Saturday 22 September 2018

Recruitment is much more than just finding the right Talent!



A pertinent concept that is finding more and more acceptance in the world of Marketing, Brands and Management is ‘The Customer Journey Mapping’. There are more related terms like Customer Experience (CX), Customer Touchpoints and Customer Lifecycle, which more or less are trying to build around the same philosophy i.e.

  • Decoding the entire customer journey map through your product & services mix
  • Providing a consistent and positive customer experience and brand messaging across the entire value chain
  • Joining up all your internal processes & functions like branding, marketing, sales, delivery, operations, after sales, etc. that ‘touch’ the customer anytime through his/her journey and let these functions visualize and understand their larger role in the jigsaw from a customer point of view and
  • From a customers’ standpoint, it’s a singular ‘Brand’ that is honoring its set of promises and not a disparate set of entities abandoning them in the complex web of internal processes to wade their way through.

Now here’s extending this philosophy a bit further and looking inwards. It’s widely accepted that your customers are not just ‘external’ target audience that you cater to, but also your internal ‘customers’ i.e. your Employees that need to experience the entire culture and promise of your Brand. In that case, how serious are we in extending the concept of ‘Customer Journey Mapping’ to this important and integral set of internal customers?

It starts with recruitment. The first window when your potential internal customers i.e. employees get to touch and feel your Brand. And how often have we seen this entire process of recruitment being a bureaucratic set of long-winded processes that just set out with a singular objective of ‘Identifying and Onboarding the best Talent’.

Organizations are often seen gloating about their stringent recruitment processes and powerful brand pull that allows them to select the best of the best. A conversion ratio of anywhere between 5% or 10% for every open position! In other words, your ability to scout and scan through 100 or 200 potential candidates for every 10 open roles. While it’s a relevant metric to track the efforts of your recruitment machinery, your brand pull and the goodness of your selection process, an important metric we often miss tracking is the ‘Customer Experience’ of all those 190-odd potential candidates that didn’t meet the cut amongst those 10 open roles.

It’s time we start looking at this entire recruitment process as a great opportunity to exhibit the culture of our organization. The promise of our brand. These 190-odd potential candidates that may have dropped off at various stages of your selection funnel have experienced your brand ‘up, close & personal’.  The end-result is incidental of whether they made it or not, but the bigger goal for us as recruitment teams and as culture custodians is to ensure that every candidate who has gone through this recruitment funnel goes back with a fantastic experience. Despite not being selected, they need to go back with a much stronger affinity towards your brand & organization, than the moment they had applied for it.  
It’s much easier said than done. Recruitment can be a very time-consuming and draining experience. For selection managers, it is often an additional task over and beyond their day jobs. And that’s where it can take a toll. So engrossed are we in running against tough timelines to bring in the best talent through the door, that we often end-up missing the ‘customer experience’ bit. Our quest to identify that ‘Best 10’ can be so single-minded that it eventually turns out to be a filtration and elimination process. Nothing wrong with that, but let’s make sure that each of these funneling processes are real, inclusive and as less ‘stereotypical’ as possible. Let’s make sure we aren’t dropping off candidates on flimsy and superficial grounds of ‘too aggressive’, ‘too ambitious’, ‘very unstable’, ‘failed entrepreneur’, ‘stopgap seeker’, ‘cultural misfit’, ‘lives too far away’, etc.  The more deep-rooted biases of gender and the reverse trend of force-fitting gender ratios, sexual orientation, attire, marital status, body type and ethnicity still play at many levels and are more difficult to detect. However, it’s for the selection managers to keep challenging and taking a firm stand against such biases & stereotypes throughout the entire recruitment value chain. At the same time, be sure to hold a mirror and make sure that they themselves are not subconsciously falling prey to the same biases. 

