STRESS, SUCCESS AND EVERYTHING IN-BETWEEN
The Highs and Lows of A Woman’s Journey in the Corporate WorldThat evening, I was alone
in the office, winding up my desk after a hectic day. I was surprised to
receive a phone call from the reception. Manjari (not her real name) was on the
phone.
“Madam, are you alone? Do not speak. Just listen to me. They
have decided to transfer you from this branch,” Manjari whispered, her voice
barely audible.
“Transfer? Why? What happened suddenly?”
“I understand there are some telephonic instructions from the
Central Office to transfer you immediately. You have that woman Reena (not her
real name) in your office? Her husband has complained to the Chairman that the
customer service at the branch is poor. So they have decided to transfer you
immediately from here.”
“What the heck! Why her hubby of all the persons?” I was
agitated by the news.
“Reena is annoyed with you. She whined before her husband, a
clerk in the Ministry of Finance in the Government. And he complained to the
Chairman when the latter called on the Finance Minister yesterday. As this is
an all-women branch, the management is trying to find a woman officer to
succeed you. There are not many women officers. Therefore, it is taking some
time. Somebody will come to take charge from you in a day or two,” she spoke breathlessly
in a hushed tone.
“During the day, my department kept a close vigil on me. So I
could not inform you. On my way home, I have stopped here to let you know. I am
calling from the reception but have no guts to come to the branch. If somebody
sees me talking to you, I will be in trouble. Take care. Bye.” The phone
disconnected, leaving me numb.
Manjari, who had worked with me earlier, was one of my most
trusted lieutenants. She was also fond of me. She had risked leaking the
top-secret information to me, but the news left me heartbroken. Was this the
reward for taking good care of the customers in the branch? I knew her husband
worked in the Government of India, but did it give Reena the license to
misbehave with the customers? And her husband? I never expected him to stoop so
low. He walked up to the Chairman, who was waiting outside the office of the
Minister and provided him with some fictitious feedback about my misbehaviour
with the customers and asked that I be transferred from there immediately. I
was also upset with the circle management for their unquestioned compliance
without verifying the facts of the matter.
I was crestfallen but did not know what to do or who to talk to.
At home, when I shared this with my husband. He listened stoically and gave me
practical advice, “Never mind. A transfer is a part of life in the career. Just
take it in your stride, and do not brood over it. Such occasions will come in
future again. Do not take them personally. Shall I fix up a daiquiri for you to
soothe your nerves?”
His advice was sensible, but my mind was agitated. At night, I
lay awake in bed, reliving every single moment of pain that Reena had inflicted
on me during the last six months.
The customers of this branch were only Government officials who
did not like to wait for payment by holding a token. They used to complain to
me every day about the absence of a Teller in the branch. I met my seniors and
apprised them of the public expectations. I recommended to head office for
posting at least one Teller, but my recommendations fell on deaf ears. I
persistently verbalised my need at all the fora. Finally, the head office
heeded and decided to post a Teller at the branch.
I remembered the morning when I saw a tall woman walking
nonchalantly into my cabin. She was wearing dark maroon lipstick on her dusky
complexion, along with a disgruntled expression on her face. Walking into the
room casually, she plunged into one of the visitor chairs without introducing
herself. Opening her branded big bag without even looking at me, she started
searching for something in it, opening pocket after pocket, as I looked on,
wondering who she was.
Though irritated at her behaviour, I did notice her expensive
tanchhoi silk saree. Finally, she pulled a crumpled piece of paper from her
stylish bag and threw it in front of me without uttering a word.
Reading the letter, I realised the visitor was Reena Sarna (not
her real name), who was posted to the branch as a Teller. Despite her uncivilised etiquettes, I felt jubilant that
head office had finally heeded my request. Now, we will definitely be able to
improve the quality of service to our elite clientele.
I personally went with her and introduced her to every staff
member. Everybody was happy to have one more person in this heavy workload
branch. Little did I realise then that Reena Sarna was an inauspicious omen for
all of us.
On the first day, she had an altercation with a customer on the
way he handed her the cheque for encashment. Hearing her shouting at the
customer in a high-pitched voice, I walked up to the counter only to find Reena
screaming, “You have given this cheque to me like this. Who will unfold it?
Your father?”
