Our former Top Small Workplaces judge Peter Cappelli, from the Wharton School's Center for Human Resources, was cited in a CNN article last week on lessons for U.S. bosses from their counterparts in India.
Cappelli provides a lot of good takeaways in the piece, based on his recent study of leaders and HR departments from close to 100 of India's biggest companies, but I think my favorite is:
A lot of U.S. companies in particular will say, 'We're not going to meet our quarterly numbers, so we've got to adjust everything in the pipeline to make sure we do.' That's a costly thing for the long term.
This falls under the Indian leadership lesson of taking the long view of growth and profitability – with average growth at a manageable 18% in 2009, it's a lesson our Top Small Workplaces share. This strikes me as quite interesting, given that Cappelli's employee engagement research sample is the largest firms in India.
Other Indian leadership traits Cappelli advises American CEOs to embrace – which our Top Small Workplaces are already hip to – include:
- Have a social purpose
- Invest in employees through human capital strategies
- Trust your employees to tackle your biggest problems
- Act as "chief culture officer"
Related: We interviewed Cappelli when he came to our offices in 2008 to help determine that year's Top Small Workplace winners. In the video below he shares some additional thoughts about a company can create a more productive workplace (click here if you can't see the video in your blog feed):

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