Beyond all such biases, let’s accept that recruitment needs a lot of patience, compassion and empathy and it is easy to get distracted by the pressures of onboarding. However, Great organizations are not just about Great products and services, but also about their people practices, culture and Customer Experience. They don’t just stop at nurturing the talent within, but continue cultivating the larger ecosystem.  Here is a quick checklist of Dos and Don’ts to ensure we continue to leverage Recruitment as a great opportunity to further enhance our Customer Experience & Brand Equity -

  1. It all starts with a well fleshed-out Job Description (JD) which needs to be real and fluid. Don’t make it too water-tight, impregnable and search words’ driven.  Avoid platitudes like ‘fire in the belly’ and ‘willing to stretch’.
  2. Encourage diversity, rather than building a uni-dimensional workforce. For e.g. why should only candidates with prior research experience be considered for research openings? Why not those from Journalism, mass media, PR, advertising or even sectors as diverse as Logistics be consciously considered. From a personal experience, it is this Diversity that has worked the best for our team!
  3. Try to reduce the various ‘filtration’ rounds and let them exist only for a specific purpose.
  4. Continue challenging the rationale for all those candidates who got filtered-out at each stage, right from profile identification to screening.
  5. Make it conducive & convenient for the candidates. Do we really need to call them over physically for each of the rounds? Make it as ‘Virtual’ as possible till the final round.
  6. Do our assessment tests need to be ‘speed tests’? Rather, why can’t these be about understanding your knowledge and skillsets in a more conducive and relaxed environment.
  7. Are your processes efficient and time-bound OR do they keep potential candidates on an infinite ‘On Hold’ loop with a cliched phrase like “We’ll get back to you”. And yes, we are all guilty of this indecisiveness syndrome. A candidate ‘On hold’ for many weeks is definitely NOT what you were looking for. Why then to keep him/her in waiting for so long? Better to provide a succinct and clear feedback and drop his candidature (even if you haven’t identified any alternative candidate). It’s better to build a strong pipeline than to keep open too many ‘not too sure’ choices for too long.
  8. Are you making sure to provide a detailed feedback at each stage? Or leaving candidates with an arrogant, “sorry, you haven’t gone through our next round” message relayed by your recruitment teams.
  9. If you realize during an interview itself that this is definitely not the candidate we are looking for, be courageous enough to provide a prompt, direct and constructive feedback at that stage itself, rather than relaying an indirect and impersonal feedback through your recruitment teams.
  10. Finally, People are not inanimate Products. They constantly evolve and get better through right coaching, mentoring, direction and guidance. Avoid tagging them as Selects and Rejects and abruptly ending the entire process.

Eventually, the 10 selected candidates that will onboard will become a part of your culture. They’ll naturally get to experience the Organization in due course. However, a larger part of your responsibility also lies towards the 190-odd who didn’t meet the cut at various stages. The onus is on you to leave them with an absolutely professional and Inspirational experience. They were not rejects – as they are still living, breathing and evolving. They simply weren’t most suitable at that moment or because there were others more experienced, relevant and mature AT THAT MOMENT! Make sure these 190-odd do receive that constructive feedback before they return back to their worlds – more confident and assured about what they need to do to get better, rather than feeling disheartened, demotivated or ‘rejected’.

The job-seekers are as much looking for a job, as much as the organizations are looking for the right talent. We opened up the new roles and invited applications. The candidates invested their time, efforts, traveled and appeared for our various rounds and undertook our tests. It’s an irresponsible and terrible customer experience if we leave them waiting and looking for answers. It’s unfortunate if they have to wade through our departments, websites, contact us numbers to gain the final feedback. And this happens across all levels right from the most senior roles till the entry level profiles. Its arrogance and bad corporate citizenship if an organization doesn’t bother to provide you with a detailed rationale and feedback despite having taken you through multiple selection rounds and then suddenly doing the vanishing act.

To sum it up, the onus is on us to either leave the potential candidates feel bitter, demotivated and rejected. Or leverage this opportunity to guide them and offer a few lines of constructive feedback that enables them to keep evolving and build on their competencies.  The same applies for our existing employees who’ve decided to move on for better opportunities. Let’s not look at them as attrition, betrayers or a lost cause. There is no need for us to feel bitter or reduce our compassion quotient with them during their notice period. The nurturing needs to continue right till their last day. And in fact even after let’s continue maintaining a proud alumni network rather than treating them as outsiders or those who abandoned us. Let’s keep it positive, evolving and inspiring! It’s always about people and careers.

This is the ‘talent pool’ we keep referring to. There is a fair possibility that the potential candidates who didn’t meet the cut right now, might return back as much improved, evolved and terrific professionals a few months down the line. Even if not, they might become your evangelists and promoters amongst their peer group for the way you made them feel. Your ex-employees too can be a potent network that can be counted on for expanding your ‘talent pool’. There is no bigger joy than seeing many of your star performers returning back as they believed this was the best ‘Experience’ they ever had!