I was shocked. I had never heard anyone, let alone a woman,
using such foul language. The only fault of the customer was that he had handed
her over a folded cheque instead of opening it before presenting it to her.
Perhaps it was too much effort for her to unfold the cheque and make payment!
Reena had a sense of entitlement about her and looked down upon
all other team members. Nobody seemed to like her and her brusque behaviour.
The cohesiveness of the team was under the threat of cracking down.
Next week, Reena was late by half an hour. There were customers
lined up at the counter, and other staff would not handle her work on the plea
that these were self-payments and the Teller should pay them. Their logic made
sense. If she received a hefty Teller Allowance, she should be at her desk on
time to do her work.
I put a cross against her name on the attendance register and
gave the powers of Teller to the next senior clerk. Reena reached late, yelled,
screamed, and created a ruckus like a spoilt brat. Her shrill voice was audible
across the entire VIP floor of that building, which usually was serene with
pin-drop silence.
Come another day, although Reena was on time, after opening her
counter, she barged into my cabin, picked up the phone, and started instructing
her servant loudly, “Ramu, give bath to Bunty. See that the water is not too
hot or cold. Make him wear a white printed shirt. Yes, the same one on which
brown cats are printed. After that, give him milk. Wash the bottle properly and
see that you hold the bottle well. Do not start watching TV while feeding the
baby.” The instructions went on.
Her high-pitched voice was shattering the silence of that
prestigious floor. Meanwhile, some customers who waited at the counter were
getting restless. I told Reena to return to her desk and attend to the
customers first, which irked her no end. “Let them wait. They can stand for some time. Heavens will not fall if they wait there for a few minutes. As it
is, they do not do much work in their office.”
“No. You attend to the customers first,” I was polite and firm,
but Reena thought I was being rude and siding with the worthless customers at
the cost of Bank staff.
Having a daily altercation with Reena had become a routine.
Last evening, when Manjari conveyed the news of my punishment
transfer, it became one of the most memorable experiences of my life.
“Ding…dong,” the call bell rang, and I realised it was morning,
and the milkman was at the door. I had been awake the entire night. I was not
upset about the transfer but about how it was being done. I felt humiliated to
the core.
Resigned to my fate and feeling down in the dumps, I reached the
office early that day and started clearing the table. I had to remove my
personal belongings from the drawers and prepare myself to get relieved.
Manjari had forewarned me, and I could do little about it.
“Good morning! I see you come to office quite early. Good to find you here. Now, I can empty my pockets. Here is a cheque. Please put it in my savings account. And…eh… here is some cash. Please deposit it in my PPF account. You know the account numbers. No? Will you please fill out the forms on my behalf? Keep the receipts with you. I am going abroad for two weeks and will collect the receipts on my return,” Mr Banerji was giving instructions about his accounts. As the topmost official in that building, he was used to personalised service from me.
As Mr Banerji turned around to leave, I politely mentioned,
“Sir, I will do all this but may not be here to hand over these receipts to you
on your return as I am being transferred from here.”
He stopped, looked at me in disbelief, and said, “Transferred?
Why? You have not completed even two years here. Is it a routine transfer?”
“I understand somebody from the Ministry of Finance has
complained against me that I am not extending good customer service,” I uttered
and shrugged shoulders.
“Who says so? You are doing a wonderful job. I know it for
sure.” He turned around, pulled a chair and sat down. Picking up the phone, he
dialled a number from memory and started talking to someone in Bangla. I could
not understand a word of it.
Ending the phone call, he told me not to worry and to continue
working as usual. Half an hour later, I received a phone call from the Ministry
of Finance, “Where exactly is your branch? Which floor? Which side? The Finance
Minister will visit your office in the afternoon at about 2.30pm.”
At 2.30pm, my heartbeats increased as the Minister of Finance
walked into the branch, “I did not know there was a bank here. How long have
you been here? What is the business like? How many accounts?” He made some
general enquiries and was gone.
***
The next day, my successor landed up at the branch, “I have been
sent here to take over charge from you and relieve you today itself,” she
informed me. Before I could react, the phone rang, “Has Ms Kampani (not her
real name) reported at the branch?” This was my boss, the Regional Manager.
“Yes, sir.”
“Hmmm. Do not let her know that I had called, but do not hand
over the charge till further instructions."
