Sunday, March 5, 2017

10 Reasons Why Bangalore Airport Rocks

I’ve spent a lot of time airports last year. You can probably tell by how I’m motivated to write this article, and make it a listicle at that. 10 specific, bulleted reasons. That means I’ve really thought about it.

1.       Squeaky clean eat off the commode lid washrooms – Delhi, Vadodara, Abu Dhabi, Dubai….Let’s just say I’m so relieved (mentally) when I finally get back to Bangalore airport and wander into the washroom behind all the other girls going in groups. It’s shiny. It’s dry. There’s always a smiling lady who greets me as though she loves her job and feels happy to see me and she points me to the hidden tissue papers.

2.       Seat Covers – Yes, this is also about washrooms. Bangalore airport gives you disposable toiler seat covers. Since my entire family makes fun of me when I hunt these down in grocery store and carry them around in my purse, this is a big deal.

3.       Access to sanitary napkins – And one more. They tried the vending machines, but the science behind this has yet to perfect itself. However, now notices say that sanitary napkins are available on demand. I’d prefer easy and interaction free mode on this, but well, they tried.

Okay so the weightage on evaluating airports seems to sway very much toward washrooms. But I think a washroom reflects the basic standard you are happy with and says much about everything else. Mumbai International terminal comes close. Now onto the rest.

4.       Hatti Kapi – This little modern traditional coffee joint is a pleasure to come back to after a long trip. It’s got the nostalgia of homemade deep fried vadas, pure organic jiggery filter coffee, and served to you by a dignified older gentleman with ‘senior’ written on his T-shirt. Points for inclusiveness. All the aspects of being served Mysuru filter coffee in your favourite traditional uncle’s house.

5.       Sparrows – I loved this so much I wrote another article on it once when my plane was delayed for what seemed like forever. These little birds hop around the food court cute, bold and unafraid. Banished from the Bangalore of old where they were cohabitants of every house, bringing joy to children in the backyard, they thrive here in the strangest of circumstances. What this means for airport maintenance, I don’t know, but I love them.

6.       Celebrations – Bangalore airport is always celebrating. Diwali, Christmas, Karnataka Rajyotsava…. And they do this with style. Dance troupes, bands, orchestras, giant displays, promotions… they’ve taken the mundane transit experience and made it one of community. Even for the transient moment you’re passing through, you feel like you’re more than a traveler.

7.       Taxi! – Bangalore airport reacts fast to keep up with the choices of commuting. I remember how the regular curb side pickups became more organized, the queue managers got longer and more ziggy zaggy, people were employed to direct passengers and organize cabbies. Every time I go along at an indecent hour, the guy takes the cab number, my phone number and where I’m going. (I hope in a non-stalker manner I hope) Ola and Ubers started confusing the system, and honking was deafening in the drop off section. The airport then marked out an ‘app pick up’ section, had the apps bring people to the airport, put up signage. Now there’s no dearth of choice and no waiting time – you get out, you get into a cab of your choice and off you go. A metro line from my home to the departure gate would be good, but I’m not complaining.

8.       Traffic management – There’s always been lines and lines of vehicles getting in and out. I know over the years this has only grown. For a while there was the insane deafening honking, but they reacted fast and kept introducing new traffic flows, crossing guards, parking supervisors. Given the sheer number of vehicles driving in and out, there’s never a traffic jam that I’ve seen.

9.       Overnight parking – I just discovered overnight parking at the airport. Sometimes on day trips or two or three day trips, I love to drive down, park my car under the parking lot camera and be on my way. The parking fee for up to three of four days works out cheaper than cabs, and I feel safer to drive myself. Especially after a few sleepy cab drivers in the indecent hours of the morning caused me many heart palpitations.

10.   The airport app – There’s an airport app. You download it and you access a world of information on your phone. This is a good touch, and done so swiftly. Now you know if you have an app….you’ve arrived.

Although there’s still miles to go, it’s obvious to me that this is an airport that listens to its commuters, responds fast and tries to make things as easy as possible. Of course, I may be biased, it is my hometown. But I can’t ignore the feeling of pride that wells up in me every time I land here.

The newsletter phenomenon – part 2

Behind the scenes
So the newsletter is here to stay, is still much loved, and still the popular kid in school. While part 1 of this article talked about when it’s agood call to use a newsletter, we now get to the cooking. There’s practical nuances that work behind the scenes to make the newsletter an effective tool – frequency, content, technology, and just simply the skills and resources needed to create it.


