Monday, April 2, 2012

Earful!: Attempting to be Mallya



(Image Source: http://www.kaipullai.com/)


The problem with larger than life figures is that people can never see them any other way. For instance, can you believe Vijay Mallya is poor? All media reports say he is unable to pay his employees. But take one look at him and the diamond ear rings and gold chains continue to dazzle your eye balls. He arrives in a designer suit and a snazzy car and asks for donation (sorry bail out) from the government. You, like the budding punk in my neighborhood, will be tempted to believe, the good times are just around the corner.


Well, who doesn’t want to be publicly poor, but privately rich? If that is your dream, then this post should help you fulfill it. Remember, you need to be rich to begin with.

1. Divide and conquer – Split your kitty into smaller chunks and make the world believe they are separate sources of funding cut off from one another. When money in one fund gets spent, you seek bail because “the complex nature of investments and conflicts of interests prevent you from borrowing internally”. Of course in reality, it is like cutting a chocolate cake into pieces and eating one piece every hour. As long as you are the solo cake-eater, you will end up eating the entire cake by nightfall. Who cares if you had one extra slice in the afternoon?

2. Confuse, don’t convince – We deal with pesky people all the time. More so, when one starts getting rich. Intermix and liberally use terms like “breath through”, “new segment”, “good times,” “World class”, “customer delight” and “Innovation” repeatedly in your conversations. Make people feel grateful for your existence. During bad times (of course you must never use the words in public), you can always pin the blame on “jealous competitors”, “regressive government policy” or “sectorial crisis”.

3. Get others to tow your line – After all, how long can you say the same thing? For a change, let others in your business circles speak the same jargon. As long as you are having a good time at their expense, how does it matter?

4. Travel by your private jet– Isn’t that cheaper than renting an A380? See, you are already saving money and consequently your company from bankruptcy. You have a moral conscience.

5. Party – Show up at all major parties or throw some yourself. Don’t you need exposure (and funds) to like-minded people? Additionally, you (and others) are having good times, thanks to mugs of your beer being downed by the crowds.

6. Keep your private yacht docked in the most prominent bay – See how poor you have become? You can’t even afford to take off on a cruise. It is another matter that renting that part of the bay will cost you more than the cruise itself.

7. Stay cooped up in your bungalow – Look how depressed he has become, the public will say. Only you know that no one serves food on gilded cutlery in this country, except your household staff comprising smart young people who don’t care much about salary but are here for the “experience”. If any pesky journalist questions you on the opulence, you can always say you have only tomato soup for dinner.

If these seven steps don’t help you, try acting in movies. Not only will you get more money, you will also learn the requisite emotions that come with playing the part of a publicly poor person.

3 comments:

  1. I think Mallya took a sneak peak at this blog and decided to pay his junior employees some salary. The last thing a publicly poor person wants is to become privately poor.

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  2. This guy is not poor as long as his political connections are there to help him out.In any other country his F1 and cricket team would have been sold along with his private jets and palaces in Bangalore to cover the costs of running King fisher.

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