Eventually, it is this Customer Experience that becomes the biggest competitive differentiator with all other tangible features and benefits acquiring parity. And this holds true as much as for your external customers as your internal ones…and for all those who continue aspiring to get associated, simply because the way you made them feel! 

Friday 16 February 2018

Aiyaary flatters to deceive with an over-cooked but bland end product!

Aiyaary Flatters to Deceive



Aiyaary suffers and crashes into dullness due to its own over-intelligence. Coming from Neeraj Pandey, the name behind some of the smartest espionage-heist flicks in recent times (A Wednesday, Special 26, Baby, Naam Shabaana, Rustom), it’s a major disappointment. In fact, both Baby and Naam Shabana are amongst the best (though under-rated), modern day classics in the espionage genre.

However, coming to Aiyaary, here is an expected non-linear plot that tries to ‘preach’ too many things without bringing them together as a coherent story. It ticks all the mandatory boxes for a ‘spy-thriller checklist’. An A-Class ensemble cast of 5 National Award winners. High-octane background score that ‘tries’ to keep the tempo alive. Chest-thumping dialogues around patriotism. The now done-to-death ‘covert operations’ angle i.e. “Get caught and the army & the nation disowns you and labels you a traitor’. The armed forces & arm dealers’ nexus. Global tourism in the form of Mumbai-Delhi-Kashmir-London-Cairo. Neglected families. Girls with guns (that just strut and don’t fire). Tech-savvy operations in the form of hacking, phone-tapping, databases, pen drives, spy cams, Phew! Throw in an Aadarsh society scam angle…and what you have is an over-muddled, needlessly over-convoluted plot…that drags along with no sense or purpose.

At 160 minutes, it feels an hour too long. It takes its own languid pace in trying to set you up in the entire first half. And when you’re ready for the action to begin in the second half, it takes a surprising reverse-gear in trying to establish arcs and back-stories for each of the characters. Pacing is critical in any spy-thriller and ‘Aiyaary’ makes a blunder of sorts out here. And speaking about the Google-worthy weird title ‘Aiyaary’, well there is not much of Aiyaary (wizardy/deception/disguise) either!

Overall Aiyaary is a failed-attempt that ends on a whimper. The best of brains, the best of production values, the best of cast…but to repeat one of the lines from the movie itself, “Sir, mind it, nothing really happens, it all remains just On-paper!” Stay away, and instead watch a Baby or Naam Shabana on TV once again. 

Sunday 2 October 2016

No. 101, Powai: The address for Great food, Warm service...and Conversations!

Head No. 101 Powai for Delectable North Indian Flavors!

Powai is amongst the most strategically placed location in Mumbai that houses the biggest of MNCs in the ITeS space and amongst the coolest of residential hubs. The Hiranandani Housing has ensured state-of-the-art gated communities and clinical maintenance of the environment. The overarching impact of this potent commercial + residential combination has ensured a very happening buzz and feel to Powai.

Expectedly these factors and immense demand have fuelled a buzzing food scene in Powai with some of the most hip lounges, bars, fine dine places…and a range of gastronomical options to sip, gorge, socialize and hang out at. However, off late the entire food scene in Powai has started to become a tad stagnant with the likes of Mainland China getting complacent and un-innovative, Yellow Chillies and Red Olives not having the ‘happening’ feel, Sigree Global Grill coming across as too industrialized and assembly-line and others like Mehmaan Navazi, Breeze, Saffron Spice, Rodas, Chillies, etc. too falling in the safe, unexciting zone.

Out then comes a relatively new entrant No. 101 in this overcrowded space. The objective pretty simple – Strong focus on good, flavorsome North Indian and Mughlai fare with aggressive, value for money pricing. It’s not a big set-up with the ambience itself appearing a bit confused. What with colorful Bollywood posters and witty Hindi one-liners adoring the entrance staircase…ending up with random posters and an artifacts-theme wall in the interiors. Having said that, apparently No. 101 doesn’t even attempts to try too hard on the décor or music front. The TV is tuned on to some random sports action and the music is kept low-key. The focus remains on the things that really matter – Great food, efficient & warm service and of course…the quality of conversations with your gang.

