Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Friday, 8 May 2026

Vendor ID Plastic Cards : a 6 year project "

 

HC tells BMC : Issue ID Cards to Hawkers !   ( I told you so — in 2020 ! )


The Bombay High Court has now directed the Maharashtra State Government and BMC to issue ID cards to all authorised hawkers in Mumbai.

[ Read the Hindustan Times report here : HC tells State, BMC to issue ID cards to authorised hawkers ]

My reaction ?

Only 5 years late !

And I mean that quite literally.


What I had proposed — back in February 2020

On 26 February 2020 — more than five years ago — I wrote a detailed blog post titled :

      >> BMC proposes : Hawkers will dispose ?   [ 26 Feb 2020 ]

In that post, I had specifically proposed :

✔   Grant a hawking license to ALL 3 lakh hawkers in Mumbai

✔   BMC to issue each hawker a plastic ID card with — photo, name, gender, birth-date, address, mobile no, Aadhaar No, PAN etc.

✔   The card to be embedded with a pre-paid / rechargeable FasTag, which would automatically transfer licence fee to BMC's bank account

✔   A mobile app [ I called it HawkWalk ] on the hawker's smartphone to display his exact location 24x7 on a Central Hawking Control Room dashboard at BMC

✔   If a hawker uses BHIM for accepting payments, 5% of each sale would automatically get credited towards his monthly licence fee — thereby incentivising digital payments and organising this totally unorganised sector

✔   Integration with What3Words GIS API for precise pitch-slot identification — far simpler than BMC's proposed Latitude / Longitude approach

And the most important outcome of all :

Once every hawker becomes LICENSED, he can flash his plastic card at the police constable and say :

" I am taking your photo with HawkWalk and pressing the button : This officer wants a bribe "

End of the Hafta Raj !

( Remember : Rs 1.5 crore changes hands every SINGLE DAY in Mumbai in hafta payments to allow street hawking. Each unlicensed vendor pays an average of Rs 50 per day. That is Rs 18,250 per year — gone, forever, the moment he gets a licence card. )


Then in May 2020 — I went further

When Finance Minister Smt. Sitharaman announced the Street Vendor Loan Scheme ( Rs 10,000 working capital loans for 50 lakh vendors ), I wrote :

      >> Street Vendor Loan Scheme   [ 14 May 2020 ]

My argument was simple :

By repaying Rs 31 per day ( principal + interest ), a vendor avoids hafta of Rs 50 per day.

Daily net saving = Rs 19. Annual saving per vendor = Rs 7,000. Saving for 50 lakh vendors = Rs 3,500 Crore per year.

The FM did not mention this saving in her press briefing. Politically incorrect, perhaps ?


More related blogs — if you want the full picture :

>> All my blogs on : ID Cards for Street Vendors


So — what is the pattern here ?

I have been writing to Central and State Government Ministers, Chief Ministers, Secretaries and Municipal Commissioners for many years now — emailing them detailed, specific, actionable proposals on a wide range of policy matters.

The response is almost always :

    ✗   No acknowledgement

    ✗   No reply

    ✗   No action

And then — somewhere between 5 and 8 years later — the same idea quietly surfaces as a Government Order, a Court directive, or a new scheme.

Without, of course, any reference to whoever originally suggested it.

I have stopped being surprised. Or bitter. At 92, I have learned that ideas are like seeds — you plant them, and someone else harvests them. What matters is that the harvest happens.

The Bombay High Court has now done what BMC should have done in 2020.

Better late than never.

But imagine — just imagine — what Mumbai's streets would look like today if the system had moved in 2020, not 2025.

3 lakh hawkers, each with a digital ID. Zero hafta. Full GIS tracking. Digital payments. A clean, organised, humane informal economy.

Instead, we waited five more years for a High Court to tell the BMC what a retired 87-year-old had already told them in a blog post.

Such is life in India's governance ecosystem.

I remain — optimistic.


