Harsh Shrivastava's CHASS presentation on September 25,2012

Harsh Shrivastava
Harsh ShrivastavaHead, Corporate Affairs & Communications at Feedback Infra
PRESENTATION TO
“THE HUMAN DIMENSION”
BY
HARSH SHRIVASTAVA
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2012
People AND Profits?
How can HASS Help?
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
1
After lunch blues? A FANTHASSTIC session!
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
2
Finding
A
New
Track for
Humanities
Arts
Social
Sciences
To achieve
International
Cooperation
Profit: the one, true path!
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
3
 Business drives everything.
 Government also supports business
 Productivity Commission
 AusTrade offices
 COAG debates
 Academic support:
 B-schools and law schools
 Science seems to be also subordinated to this goal
 Medicine, chemistry, biology
HASS: Harry Potter before Hogwarts
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
4
 Unbalanced: HASS
 Unfunded.
 So far: unconcerned.
 Although the presence of the Minister AND the Shadow
Minister is good.
 Seemingly unlinked from the daily concerns of the
Footy fans or Herald Sun readers.
 The Wizards of HASS vs. the Muggles of Money
Further behind in other countries
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
5
 India
 350,000 MBAs; far fewer historians, anthroplogists, social
scientists. Students give these up for “safer” government jobs.
 Cambridge HASS conference in India: First session
 Delhi’s new HASS university
 Singapore and HK: all business, all the time
 Qatar, by emphasizing the A of HASS is different.
 Latin America: literature, but what else?
 Africa: anthropology …
Is HASS a luxury, only for the rich (34 OECD countries)?
But other countries are bigger, faster
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
6
 34 OECD countries have a 2010 population of 1.25
billion and GNP of 42 trillion USD
 BRIICS alone have a population of close to 3 billion
and a GNP of 18 trillion USD.
 More importantly, these countries are growing much
faster. (2010 OECD, 3.8; China 10.4, India 8.4,
Indonesia 6.1)
Yet businesses struggle in these countries
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
7
 It is difficult to do business in:
 Africa
 Brazil
 China
 India
 Indonesia
 Russia
 … is the common complaint of all CEOs!
Q: What are MNCs missing in these markets …
People: the missing link
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
8
A: The Human Dimension
Consumers are people first ...
As they get richer, their complex human dimensions
are increasingly important.
To paraphrase Thomas Friedman …
I might buy your Lexus, but first you’d better understand
my olive tree!
One Lexus, but many olive trees
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
9
 What was the history of this olive tree?
 Of other olive trees?
 Of other olive groves?
 How does the olive tree define my life?
 In plays, poetry, and prose?
 What did women have to do with this olive tree?
 Or immigrants?
 Will my kids’ “Olive App” for their tablets, be enough
to explain this tree’s importance?
Need ALL the HASS to sell more
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
10
 Markets are big, but they are also diverse.
 Income is no longer the only criteria.
 People consume products or services for different reasons.
 All the disciplines
have a business angle.
 Cellphones are a good example
iPhone 5 vs. Galaxy S3
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
11
 After all the patent wars are over, these two iconic
phones still need to be sold—round the world to
people who already own a phone.
 Apple and Samsung are not selling them only on
their tech specs, but on many other “human” criteria.
 Many of the HASS disciplines used as inputs in the design
and the promotion of these phones and cloud services.
 Galaxy S3: “Designed for Humans” …
 … as if they knew about “The Human Dimension”!
 Nokia, Blackberry: engineering, business doesn’t sell.
The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #1
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
12
 It’s not only minerals that you export, but also
movies, museums, marketing services, apart from
motorcars and manufactured widgets.
 High-end services like consulting (2.8 bn),
architecture, tourism, and even education (15 bn)
need a more holistic and far deeper understanding
of your foreign customers and potential customers.
 Your competition is already doing this:
 Hollywood, Hyundai, and Huawei
The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #2
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
13
 Understanding foreigners is good; understanding
your fellow citizens who have come from across the
globe to become Australians is better.
 Sandridge Bridge in Melbourne is a great example of how
HASS can help bring the world to our workday lives.
 Understanding the cultures, crafts, cuisines, cities of
these 128 (and counting) countries is a good way to
sell to an increasingly affluent middle-class.
 Westpac’s win in the Indian immigrants’ market depends
on how it uses HASS; else it will leave this big
demographic to our ICICI Bank.
The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #3
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
14
 Marketing departments need to work with HASS to
sell more.
 But HR departments also need to “deploy” HASS to
get the most out of their multi-cultural workplaces.
 Eg. Speakers at this conference; the staff of CHASS.
 If we don’t understand where we’re coming from
(historically, culturally, geographically), how can we
walk together to reach our organization’s goals.
 And individual goals too!
 http://wadhwa.com/2012/05/17/washington-post-why-
silicon-valley-needs-humanities-students/
The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #4
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
15
 Business usually reacts to government and policies
 Business lobbying to government is linked to
economics, but politics, often trumps economics.