“Yes, sir,” I said and looked at Ms Kampani. She was busy looking
around, admiring the interior of the branch.
A few minutes later, she said, “Let us start with Branch
Documents.”
“Let us go and have some tea and samosas,” I evaded the suggestion, and we walked to the
cafeteria in the building.
By afternoon, it was difficult to resist her pressure on me. She
had been instructed to relieve me on the same day. Obviously, she was pressing
for that. Ignoring what the boss had said, I shared the truth with her. She was
quite a sport, and we mutually agreed to sit and enjoy the company of each
other until the bosses took the final call.
Three days passed like this. The mystery about the way forward
was intensifying. Meanwhile, I had an attack of the flu and developed a high
fever. I rang my boss, “Sir, I am down with flu and want to go on leave. May I
hand over the charge of the branch to Ms Kampani? She is already here.”
Without thinking for a second, he responded, “No. I am deputing
Ms Varma (not her real name) to take charge.” This was the usual arrangement.
When Ms Varma came to take charge, Ms Kampani could not stomach it and left for
head office, never to return. At head office, they asked her to join there
itself.
I won the battle and had immense satisfaction that I could not
be dislodged in a devious manner. The way fate protected me, I felt strong
enough to take on Reena Sarna head-on during my remaining tenure.
Reena Sarna continued to work in the same office, and so did I,
though the daily confrontation continued. She had tried to use the official
powers of her husband to kick me out, but a divine shield saved me from her evil
designs.
Don’t they say, “Jako raakhe saainya, maar sake na koye.”
***
PS: A week after Ms Kampani went back, the
Personal Secretary to the top boss of the circle phoned me. He wanted to know
how my transfer was stalled.
"I cannot understand this puzzle at all.
One day, the Chairman wants you to be transferred from the branch immediately.
Two days later, he instructs the transfer to be cancelled."
"How would I know? Why not ask the
Chairman?"
"The boss tried to, but the Chairman is
also zapped," he confided in me. He hoped I would divulge some clue to the
mystery of my transfer and its reversal.
I had grasped he was trying to explore what connection I had wielded to stop my transfer. He continued to interrogate me for half an hour, but butter would not melt in my mouth. I had learnt to be discreet.
7 comments:
The travails of a Branch Manager saddled with a bag of wind flying high because her husband was in Ministry of Finance!! As it is handling Award Staff needed all sorts of capabilities, then finding such staff who could throw their weight around, kick up a fuss and create a nuisance was the lot of a hapless Branch Manager, who managed with grace and inherent efficient qualities.
Hats off to your patience.
Madam, how could you remember white printed shirt with brown cats.....really your narration of events is so good. Again proud of you. (Sridevi Mallur)
True! Harsh words are like the writing on water for the speaker but are etched in bronze in the target's heart forever! But, fortitude and patience help us tide over such unsavory situations! One has to just move on, IF POSSIBLE! (Rajeshwar Kaushik)
Bravo, Ranjana ji. Such unsavory incidents and sudden transfers are a part of our lives. A mere clerk in MOF could shake your chair.
As for uncouth employees, you will find them everywhere. Moreso, when we were BMs.
But hats off to your steadfastness. Each incident takes you out with flying colors.
Divine Shield is a very apt title and at the most appropriate time, Mr Banerji was sent as divine intervention. My salutations as always!
My only grudge is that Chairman took a decision at the behest of a clerk in MOF without ascertaining the facts n ground reality. (Vijay Gupta)
Btw, I admire your typical feminine traits ! Trust a man never to remember the colour and style etc. of the subject's clothes, shoes, etc. but you do remember the shade of the lipstick, style of the saree, etc., so vividly! Your prose is so clear that one is easily transported to the scene of action and is able to view the events from a vantage point in the viewers gallery! Kudos! Thanks for sharing your experiences! I humbly suggest that you should try your hand at writing fiction. I am confident that your works will be liked immensely and will sell like the proverbial hot cakes! (Rajeshwar Kaushik)
It was great reading the way you dealt with Reena spouse of a clerk in Finance Ministry. You had always been strong like that. (Arun Aggarwal)
What a roller coaster ride you v had in the bank, Ranju! Those experiences v veritably made u the person u r today. I have specially loved Shiv's laid back responses to your travails. (Kanwal Bir Singh Bedi)
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