Superstar Shahrukh Khan delivered speech at IIM Bangalore at the Indian
Institute of Management in Bangalore (IIMB).
Here is an excerpt of the speech:
Thank you
to Saif and team to put all this together. Good evening to the Alumni of IIM,
the faculties, students and distinguished guests.
I was so
pleased with myself when Mrs. Shaw requested me to give the keynote lecture for
this alumni conclave until I saw the alumni list. My mind suddenly froze up
like the icebergs in Iceland where I have just shot my latest song, and I
thought, “What will I say to all these wonderfully wise people?” For a second I
contemplated sending a stunt double but then I read a joke about the wisdom of
all you amazing achievers from IIM. The joke made it clear to me that all of
you are extremely wise, but your wisdom is of a different kind from us lesser
mortals. It went something like this….it was about a kid who claimed he was too
good for the standard 1 that he was in and should be promoted to the fourth
standard. He was marched to the principal’s office and for gender equality
reasons; obviously the principal was a lady. She thought the kid should be
given a fair chance, as ladies are always fair and said she would ask him a few
questions and if he will answer them right…he will be promoted to the fourth
standard. Her first question to him was…what does a cow have four of that I
have only two of? Boy after a moment…Legs.
What is
in your pants that you have but I do not have. Boy…pockets.
What does
a lady do sitting down a man does standing up and a dog does with his one leg
raised. Boy…shake hands.
What
starts with F and ends with K is a four letter word and if you don’t get it,
you have to use your hand….boy confidently…A Fork.
The
principal looks at the teacher and tells him, send him to the IIM…he will fit
in there just perfect.
That gave
me some confidence to stand before you all. Maybe in your quest for knowledge,
you all might have overlooked some very basic and simple truths…so here I am…to
widen your sphere on how normal mortals would have answered those questions.
I am no
guru in creative leadership so please bear me with some compassion and patience
and do excuse my humour.
The
essence of creativity is the ability to channelize imagination into expression
and build from it something new and possibly ingenious. Whether it is an art
form or a scientific invention or discovering a new way of doing the same old
thing…it begins in the mind. A mind that does not function within the framework
of boundaries but constantly searches beyond them is a mind that is able to
create anew. The cornerstone of leadership, I believe, is nothing more than
cultivating the discipline and courage to nurture and sustain such a mind while
constantly calling the bluff of the illusory limits imposed by life.
See I am
fifty. An age where you most likely are making retirement plans not romantic
plans. But here I am still coochie cooing girls my children’s age. And no they
don’t look up to me, actually they can’t because they are all taller than me,
they treat me as their age/equal having been put in the position of someone who
is a romantic hero, I have cultivated a belief that I can love them back as
beautifully as any man can age notwithstanding. With respect dignity and put in
my own experiences of life, which younger heroes won’t have. Though I must
admit girls having a bit of a father fixation, comes in handy with my
endeavors.
Leaders
are able to assimilate experience in order to reframe the world around
themselves on their own terms. They use the very structure of life to dismantle
it. They are not afraid to question, to imagine, to dream and to believe. They
are also not afraid to act even if their actions might not result in success.
There is
an old song I always turn to, when I am faced with adversity. Being a public
figure most of my actions and intentions are questioned, reviewed and sometimes
loved and sometimes even distorted. Ranging from praising my sexiness to
questioning my sexuality, I get it all. But whenever I feel thwarted I think of
this song…Hum to ACT karega. Duniya se nahi darega. Chahye ye zamaana kahe
humko deewana kahe hum toh ACT karega.
Many
books have been written on leadership skills, on methods and models for it but
in my view, it really isn’t all that complicated. To be able to dream
unencumbered, to imagine and hang on to a boundless mind filled with ideas so
that you never stop renewing yourself and the world around you whether it is
your inner world, your consciousness or your outer world that encompasses your
profession and your relationships is essential to leadership. But dreaming is
not enough, its also important to be able to dismantle the old, the frameworks
that are laid out before you, the ideas that you yourself cling to, the ones
that hold you back and prevent you from growing. It is by disassembling your
fears of failing, of losing (not just things, but people and positions), and
most of all- of change that you can be truly creative not just in the things
you choose to do, but in the way you view your part in the world you inhabit.
I meet
many successful people in the world of business and I often find that while
their ideas are very clear, the way they speak of them is oddly dispassionate.
The madness and passion are missing. I get the sad impression that business
often becomes numerical: about millions and targets or it ends up being so goal
driven that there is a stark loss of inspiration from it. I think the emphasis
on organizational goals and efficiency has clouded the poetry of creating.
Perhaps because of the artistic basis of the work I do, it is difficult for me
to relate to this starkness. I feel it lacks life. Creation cannot be a
managerial concept/notion, no matter how good the idea is, it has to be an
“imaginerial” conception. To lead means to inspire, and you cannot inspire
people mechanically or through numerical (with all due respect…unless they are
stock brokers or bankers!!). Inspiration is an emotional construct. To make
people believe in anything, whether it is a product, a story, an idea, or you:
you need to connect their ability to imagine and dream with your own.
You can’t
create within a box with unbending walls. It is an open process, one that is
welcoming and wild. To abandon that inclusive wildness for a narrowly defined
goal is illusory. I have never set one- truly. I have never set out to earn a
particular amount, to count the crores at the box office or to compare my worth
with anyone else’s. In fact I would go as far as saying that quantifiable goals
are indeed illusions. The only reality is hard work.