The frequency and regularity is important. This depends on how easy or difficult it is to source content, the effort going into design and layout, and mindspace of your audience. The newsletter that arrives promptly in your mailbox at the same time, same day every week makes you believe it’s credible and dependable. And therefore the news in it is also credible and dependable.

To ensure regular streams of content you need a network of sources who are enthusiastic and willing to provide news on your publishing schedule, besides their day jobs. Packaging content is important – tiny digestible bites with goto links for more information. Graphical treatment of key points or emotive use of colour and design create the ‘mood’ to receive information. Engagement devices such as contests, feedback, and a call to crowdsource content make audiences feel included.

Then of course there’s technology. Is your newsletter a pdf delivered by email, or an emailer, or is it an e-zine? Or perhaps it’s just a news stream on your website that is delivered to mailboxes? The technology must be chosen based on the receptiveness of the audience. In one internal newsletter I worked on, the technology evolved with the audience. It began as a pdf, then became an interactive pdf, then grew into a slick e-book. But following an acquisition which changed employee demographics, 50% of them were not receptive to the e-book, so we scaled it back to a pdf. It’s most important to reach people – the technology is a means to an end.

And who will do all this work? Admin, CSR, sales teams, businesses and change programs would believe that that this is an hour’s work tops for a coms person. Coms people do have superhuman powers, but not here. It needs the skills of writing, design, and whatever technology you are using – maybe html, flash, maybe a tool subscription.

The newsletter generally heralds a time in the organization where there is a thirst for information, and a compelling need to share it.  While it is a positive climate for communication, newsletters are the ‘last mile’ connect. In a newsletter, the amount of information that can be shared is limited, and its job is to ‘push’ the content until a ‘pull’ is created – where people themselves visit the regular channels frequently.

Newsletters must eventually pave the way for a strong aggregated channel such as a single monthly or weekly communique, the intranet or website. In the food-related dessert analogy I use here, the intranet or website is the buffet where people can choose what information is relevant and helpful to their work. They can choose how much they want, look around and see what they may want later, and keep coming back whenever they want.

So what the ideal newsletter essentially says is “Bon appetite!”  
 

Monday, December 26, 2016

The newsletter phenomenon: Part 1 - “This calls for a newsletter!”


(This is a two part article on newsletters – part 1)

Every coms person has come across this – the newsletter phenomenon. It’s when suddenly everyone in the organization is overwhelmed with the need to communicate (a job too well done by the coms head, perhaps?). Admin wants a newsletter to tell people they’ve recently upgraded the washroom. CSR wants more volunteers. Businesses want multiple newsletters – one for sales teams, one for customers, and one to let global know they’re on the job. Change programs want one because for the life of them, they can’t justify their very existence on the very intricate multi-colored graphic from their ppt slide with the objectives and methodologies in font size 8.  
Now just to be clear. I love newsletters.

As a communications device, a well-designed and thoughtful newsletter is the chocolate cake of coms – looks delectable, delivers just the right information right to your mailbox, so easy to consume. And if crafted with care, leaves you wanting more. Which is exactly the coms person’s evil design – to ultimately lead you to the mothership, the intranet or website.  
But just like the chocolate cake, if eaten every day for breakfast, lunch and dinner, ugh. Overkill. No longer interesting to the reader nor useful for the sender. If everyone is serving dessert at their stalls, no one wants to buy any.

We must understand the humble newsletter as a communications tool  - in the context of the purpose, the time, and the pulse of the receiver. Typically, a newsletter is useful in these scenarios:
1.       When an organization is vast and unstructured – In organizations with multiple businesses, each one needs to reach out to their people to create a sense of core team or a shared vision. The same goes for customers – a conglomerate selling a diverse portfolio needs to create separate nuggets of relevant and exciting news for the customers of their specific industry, product or technology.

2.       When the intranet or website is ineffective – The more sustainable way to communicate is intranet or web. But many intranets or websites are ill structured making it frustrating to find information. In this case, a newsletter is an interim solution, curating content and linking it with web or intranet, so that people know where to find what. At times too, an older audience or one that is not well on-boarded into the technology may struggle.

3.       When change is in the air Especially in times of change, it is important to over communicate, so that there is a sense of reassurance or something to focus on. A newsletter in this context is extremely high impact.