With regards,
Hemen Parekh
08 May 2026
hcp@RecruitGuru.com
www.hemenparekh.ai


[ PS : If you wish to chat with my Digital Avatar — even when I am no longer here physically — visit : www.hemenparekh.ai ]

For a Headhunting Firm : A design for Productivity

 


 

WHITE PAPER

The Pyramid of Productivity

A Visionary System Architecture for the Future of Recruitment

H.C. Parekh  |  3P Consultants  |  Founded 1990  |  Blueprint: January 2003

 

Executive Summary

 

In January 2003, H.C. Parekh — a former General Manager at Larsen & Toubro and founder of 3P Consultants — committed to paper a system architecture that was, in many respects, a decade ahead of its time.

The document, titled the 'Pyramid of Productivity,' laid out a five-layer technology and operations framework for a next-generation recruitment enterprise.

 

What makes this blueprint remarkable is not merely its ambition, but its structural coherence. Parekh had identified, by 2003, the core components of what would later be recognised as a recruitment technology platform: master data management, multi-entity databases, AI-assisted matching tools, a SaaS application layer, and a multi-sided user network. Each of these pillars is now a distinct product category attracting billions in venture capital.

 

This white paper examines the Pyramid layer by layer, contextualises it against today's HR technology landscape, and draws out its enduring lessons for entrepreneurs, HR leaders, and technology strategists.

 

1990

Founded

Post-L&T startup

5

Architecture

Pyramid layers

10,000+

Target Corporates

User group

2003

System Blueprint

Pyramid diagram

 

The Founder and the Vision

 

H.C. Parekh's path to 3P Consultants was shaped by a formative decade in industrial relations at one of India's most complex manufacturing enterprises. As General Manager at Larsen & Toubro's Powai factory (1979–1987), he had led a pioneering programme of participative management — building trust between workers and management through structured dialogue, transparency, and shared ownership of outcomes. That programme produced measurable productivity gains of 3% per year.

 

The founding of 3P Consultants in 1990 represented a pivot from managing people within an organisation to building the infrastructure through which organisations find, assess, and place people at scale. Parekh brought to this new venture the same systems orientation that had characterised his L&T work: the conviction that sustainable performance requires well-designed architecture, not improvisation.

 

The recruiter who wins is not the one with the best rolodex — it is the one with the best system.

 

The Pyramid of Productivity: Layer-by-Layer Analysis

 

The pyramid is structured with the most abstract, foundational elements at the top and the most concrete, user-facing elements at the base — an inversion of the conventional pyramid metaphor that reflects Parekh's engineering sensibility. Each layer depends on the integrity of the layers above it.

 

Layer

Components

Modern Equivalent

Masters (Top)

Industry · Function · Designation Level · Education · City/PIN/STD · Company-Group · Country-Currency · Edu. Institutes

Master Data Management (MDM) — normalised reference tables that ensure every record is consistently tagged

Databases

Member Resumes · Non-Member data · Client Profiles · Company Profiles · Job Ads & Histories

Multi-entity relational schema — candidates, clients, companies, and postings as first-class objects

Software Tools

Highlighter · Eliminator · Refiner · Compiler I/II · Composer I/II · Ad Viewer · Matchmaker · Desig. Splitter · Educator · Extractor · Classifier · Tabulator · Profiler

AI-assisted recruitment workflow engine — what LinkedIn's Recruiter and modern ATS platforms do today

Applications

OES · Manhattan · Lock-In · Communicator · Home Working / Video Interview · Web-Service

SaaS product suite — remote interviewing, engagement tooling, and web-based service delivery

User Groups (Base)

3P Consultants (Residents & Office) · 700 Newspapers · Content Providers · 16,000 Cybercafes · 1,000 Franchised Placements · Interview Experts · 3P Consultants (Home) · 10,000 Corporates · Recruiting Cos.

Platform network — multi-sided marketplace aggregating supply, demand, and distribution simultaneously

 

Deep Dive: The Five Layers

 

Layer 1 — Masters: The Foundation of Data Integrity

 

The topmost layer of the pyramid is not the most glamorous, but it is the most critical. The Masters layer defines the controlled vocabularies and reference data sets against which all other data is tagged: Industry, Function, Designation Level, Education Level, City/PIN/STD/State, Company-Group, Country, Currency, and Educational Institutions.

