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TelecoTelecom Trends - The BSNL Story
Srinivasa U Rangan, Associate Professor,
holds the Kingsbury Term Chair at the Asian
Institute and Institute for Latin American Business
at Babson. Rangan's research, teaching, and
consulting focus on competitive strategy, joint
ventures, strategic alliances, global competition,
and national competitiveness. Recently he was at the
ISB to conduct a GAMP programme on strategy. One of
the participants present was Kuldeep Goyal, CMD,
BSNL India’s largest telecommunication company.
CEE Emerge brought the two together in a post-
programme discussion, where they shared views about
opportunities and challenges of a telecom PSU, how
BSNL beats competition at home and abroad, its stand
on human capital, and finally some strategies on how
to leverage on being a PSU.
Professor Srini Rangan - Let me begin by stating
that I think in some respects you fall in a very
fortunate position. BSNL is probably making a
transition, from being a pure PSU into a more market
responsive kind of organisation, you also have
enormous strengths, you are sitting on a lot of
cash, you have a significant installed base in terms
of wire line and wireless , you have actually had
the advantage of having to wrestle with tough
domestic competition, and therefore have sharpened
your abilities in terms of how to compete against
private operators – all this within the uniqueness
of a PSU. So when you want to globalise you may be
able to exploit your strengths, leverage it much
better, you can probably buy up companies, acquire
them etc. What other opportunities do you foresee in
terms of transferring knowledge and capabilities to
other places? In the next five years what will be
your strategic priorities?
Kuldeep Goyal - The Indian markets is going to be
saturated in say the next five years or so. The
growth will taper off significantly, and therefore
operations outside is going to be really important.
Mobile and mobile broadband will be very important
for to get us into TV operations and the Wi-max. So
indeed it is our experience that we can leverage on,
while going international. We have started looking
to bid for licenses wherever they opened up, but we
hadn’t thought about acquisitions. After having
discussions with you, I feel that it is one more
option for faster growth and it helps in
accelerating the learning processes.
Srini Rangan - In terms of organisational
capabilities, you have a work force which is
largely, what I would call, with a mind frame of the
PSU operation. As you try to go abroad, or for that
matter as you become more open, do you see this mind
set as an impediment or an advantage?
Kuldeep Goyal - One set of our workforce is quite
skilled. They have been through number of
technologies which have been inducted in the telecom
network. But yes, the majority of the work force is
trained only in formal operations like call
rectification, provisioning of connections etc. So a
skilled work force is definitely useful for
operations.
Srini Rangan - Are you already moving in the
direction of lateral induction of highly competent
managers and technical people?
Kuldeep Goyal - Right now the induction is at the
entry level only. Lateral induction is still at a
nascent stage, but we are seriously considering the
same, especially in the fields of marketing and IT.
Srini Rangan - That takes me to the next question.
Historically PSUs have not done any marketing. They
have not even done selling, because they are pretty
much monopolies. But now we are moving towards a
different milieu. How has this transition of having
to face competitors such as Bharti and others,
caused you to move in the direction of creating and
strengthening your marketing capabilities
Kuldeep Goyal - So far our focus has not been on
marketing. What we have is a ‘pull marketing’ not a
‘push marketing’. Customer comes and then we service
him. But now we have moved our focus of going out
and reaching our customers. We are putting in place
dedicated teams who will be exclusively in charge of
sales. We plan to train 20 percent of our work
force, in sales and marketing, and of course give
them product expertise. We are engaging some
marketing agencies on the job, and in fact we have a
new brand ambassador actress Deepika Padukone. We
are now heading towards ‘push marketing’.
Srini Rangan - PSUs have a difficult time motivating
people. Essentially there is no compensation or
incentive for performance, there are no systems
which rewards performance. As you take on domestic
competitors, and eventually go global, what are your
plans in terms of how you want to move towards
different incentive based performance measures and
matrix, systems and processes?
Kuldeep Goyal - Right now we practice a system of
incentive that is uniform. Even the productivity
linked incentives are uniformed. I agree that this
doesn’t induce a good worker to give more
productivity. The PSU is governed by a PSU based
committee. Recently the committee has come out with
recommendations, where performance linked incentives
have been suggested. In addition we plan to start
some incentive scheme within the organisation. In
fact we have already started a scheme where for
every connection they provide, the field staff is
eligible for some incentive.
Srini Rangan - If you look at all your competitors
Bharti or Reliance - they have poached people from
your organisation. You seem to be haemorrhaging
talent. How are you going to stop that?
Kuldeep Goyal - This trend is primarily due to the
compensation package difference which is
unmatchable. But then if you look at the total
attrition rate which has taken place, we have about
3 percent attrition. It is not much at the entry
level but is more in the top and middle management.
To counter this, what we do is have further
recruitment. For a PSU these are the limitations. Do
you have any suggestions about how to get over the
curves and controls which often curtails our growth?
Srini Rangan - In India it is going to take quite a
bit of effort and time for PSUs to make a transition
into a market oriented, independent and shareholder
responsible kind of organisation. You have to think
of organizational processes, you have to think of
organisational systems, you have to think of
incentives, you have to change the people’s mindset,
and how they are going to work, and you also have to
think in terms of innovations, products and services
which you are going to offer. The other thing you
can do is strengthen your installed base. Here I am
specifically thinking of corporate clients, large
corporate clients to whom I am sure you are
providing service. Remember your rivals are always
trying to poach that. Have you thought of how you
can try to retain the large corporate clients?
Kuldeep Goyal - We are trying to provide a complete
network where all the services - wire line services,
wireless services, broadband services – are given to
them and they have only one agency to deal. It will
also include services like video telephony, video
conference, audio conference, etc. In fact we are
also in the process of launching new services like
third generation mobile services, and we will be the
first to market it in the country. With that we hope
to retain our corporate customers and high end
residential customers.
Srini Rangan - Lot of questions answered. It was a
pleasure talking to you Mr Goyal.
Kuldeep Goyal- Thank you very much. My pleasure.
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