We were late to try the ‘Wow Menu’ with some of the best appetizers and drinks priced at just Rs. 101. But the offer definitely looks most tempting to visit the place once again. Drinks definitely are not a forte of this place with most of the mocktails & cocktails we ordered being pretty standard. However, what really bowled us over was a selection of some the best starters – the succulent Gilaafi seekh kebabs, the delicately made Galouti Kebabs, the the finger-licking Reshmi kebabs (which we couldn’t have enough of and kept on asking for more), Chicken Tikkas & Tangdi kebabs the quality as good as the best of Awadhi/Lucknowi cuisine and even vegetarian delights like Bharwaan Kumbh (Mushroom) which is quite a specialty out here!





We were so full and satiated with the starters itself that we decided to keep it pretty simple with the maincourse. Butter Chicken, Murgh Chilman Dum Biryani and standard Indian breads like Butter garlic Naan and Tandoori Rotis. And once again each of these items stood out as one of the best we’ve had in a long while. The butter chicken was tender, perfectly textured and delicious to the core; the Biryani calming, soothing and soulful…just what Biryanis should be! And most importantly, the best of the lot was the Naan and the Rotis. The Rotis are amonst the most overlooked part of most restaurants. However, No. 101 has its heart in the right place. The Rotis and Naans were served at the perfect temperature, Soft and Crispy and with the right amount of Garlic, butter, etc. to make it an experience in itself. Come to think of it, these are such standard items in most restaurants that we’ve stopped looking at our Butter Chicken, Chicken Biryani or Rotis with any amount of affection. However, it took No. 101 to bring back the love for these legendary Indian foods.

To sum it up, No. 101 is a refreshing alternative in the buzzing food scene at Powai. If it is delicious food that you crave for, at the most bang-for-your-buck pricing and no other frills like Sports bar, music, lounge, cocktails – just pack in your friends and family and head off to No. 101 for a comforting time and endless conversations with your Besties.

All of us will keep coming back to No. 101 for more such Good times! 

Wednesday 25 November 2015

An Open Letter to Aamir Khan: Dil, Still Chahta Hai!


An Open Letter to Aamir Khan: Dil, Still Chahta Hai!


Dear Aamir, I completely disagree with you! We are amongst the most tolerant nation ever! 

We are so forgetful and forgiving. We are willing to accept murderers, riot instigators and rapists as our leaders. We are willing to accept rash drunken drivers killing people on the roads as our Superstars. We openly embrace match-fixing cricketers and give them a second career in dance and reality shows. We still flock to and trust Dhongi babas despite their heinous crimes. Liquor barons and failed businessmen may siphon off crores of rupees from our banks, but we’d still party with them in our social circles. We applaud the audacity and oratory skills of firebrand leaders who instigate communal disharmony, cause riots and loss of public property and lives.

Look we’ve even accepted to offering bribes/donations to babus, traffic cops and schools/colleges as a normal way of Indian system!

However, it is just that sometimes we have a lapse of IQ and EQ and innocently believe in forwarded messages on social media. We get influenced by the constant hammering of TV channels that are known for creating sensational headlines and debates in their race for TRPs. We find it difficult to understand your long interviews and lofty statements, and simply pick up 1 statement and twist it around. We suck up to our elected/selected public servants (MPs, MLAs, etc.) by wishing them Happy Birthday with large ugly posters (with our names of course!) But despite having no hand in your hard-earned superstardom, somewhere we believe you owe it to us. Be grateful man, we’ve made you who you are!

Sarcasms apart, go ahead Aamir and continue speaking from your heart. Your heroism has always been more about your entire righteous off-screen persona, rather than your ‘Dabangg’ on screen avatar. Your movies touch dizzy heights (both commercially and critically) not because of our generosity towards you, but because they strike a deep chord with us. Be it Rang De Basanti, Taare Zameen Par, 3 Idiots, PK or even Satyamev Vijayte, you’ve always managed to give voice to some of our deepest frustrations.

Yes I have my grudges with you – like you encouraged us to save money by buying cheap generic medicines and not to add to the coffers of multinational pharma companies who are unethically over-pricing their branded products. However, why don’t you offer similar advice to distributors of your movies for over-pricing the ticket rates to obscene levels during the opening weekend?  I also had my grudges when you tried to be our Moral Science teacher by speaking against AIB Roast (despite yourself producing a high on profanity flick like Delhi Belly with the infamous DK Bose track).

Having said that, I would never associate you with words like Traitor, Opportunist, Escapist, Timid or Hypocrite. Speaking your heart out, giving an honest opinion, caring for your family, expressing your concerns and more importantly for your countrymen’s apprehensions doesn’t makes you anti-national. It simply indicates the purity of your thoughts and clarity of your vision. A vision that doesn’t seek any endorsement from anybody and doesn’t try to appease by making politically correct statements.

