Wide Aware moments that stay with us for life

Recently, on a corporate management training programme, our gorup had the opportunity to explore issues related with inclusion and exclusion and its relation with conformity.

We were conducting a programme for a team of senior executives who were competent on a professional level, and the chief stated objective was to encourage innovation, entrepreneurship and individual performance. The organization was planning incentives and rewards for the high performers, and the group was largely unexcited by the plans.

Group discussions and exploratory conversations led us to realize that the group did not truly believe that the organization wanted them to assert their personal authority and that if they did so, they would be harmed in some way. On the other hand, there was no shortage of leadership, risk taking, creativity and competencies. Just this strange ceiling which was very difficult to define.

Further explorations and analysis of data from team building activities indicated instances we could inquire about and we finally realized that, while the rewards highlighted the outstanding performers, those who were hard workers, but lacked exceptional talent, were unaffected by them. Worse, they also were to some extent demotivated by the high targets that were required to achieve them, and actually lost interest in the whole thing, including the inclination to push their performance to greater heights.

An intense discussion between the “seniors” and this team followed, where the team expressed feelings of being unappreciated and their resentment at being aimed toward the highest possible target within the group. Most of them would not be able to achieve that, and hence they weren’t even trying. The ones capable of achievement were not interested, because they perceived it as a possible cause for being excluded by the others. It was a strange situation where most of the people in the team were stuck at one point - they wanted appreciation and acknowledgment, and they wanted to be accepted regardless of their strengths and failures.

The “seniors” on their part were not aware that this was a problem and they had missed out the group dynamics in this team completely. It was difficult to reach a point of compromise and move ahead of blame games and see what could be done.

Outstanding employees are rare, and the majority of an organization comprises of mediocre professionals that are pretty much similar to anywhere else. We saw the need to encourage individuals, at their level, and came up with options of less extravagant, but easily achievable rewards and a system of letting employees choose their targets in unusual situations. Needless to say, each employee, now was interested in making efforts towards a goal, that they knew they could achieve with the right efforts.

What a do about nothing - and this is probably one of the most common situations in organizations in one form or the other.

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Our Pench trip

Well, I’m kind of late on this post, as the trip happened in May, but the pictures are up in any case for quite some time.

What do i say, it was a mixed bunch that left for the trip. Raka and I were there of course. Mugdha, Sneha and Sagar were Raka’s old friends from Himalayan treks they had participated in and Vinay Savla was a friend I had made online.

We started off with intros in the train. Seemed like a luxury after some of the tours we have been on. Playing cards, and songs on Raka’s fancy phone ruled.

We went to Pench, stayed in a resort near the Tiger, and came back with memories of a successful trip without having seen a tiger.

We did see a lot of other wildlife though, and it was a beautiful experience. Part of the success lay in the group attitude that we expected a wildlife tour to be more than the sighting of one animal.

Planning to add lots here, but made a start at least.

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Leaving for Pench!

Leaving for Pench today. Haven’t been there before. It is Wide Aware’s first Wildlife tour to this Tiger Reserve, and we are filled with apprehension and excitement. We have organized this tour at expense, as we have no experience of this region to be offering services. It is a nail-biting time as we wait for the train to arrive, and our journey to start.

Many thoughts cross my mind. Nervous “what if” ones as well as fanciful flights of my imagination. We want to see tigers the most, as it is supposed to be the highlight of this reserve, but we are also anticipating a fantastic time among trees, birds, wild dogs, herbivores like bison, deer… My hyperactive mind serially visualizes all available options including a boring trip with no sightings, people collapsing in the extreme heat of the region in this season, superb sightings, but getting lost in the jungles, a tiger attack, evenings of star gazing…. My mind knows no limits. I even found myself idly thinking about a campfire evening – The temperatures out there are going to be prime heat stroke material – campfire!!!??

This happens to me with every new tour I begin. My mind goes into an imagination expedition. All the years of experience and their accumulated wisdom are inapplicable to these fantasies, and I am free to be a completely ignorant child on these flights of fancy. However bizarre, it may sound, but the girl who has spent 12 years in the wilderness one way or the other still gets fits of nail-biting, particularly when on a new tour with clients.

We are well equipped with a camera, another camera, a third camera, binoculars, field reference guides, notebooks, small pouches we are planning to gift participants to put their rubbish in so as not to litter, a book on astronomy for the nights (I am a perpetual beginner, with my reliably forgetful memory), snacks for moments of hunger, a first-aid kit, and lots of things besides. A friend even joked that the only thing left out is a pack of diapers in case we see a tiger from really close.

So, I have vented my jitters, reviewed my preparations, and it is now time to leave for the much awaited tour. Bye folks, wish us luck. I should be back soon with tictures and an account of the trip, maybe backed by a short video or something.

Ta-ta!

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Hi folks!

Footprints on the Mountainside is about memories - unforgettable experiences that stay with us for life, and change the way we look at things.

We often see the mountains as our personal space, our own world and these experiences are very dear to us.

I have created this space so that we can share these evergreen memories and enrich the minds of like-minded souls who may have other things to share.

I hope in this process to create a vast, collective experience that is entertaining, motivating and educational.

Welcome, one and all, to:

Footprints on the mountainside

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About Author

Footprints on the mountainside is a blog about all things that are important to me, as an outdoor person, as a facilitator on experiential learning programmes and adventure sports.

The blog largely reflects things that come to my notice, experiences in day to day life and things I wish to say to the world at large.

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