14th May 2010:
Today I traveled to Kanbauk, a small village in southern Division of Thanintaryi in southern Myanmar, to attend to some staff problem.
The flight time was 1 hour and 20 minutes on Twin Otter 300 series and throughout the journey, some 10000 feet above the fertile delta area of Ayeyarwaddy, I dozed off at once upon take-off with head hanging in the air as the seat had no headrest. Not sure myself why I was so tired, mentally. May be the work pressure, I supposed. Pressures which made my heart beat faster. Pressures which put me at the corners most of the time. Every now and then the thought about changing job came to my mind, but I paid no heed. Now it was here again!
Waiting for me on the ground were a couple dozens of unhappy employees — casual workers we hired to upkeep our facility. Days earlier they sent a memo from an anonymous gmail account to the management demanding some kinda compensation. The whole issue or mess rather started when the top management of this organization at HQ started asking the employees, “what is our core business?”. That simple question sent line managers scramble for some kind of actions to be taken on their part, in order to re-channel their resources to support Company core business. On my part, manpower optimization is the area to focus. Laborers, drivers, gardener, security personnel are non-core. Yes we need their services to support our core business, but we do not want to own them. The management has decided to transfer their employment to other company which in turn will provide us the manpower services we need. The idea is simple. A simple plan which could go either way. Happy staff. Or unhappy staff. But it seemed to me now I am facing the latter.
On brighter note, am I in the business of making people happy? I am not running an amusement park, right? Somebody in me kept poking: “Who and what makes me happy?”.
How to get to Kanbauk?
This is a small village in southern Myanmar. No tourists allowed for security reason (only 60kms to border Myanmar/Thailand). Meant for hard-core workers, as this is a logistic hub for oil & gas industry. If you must come here, a chartered flight from Yangon to here takes about 1 hour and 20 minutes, depending on weather condition. Another alternative is by bus from Yangon which takes the whole night and part morning. Yet another way to reach here from Yangon is by commercial flight (Air Yangon) to Dawei and drive up to Kanbauk. Dawei-Kanbauk distance by road is about 50 kms.
Leave a Reply