Aamir, take heart in the fact that you are amongst the rare real heroes who are too good to be true or believable. You are too much of a perfectionist and we’re always trying to find ways of breaking this myth. We accuse you of shedding fake tears on TV, we accuse you of infidelity (why can’t 2 individuals naturally grow apart?), we accuse you for seeking opportunities to promote your movies (despite the fact that your next movie Dangal is about 13 months away from a release) and we even feel bad about you earning crores through a social program like Satyamev Vijayte; So while Satya Nadella and Sundar Pichai’s million dollar salaries make us proud as Indians. But an Aamir Khan earning his rightful remuneration causes a debate. Why so?

We conveniently forget all the Philanthropies you are involved in. We forget all the public interest campaigns you are involved in. We forget you being a UNICEF ambassador. We forget you being on the cover of TIMES. We forget your guts to shun all popular awards for their lack of credibility. We forget your scant interest in getting yourself waxed at Madame TussaudsWe forget the fact that you’ve never endorsed any liquor or tobacco product…not even through surrogate advertising.

We forget the fact that you’ve always been a free, bold soul that has never cared for popular opinions, safe bets or milking the situation. You started doing just 1 movie a year…way back since 1996…when all your contemporaries where cashing on multiple offers. You produced Lagaan when no one would’ve dared touching such a weird, dated subject. You vanished for 4 long years after the dizzying success of Lagaan and Dil Chahta Hai…and did things what you liked, because you were never insecure about your stardom. You were the first to start investing in the physicality and entire look of your roles without bothering to stick to any particular image. You played second fiddle to a kid in your directorial debut (Taare Zameen Par). You were the founder member of the 100-crore club with Ghajini. You did TV right after the humungous success of 3 Idiots. You are the only one in the top bracket of stars who doesn’t have a franchise series to keep cashing upon (Salman has Dabangg, SRK has Don, Akki has Housefull and Singh series, Ajay has Golmaal and Singham, Hrithik has Krrish, etc.). The list can go on and on, but the fact remains that constantly riding against the tide is what defines Aamir Khan!

Here is a future that I can imagine 20 years down the line - I can imagine all the 3 Khans still being around and kicking. So while Salman would continue to be known for his Charisma and SRK for his wit and charm, it would be Aamir and his body of work that would be the most credible of the lot. Knowing Aamir and his free-soul, he may be the first to bow out playing a leading man. But, most probably it’ll be Aamir who’ll end up with the proudest library of movies as an actor, director and producer…and of course for all his contributions to the society and India at large through philanthropies, campaigns, initiatives, ideas, TV shows, etc.

Aamir, just like you, I too am hopeful and positive about a better India. An incredible India that is much more tolerant than ever before. But more tolerant about the positive things than for the parasites mentioned at the start of this post. More tolerant for logical debates. More tolerant towards people asking difficult and uncomfortable questions. More tolerant towards alternative and contrarian point of views. More tolerant for self-censorship. And more importantly, more tolerant for some good ol’ self-deprecatory humor that allows us to take it on our chins rather than get so ruffled by anything that challenges our conventional thoughts and beliefs.

Aamir, I am hopeful of a more mature India that will have the IQ and EQ to go back and understand your words in their true light. An India that will realize the worth of your contributions, the depth of your solid character and of course, your love for the nation and empathy towards it people and their issues. An India that will stop questioning your genuineness once and for all!!

An Incredible India that starts celebrating Aamir Khan as one of the finest heroes (both reel and real) we’ve ever produced!

Before we end, allow me to mention about one of your iconic movies – Dil Chahta Hai. It was your Dil Chahta Hai and its so-true-to-life portrayal of friendship, bonding and camaraderie that was the raison d'etre for starting this blog. All I ever wanted to do was write a tribute for this phenomenal movie, that in more ways than has continued to represent me, my spirit and my reason for being. A movie that I would love to watch once again on my last day and die out with a smile…with the strings of ‘Dil Chahta Hai Reprise’ that play with the end-credits still ringing in my ears. What a way to go would that be!!

But may be more of Dil Chahta Hai on a separate post. For the moment, carry on Aamir…and continue pursuing what your Dil, Still Chahta Hai! And I am sure, an incredible India would feature right up there in your list of wishes! 

