We were batchmates at IHM Mumbai. She was friendly, lively and a
fun person to be with. Her speech used to be ‘many more words per minute’ than
most of us because she was a fast thinker. She worked hard and was ambitious;
she was one of the toppers all though the college years. Focused on what she
wanted and achieving not just that but much more. She has lived a life probably
just the way she had planned it to be. She is one of the fittest women I know
and also a great parent. She keeps giving people around her many professional
and personal goals; making her a complete package! She is truly a star,
an inspiration to many men and women. Presenting to you Ms.
Vipula Gandhi, Managing Partner at Gallup Inc, and is based at the
company’s headquarter in Washington DC. IWH in conversion with her.
IWH: Tell us something
about you, your growing up years, life through school, college etc.
Vipula
Gandhi: I am the youngest of 3 kids born in middle India to highly
educated and middle class parents. I spent my early years in a steel city,
Bhilai, where my father worked as an engineer. My parents had difficult
childhoods in strained circumstances common to many other refugees from
Pakistan. By the time their only daughter arrived, they had built a reasonable
life for themselves. My father bought a car the day I was born to celebrate and
ensure that his only daughter comes home from the hospital in a car! As I look
back, I am in awe of my forward thinking parents, they raised me just as they
did their other two boys- I rode motor bikes and was introduced to the concept
of independence very early on. We were not rich but a wholesome and loving
rearing made up for a great childhood for all of us. They ensured that I
studied in good schools and was supported when I requested help.
I
did very well in school and then met my first big failure in life – inability
to become a doctor which was my father’s dream! My late father always meant a
lot to me. I was lost. I knew from early age that I get energized by delivering
great customer service, I applied for IHM because one of my other friends was
applying and suggested I would be a good fit. So really not a thought through
strategy at that juncture in my life. I just wanted to start doing something to
get myself going after the big speed bump. Hospitality was an emerging industry
in 1994 and not a place where many middle class parents saw their daughters
working.
IWH: What
made you select Hospitality as a career? Was it easy making that decision?
Vipula
Gandhi: IHM, Mumbai and OCLD years shaped who I am. Hospitality
industry taught me basic fundamentals of business that I still hold dear
in my heart – customer is the reason why businesses exist. Everything that we
do must have customers’ interest at its center. Having spent 4
years in hotel operations and Sales, I realized that my calling was elsewhere
and when offered a sales role in Financial sector I made my move. Then followed
7 years in Banking sector that led me to a Corporate Banking Director role in
London with Barclays Bank. In spite of success in this role and an MBA in
Finance, I soon felt I needed an intellectual challenge and when head hunted
for management consulting role, I changed industry again. I now feel fulfilled
helping organizations grow; growing businesses have huge impact on building
successful societies. This is my contribution to making this world a
better place. When I look back, the industry changes make complete sense
but they looked risky and out of comfort zone when life presented those doors
of opportunity. I have lived and worked in Mumbai, Delhi, London, Dubai,
Singapore and Washington DC.
IWH: What
is your current role?
Vipula
Gandhi: I am now the Managing Partner for a management consulting
firm, Gallup Inc, and based at the company’s headquarter in Washington DC. My
teams and I help C- Suite leaders of Fortune 1000 companies on designing
and delivering on business strategy through advise and analytics.
IWH:
How has your hospitality/ professional journey been so far? Pros, cons etc?
Vipula
Gandhi: I absolutely love what I do! If I win a lottery, I would
still be doing what I do today- Caution – I will take a 6 month break to travel
the world for sure though. When you look at my success you will miss the
failures along the way, I learn every day from my missteps and get a little
better. You will also miss the sacrifices along the way- the dilemmas – a child
with fever at home and a big pitch presentation 1000 miles away, daughter’s
school concert and an important meeting in another country, long work hours and
a child that needs a mother’s care and attention, workplace stress that creeps
into my interactions with my family etc. I have lots of adulations but I also
have numerous bruises and scars that I hold dear.
IWH:
Who has been your mentor or a role model? In what way has that person helped
you?
Vipula
Gandhi: My initial role models were at home. My father: an honest,
hardworking and loving leader of the family. My Bhabhi (sister in law), first
ambitious and accomplished career woman I knew from close quarters. My mother’s
gift to me has been an ability to see good in every one – I learn from everyone
around me every day. Inspiration is all around us, all we need to do is open our
eyes! Chairman and CEO of Gallup Inc. Jim Clifton, is my Coach as well as a
mentor. I learn so much for him in every interaction. He makes me a better
leader. I have never proactively looked for mentors and coaches in spite of
knowing how critical they are for success. I have found that these
relationships have to be authentic and develop organically to be of substance
and value. I mentor and coach multiple emerging leaders today.
IWH:
What have been the high points of your career? Highlight at least 3.
Vipula
Gandhi: I am grateful for my professional success beyond my own
imagination, from Corporate Banking to Management Consulting. When I delivered
a key note talk at a conference in Ritz Carlton in 2013, I felt a sense of
pride like no other as not long ago I used to arrange for these conferences as
Banquet Sales Manager at Oberoi Mumbai. I was the youngest and only
non-European, non MBA Relationship Director in London in my Corporate
Banking team thanks to a leader spotting my talent early on. I am now the
only non-American and only woman business leader (Managing Partner) in my
organization.
IWH:
What challenges have you faced as a woman in the industry? How did you deal
with them?
Vipula
Gandhi: A Woman’s leadership skills have always been negatively
branded. Consider the words we use for the display of same traits – she is
bossy, he is decisive; she is aggressive, he is assertive; she is a micro
manager, he is a rare leader who obsesses over finding small improvements;
she is blunt, he is provocative. The list goes on!
If
I cared about these labels, I would be making a choice between being a ‘good
woman’ and being a ‘good leader’. I don’t! I am who I am and I don’t offer
apologies. I care more deeply about what our customers think and my teams think
about how the work gets delivered. It’s imperative that we raise our kids to
think in gender neutral ways and watch our own language as we describe the
world around us. We can change these stereotypes in our lifetime.
IWH:
If there was anything that you could change about your life or career what
would that be?
Vipula
Gandhi: The only thing I would change is the focus on healthy
eating habits and exercise from early life. I am a type A personality (no shit,
Sherlock!) and that drive at work made me ignore the impact on health. So
missing meals, eating unhealthy food at odd hours wasn’t a smart thing to do.
Exercise should be an integral part of our lives, the sooner we start the
better. We live and learn!
IWH: What
do you think of IWH?
Vipula
Gandhi: I think it’s a great forum with its vision of inspiring
and empowering woman. To bring women together to learn from, recognize and
support one another will help us build
stronger
societies.
IWH:
Your advice to the young professionals and students.
Vipula
Gandhi: Dare to dream, be kind, be responsible, work hard, respect
others, be useful and above all remember the role of leadership is to
serve others.
IWH:
Anything else you wish to share with our readers
Vipula
Gandhi: I would like to remind the readers on the importance of
relationships and over all wellbeing. Women in this forum are not just career
women; they are partners, mothers, daughters, sisters, colleagues, neighbors,
friends and so much more and everyone just has 24 hours in the day. As we
climb the ladder of success, we need to ensure that we invest in these
relationships. Research has proven that we are healthier and happier when we
have wholesome relationships. It’s great to have a passion for what we do but
it’s critical that we are balancing our lives on 5 pillars of well being –
physical, social, career, financial and community.
It
was simply an ethereal feeling connecting with her for this interview and
having an enlightening conversation with the lovely Ms. Gandhi.
Read full story: http://www.theiwh.com/life-is-many-things-ms-vipula-gandhi/
Website: http://www.theiwh.com/
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