Beyond Damage Control: Why Language & Timing Matter

When an organization hits PR disaster, such as recent TCS Nashik controversy or Lenskart grooming guideline issue, success depends entirely on language and timing. In Indian context, brand is not just business but part of social fabric, meaning any lapse in communication is felt as personal affront to consumer identity. To strengthen response, one must look deeper into psychological and legal layers of communication where language acts as brand’s character and timing serves as its pulse.

Precise language acts as primary shield during crisis. When TCS faced allegations of harassment, public demanded specific truth rather than vague corporate jargon. Using phrases like zero tolerance, internal procedural gaps fails, because it ignores human element of victim’s experience and feels like hollow corporate talk. Language must be culturally fluent and respectful. Labeling religious symbols like Tilak or Bindi as grooming violations is linguistic disaster that ignores deep-rooted sanctity of Indian traditions. Response should move away from Western neutral templates which feel cold and disconnected, instead using words that show genuine respect for local values. Direct ownership is always better than passive voice. While Lenskart’s leadership apology aimed to humanize brand, calling document outdated can seem like convenient excuse if public feels it is merely damage control.

Timing is brand’s pulse, and in digital age, Golden Hour has shrunk to Golden Minutes. If organization remains silent, public fills information vacuum with anger and local activists define narrative. Once labels like Anti-Hindu or Discriminatory stick, even factual corrections later feel like lies. While Lenskart responded within twenty-four hours to prevent long-term boycott, true mastery lies in acknowledging issue while it is still trending. Early response signals company is not hiding. In TCS case, delay between reported events and public acknowledgment created narrative of negligence that is hard to erase. When criminal investigations are involved, corporate PR often slows down, but this silence allows hostility to grow unchecked.

Effective clarification follows simple structure of acknowledging pain before jumping to facts. Company must explain how lapse happened—perhaps training manual error—without using it as shield to deflect blame. Beyond initial statement, organizations must leverage social proof and third-party validation to rebuild trust. Mentioning independent probes, SIT investigations, or external audits adds significant weight. When company says we are investigating, it sounds like self-protection, but stating that external agency is auditing manuals signals true accountability. Internal alignment is equally vital because employees are biggest brand ambassadors. If internal culture contradicts public apology, leaks will occur and further damage credibility. PR must always align with actual HR policy changes to maintain integrity.

Organizations must move from damage control to cultural audit by involving diverse committees during policy drafting to prevent controversial labels from ever being triggered. High-empathy, low-ego communication ensures that when mistake happens, public sees it as human error rather than institutional bias. Clarification must never turn into justification. Saying we did this because of global standards only increases anger, while admitting we made error in adopting global template without local context creates path to forgiveness. In Lenskart case, citing outdated documents is risky if document was live on server; better approach is acknowledging oversight in review process to maintain sincerity and rebuild broken bond with Indian consumer.

Ghosting: Vibrant Threads to Silent Dreads

Amit Ranade was grandson of the legendary Girdharilal Ranade, a man whose word was considered more valuable than gold in busy markets of Ahmedabad. When Amit took over Vibrant Threads, he did not just inherit a massive factory and rows of high-speed looms, he inherited a name that stood for reliability. Amit sat in his office overlooking dusty roads of Ahmedabad.

Burden of Avoidance: Loss of Trust

He was now boss of Vibrant Threads, a company known for quality cloth. Amit was a clever man, but he suffered from a peculiar weakness. He found it very difficult to give people bad news. He thought staying silent was better than causing disappointment. This habit of Ghosting was about to cost him dearly.

It was a hot Monday morning when Jiya, his best designer, sent a crucial email. She had developed a new type of moisture-wicking fabric for a massive international sports brand. This contract was biggest opportunity in the history of the firm. Amit opened the file and felt a knot in his stomach. The design was perfect, but cost of new looms needed to weave it was way over budget. Amit did not want to say no to Jiya, but he also did not want to admit that company was tight on cash. Instead of calling a meeting to discuss a phased rollout or a budget adjustment, Amit did what he always did when faced with pressure. He simply stopped responding. He closed the laptop and decided he would deal with it later.

Tuesday came and went. Jiya called him three times, but Amit watched his phone vibrate and did not pick up. He figured that if he did not answer, Jiya would simply wait. He did not realize that silence is never just silence, it is a message of its own.

He ignored the emails. He ignored the WhatsApp messages. When Jiya knocked on his door, he told his secretary to say he was in a deep meeting with the bank. Amit thought he was being clever by staying silent, but in leadership, silence is a deafening noise. By ghosting his team, he was effectively telling them that their time, effort, and talent did not matter. He was trading hard-earned trust of his grandfather’s era for a few days of temporary peace. In a leadership role, clarity is the only currency that matters. By choosing to ghost his lead designer, Amit was defaulting on his primary debt as a boss.