 

The annotation 'Actual Designation ?' beside the Designation field is telling. Parekh was already grappling with what remains one of HR data's most stubborn problems: job title proliferation. When every company invents its own titles — 'Associate Vice President,' 'Senior Consultant II,' 'Principal Engineer (Band 6)' — cross-company comparisons become impossible. The Masters layer was designed to impose order on this chaos through standardised designation hierarchies.

 

In today's parlance, this is Master Data Management (MDM). The fact that Parekh designed it in 2003 — before most Indian companies had formalised HR information systems — speaks to the depth of his data architecture thinking.

Layer 2 — Databases: The Multi-Entity Schema

 

The Databases layer separates five distinct data entities: Member Resumes, Non-Member data, Client Profiles, Company Profiles, and Job Advertisements with their Histories. This separation is not merely organisational tidiness — it reflects a sophisticated understanding of data relationships.

 

A candidate is not the same as a member. A client is not the same as a company. A job advertisement is not the same as a vacancy. By maintaining these as distinct entities with their own schemas and relationships, Parekh designed a system capable of nuanced queries that flat-file or single-table approaches could not support. This is, in essence, a normalised relational database design — the kind that enterprise software companies charge significant licence fees to provide.

Layer 3 — Software Tools: The AI Layer Before AI

 

This is the layer that most astonishes a modern reader. Parekh identified thirteen distinct software tools, each performing a specific function in the recruitment workflow:

 

       Highlighter & Eliminator — automatic shortlisting based on defined criteria

       Refiner — iterative narrowing of candidate pools

       Compiler I/II — aggregating profiles from multiple sources

       Composer I/II — generating structured outputs (letters, reports, shortlists)

       Ad Viewer — browsing and parsing job advertisements

       Matchmaker — the core engine, pairing candidates to roles by profile fit

       Desig. Splitter — decomposing non-standard titles into standard components

       Educator — training and upskilling module

       Extractor — parsing unstructured resumes into structured data

       Classifier — categorising candidates by function, industry, level

       Tabulator — generating comparative reports

       Profiler — building rich candidate profiles from multiple data points

 

The Extractor and Matchmaker tools, in particular, describe what is today a multi-billion dollar software category. Resume parsing (Extractor) and AI-driven candidate-job matching (Matchmaker) are the core features of platforms like Eightfold AI, HireVue, and LinkedIn Recruiter. Parekh conceived them when the standard technology for resume processing was a fax machine.

Layer 4 — Applications: The Product Suite

 

The Applications layer translates the underlying data and tools into user-facing products. Six applications are identified:

 

       OES (Online Employment Service) — the core job portal

       Manhattan — likely the enterprise client management application

       Lock-In / Blackhole — engagement and retention tooling, designed to keep both candidates and clients within the 3P ecosystem

       Communicator / Octopus — multi-channel communication platform (email, SMS, alerts)

       Home Working / Video Interview — remote assessment and placement

       Web-Service — the API and integration layer connecting 3P to third-party systems

 

The inclusion of a Home Working and Video Interview module in 2003 — seventeen years before remote interviewing became a business necessity — is perhaps the single most striking element of the entire pyramid. Parekh had recognised that geography was an artificial constraint on talent placement, and designed a product to dissolve it.

Layer 5 — User Groups: Platform Economics Before the Term Existed

 

The base of the pyramid is the most expansive layer, and the one that reveals Parekh's most distinctive insight: that 3P Consultants was not a recruitment agency but a platform. The user groups identified include:

 

       3P Consultants (Residents and Office-based) — the supply-side professionals

       700 Newspapers — distribution and sourcing partners

       Content Providers — data enrichment partners

       16,000 Cybercafes — distributed access points for candidates without home internet

       1,000 Franchised Placements — distributed delivery network

       Interview Experts (Home-based) — distributed assessment capacity

       3P Consultants (Home-based) — remote workforce

       10,000 Corporates and Recruiting Companies — the demand side

 

The 16,000-cybercafe distribution network is particularly brilliant in its context. In 2003, broadband penetration in India was minimal. Parekh designed around this constraint by treating cybercafes as branch offices — distributed access points through which candidates across India could engage with the 3P system. This is the same problem that M-Pesa solved in Kenya a decade later by using mobile airtime agents as banking branches.