 Politics is shaped by humans and our concerns.
 If business worked with the HASS communities, it
can help shape the government’s agenda.
 Mining is a good example of how “whining” doesn’t work.
The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #5
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
16
 The world is changing at a faster rate—is a truism.
 But individuals and the collective society and nations
and the globe are also changing.
 HASS can help make sense of this accelerating
change—and point to the future.
 Will the Arab Spring mean new markets—for what?
 How will rising nationalism in China play out—and what
will this mean for Korea and Japan
 What will multiculturalism look like five years hence?
The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #6
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
17
 Super funds and insurance funds are big (nearly $2
trillion).
 They are looking for stable, long-term investments.
 Economic forecasting is not enough to get the best
returns.
 HASS disciplines can help better predict Australia
and the world’s future.
 Will China be a democracy in fifteen years?
 How will Australians react if the mining moolah ends?
 Is gay marriage foreseeable? What’s the business impact?
Startups: HASS more valuable than MBA
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
18
 Previous five slides—big companies.
 HASS can help startup
 Most are in urban services
 Widgets are all from China
 Restaurants—what do people like to eat (culture).
 Hardrock—new gym driven by adventure (TV)
 Festivals—understand human curiosity
 Floriade in Canberra
 Mural festival of Sheffield, Tasmania
People AND Policies: How HASS can help
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
19
 Rising prosperity is making more people concerned
about their culture; making it more difficult to sell
anything more than just “stuff”.
 Similarly, rising democracy (including information) is
making it more easy for people to resist policies that may
be economically correct, but don’t appeal to their human
concerns.
 In both cases, HASS can help
HASS for international cooperation
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
20
Australia’s HASS system can help promote Australia’s
soft power in three ways.
 Help other countries replicate the institutional
structure:
 CHASS Philippines; CHASS Vietnam; CHASS Iraq
 Make AusAID more effective.
 Australia can host many cross-country HASS
dialogues—involving its immigrants.
 India and Pakistan; Thailand and Cambodia;
 Israel and Palestine?
Wizards WITH Muggles: HASS and the All Ords
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
21
 Next year’s conference:
 Delegates from the 25/500 companies that comprise the
Sydney All Ordinaries Index.
 3/38 speakers from companies.
 Sessions on the “What” and the “How” of how HASS can
work more with business (and not the other way around).
 Learn from the relative success of the Arts.
HASS
HARSH.EMAIL@GMAIL.COM
November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum
22
Questions?
1 of 22

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Harsh Shrivastava's CHASS presentation on September 25,2012

  • 1. PRESENTATION TO “THE HUMAN DIMENSION” BY HARSH SHRIVASTAVA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2012 People AND Profits? How can HASS Help? November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 1
  • 2. After lunch blues? A FANTHASSTIC session! November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 2 Finding A New Track for Humanities Arts Social Sciences To achieve International Cooperation
  • 3. Profit: the one, true path! November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 3  Business drives everything.  Government also supports business  Productivity Commission  AusTrade offices  COAG debates  Academic support:  B-schools and law schools  Science seems to be also subordinated to this goal  Medicine, chemistry, biology
  • 4. HASS: Harry Potter before Hogwarts November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 4  Unbalanced: HASS  Unfunded.  So far: unconcerned.  Although the presence of the Minister AND the Shadow Minister is good.  Seemingly unlinked from the daily concerns of the Footy fans or Herald Sun readers.  The Wizards of HASS vs. the Muggles of Money
  • 5. Further behind in other countries November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 5  India  350,000 MBAs; far fewer historians, anthroplogists, social scientists. Students give these up for “safer” government jobs.  Cambridge HASS conference in India: First session  Delhi’s new HASS university  Singapore and HK: all business, all the time  Qatar, by emphasizing the A of HASS is different.  Latin America: literature, but what else?  Africa: anthropology … Is HASS a luxury, only for the rich (34 OECD countries)?
  • 6. But other countries are bigger, faster November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 6  34 OECD countries have a 2010 population of 1.25 billion and GNP of 42 trillion USD  BRIICS alone have a population of close to 3 billion and a GNP of 18 trillion USD.  More importantly, these countries are growing much faster. (2010 OECD, 3.8; China 10.4, India 8.4, Indonesia 6.1)
  • 7. Yet businesses struggle in these countries November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 7  It is difficult to do business in:  Africa  Brazil  China  India  Indonesia  Russia  … is the common complaint of all CEOs! Q: What are MNCs missing in these markets …
  • 8. People: the missing link November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 8 A: The Human Dimension Consumers are people first ... As they get richer, their complex human dimensions are increasingly important. To paraphrase Thomas Friedman … I might buy your Lexus, but first you’d better understand my olive tree!