4.       When there’s too much to say, but all to the same audience – In the coms maturity cycle of any organization, there’s usually a time the newsletter phenomenon hits hard. Then your mailbox is filled with them, and pfft…it’s over. Overkill. If there is a common audience, and many teams trying to communicate to them, it makes sense to have a single aggregator newsletter.
The newsletter has evolved from a simple communication containing information to one that is dynamic, and can deliver return on investment. Far from becoming outdated, it has redefined itself to the current digital environment and can now offer advanced tracking and effectiveness metrics. A newsletter can let you know who read it, how much time they spent, which article interested the reader most, and entice people to act. For internal audiences, this could help put a metric to that nebulous HR parameter - employee engagement, or for customers it could generate and qualify sales leads, and become the first touchpoint to reel in the person to a longer conversation.

No doubt about it. Newsletters are still around, still making waves, and still stealing the show.  

Wait for part 2 of this article: The newsletter phenomenon – Behind the scenes

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Moms, move over. Dads, lean in.

I had another conversation on this, my pet peeve, this time with a good friend from my past. He asked me how I ‘manage’ when I travel. And also was very impressed that my husband could ‘manage’ our son in my absence. Although I’ve had this conversation many many, MANY times, I was a bit surprised because I thought we had similar upbringing, and didn’t expect this conversation from him.
It made me think. 

I’ve also had conversations with close friends who are dads-to-be, whose idea of fatherhood is EXACTLY the same as my idea of motherhood. Means they want the whole experience. The sleepless nights, hours of unexplainable crankiness, cutting back on work, tracking their child’s littlest physical need and emotional mood. This conversation ends in them sighing regretfully, because they usually defer to their wives’ idea of parenting, which is that she knows best and makes the rules of parenting, thus dictating the role of the father.
There’s a clearing in the middle which represents perfect equal parenting, and a long walk from both sides to revel in this idyllic pasture.

Moms, get off your pedestal. Facilitate equal rights to parenting.
You know as much as you were taught or exposed to which may be more than your husband, because of the way girls are shaped from childhood. This does not make you a better parent than your husband. For you, equal parenting means being clear from the start that you don’t know it all. Because you don’t. Every mom will tell you that despite all the ‘training’ she got on this prior to having a baby, it’s a different and unique journey. A journey that is enriching because you figure it out as you go along and this emotional and mental engagement in your child is what makes it fulfilling. Taking dad along on this journey means stepping back and letting some things go so that dad can step in. Expect more from dad and give him room to experiment. And if you’re the sort who likes the control you get from maintaining that the realm of parenting can only be done by you, then get over it – that’s unfair and a bit unrealistic.  
Dads, lean in. Claim equal rights to parenting.
You know as much as you were taught or exposed to, which depends completely on your childhood environment. This does not make you better or less knowledgeable than your wife. And if you didn’t get the exposure, there’s a wealth of experience to draw from; people have had kids since forever. There’s forums online, reams of written material, older and wiser family members, and of course, your wife to discuss and learn with. Parenting is a unique journey for each person, that is enriching because you figure it out as you go along and this emotional and mental engagement in your child is what makes it fulfilling. And if you’re the sort who finds it convenient that your wife ‘manages’ the house and kids, then get over it – that’s unfair and a bit cowardly.


And to everyone else, recognize the stereotype - they creep up in everyday conversations - and call your own thinking on it, and then invite others to challenge these notions as well.

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

The virtual world gets (horribly) real

Cartoon credit goes to.......

Recently, a whatsapp group admin was murdered because he expelled a member for unacceptable behavior. Also recently, an unthinking comment on a (usually) well-moderated group of mothers went communal because the group was unmoderated for seven hours, while the admin chose to spend those hours with her kids instead. The admin was stalked, threated and forced to get police protection.

The virtual world just got unmistakably, horribly real.

Until now, social networking offered many a way to connect with communities and like-minded people that surpassed the physical boundaries they had to live in so far. A world they could not find with neighbours, work colleagues or sometimes even their own families. Until now, it’s been a cozy little Utopia.
But mobile penetration is higher than the use of toilets. And personal space, the rules of social engagement, the need for civil behavior and even the legal enforcement of these had never come up. We need to realize now – social media and society are one and the same. The virtual world is made up of people. Only until now, those people were still experimenting with it. Today’s generation are digital natives, who learn about phones and internet along with their first baby words. Also – smart phones and internet penetration has only scraped the tip of the iceberg. While currently only 34% of India’s population is online, industry is leading a frantic race to increase users and get everyone online.

