusion, Obsolescence and Disposal<br />

of Consumer Durables.<br />

WW: Does this sector attract<br />

women professionals?<br />

DK: There are very few women in this<br />

space world over. It would be less<br />

than 5% in most countries. The ratio is<br />

probably even more skewed in India.<br />

It could be because a career in e-waste<br />

management in not so well known or<br />

well received here.<br />

WW: What are the attributes for a<br />

person to decide to take e-waste<br />

management as a career of choice?<br />

DK: It is very much like any research<br />

or consulting job in many ways. You<br />

need to read up a lot and have an<br />

analytical bent. It is important to<br />

highlight that it is far less glamorous -<br />

you have to have the heart and<br />

stomach to visit some fairly grim<br />

areas where e-waste is disposed and<br />

interact with informal recyclers and<br />

scrap collectors.<br />

WW: Is India a mature market in<br />

e-waste awareness?<br />

DK: I think there is a big scope for<br />

improvement. Though there is a<br />

specific legislation on e-waste<br />

management and guidelines issued by<br />

CPCB (Central Pollution Control<br />

Board) in handling hazardous e-waste,<br />

yet most of the e-waste recycling is<br />

done by informal recyclers. If the<br />

e-waste is recycled in an environment<br />

friendly and technically correct way,<br />

recovery of metals like aluminium,<br />

copper, steel and iron will save a lot<br />

of energy and reduce carbon<br />

emissions compared to the process of<br />

mining those from fresh sources. This<br />

will help reduce India’s import bill as<br />

well as preserve natural resources.<br />

There is lots of work yet to be done in<br />

Indian sub continent, which is what<br />

makes it an exciting time and place to<br />

be in here.<br />

WW: Does the industry have<br />

potential for employment<br />

generation?<br />

DK: Lots, in fact there is a possibility<br />

of multimillion dollar businesses in<br />

setting up units for treatment and<br />

recovery of e- waste. In fact even<br />

before treatment, presently e-waste<br />

engages enormous unskilled manpower<br />

for the collection, segregation, manual<br />

dismantling, packaging, transportation<br />

of e-waste. So for today and the future,<br />

there would be a huge demand of all<br />

kind of manpower if e-waste management<br />

is organized professionally in the<br />

country. It has the potential to employ<br />

unskilled and semi skilled workforce<br />

from rural places as well as skilled<br />

workforce like engineers and scientists,<br />

auditors and environmentalists. It is<br />

amazing to note that this sector is so<br />

focused in process yet so wide in<br />

impact socially, environmentally and<br />

economically.<br />

WW: What is your advice to women<br />

who want to pursue a career in<br />

e-waste management?<br />

DK: One should look at this career as a<br />

resource management field and e-waste<br />

is just another resource of our times.<br />

And the best thing about this area is that<br />

concepts and expertise from e-waste<br />

management are very transferable to<br />

other disciplines. Hence this career<br />

gives you a lot of fluidity in terms of<br />

multi-functionality and opportunities to<br />

work in divergent fields and is an<br />

excellent career for those aspiring to<br />

work in the development sector.<br />

36<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

19 27


SOCIETY<br />

An Oasis of<br />

GROWTH<br />

In most parts of the rural India, women are denied the right to education and earning<br />

opportunities. The rural belt around Sangli District in Maharashtra is one such area where<br />

there was a large population of women without opportunities to earn and take control of their<br />

future. Payod Industries took it upon themselves to put an end to their plight and take these<br />

rural women out of financial and social doldrums. Megha Johari talks to Snehal Londhe,<br />

co-founder of Payod Industries to understand more about their socio-commercial venture and<br />

