Career Lessons from Bunty aur Babli -Guest Article by Rashmi Bansal

Mon, Aug 8, 2005

Featured, Guest Articles

Aapki naukri mein na izzat hai, na mazaa hai aur na matlab (Your job has neither respect nor fun nor meaning),” declares the new tall, angry young man.

A man whose father would like nothing more than a son who follows in his footsteps as a ticket collector.
The young man is Abhishek Bachchan, giving voice to the hopes and dreams of the Average Young Indian, in Yash Raj Films’ summer caper, Bunty aur Babli.

This is one sentiment the scriptwriter has identified perfectly.

Izzat (Respectability) x Mazaa (Fun) x Matlab (Meaning) = Career Satisfaction.

Apply it to just about any industry or profession. And it works!

All mazaa, no izzat Take BPOs, which are worried about employee attrition. These companies provide young graduates with the best of everything — money, work environment, career growth. Even fun, in the form of special allowances, movies and parties.

The mazaa angle is, thus, well taken care of. But what about izzat?
‘I work at a call centre.’ Despite ads from e-Serve, which pretend otherwise, that statement will not really impress your girlfriend’s father. At the end of the day, the job essentially lacks matlab. You work for one company but answer calls for another. There is no shared vision or mission beyond answering the next call. What you do never never really seems to make a ‘difference’.

In the equation, there is only one variable the young person can control. And hence he/she hops from job to job in search of more mazaa (money).

Izzat and mazaa, but no matlab?

On the other hand, IT, which mainly employs young engineers, has better chance of retaining its employees.

Not only do they provide decent starting salaries/ fabulous campuses, there is the additional mazaa angle of being sent abroad to work within a couple of years of joining. Plus, saying you work for Infosys, Wipro or Cognizant Technologies receives a respectful nod from peers and parents.

The reason many still quit IT is the matlab angle. Those who equate coding work with being a cybercoolie often choose to go abroad for further studies or try an MBA. Not that life after the MBA may offer any more in terms of matlab, but having the IIM tag adds to izzat value.

The relative importance of these three factors varies from person to person.

Matlab, in fact, is the most personal variable. Some of us can happily buy into the mission statements of thecompanies we work for. We can find personal meaning by reaching our goals and targets as well as be a tough but fair boss/ employee/ coworker and a loyal and loving spouse/ parent/ friend.

But to others, ‘meaning’ comes from doing what you are passionate about, something you really care for. This definition of matlab is often swept under the carpet at an early age when we follow the herd towards the engineering/ medicine/ MBA degrees we never really wanted (but were assured was the only way to go). In the long run, we try and make up for the absence of meaning by trying to maximise on the other two fronts.

Yet, when any of the three variables actually becomes zero, the equation comes to naught. So every now and then, an individual will take the bold step of pursuing matlab even if it comes at the cost of mazaa, i.e. lower salary or perks.

These are the folks who choose to quit their fancy jobs and join the non-profit sector. To them, the loss of some money and perks is evened out by the thrill of making a ‘difference’.

Similar is the choice of becoming self-employed. While a handful are ‘entrepreneurs’ in search of size, scale and summits, the majority are ‘alterpreneurs’ who strike out on their own leveraging their knowledge, skills and contacts as an alternative to the regular corporate grind.The trick, really, is figuring out your own personal equation, instead of living by what you saw scrawled on the Blackboard of Life by people before you.

Rashmi Bansal is a graduate of IIM Ahmedabad and founder-editor of the popular youth magazine JAM (www.jammag.com).

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