So from a sociological context what we have on our hands is a potential nightmare. A world where under the notion of anonymity and no geographical, social or culturally enforced limitations, it’s easy for the best of us to lose grounding and rationality and give way to the dark side. I shared once a video of a drunk cop on a metro train and was all judgemental….it later came to light that he was suffering a stroke while riding home in the metro. I reposted with chastisement, but the damage was done by collective social media fueled by thousands of such shares. I shudder to think about how easy it is for the committed and conscience-less anti-social personality to deal in murky, downright creepy exchange of ideas, material, trade or worse.
Cyber laws and their enforcement are met with the ambiguity of free speech and the complete confusion on how to handle this new type of social scenario that transcends the limitations of the law.

More than laws, a society is governed by peer pressure and conformity. How will India’s diversity, and more terrifyingly – India’s hyper discriminatory, over critical, self-righteous culture translate online?

Will the 34% of people online rapidly mature and be able to nudge newbies into behaving?

We need to realize that a personal moral code is carried over into our online social life. And if that is a common moral code, then we have a civil society. While India is held together by several moral codes, each was limited to a geography, a religion, a community. The great melting pot is around the corner, and let’s face it. India is volatile – passions run high, rationalism is perceived to be anti-national, and communal sentiment is a pile of tinder, with politicians just waiting to light a match.  
Social media is going to rip off the paper thin façade that holds us together off and let the crazy out. It’s the wild wild west where everyone has a gun, and triggers ‘send’ with no sense of reality or consequence.

Is it time to log out? Or is it the right time to log in?

 

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

The cranky pot whiny monster

Beat the traffic, rein in the road rage, and finally get to my parent’s house to pick up my son.

Time check. If I leave here in 10 mins I’ll be home by 7.30pm then 30 minutes for dinner 15 minutes for bath 15 minutes story time and he’ll be asleep by 8.30 that makes it 10 hours of sleep before he wakes up at 6.30am and can catch the bus for school without being cranky all morning still not enough sleep for his age but can’t help that now that’s what it’s like having a working mom he better learn to deal with it…
“Hi Dad….DHRUVVV, come on get your shoes, let’s go!”

“NO.”

Deep breaths.
Dad’s voice floating in from behind the kitchen counter “You want a sandwich?”

“No thanks Dad. I got to rush. Come on sweetie. We have to go now. Dad, has he eaten? When did he eat last? You know he gets so cranky if he doesn’t eat……PUT ON YOUR SHOES DHRUV! ”

Whining and shoe finding drama in the background. Probably hungry.
“Really, Dad, I mean why can’t he just eat and be in a good mood. He won’t eat, then he gets cranky and doesn’t want to eat, but all the time he’s hungry and I’m trying to force him to eat so he’ll be in a better mood. Kids are just so illogical!”

A sandwich has appeared on the kitchen counter. I wolf it down. It has been 6 hours since lunch.
“I mean, seriously is it so hard to know that when you’re hungry? I mean I try to teach him this all the time – if you’re hungry, eat, and don’t be a cranky pot whiny monster.”

More whining and shoe finding drama in the background. Finally got all his stuff found his shoes checked his bag everything’s there its been more than 10 minutes now recalibrating he will sleep only by 9 now ruining everything sigh better prepare for a cranky morning.
“OK, bye Dad. Got to go and stuff the monster, he’s hungry and will be super whiny all the way home. Thanks for the sandwich!”

Apparently kids never do learn how to eat when they’re hungry and not be cranky pot whiny monsters.

 

Monday, March 14, 2016

The death of the intranet and the birth of (gasp!) the meme!


So it has officially been 12 years now that my love story with internal coms continues. And intranets in this story, being the backbone of internal coms, have been the ‘Coffee Day’ of frequent rendezvous in this analogy.
I think a little backstory is called for. My first internship was with i-Vista Solutions, and one of their first products was an intranet. I wrote the marketing content for it, sat with techies who patiently deconstructed the techspeak for the average arts student. My first job at ABB then had me spend massive amounts of time on CAWP – a Lotus Notes powered system of databases with a user interface that served as the intranet. Incidentally, when I came back to ABB 10 years later and saw my name under the pages ‘page created by Nandini Naik’, it felt akin to finding my star on the Hollywood walk of fame. At HP, I was part of an entire team that made updates to the intranet, for the whole of the company, worldwide. Clearly, they were already living in the future.