impact.<br />

here was a time when<br />

Hingangaon village, near Sangli<br />

district was an unknown barren<br />

land on the map of Maharashtra. Before<br />

2008, the village was entrenched with<br />

all kinds of social vices like<br />

discrimination based on scheduled and<br />

backward caste practices, oppression of<br />

women and denial of rights to the girl<br />

child. The only source of paltry income<br />

of the villagers was the agricultural<br />

activities, which was seasonal and<br />

cyclic. But after the setting up of a<br />

glove making factory, Payod Industries,<br />

the village has found its place under the<br />

sun.The gloves production unit has<br />

changed the life and aspirations of the<br />

village otherwise crumbling under its<br />

own scarcities. All this has been brought<br />

about by the incessant efforts and<br />

determination of Devanand and Snehal<br />

Londhe, the couple who founded this<br />

socio-commercial enterprise.<br />

When Snehal Londhe and her<br />

husband decided to give up their cushy<br />

jobs and become social entrepreneurs,<br />

they were aghast at the state of the<br />

democratic and secular India. Snehal<br />

recalls, “When we decided to set up the<br />

factory in Hingangaon, we had to<br />

encounter a lot of resistance from<br />

villagers, men and women alike because<br />

they had never imagined working in a<br />

factory environment. The women had<br />

never stepped out of the house to do<br />

more than fetch the basic necessities or<br />

become a farmhand.” To make matters<br />

worse was the foreboding of the caste<br />

barriers and acute poverty. Bracing<br />

such stiff resistance and lack of skills<br />

among villagers what pushed the<br />

Londhe couple to start a makeover<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 37