Diligence
is imperative to both creativity and leadership. Making the mistake of thinking
that your dreams will take flight without you having to flap madly at those
wings to get up into the sky is plain silly. In my experience, its great to
delegate, but there’s no short cut to working hard. To know and to understand
what you are doing, to be open to learning about it and from it, every single
moment requires diligence. It requires work. If you want to excel at something
there shouldn’t be a single person around you who can claim to be more familiar
with its mechanics than you are. Its non negotiable to strive and to be
familiar with your trade. Life remains ordinary if you are unable to sustain
the capacity to work hard on your dreams. If you aren’t determined to get
there- you won’t. And this is a paradoxical thing because I’ve heard many
people say that you need to know where you’re going to be determined about
reaching there but it hasn’t been the case with me. I never knew my destination,
I can’t even claim to know it today…Now that I am on the cover of Forbes India,
is that where I wanted to be as a businessman.
My IPL
team has won the championship and its profitable, is that the dream I had for a
sporting franchise venture. I have a film running in a cinema hall for the last
twenty years…should that be the attempt in terms of achievement for my next
film. No I don’t think so. I believe goals actually limit our ambitions and
desire. I don’t mean that don’t have goals, but call them milestones…think of
them as a passing moment of excellence and keep on striving harder for a place
which can’t be defined or confined by names or numbers. I have never set goals
but I have truly never done a single thing that I wasn’t determined to do the
best. I had no idea where it would take me for the most part of it, but I had
the idea that I would do whatever it was with a determination that would scare
everyone else away.
No matter
how hard we work, however, leadership implies being prepared for disaster. And
it will come. If it doesn’t hit you like a tsunami washing away your house and
home…it’ll show up some other way, as failure maybe, or then by taking away
something (or someone) you loved and believed in… so what are you going to do
about it? You can cry and wallow. I do that often and I am not ashamed to admit
it. I do that in a special corner reserved for tears in my huge golden
bathroom. Somewhere between the Jacuzzi and the steam room, I sit on the floor
and shed huge tears of self pity, persecution and how the world doesn’t
understand my genius and effort….but then I take a hot and cold shower and walk
out wearing my limited edition cologne… ready to embrace disaster. So a bit of
wallowing and crying is ok… but the thing to understand is that if you learn
how to welcome disaster you overcome it. So what if everything gets turned on
its head, change your perspective- do a hand stand- don’t sit there staring at
the ruins, start getting bits of you together and rebuilding yourself. That’s
what leadership is about after all. Besides a “perfect life” is a farce. God
isn’t making utopian ad films and screening them on the clouds to sell it’s USP
to you. It’s a man made idea and we’re buying into it all the time. Actually,
there is nothing more beautiful than the imperfection of life. Creativity is
about taking this imperfection and translating into something beauteous. In my
trade, life serves as a fertile ground for innovation and ideas. We use its
imperfection every moment. In fact there is really nothing that allows us to
create better or to live better than trouble so why not embrace it and embrace
ourselves too in the bargain. And while we are embracing, lets embrace destiny
too ( in my case I will embrace Kajol, Madhuri and Alia also, which unfortunately
doesn’t come in your perks package whichever company you join or create…ha ha)
because Destiny isn’t what it’s rolled out to be either. Accidents happen (I am
a living proof of an accidental movie star/entrepreneur/speaker at an IIM
gathering. I wanted to be a sportsman. Represent India hopefully as a hockey or
a cricket player. Suddenly I hurt my back. Didn’t have the resources to get the
best treatment. Joined a theater group to fill in time and overcome my sadness
of not being able to play at a professional level. Father died and we were
evicted from our rented house. Mother went looking for a smaller place and the
dealer’s father in law was making a series, called Fauji. My mother sent me to
him and he cast me as Abhimanyu Rai in the serial. Things went ballistic from
there. I got film offers and one thing led to another, and I became a movie
star. By the way we never took the house from the dealer, Mr. Dhawan who
actually got me on the road to stardom. And my mother didn’t live long enough
to see my work either). I realize now that hurting my back wasn’t an accident,
being here speaking to you all is the larger happier accident. So destiny plays
a part for sure and no one can teach us either how to find it or how to chase
it. Just like disaster, it will come your way but if you don’t have the courage
to ride its wave when it does, it’ll toss you right back on the beach and all
you’ll get to see is the sunset of a tired and weary life (plus your backside
will be sore!). So I would advise keeping your eyes open for life’s magic and
not turning away from it citing practicality and good reason. There isn’t one.
Be brave enough to face your destiny, to sacrifice for it and compromise for it
if you have to. It will always be worth it. To imagine that you know better
than life is the silliest (and possibly the most costly) mistake one can ever
make.
To
conclude, I’d like to borrow from my latest endeavour of creativity- Dilwale
and say that unless you live by the heart, unless you are Dilwale, none of this
will truly translate into the splendour that life is capable of unfolding
before you. The mind is the seed of creativity but the heart is the soil. That
seed cannot grow without an open heart. To be able to love, to give, to share,
to nurture, to take others along on your journey with as much goodwill for them
as you have for yourself is the basis of all creative endeavour, of all real
success, of all happiness and of true leadership. If you close up your heart to
the world, if you choose to live your life on parameters that let you forget
how to love, you will dishonor life and disallow it from honouring you. There
is no greater creativity in life or leadership than the ability to touch each
moment that you are living with the beauty of living it by your heart, to give
back to life the fullness that it has had the generosity to give to you.
And that
joke I cracked about the little kid…giving all abnormal answers to basic
questions….was just a joke. I really think all of you from IIM are very sexy
and cool. Actually I must admit it’s really next to impossible to find such a
combination of smart and sexy in so many people together. It’s an honour to be
amidst you, and talk with you, for it does get lonely just talking to myself in
the corner of my golden bathroom.
Thank you.
Thank you.
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