 

Ahead of Its Time: The 3P Blueprint vs. Today's HR Tech

 

The table below maps each element of the 3P Pyramid to its contemporary equivalent in the global HR technology landscape — products and platforms that were built, in most cases, years or decades after Parekh's 2003 blueprint:

 

3P Vision (2003)

Industry Reality (Today)

"Matchmaker" tool for candidate-job fit

LinkedIn AI Recruiter, HireVue, Eightfold.ai

Video Interview / Home Working module

Zoom, Teams, HireVue — mainstream post-COVID

16,000 cybercafe distribution network

Mobile-first job portals (Naukri app, Indeed)

Franchise placement network (1,000 nodes)

Staffing aggregators, gig platforms

Extractor tool for resume parsing

AI resume parsing (Sovren, Textkernel, Rchilli)

Web-Service application layer

Cloud-native SaaS HR platforms

Multi-sided user groups (corporates + consultants + newspapers)

Indeed, Naukri — two-sided marketplaces

 

Lessons for Entrepreneurs and HR Leaders

 

Systems Before Scale

The most common failure mode for recruitment businesses is to grow headcount before building infrastructure. Parekh's instinct was the inverse: design the system first, then populate it with users. The pyramid's five-layer architecture could support a business of any size because its foundations were not human — they were structural.

Data as Competitive Moat

The Masters and Databases layers of the pyramid represent a form of competitive advantage that is difficult to replicate: clean, structured, proprietary data. Every placement, every assessment, every client interaction was designed to feed back into the database — making the system smarter with each transaction. This is the flywheel that powers every successful platform business.

Distribution is Strategy

The 16,000-cybercafe and 1,000-franchise network was not a marketing plan — it was a distribution strategy. By recognising that candidate reach was constrained by infrastructure, and designing a distribution layer to overcome that constraint, Parekh was thinking about the problem in a way that most recruitment agencies never did.

Remote Work is a Feature, Not a Compromise

The Home Working and Video Interview application was designed into the core product suite, not bolted on as an afterthought. This architectural decision reflected a belief that remote work was a capability to be built, not a problem to be managed. Most of the world took until 2020 to reach the same conclusion.

 

Platform thinking asks not 'how do we serve more clients?' but 'how do we build the system through which clients and candidates find each other?'

 

Conclusion

 

The Pyramid of Productivity is a document from 2003 that reads like a product roadmap from 2015.

H.C. Parekh had, in a single hand-drawn diagram, sketched the architecture of what the global HR technology industry would spend the following two decades building — at a cost of tens of billions of dollars in venture capital and engineering talent.

 

That the vision preceded the technology is not a tragedy. It is a testament to the quality of the thinking. The constraint was not imagination — it was infrastructure: broadband penetration, cloud computing, mobile devices, and AI tooling that simply did not yet exist at the scale the pyramid required.

 

What endures from the pyramid is not any individual feature, but the architectural discipline it embodies: the insistence on building from foundations upward; the commitment to data integrity before data volume; the recognition that a recruitment business is not a collection of individual transactions but a system for creating matches at scale.

 

For the entrepreneurs, HR leaders, and technology strategists of today, the pyramid offers a simple challenge: draw your own. If you cannot describe your business as a coherent layered architecture — from master data through to user groups — you may be building a practice, not a platform.

 

About H.C. Parekh & 3P Consultants

 

Hemen C. Parekh served as General Manager (Industrial Relations) at Larsen & Toubro's Mumbai factory from 1979 to 1987, where he pioneered a participative management programme that produced sustained productivity gains.

He founded 3P Consultants in 1990 as a technology-forward recruitment enterprise. The Pyramid of Productivity diagram was drawn on 6 January 2003 as a system architecture blueprint. Parekh launched the blog 'Letters to L&T Employee' on his 80th birthday (27 June 2013) and subsequently created a digital avatar at www.hemenparekh.ai.