SOCIETY<br />

of the region was their commitment to<br />

their soil. “When we left our village to<br />

get educated and employed, we had<br />

vowed to come back some day and create<br />

employment opportunities here,”explains<br />

Snehal Londhe, Managing Director of<br />

Payod Industries. Hingagaon and the<br />

neighbouring villages are drought prone<br />

areas with negligible agricultural<br />

activities. The men left the village in<br />

search of work, leaving behind their<br />

wives, mothers and children. Most of<br />

them became drivers and many died in<br />

road accidents, hence leaving young<br />

uneducated dependent widows to live at<br />

the mercy of the family.<br />

Fully cognizant of these problems,<br />

the duo embarked on the journey of<br />

providing employment opportunities and<br />

skillset development for sustained<br />

livelihood, especially of the women of<br />

this region. Recalling their impediments,<br />

Snehal explains, “There was no transport,<br />

no internet, and no nationalised or private<br />

bank ready to gamble on our faith. They<br />

did not think we will be able to run an<br />

international standard production unit<br />

right here.”<br />

But as they say, fortune favours the<br />

brave. Payod Industries is the only<br />

manufacturer and market leader in<br />

industrial safety gloves with 100% export<br />

and employing 95% women workers<br />

from the local villages in and around<br />

Hingagaon. They make polyester<br />

seamless gloves, cotton knitted seamless<br />

gloves, seamless cotton gloves with PVC<br />

dotted on palms and bleached white<br />

gloves. And all of their production is<br />

carried out at international standards on<br />

high end sewing machines and packaging<br />

machines, under strict quality control.<br />

Payod Industies was set up with the<br />

core idea of empowering the women of<br />

Sangli district and the adjoining rural<br />

clusters. The factory provides training on<br />

knitting, sewing, packaging, dye cutting<br />

and many other processes involved in<br />

process of glove making. For those<br />

women who cannot come to the factory<br />

compound due to domestic pressures<br />

or other exigencies, Payod provides them<br />

with decentralized working space- soft<br />

loans for stitching machines and<br />

renovation of houses, so that they could<br />

earn their livelihood working from<br />

home. Since the strict quality parameters<br />

demand cleanliness and personal and<br />

community hygiene, the economic<br />

incentive has pushed this behavioural<br />

change.<br />

Snehal shares the past saying,<br />

“There was a time when we had to urge<br />

women to get trained and we would<br />

incentivise them with an honorarium<br />

amount that they would have earned in<br />

the fields. These women expected to earn<br />

INR 20-50 a day. And now they earn<br />

INR 6000 to 7000 a month depending on<br />

how much work they turn around.”<br />

Payod Industries has not only led to<br />

an economic empowerment, but also set<br />

the stage for a social and behavioural<br />

transformation in these rural areas.<br />

About 95% of the employees are<br />

women from socially disadvantaged<br />

families, widows, women family heads,<br />

BPL families and economicallybackward<br />

families. Regular income has meant that<br />

many of the children of these poor<br />

families are able to remain in schools.<br />

There has been an increase in enrolment<br />

of children in the schools and reduction<br />

of drop outs because of access to<br />

livelihood opportunities for their parents.<br />

Payod has walked a step further by<br />

engaging in village development<br />

initiatives. The industry has adopted the<br />

local government school and provides<br />

global classroom facilities. The school<br />

going children are provided with<br />

educational aid as well as shoes and<br />

books whenever required. The village<br />

also boasts of a free library, ‘Hingagaon<br />

Village Knowledge Centre’ which has<br />

3000 books, 15 magazines and holds<br />

seminars on topics like agriculture and<br />

technology, women health, child<br />

nutrition etc. All of this is aided and<br />

maintained by Payod Industries as part<br />

of its corporate social responsibility.<br />

Payod has earned awards and accolades<br />

for its exemplary work from many<br />

national level agencies and platforms<br />

like the Officers Forum of Maharashtra,<br />

DICCI 2011, Sankalp 2014, Perarna<br />

Puraskar – IBN Lokmat and World Rural<br />

Entrepreneur forum.<br />

Kajal Karpe, a victim of fate has<br />

become a hero of her destiny after<br />

getting trained and absorbed by Payod.<br />

The young widow is an expert tailor<br />

spinning thousands of gloves a month<br />

and earning enough money for her<br />

family to live a comfortable life. Kajal is<br />

getting her younger sister educated,<br />

footing expenses for her father’s medical<br />

care and has installed a water filter in her<br />

house. A perfect example of positive<br />

economic and behavioural progress,<br />

Kajal believes in the importance of<br />

sanitation and hygiene. The change in<br />

perspective has been brought about by<br />

the economic liberation and financial<br />

independence which she has gained by<br />

getting skilled at Payod Industries. 180<br />

clusters of villages, 850 women employees,<br />

200 machines and a new generation of<br />

economically and socially liberated<br />

women is the turnover of Payod Industries.<br />

Snehal, Devanand and their team have<br />

truly proven to be the oasis in the drought<br />

prone villages in and around Sangli.<br />

38<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


BOOKSHELF<br />

Chess Not Checkers:<br />

Elevate your Leadership<br />

Game<br />

Author: Mark Miller<br />

As organizations grow in volume and complexity, the demands on leadership<br />

change. The same old moves may not change the desired output. In Chess Not<br />

Checkers, Mark Miller tells the story of Blake Brown, newly appointed CEO of a<br />

company troubled by poor performance and low morale. The book is a guide on<br />

how Blake changes his game to revive the company. A gripping narrative,<br />

imparting interesting and applicable leadership lessons, it is full of wisdom about<br />

the different kind of leadership that it takes to create a high performance<br />

organization when complexity changes the game.<br />

It's My Pleasure:<br />

The Impact of Extraordinary<br />

Talent and a Compelling<br />

Culture<br />

Author: Dee Ann Turner<br />

Based on her more than thirty years at Chick-fil-A, as Vice President, Corporate Talent,<br />

Dee Ann Turner shares how Chick-fil-A has built a devoted talent and fan base that<br />

spans generations. It's My Pleasure tells powerful stories and provides practical<br />

applications on how to develop extraordinary talent to build and stimulate a company's<br />

culture. The book is divided into four basic sections: The Essence of a Compelling<br />

Culture, Building a Team that Creates a Compelling Culture, Growing a Compelling<br />

Culture within the Team, and Engaging Guests in a Compelling Culture.<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 39


STARTUP SMART<br />

THIS SECTION FEATURES INFORMATION, ADVICE AND BEST<br />

PRACTICES FOR THOSE VENTURERS AND ENTREPRENEURS<br />

WHO HAVE TAKEN THE ROAD LESS TRAVELLED


PROTECTING<br />

INDUSTRIAL DESIGNS<br />

Advocate Anand Mahurkar, a Partner at Krishna & Saurastri<br />

Associates, is a techno-legal expert practicing in the field of<br />

Intellectual Property (IP) for more than a decade. He is an engineer<br />

and a lawyer who has been a brand and innovation consultant and<br />

IPR consultant for SMEs and Fortune 500 companies. He has<br />

experience of handling matters pertaining to patents, copyrights,<br />

trademarks, industrial designs and more for his clients across India,<br />

USA, Canada, South Africa, Europe, China, Japan. In this feature, he<br />

talks about the importance of Intellectual Property rights for<br />

start-ups and early stage ventures.<br />

DCooper for the first time in<br />

o you remember your reaction<br />

when you encountered a Mini<br />

your life? I must share mine. I was<br />

blown away! What was your reaction<br />

when you saw the Apple’s ipad? I<br />

could just about utter ‘Insanely<br />

great!’. These are our reactions to the<br />

beauty, creativity and class that is<br />

created by the designers of products.<br />

But what has legal got to do with this?<br />

A lot! Do we have any legal protection<br />

measures against copy or piracy of<br />

such creative designs? The answer is<br />

yes. This is one of the IP (Intellectual<br />

Property) rights legally available in<br />

India. In India we do have The<br />

Designs Act 2000 that gives all such<br />

rights to the creators to protect their<br />

design or ID (Industrial design). This<br />

is also referred as design patent in the<br />

USA. Accordingly, design implies<br />

creating/suggesting/thinking of a<br />

shape or pattern which can be applied<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 41


