John Kuruvilla: I have worked in over 20
companies but there was none who could run John even close on sheer class and
managerial ability; he had the kind of personality self-help authors would
approve enthusiastically. I first met him in June, 1994 while awaiting him for
a job interview and he saw me an hour later. He was profusely apologetic and attributed
it to a sudden client meeting.
The written test was even more
foreboding but at the end, I heard John’s sonorous voice on the phone,” I am
going to make you a job offer. You will start at a 4 K package and is it okay?
Then come and meet us in the evening”.
John explained,” From the test
you have some potential but a long way to go. You will be working with the best
advertising talent in the city and not many people have survived the 6 month
hurdle. So, help you God”.
The office was in Lavelle
Road, that runs left of the famed Richmond circle and it is a two-storey
building. All the cabins were in grey decolam sheets with a red horizontal
life, the office looked a MNC. Behind the receptionist stood a tall painting of
J Walter Thompson in a grey beard, sailor uniform, and a cigar. John had a
separate room for himself and from where he ruled the office with an iron fist.
John was only 32 and already a
Vice-President of a large advertising firm. He was nearly 6’ in height though
stout for a healthy buffalo look, dark complexion, short hairs, square face,
and a very prominent mustache. When he spoke, it was almost studio quality
loud. I have never seen a person generate this kind of charisma before even at
a glance. He looks a military commander out to inspect a parade in an office
setting.
Contract was the ideal office
I have worked; one cannot talk loudly on the phone and disturb others in the
vicinity, a telephone etiquette I have not found elsewhere. Two, one cannot
read newspapers and magazine – as an agency they get every possible trash –
during office hours except the lunch hour. At the register, one has to log out
the “in” and “out” time. As a client executive, you cannot brief creative
unless the T-plan was approved by the reporting head; the creative team must
visit retail outlets with a camera in tow once a month. Contract was so full of
rules but that showed a kind of professional excellence I have not seen hence
in other places.
John would come in his Gypsy
(that vehicle suited his huge figure to a T) at 8’0clock to the office and be
the last to go at 7 or 8 in the evening. John used me for those consumer
surveys and I can claim to have walked every bye lane of commercial Bangalore.
He would command,” Sathya, draft a questionnaire for a perceptual study of HMT
watches”. I would report back within half-an-hour and even with brief glance at
the printout, he would squeeze it to a ball and throw it into a bin. “Try again
and this time more slowly,” I would retreat much chastened. I would consult other
colleagues, dust off books from college days, call up friends and come up with
a better effort. Then John would scrutinize,” For this objective, why this
question?” You were left in doubt that you were in the midst of a master. John
even explained,” I am not a singer, dancer, athlete, painter, broker anything
in life. I am an advertising person and let me be the best in the city”.
This passion for excellence
had rubbed to every member of the team; Saurabh was the best account executive
in town, Sudhir the best account planner, Ganesh Shenoy the best media planner,
Swami was making waves in direct marketing, Amit Kumar the production guy, and
Nishad a good hand at copy. In my 25 years of work experience, never has a
team with such skills and expertise gather in one place. You could see sparks
of brilliance in the air. We could have sent a man to a moon with such
attitudes and discipline.
Most of the senior executives
lectured at IIMs or other management colleges as visiting faculties and it was the only time I saw “advertising” to be
intellectually stimulating. I just worked there for 3 months but those were the
most memorable part of my work-life.
As for me I was a wild rough
diamond that John and his team polished me for life. The three months stint in
Contract, Bangalore got me so drilled in the “Thompson way and the T-plan” that
you wake me up in midnight and I’ll hold a seminar on Single-minded
proposition, target audience, brand image and brand positioning and all that
crap.
Post Script
(2017): John
did correspond to my blogs and I even mailed across my “Darling India”. I
follow him on Facebook and he still has that magnetic presence about him. On
the career front, he ventured into new territories like startups. As a
marketing man, there was simply no one quite like him. He steels himself to a
goal and spares no effort in accomplishing them and what’s more he usually
succeeds.
Verdict: Sattvic
Lessons to be learnt:
One in a million professional; make for good friends and learning
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