Gita Guide To Mnagement
(vasanth)
Write your abstract here.The Gita guide to project management The Gita, the divine song that Lord Krishna sang to Arjuna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra, has messages that man has imbibed for centuries. The ancient tome teaches about the way of work, way of worship and way of life and so on. Like modern physics and mathematics looking at ancient Indian scriptures for solutions (e.g. matter and atom concept is the same as the ancient ?universe-and-soul idea), the modern Indian management science is looking at the Gita for guidance. The book has messages for HRD managers, project managers and other professionals. The Gita has 18 chapters and 694 verses (slokas) that describe aspects from simple things like war and dejection to meditation and glory of God. But the theme is to show how to take action. And that is where the message for project management lies. The message for actions and working is spread all across the Gita, but chapters 2 and 3 are the main pointers. What is PM? First let us understand what project management is. PM is achieving a defined goal in the given duration, the given cost and using the given resources effectively and efficiently. 3 verses in the Gita are supreme and, in effect, contain the whole Gita. All 3 points add to the field of PM. Verse30, chapter3: This chapter is Karma Yoga, the principle of action. This chapter guides to the core of the PM. Verse 30 says ?mayi sarvani?. that is: ?dedicating all actions, with your mind fixed, free from desires, possession and fears, fight.?That is what PM working continuously, without attachment, fear or favor. Another requirement of PM Yanisha sarvabhutanam?? (2-69), that is:? what is night for all beings, the dedicated man keeps awake in that state. And that in what all beings are awake is the night for the dedicated man?. The project manager has to be awake, be vigilant. When everybody relaxes thinking that the work is going-?night for all beings?-the project manager must look at things critically-?the dedicated man keeps awake?-and ensure that indeed things are right. When everybody is taking care of things, the project manager does not disturb. Chapter-2-verse47: ?Karmanyevadhikarste...?that is: your right is in the action and not in the result. Be not instrumental in making your actions bring about the result, nor do you attach to non-action. ?This is the prime teaching of the Gita. That message teaches us to act-?do not attach to non-action?-and act without contemplating what the result will be-?your right is not in the result?. This may sound opposite to the definition of ?project?. That is because the goal is important in a project. But the message is subtler and, in fact, complimentary to the goal definition. There is nothing wrong in having a goal before we act. We must have a goal, else how do we know what action to take? A work must have a direction. How do we know the direction? The direction comes from the goal. If the destination is London, we go west. If the destination is Singapore, we go east. The goal gives the direction. That is what PM is. Take action in the right direction; spend no time or energy contemplating the result and things will fall in place .THE RESULT WILL COME NTURALLY. Some more pointers: One?s own duty is better than other?s (18-47). Hypocrisy, arrogance, pride, anger, sternness and ignorance are low marks (16-4). You do, but doership is in the nature (5-14). You perform the allotted duty, for action is superior to inaction. These all are needed guidelines in the field of PM. Project management knows where we are and where we have to go, how much time we have and what are our resources. For that, the only thing we can do is to take action, the right action. Is it not the message of the Gita? Act, and act now.
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