to an article or intended to be applied<br />

by industrial process or means. To<br />

understand this, let’s take an example<br />

of a tissue paper holder. A new design<br />

can imply new appearance, shape or<br />

configuration.<br />

The scope of protection of<br />

Industrial designs varies from<br />

packaging, handicrafts, furnishing,<br />

textiles, jewelry, utility products,<br />

appliances, Graphic symbols and<br />

logos, surface patterns, ornamentation<br />

to furniture. As per the IPO (Indian<br />

Patent Office) the registration of a<br />

design confers upon the registered<br />

proprietor ‘Copyright’ in the design<br />

for the period of registration. Here<br />

‘Copyright’ means the exclusive right<br />

to apply a design to the article<br />

belonging to the class in which it is<br />

registered. A proprietor of an ID<br />

(Industrial Design) can apply for the<br />

registration of that design. The rights<br />

offered by an industrial design can<br />

protect shape, configuration, and<br />

pattern of lines etc. that is applied to<br />

an article. In general, the ID protects<br />

the aesthetics that is visible to the eye<br />

of a viewer. The ID may not be able<br />

to protect an invention or technical<br />

solution or functionality or inventive<br />

concept of a product or technical<br />

features present inside the product.<br />

It is worthwhile to note that the<br />

protection conferred by ID is limited<br />

to the applications of the design.<br />

There are generally 32 classes in<br />

which one can protect an industrial<br />

design. This classification (popularly<br />

referred as Locarno Classification) is<br />

an alphabetical list of goods which<br />

constitute industrial designs, with an<br />

indication of the classes and<br />

subclasses into which they fall.<br />

Generally the proprietor or the lawyer<br />

of the proprietor selects one or more<br />

classes depending upon the nature of<br />

use and application of the design.<br />

For example, suppose a designer<br />

designs a set of gloves with integrated<br />

scrubber (Gloves-Scrubber) for<br />

washing utensils in the gloves. After<br />

registration, the right will be limited<br />

to the shape and configuration of<br />

the product. Another designer may<br />

create a set of ‘Scrubber Gloves’<br />

with a completely different shape<br />

and configuration. Here, one should<br />

note that the owner of the registered<br />

design can only protect the shape<br />

and configuration developed by her.<br />

However, such design neither<br />

provides protection to the<br />

technology of making the glove or<br />

method of fusing scrubber with<br />

gloves. Further, the registered<br />

design may not be able to protect<br />

the technical or functional features<br />

of the product. The owner may<br />

consider patent registration in<br />

addition to design registration to<br />

seek protection for technology<br />

involved with regard to such<br />

product. In this case it is<br />

recommended to protect the design<br />

of the Gloves-Scrubber in the<br />

classes of gloves as well as<br />

scrubbers. The proprietor will have<br />

the protection in the two classes.<br />

The owner of a registered<br />

design has the right to prevent third<br />

parties from making, selling or<br />

importing articles bearing or<br />

embodying a design which is a copy<br />

of the protected design, when such<br />

acts are undertaken for commercial<br />

purposes.<br />

Although the rights conferred by<br />

the patent and design registration<br />

are similar but nature of protection<br />

is different. Let’s understand in<br />

details on the meaning of violation<br />

of rights of a registered design or<br />

piracy of designs. If a registered<br />

design or its imitation is applied to<br />

any article in the same class of<br />

article of registered design without<br />

the written consent of the registered<br />

proprietor for the purpose of selling<br />

or importing that article then such<br />

acts amounts to piracy of the<br />

registered design.<br />

It is to be noted that any artistic<br />

work protectable under copyrights<br />

will not get protection that a<br />

registered design receives. For<br />

example, a painting, a sculpture, a<br />

drawing, a photograph should be<br />

protected by Copyrights and not by<br />

the provisions of ID. So any new<br />

design that is appealing to the eye<br />

and that is new, can be protected<br />

under the provisions of Industrial<br />

Design in India and if required the<br />

protection may be extended beyond<br />

national boundaries in the countries<br />

of interest. We should recommend<br />

creative artists or product designers<br />

around us so as to protect their<br />

creative designs before disclosing<br />

them to public. The owner of the<br />

design may enjoy the exclusivity for<br />

a term of 10 years from the date of<br />