 

 

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Whitepaper on Participative Management

 


WHITE PAPER


Participative Management as a Productivity Driver

Lessons from the Larsen & Toubro Lonavla Seminar (1986)

Based on the work of H.C. Parekh  |  Powai, Mumbai  |  December 1986

 

Executive Summary

 

In an era of industrial unrest, one manufacturing enterprise demonstrated that the path to sustainable productivity was not found in coercion or contractual compliance — but in conversation. Between 1979 and 1987, Larsen & Toubro's Mumbai factory navigated strikes, go-slows, and even workplace violence by deploying a strategy rooted in radical transparency and structured dialogue.

 

This white paper examines a pivotal episode in that journey: a joint employee-management seminar held in Lonavla on 20 December 1986. Attended by approximately 165 participants — union shop representatives and senior management alike — the seminar produced measurable results: an average annual productivity gain of 3% and a durable atmosphere of trust between the workforce and leadership.

 

The implications for today's industry leaders are profound. As organisations navigate hybrid workforces, disengagement crises, and fractured institutional trust, the L&T model offers a tested, replicable framework for rebuilding the human infrastructure of high performance.

 

~165

Participants

Union + Management

8 hrs

Seminar Duration

8 AM – 4 PM

+3%

Productivity Gain

Per year (avg)

1979–87

Years of Impact

Mumbai Factory

 

The Context: Crisis as Catalyst

 

The late 1970s and early 1980s were turbulent years for Indian manufacturing. At Larsen & Toubro's Powai factory in Mumbai, the turbulence was acute: prolonged strikes, deliberate slowdowns, and an atmosphere of mutual suspicion between workers and management had eroded both morale and output.

 

It was in this climate that H.C. Parekh, then heading industrial relations at L&T, began a systematic programme of direct communication — writing personally to approximately 7,500 workers, managers, and union leaders. The underlying hypothesis was straightforward: that sustained productivity could only be achieved through genuine employee motivation, and that motivation required trust, and that trust required honest communication.

 

"Management of productivity in the coming years will depend increasingly on the single crucial factor of employee motivation through harmonious employee-employer relations." — H.C. Parekh, 1986

 

The Lonavla Model: Design Principles

 

The December 1986 seminar was not an improvised initiative. It emerged from sustained dialogue between management and the union, and its design reflected several deliberate choices that industry leaders would do well to study.

1. Neutral Ground

The seminar was held at 'Swapna Poorti,' a BKS facility in Lonavla — away from the factory floor, its hierarchies, and its history. Physical distance from the workplace is not merely symbolic; it reconfigures the psychological dynamic, enabling participants to engage as individuals rather than as role-incumbents.

2. Joint Ownership

Critically, the seminar was not a management initiative that the union was invited to attend. It was jointly conceived and co-designed. The union suggested the venue; management agreed to bear the costs. This shared ownership of the process created shared ownership of its outcomes.

3. Structured Candour

The agenda was built around honest disclosure. Management presented a SWOT analysis of the company — including its weaknesses and threats — to shop-floor representatives who had rarely, if ever, been granted access to such strategic thinking. This act of transparency communicated respect.

4. Time for Debate

Of the eight hours available, three and a half were reserved for open discussion and debate. The seminar was not a presentation with a Q&A; it was a forum. This allocation of time signals what an organisation truly values.

5. Senior Participation

Both the president and general secretary of the parent union body, alongside multiple Joint and Deputy General Managers, were present. The seniority of participants on both sides signalled institutional seriousness and created the conditions for consequential decisions.

 

A Framework for Participative Management

 

Drawing on the L&T experience, we propose a five-pillar framework for organisations seeking to replicate these outcomes:

 

Pillar

Description

L&T Application

Open Communication

Direct, honest dialogue between management and workers

Letters to 7,500 employees; transparent SWOT sharing

Structural Inclusion

Formalised participation channels beyond grievance redressal

Joint seminar design with union; shared agenda ownership

Psychological Safety

Environment where candid feedback flows freely

Off-site venue removed hierarchy; equal seating

Sustained Follow-through

Momentum maintained through scheduled future engagements

Foremen seminars planned for Jan & Apr 1987

Shared Ownership

Mutual accountability for outcomes

Union-management co-sponsorship of productivity goals

 

Outcomes & Measurable Impact

 

The results of the L&T participative programme were not merely anecdotal. Over the period spanning the broader initiative (1979–1987), the factory achieved a sustained productivity increase averaging 3% per year — a remarkable figure given the industrial relations climate of the era.