Then was Logica – when I fell head over heels in love with the intranet as the definitive internal coms solution. Swamped with the need to communicate to employees, give individual teams freedom to communicate, but maintain control over the messages and grammar (!), the intranet was my savior and my career launchpad. Over three migrations on various platforms, I evangelized intranet with zeal, marketed it as the win-win solution for everyone. As the responsibility of the organization, not the coms team. Had collaborative workshops with each team to understand what they wanted to say, how they could say it and what functionalities were best suited. Trained a network of ‘Intranet SPOCS’ who learned the tool, understood its value and then ran with it. It was the dream. The last migration to MOS gave us a world class, intuitive intranet that everyone was proud to own, not a tool that was part of the coms mandate. When Logica was acquired by CGI, final validation came from the fact that the intranet was the tool chosen in the integration discussions that would stay.
Now, back to the present. I met the founder of i-Vista riding a shuttle to catch a flight. They had moved away from their intranet product years ago. Hard to sell he said. I know. I ‘sold’ it internally for years.  Without a coms person crazed with evangelical zeal and armed with budgets pushing the decision from inside, it was a hard sell. Came back to ABB 12 years later, and still using CAWP, but in the process of migrating. Just saying, despite being passionately involved with intranets, I now go to LinkedIn to search for people within my own company. Met an ex-colleague who now works with a major lifestyle brand. They’ve just adopted Facebook@work. He says they only use intranet as a document repository now, and plan to communicate with employees only on FB. No need to train, evangelize, hard sell. Crowd-sourced content that can be moderated. Employee engagement at its best – through a truly social network.

Over a decade, is the writing on the wall? This love story seems right where it started, and destined to end where star-crossed lovers end up with all odds against them.
Reluctantly, I agree that Facebook is probably a better platform – easy to post, share, moderate information, balance of text, video and words, and let’s face it, fun. If you don’t have to force people to be there, that’s half the battle won. In my love story of internal coms, I must say, I have never imagined the meme rising up as an official mode of communication.

The times, they are a-changing.  

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Day 6 – Observations on inclusiveness

I had two experiences over a trip to Delhi, coincidently both around inclusiveness.

Over coffee at the airport, my colleague narrated an incident where he had invited a group of HIV-affected* children to perform while planning a company-wide employee family event. He later decided not to have them at the event, due to much discussion over the ‘risk’ this would expose employees and their families to. Instead, he later organized a visit to their institution with a few interested employees.

We stayed at Lemon Tree hotel in Delhi. At breakfast the next morning, I heard a loud shuffling as a waiter walked past me. I looked up to this scene. A very pleasant and patient waiter, was transferring a tray of plates to the shuffling waiter, whom I recognized as being affected by Down’s syndrome. The waiter with Down’s syndrome tried to pick up the stack of plates, but was not able to. He then held his hands out, and his colleague lifted the stack of plates and put them into his arms, and he took them into the kitchen.**

How organizations, or people in every situations handle inclusiveness is purely based on attitude. In the first instance, it is an attitude of self-protection, closed and ‘safe’ in the way things are. In the second, it is an attitude of openness, where interpersonal skills and social learning define the way things are.

Many organizations mention activities where they visit NGOs and other institutions in inclusiveness reports. This is not inclusiveness, when you leave your safe space to play with ‘them’ in a limited-risk and time-bound experience. Inclusiveness is when you open your environment to people with special abilities, or from differing backgrounds, and importantly, change the environment for them to make it better for everyone.
 

*HIV-affected – this term doesn’t always mean HIV-infected; it also covers those who are related to someone who is infected, and the stigma carries on into their lives. HIV does not transfer over casual contact, shaking hands or hugging.  

**Note on Down’s syndrome – Lemon Tree hotels refers to people with Down’s syndrome as ‘happy people’ because of their unshakeable cheerfulness. Weak muscle tone and loose ligaments are often a problem for them, so picking up the tray was difficult for the waiter. His colleague understood this and put the tray into his hands. Physical motor coordination also works differently, hence the shuffling gait. The restaurant manager I spoke to says 15% of their employees are differently-abled, and all their employees know sign language.