filing which is further extendable by<br />

another five years. And then the<br />

protected designs would be<br />

commercialized by licensing the<br />

rights to use the registered design.<br />

Design registration confers<br />

non-exclusive rights to the owner of<br />

the design. The design registration<br />

should not be confused with the<br />

patent registration.<br />

anand@krishnaandsaurastri.com<br />

42<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


Occupational Hazards OF a<br />

<strong>Work</strong>ing Mother<br />

Mr Manoj Wad is a leading Corporate Lawyer and Partner at J S Wad<br />

& Company. In his career spanning 27 years, he has practised in the<br />

Supreme Court and is on the legal advisory board of leading<br />

Multinational and Indian companies. His firm provides a bouquet of<br />

legal services to assist individual professionals, start ups and<br />

established business entities in their vocational and professional<br />

endeavors.<br />

re you married?”<br />

“Do you have children?”<br />

“Are you planning to Ahave kids?” Ask these questions to an<br />

interviewee in the U.S.A. and the<br />

employer is heavily penalised. The<br />

U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity<br />

Commission (EEOC) vigilantly acts to<br />

prevent discrimination at every stage<br />

of employment based on factors<br />

ranging from race, religion, age (40 or<br />

older) to sex (including pregnancy). In<br />

stark contrast, these questions form the<br />

basis of hiring and firing a woman<br />

employee in India, with no laws or an<br />

EEOC to safeguard them.<br />

Women employees in India who “dare”<br />

to be pregnant are “duly” punished<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 43


y their employers, either through<br />

unlawful termination or forcing them<br />

to resign by altering working<br />

conditions beyond their endurance.A<br />

country that worships married heroes<br />

even in their 50s, 60s and 70s and<br />

conveniently discards a heroine the<br />

moment she is married, is a glaring<br />

example of the popular mindset.It is<br />

these realities that make one<br />

contemplate whether the latest<br />

government proposal to increase<br />

the three month maternity leave to<br />

eight months for working women<br />

under the Maternity Benefits Act,<br />

1961, will truly benefit women<br />

employees or add to the persistent<br />

gender gap disparities further<br />

worsening their already glooming<br />

employment prospects.<br />

Yes, we do have a<br />

comprehensive law. The Maternity<br />

Benefits Act, 1961, enumerates<br />

varied provisions, like employer<br />

can neither dismiss a woman<br />

employee during pregnancy nor<br />

vary any condition of service to<br />

her disadvantage, an aggrieved<br />

woman can file a civil or criminal<br />

suit, offenders can be imprisoned<br />

or fined.<br />

However, the question is how<br />

successfully has the Act been<br />

implemented throughout the<br />

country, especially in the light of<br />

the fact that it addresses women<br />

working only in the organised<br />

sector, while majority of the<br />

female workforce is employed in<br />

the unorganised sector.<br />

Yes, we do have a vigilant<br />

judiciary as well. In 1991, the<br />

Supreme Court ruled in favour of<br />

the pregnant employees in the case<br />

of Neera Mathur vs. Life<br />

Insurance Corporation of India,<br />

while in 2012,when Indrani<br />

Chakraverty brought a criminal<br />

case against her employer the<br />

Idiom Consulting Ltd. for<br />

violating the Maternity Benefits<br />

Act, the Delhi High Court ordered<br />

that she should be paid Rs 7.5 lakh<br />

as settlement if the criminal<br />

proceedings were to be dropped.<br />

However, the question is how<br />

many women are able to actually<br />

take the offenders to court,<br />

especially in the light of the fact<br />

that post delivery, besides health<br />

issues, the woman in India is<br />

already grappling with family<br />

and societal pressures.<br />

The need of the hour is not a<br />

raise in the number of days of the<br />

maternity leave but a rise in the<br />

standards of implementation of<br />

the existing law, in order to<br />

comprehensively safeguard the<br />

female workforce in the<br />

organised and unorganised<br />

sectors alike.<br />

Post pregnancy incentives<br />

should not be limited towards<br />

enabling women to resume work<br />

and barely survive, by engaging<br />

them in less important<br />

endeavours. Rather, efforts<br />

should be proactively directed<br />

towards encouraging them to<br />

take up ambitious roles fully<br />

maximising their expertise and<br />

experience.<br />

manojwad@jswad.in<br />

Tips to Remember:<br />

Be vigilant while entering into service agreements.<br />

Maintain vital records:<br />

Copy of Service Agreement, e-mails, any other relevant correspondence with your employers.<br />

