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Read the passages given below carefully and answer the questions that follow.

leadership is the art of persuading your people to follow your bidding, without their realising your involvement, the archetype of its practice is N. R. Narayana Murthy, the chairman and managing director of the Rs $143.81$ crore Infosys Technologies (Infosys). For, the $52$-year-old CEO of the globalised software corporation – which he founded with seven friends, and a combined capital of Rs. $10,000$ in $1981$, and which now occupies the front ranks of the country’s most admired corporations – leads with the subtlest of weapons: personal example.

Infosys ranks only $578$th among the country’s listed companies, and sixth in the software sector, in terms of its turnover. But it is setting new standards for India Inc. through its practice of inter alia awarding stock options to its employees, putting the value of its intellectual assets and its brands on its balance-sheet, and conforming to the disclosure standards of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of the US. Behind all this is the stubborn personal subscription of its CEO to the underlying causes of wealth-creation, people-power and transparency. “What were choices earlier are compulsions now,” asserts Murthy.

In fact, the mirror images of Murthy, the man, can be found all over Infosys. His Company. His egalitarianism – which finds expression in such habits as using the 'same table and chair as anyone else in the organisation – is practised firmly when it comes to charting a course for the company’s future: everyone has a voice. "We have no hierarchy just for the sake of control."

Brimming with the conviction that customer satisfaction is the key to success, Murthy has built a fleet-footed human resource management system that treats employees as customers, using the resources of the organisation to meet their professional and personal needs. His instruments are not just top-of-the markets salaries, but also operational empowerment as well as every facility that an employee needs to focus on the job.

Just what methods does Murthy use to ensure that his DNA is replicated in his company? Not for him are the classical leadership genres – transactional or transformational, situational or visionary. His chosen style, instead, is to lead by example, ensuring that the CEO’s actions set the template for all Info scions.

Murthy believes that the betterment of man can be brought about through the "creation of wealth, legally and ethically". The personal example that he has set enabled his company to mirror those beliefs: tying his own rewards, and measuring his value to the company, to his ability to create wealth, and erecting systems for the company’s wealth to be shared by its people. Sums up Nandan Nilekani, $41$, deputy managing director, Infosys: “This is the future model of the corporation. Run an excellent company, and let the market increase its value to create wealth."

Although Murthy is one of the prime beneficiaries of the philosophy – his $10$ per cent stake in Infosys is worth Rs.$130$ crore today – in his book, the leader leads not by grabbing the- booty- but by teaching others to take what they deserve.

That’s why, on the Infosys’ balance-sheet, the value of Murthy’s intellectual capital is nowhere near the top, on the rationale, that the CEO, at $52$, is worth far less to his company than, say, a bright young programmer of $26.$ To spread the company’s wealth, Murthy has instituted stock options the first to do so in the country – for employees, creating $300$ millionaires and growing to $1000$ by $2000$.

To act as a beacon for his version of the learning organization, Murthy not only spends an hour a day trawling the Internet to learn about new technological developments in his field, he also makes as many luncheon appointments as he can with technical people and academicians – dons from the Indian Institutes of Technology for instance – systematically plumbing their depths for an understanding of new developments in InfoTech. Murthy’s objective is not just to stay abreast of the state of the art, but also to find a way to use that knowledge for the company.

Following Murthy’s example, Infosys has set up a technology advancement unit, whose mandate is to track, evaluate, and assimilate new techniques and methodologies. In fact, Murthy views learning not just as amassing data, but as a process that enables him to use the lessons from failure to achieve success. This self-corrective loop is what he demonstrates through his leadership during a crisis.

In $1995,$ for example, Infosys lost a Rs.$1 5$-crore account – then $20$ percent of its revenues – when the $69$ billion GE yanked its business from it. Instead of recriminations, Murthy activated Infosys’ machinery to understand why the business was taken away, and to leverage the learning for getting new clients instead. Feeling determined instead of guilty, his employees went on to sign up high profile customers like the Dollar $20$ billion Xerox, the Dollar 7 billion Levi Strauss, and the Dollar $14$ billion Nynex.

“You must have a multi-dimensional view of paradigms,” says the multi-tasking leader. The objective is obvious: ensure that Infosys’ perspective on its business and the world comes from as many vantage points as possible so that corporate strategy can be synthesised not from a narrow vision, but from a wide angle lens. In fact, Murthy still regrets that, in its initial years, infosys didn’t distill a multi-pronged understanding of the environment into its strategies, which forced it on to an incremental path that led revenues to snake up from Rs. $0.02$ crore to just Rs. $5$ crore in the first $10$ years.

It was after looking around itself instead of focusing on its initial business of banking software, that Infosys managed to accelerate. Today the company operates with stretch targets, setting distant goals and working backwards to get to them. The crucial pillar on which Murthy bases his ethical leadership is openness. Transparency, he reckons, is the clearest signal that one has nothing to hide. The personal manifestations of that are inter alia the practice of always giving complete information whenever any employee, customer, or investor asks for it: the loudly proclaimed insistence that every Info scion pay taxes and file returns; and a perpetually open office into which anyone can walk into.

But even as he tries to lead Infosys into cloning is own approach to enterprise, is Murthy choosing the best future for it? If Infosys grows with the same lack of ambition, the same softness of style, and the same absence of aggression, is it not cutting off avenues of growth that others may seize? As Infosys approaches the $21$st century, it is obvious that Murthy’s leadership will have to set ever-improving role models for his ever-learning company. After all, men grow old: companies shouldn’t.

Openness at Infosys includes:

  1. The payment of taxes.
  2. Giving complete information.
  3. Sharing secrets.
  4. Both A and B
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