Sunday 1 November 2015

Hooda Scores, but the Movie bores!

Main aur Charles is underwhelming



Randeep Hooda sinks his teeth into the suave character of Charles. Uber cool, elegant, always with a slight smirk and a glint in his eyes, an alluring aura to the entire magnetic package that made Charles…CHARLES! However, take away Hooda’s class act, an upbeat background score, a couple of earnest performances from the supporting cast and a few nicely orchestrated scenes…and eventually ‘Main aur Charles’ ends up as an incoherent movie in the typical ‘more style, little substance’ category. 

Pity, considering the fact that here was a character and his escapades tailor-made for the celluloid. Check out Charles Sobhraj’s Wikipedia page and it immediately stands apart as a pulp fiction tale of thrills, chills and kills. Nevertheless the movie simply scratches the surface, stretches a single jail-break episode needlessly and in the bargain…misses out the entire meatier chunk of the sensational life and times of the once ‘Bikini Killer’. Hooda’s brilliant portrayal stays with you…and one simply hopes that he (Charles) lives again and perhaps establishes himself with a franchise on ‘The Chronicles of Charles’. ‘Main aur Charles’…overcooked, but still half-baked…deserves another chance, another recipe, another story, another day. But of course, the same Hooda! 

Sunday 25 October 2015

The Bestseller She Wrote Disappoints

The Bestseller She Wrote Disappoints


Ravi Subramanian’s latest #TheBestsellerSheWrote has its moments. However, at on overall level it’s a tame attempt to break his set template and perhaps one of his weakest books. Yes, though it does pack in a couple of highly charged, tear-inducing emotional moments, the final piece ends up as a pretty shallow story with a dampener of a climax (you are compelled to think “Ok, that’s it! Really? Nothing more?”) 

There are no real flashes of stunning thrills or whooa! moments, the unexpected twists are pretty expected, the characters mostly superficial, the story not as masterfully layered as all his previous ones. The sex quotient is raised up considerably, but (as it’s stated in the book itself) it’s pretty ‘thanda’ without much impact. Ravi makes a brave attempt to move into the Chetan Bhagat territory (high on mush and melodrama), but in the bargain misses that classic Ravi Subramanian stamp that made all his previous works so compelling. To sum it up, Ravi’s first fictional book without the ‘Bank’ or 'God' in its title is not a bankable read. The bestseller she wrote disappoints.

Tuesday 23 September 2014

An open letter to Deepika Padukone, the flag-bearer against Media Tyranny

An open letter to Deepika Padukone, the flag-bearer against Media Tyranny

Hello Deepika,

Since writing open letters is the new flavour of the season, please allow me to share a few thoughts with you, the new ray of hope for all the victimized celebrities…and more so, for being a role model for the larger cause of womanhood.

As you’re aware, there has always been this vicious love-hate relationship between celebs and media. We can debate this relationship, but let’s not make it a man-woman question. It’s less to do with dignity of women/womanhood/manhood but more about defining boundaries of this media-celeb equation.

Media and Celebs have also been perfect fodder for each other. Together they drive two of the biggest industries in the new multi-media world. Exhibitionism and Voyeurism. The success of Facebook, reality shows like Big Boss are all prime examples of such Exhibitionism and Voyeurism working hand-in-glove, in perfect tandem. The celebs exhibit, the media laps it up like a voyeur. The celebs exhibit more, the media barges in further. One fine day, the celeb suddenly develops cold feet/becomes coy/decides to spark a controversy. Or alternatively, Media forgets its boundaries and voyeuristically ventures into the personal space.

This is a larger question for media and the celebs to set their working equations right. Clearly set those terms and conditions of play. You will admit that the Peekaboos, the Oops moments, the malfunctions are not just the figments of a perverse media. But Celebs too have (at times) an equal role to play in scripting these ‘moments’. Some scripts work, some don’t. And if at times they don’t, it would be inappropriate to blame it on womanhood and lack of dignity. It will be more about certain boundaries and code of conduct not being followed – accidentally or deliberately. These are some standard perils of your job and knowing your intelligence, I am sure you are completely aware of it.  

Since it took you 7 years since your debut, to wake up and feel offended about some outrageous pics and captions, can I please encourage you to actually have the courage (and selflessness) to take this ahead full-throttle. These pics have been on the web since always (perhaps your 3G/wi-fi connection was weak earlier) with flattering/unflattering pics of you and most of your colleagues. Where were you Deepika when the media last ‘framed’ your colleague Katrina during her private moments in Ibiza? What was your stand then? 