Hire professional help to assist you in exercising your rights under the law.<br />

44<br />

| <strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


WOMEN IN THE NEWS<br />

Courtesy: ndtv.com Courtesy: ndtv.com Courtesy: ndtv.com<br />

India-born Padmasree Warrior, one of Silicon<br />

Valley's high-profile women executives, has been<br />

appointed as the US CEO of a Chinese firm which<br />

is building an electric car to compete with<br />

American electric car manufacturer Tesla. Ms<br />

Warrior stepped down from the position of Cisco's<br />

Chief Technology and Strategy Officer last year.<br />

Currently she serves on the board of American<br />

clothing giant Gap and Microsoft.<br />

Passengers travelling in trains will now have the<br />

option of enjoying food prepared by some<br />

women self-help groups (SHGs) as Indian<br />

Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation<br />

(IRCTC) is planning to tie up with them to<br />

enhance its e-catering portfolio. The empanelled<br />

self-help groups will be displayed on e-catering<br />

websites with their menu and prices.<br />

A fleet of women driven motorbike taxi service,<br />

by the name ‘ojeks’ has been launched in<br />

Jakarta, the capital city with a large Muslim<br />

population and terrible traffic jams. The bikers<br />

are females with headscarves, running bikes as<br />

taxis only for women passengers. This is a<br />

unique service currently available only through<br />

smart phone apps.<br />

Courtesy: ndtv.com<br />

Courtesy: timesofindia<br />

In order to address the declining birth<br />

rate and give a boost to women’s<br />

careers, South Korean President Park<br />

Geun-hye has made paternity leave a<br />

priority issue. Many companies are<br />

now encouraging more fathers to avail<br />

the equal childcare leave as a part of<br />

the company Courtesy: policy. www.ndtv.com This has given rise<br />

to a new generation of ‘Superdads’<br />

who are actively participating in<br />

childcare by taking paternity leaves.<br />

Tulika Sahu, a student of Arts<br />

College, Lucknow, has become the<br />

first woman in the country to earn a<br />

doctorate in photography, a rare<br />

subject for a doctoral programme.<br />

<strong>February</strong> <strong>2016</strong> | 43 45


49<br />

NETSETTERS<br />

Flavia Agnes: From victim<br />

to trailblazer<br />

Flavia survived and broke out of<br />

domestic violence back in<br />

1970’s and 80’s, when women<br />

were scared to so much as voice<br />

out their disapproval. In this<br />

moving talk , Flavia talks about<br />

her own tribulations as a victim,<br />

her strength as a women’s right<br />

activist and her liberation as the<br />

founder of Majlis Legal Centre.<br />

She offers hope, support and<br />

sharp legal advice for justice and<br />

empowerment of women.<br />

Courtesy: inktalks.com<br />

Devdutt Pattanaik:<br />

Diversity – a garden<br />

or a forest?<br />

Devdutt Pattanaik is a renowned<br />

author, mythologist, and<br />

leadership consultant, whose<br />

work focuses on deriving<br />

management insights from<br />

mythology to reveal a very<br />

Indian approach to modern<br />

business. In this thought<br />

provoking talk, he questions our<br />

understanding of diversity.<br />

Drawing parallels between how<br />

we embrace diverse languages<br />

and conceive ideologies like<br />

polytheism, liberalism and<br />

fascism, Pattanaik’s perspectives<br />

are eye-opening.


Inspite of martial arts trainings, pepper sprays<br />

on sale, mobile apps & CCTVs, crimes against<br />

women continue unabated.<br />

WONDER WHY?<br />

Most of these are focused on reactive<br />

safety measures.<br />

A pioneer Women Safety Consulting Company that works on<br />

an integrated safety solution that includes Preventive &<br />

Responsive management

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