 

Beyond the headline number, the Lonavla seminar produced several qualitative outcomes that created the foundation for continued improvement:

 

       Union shop representatives gained strategic literacy — understanding the company's competitive position, cost pressures, and growth opportunities for the first time

        

       Management gained ground-level intelligence — the structured debate surfaced operational friction points that formal reporting channels had obscured

        

       A video record of the proceedings was created — enabling institutional memory and broader dissemination of the participative process

        

       Immediate follow-on seminars were planned — for foremen (January 1987) and assistant production managers (April 1987), signalling that this was a programme, not an event

        

       A pipeline for joint foremen-worker seminars was established — deepening the participative architecture to the shop-floor level

 

Implications for Today's Industry Leaders

 

The L&T case is not a historical curiosity. Its lessons are, if anything, more urgent today than they were in 1986.

Contemporary organisations face a workforce that is more educated, more connected, and more willing to disengage — or exit — when treated as an operational variable rather than a stakeholder.

Transparency Is a Competitive Advantage

Organisations that share strategic context with their frontline workforce — including uncomfortable truths about competitive threats and business vulnerabilities — consistently outperform those that do not. The L&T SWOT presentation to shop representatives was not naive; it was sophisticated stakeholder management.

The Architecture of Dialogue Matters

Suggestion boxes and engagement surveys are not participation. Genuine participation requires structured, senior-sponsored forums where employees exercise meaningful influence over decisions that affect their working lives. The design of the Lonavla seminar — off-site, jointly owned, debate-heavy — was not incidental to its success; it was constitutive of it.

Continuity Converts Events into Culture

The Lonavla seminar derived much of its power from what came next: the foremen seminars, the joint worker-supervisor forums, the sustained correspondence programme. A single off-site event generates goodwill; a sustained programme generates trust. Trust is what drives the 3%.

Union Relations Are a Strategic Asset

In markets where collective bargaining remains significant, the quality of the management-union relationship is a material driver of business performance. The L&T model treated the union not as an adversary to be managed but as a partner in the shared project of organisational health.

 

Recommendations

 

Based on the L&T experience, we offer the following recommendations for industry leaders seeking to implement a participative management programme:

 

       Audit your current communication architecture: are frontline employees receiving strategic context, or only operational instructions?

        

       Design at least one annual forum where senior management and frontline representatives engage in unscripted dialogue on business-critical issues

        

       Involve employee or union representatives in the design of participation programmes — co-design confers legitimacy that top-down initiatives cannot

        

       Create a multi-year roadmap: identify which levels of the organisation will be drawn into the participative process, and in what sequence

        

       Measure outcomes beyond productivity — track trust indicators, voluntary turnover, suggestion scheme participation, and grievance rates as leading indicators of engagement health

        

       Document and disseminate — video recordings, written summaries, and internal case studies create organisational memory and demonstrate institutional commitment

 

Conclusion

 

The Lonavla seminar of December 1986 stands as a case study in the power of structured, honest, senior-sponsored dialogue to transform the dynamics of an industrial organisation. In a period marked by strikes and suspicion, H.C. Parekh and the leadership of Larsen & Toubro chose conversation over confrontation — and the productivity data bore out that choice.

 

The challenge for today's industry leaders is not to replicate the 1986 seminar, but to identify its animating principles — transparency, joint ownership, sustained commitment, and structural respect for worker voice — and embed them in the design of their own organisations.

 

Productivity is not extracted. It is earned — through the patient cultivation of trust.

 

About the Source Material

This white paper is derived from the archived letters of H.C. Parekh, published at latterstolntemployee.blogspot.com — a collection of over 7,500 communications written to workers, managers, and union leaders at Larsen & Toubro's Mumbai factory between 1979 and 1987.

Parekh launched the blog on his 80th birthday, 27 June 2013, as a record of a remarkable experiment in industrial relations. The original memo upon which this paper is based was dated 31 December 1986.