Regardless, it’s never too late to start a revolution. Please pick the cudgels now and bring this to a logical conclusion. Please set up a new ‘Do not Publish without permission’ code of conduct between Media and the Celebs. Push for a new protocol, a bill, a law. Now that you’ve ignited this, please fight this out young lady. You owe this to all your brethren in tinseltown and to the larger cause of Womanhood! No?


Salman Khan quotted saying - "Yes, I am a Man. And I have developed a Paunch. Can't help, have been having too many home-cooked Biryanis off late. But doesn't give the media guys to feature me needlessly and disrespect my manhood! Sob, Sob!"


Deepika, to reiterate once again – this is a celebrity-media question and about the perils of your job. It is not really a womanhood question. It involves your male colleagues as well. Most of them have been under the scanner as well. As with the ‘leak’ above – their paunches have been commented upon, their wrinkles, surgeries and botox analysed, their hair transplants/wigs/weaving minutely dissected and deliberated upon, their affairs closely tracked and chronicled.

Please don’t equate Media with the lecherous men on the road who ogle, whistle and try to grope and paw without your consent. The media simply captures you in a space where you’re fully aware you’ll be clicked and shot extensively. When some of your colleagues leave for an event in their skimpy outfits (and at times conveniently missing the inner-wear), they are fully aware of the 1,000 flashbulbs awaiting their arrival. The media ain’t a perverse animal on the prowl that has planted spycams in our households or is capturing demure housewives in titillating positions while doing their household chores. The ‘Yellow’ media is simply where it is supposed to be. Covering your multiple movie promotion events and success parties.

That some of your colleagues still choose to take a risk or ‘dare to bare’ is amongst the necessarily survival skills required for your industry. For every 1 principled, sure of her-talent, dignified lady like you, there are at least 10 others, willing to compromise, dare, bare and take the short-cuts. So it’s cut-throat, cutting-edge necklines and I am sure we’re all pretty aware of these state of affairs. And hence all my admiration and encouragement for someone as independent, principled and talented as you …who has steadily created such a wonderful niche for herself  in the industry by virtue of powerhouse performances in back-to-back hits.

My only humble request to you would be to pick up the cudgels and fight as a ‘celebrity’, as a ‘youth icon’ when you think your modesty has been outraged, or some of the photography terms and conditions have not been met. Please don’t play a victim and cry ‘womanhood’ as it takes away the sheen out of all that you've achieved so far.  It also dilutes the enormity from some serious and heinous crimes being infested on women across the nation. Female infanticide, dowry deaths, khaap panchayats, child abuse, gang rapes, molestation at public places, prostitution rackets, cyber-crimes and domestic violence to name a few.

If you have lived by the dictum of ‘If you have it, flaunt it’, please be brave enough to face and fight the clicks (some flattering and some unflattering) by virtue of your ‘Youth Icon’ status and not on the crutches of ‘Womanhood’.  If not leading Media houses like TOI, I am sure you’re aware of the plethora of high-definition cameras or smart phones that will be zooming in and capturing you, their favorite celebrity for their wallpapers and screen savers. I am sure you are super-intelligent and completely aware of these risks of your job. As they say, ‘the risks that come with the territory’.

Hence Deepika if you actually decide to fight and take it up for the entire industry, fight like a true warrior. Fight for the entire industry and even your male co-stars. Fight for your principles, values and moral conduct. Fight these giant media houses (who think they are indispensable and can arm-twist any celeb) and compel them to change their business models. Not a single snap to be published without the celebrity’s formal consent to do so. Not a single cheap caption and headline either.

I am sure Deepika you have the gumption to fight this in your own capacity as a ‘gutsy celebrity’, without having to seek any further support from ‘Womanhood’. The ‘Womanhood’ already has a lot going against it in this country. I am sure we can let it focus on much larger issues plaguing the nation.

“I am a woman, and I have breasts”. “I am a man, and I have developed a paunch”. “Damn, I am a man, and I have worked hard to create a perfectly sculpted cleavage.”


I am sure you get the drift Deepika. Please leave the man-woman noise out of it. We don’t really need pseudo-feminism to fight this one out. Sheer conviction and audacity of your fight against "Not to be clicked without my consent” should suffice. Please go ahead, fight it, close it! And please do not wait for it, until your next movie is up for release.