By Wednesday afternoon, atmosphere in Ahmedabad office had turned sour. Jiya was sitting at her desk, staring at a blank screen. She could not move forward with the yarn orders or dyeing process without Amit giving her the green light. Since her leader was invisible, her work became stagnant. Downstairs in canteen, workers gathered over plates of khaman and hot tea or thepla and chutney, the whispers started growing loud. People noticed that Amit was avoiding design floor. Absence of a leader creates a vacuum, and in Ahmedabad, people fill a vacuum with gossip. Rumours spread that Amit had gambled away company funds or that global deal was a scam. They began to wonder if factory was planning layoffs. Ghosting had created a vacuum, and anxiety was filling it up.

Fabric Mill to Rumour Mill

Thursday brought a final chance for Amit to fix things, but his fear won again. Jiya sent one last message asking for a decision. Amit read it, felt the familiar sting of anxiety, and put his phone face down on the desk. That night, Jiya, feeling insulted and undervalued, accepted a position at a competing firm in Surat. She felt no loyalty to a man who treated her like an unread notification. Jiya was now updating her resume. She took a call from a rival textile mill in Surat and booked a bus ticket for next morning.

The end arrived on Friday afternoon. International clients flew into Ahmedabad for an unannounced factory tour. They wanted to see the fabric that was supposed to change the market. Amit, sweating under his linen shirt, led them to production area. He expected his staff to have something ready out of habit, but he found looms silent and tables bare. There was no prototype because leader had provided no direction.

No Leadership, No prototype, No Clients

The clients did not even wait for a cup of tea. They walked out, and word of disaster spread through local industry by sunset. Amit sat in his grandfather’s old teak chair, realizing he had committed ultimate sin of leadership. He had inherited a legacy built on strong handshakes and clear words, but he had lost it all because he was too afraid to speak. Ghosting had not saved him from a difficult conversation,  it had ensured he would never have a seat at the table again.

Amit realized too late that his silence had not just avoided conflict, it had guaranteed a catastrophe. Reliability is foundation of authority, and he had cracked that foundation by being unreachable. His reputation in Ahmedabad market took a massive hit that day. Employees learned that their leader would disappear when things got tough, and global brand took their business elsewhere. Amit learned a hard lesson that a simple no or a request for more time would have saved his business. Ghosting is never a strategy; it is just a slow way to lose everything that has been built. Ghosting in the fond hope that problems will get fixed or with an attitude of “they can go to hell” will take you exaxctly there – to Hell.

Graduate Unemployability – Humanware or Hardware Issue?

This article comes as my take after I read an article on a popular Skill Development and News aggregator Platform on Graduate Employability. The graduate unemployability crisis has a hidden root cause. While we focus on hardware of education, we keep ignoring the human-ware. Shiny campuses and high-speed Wi-Fi mean nothing if the person at the front of the room is disconnected from the modern world. We are producing lakhs of graduates who aren’t job-ready because you cannot inspire excellence if you haven’t lived it.

Infrastucture Remain in OEM Packing Until it is Scrapped
PC: Gemini

In many Indian colleges, teaching is a fallback, not a choice. Faculty often teach subjects like cloud computing or digital marketing without having spent a single day in a tech firm. It’s like trying to teach someone to swim using a textbook in a dry room. No matter how modern the syllabus, a teacher just reading PowerPoint slides makes employability a distant dream.

Bridging the Gap: A Practical Roadmap

To fix the system, we must redefine job-description and titles of a Guru in modern times:

To revitalize the educational landscape, we must bridge the gap between ivory towers and real world. This begins by democratizing expertise through Professor of Practice model, rather than limiting industry veterans to elite institutions like IITs, we should bring those with two decades of on-the-ground experience into every Tier-1, Tier-2 and Tier-3 colleges.

To keep classroom knowledge from stagnating, Industry Sabbaticals should become a standard requirement. Teachers need to immerse themselves in corporate environments for several months every few years, absorbing latest technical tools and high-stakes hustle of modern workspaces.

However, systemic change requires Incentivizing Quality. Teaching must be transformed into a financially lucrative and socially prestigious career path, one that actively competes for the attention of top-tier engineers and managers.

Finally, classroom experience itself must evolve. Faculty training should prioritize Facilitation over Rote Learning, shifting instructor’s role from a sage on stage who merely finishes a syllabus to a guide on the side who masters art of sparking deep, critical discussion.

The Mindset Shift

Pouring capital into high-end hardware and sprawling glass campuses is a superficial remedy for a deep-seated educational crisis. Without a foundation of exceptional teaching, these assets are little more than expensive set dressing. It is a classic case of White Elephant Syndrome, institutions invest crores in advanced machinery primarily to dazzle regulators and parents. Yet, since faculty often lacks practical expertise to integrate this tech into a real-world context, equipment ends up mothballed under plastic sheets, serving as a monument to wasted potential.

The gap between intent and impact is most visible in curriculum. Updating a syllabus is not merely a clerical exercise, it is about bringing those subjects to life and should be an art form. In the hands of an uninspired educator, even most modern curriculum remains new wine in a very old bottle. This stems from a fundamental misallocation of resources. Indian institutions consistently over-index on physical infrastructure because it is visible, marketable, and easy to quantify. Meanwhile, soft infrastructure, rigorous teacher training and competitive salaries, is neglected simply because its value is harder to capture in a brochure.

Lost Navigator
PC: Gemini