  • 9. One Lexus, but many olive trees November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 9  What was the history of this olive tree?  Of other olive trees?  Of other olive groves?  How does the olive tree define my life?  In plays, poetry, and prose?  What did women have to do with this olive tree?  Or immigrants?  Will my kids’ “Olive App” for their tablets, be enough to explain this tree’s importance?
  • 10. Need ALL the HASS to sell more November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 10  Markets are big, but they are also diverse.  Income is no longer the only criteria.  People consume products or services for different reasons.  All the disciplines have a business angle.  Cellphones are a good example
  • 11. iPhone 5 vs. Galaxy S3 November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 11  After all the patent wars are over, these two iconic phones still need to be sold—round the world to people who already own a phone.  Apple and Samsung are not selling them only on their tech specs, but on many other “human” criteria.  Many of the HASS disciplines used as inputs in the design and the promotion of these phones and cloud services.  Galaxy S3: “Designed for Humans” …  … as if they knew about “The Human Dimension”!  Nokia, Blackberry: engineering, business doesn’t sell.
  • 12. The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #1 November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 12  It’s not only minerals that you export, but also movies, museums, marketing services, apart from motorcars and manufactured widgets.  High-end services like consulting (2.8 bn), architecture, tourism, and even education (15 bn) need a more holistic and far deeper understanding of your foreign customers and potential customers.  Your competition is already doing this:  Hollywood, Hyundai, and Huawei
  • 13. The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #2 November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 13  Understanding foreigners is good; understanding your fellow citizens who have come from across the globe to become Australians is better.  Sandridge Bridge in Melbourne is a great example of how HASS can help bring the world to our workday lives.  Understanding the cultures, crafts, cuisines, cities of these 128 (and counting) countries is a good way to sell to an increasingly affluent middle-class.  Westpac’s win in the Indian immigrants’ market depends on how it uses HASS; else it will leave this big demographic to our ICICI Bank.
  • 14. The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #3 November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 14  Marketing departments need to work with HASS to sell more.  But HR departments also need to “deploy” HASS to get the most out of their multi-cultural workplaces.  Eg. Speakers at this conference; the staff of CHASS.  If we don’t understand where we’re coming from (historically, culturally, geographically), how can we walk together to reach our organization’s goals.  And individual goals too!  http://wadhwa.com/2012/05/17/washington-post-why- silicon-valley-needs-humanities-students/
  • 15. The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #4 November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 15  Business usually reacts to government and policies  Business lobbying to government is linked to economics, but politics, often trumps economics.  Politics is shaped by humans and our concerns.  If business worked with the HASS communities, it can help shape the government’s agenda.  Mining is a good example of how “whining” doesn’t work.
  • 16. The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #5 November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 16  The world is changing at a faster rate—is a truism.  But individuals and the collective society and nations and the globe are also changing.  HASS can help make sense of this accelerating change—and point to the future.  Will the Arab Spring mean new markets—for what?  How will rising nationalism in China play out—and what will this mean for Korea and Japan  What will multiculturalism look like five years hence?
  • 17. The HASS Imperative for Australia Inc. #6 November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 17  Super funds and insurance funds are big (nearly $2 trillion).  They are looking for stable, long-term investments.  Economic forecasting is not enough to get the best returns.  HASS disciplines can help better predict Australia and the world’s future.  Will China be a democracy in fifteen years?  How will Australians react if the mining moolah ends?  Is gay marriage foreseeable? What’s the business impact?
  • 18. Startups: HASS more valuable than MBA November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 18  Previous five slides—big companies.  HASS can help startup  Most are in urban services  Widgets are all from China  Restaurants—what do people like to eat (culture).  Hardrock—new gym driven by adventure (TV)  Festivals—understand human curiosity  Floriade in Canberra  Mural festival of Sheffield, Tasmania
  • 19. People AND Policies: How HASS can help November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 19  Rising prosperity is making more people concerned about their culture; making it more difficult to sell anything more than just “stuff”.  Similarly, rising democracy (including information) is making it more easy for people to resist policies that may be economically correct, but don’t appeal to their human concerns.  In both cases, HASS can help
  • 20. HASS for international cooperation November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 20 Australia’s HASS system can help promote Australia’s soft power in three ways.  Help other countries replicate the institutional structure:  CHASS Philippines; CHASS Vietnam; CHASS Iraq  Make AusAID more effective.  Australia can host many cross-country HASS dialogues—involving its immigrants.  India and Pakistan; Thailand and Cambodia;  Israel and Palestine?
  • 21. Wizards WITH Muggles: HASS and the All Ords November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 21  Next year’s conference:  Delegates from the 25/500 companies that comprise the Sydney All Ordinaries Index.  3/38 speakers from companies.  Sessions on the “What” and the “How” of how HASS can work more with business (and not the other way around).  Learn from the relative success of the Arts. HASS
  • 22. HARSH.EMAIL@GMAIL.COM November 8, 2015The Human Dimension: Inaugural CHASS Forum 22 Questions?