“There is a commercial reason why we believe that a fair living wage is not a cost but an investment.”
AURORA: We last had a
formal interview in June 2020
in the middle of the Covid
lockdown. In many ways,
Covid was a defining moment
for businesses the world
over. Three years on, what
were the lasting lessons of
the pandemic?
AMIR PARACHA: The pandemic
was a blessing in disguise. As
far as Unilever is concerned, it
made us put humanity before
commercial imperatives and
taught us to lead with care,
compassion and empathy. We
learned how to build business
through conscious capitalism
rather than cold-blooded
capitalism. Unilever is as old
as Pakistan. We have been
here since 1948 and during
this time we have talked about
our presence, our operations
and our brands. When Covid
arrived we said to ourselves
the country needs us, and we
made a pledge that we would
make our contribution in terms of
vaccines, PPE and many other
things. We changed our tagline
from Unilever in Pakistan to
Unilever for Pakistan – and by
just replacing ‘in’ with ‘for’, made
a huge difference internally.
People felt connected; they
felt that they were doing more
than just a job. It became a
mission and a duty to serve
people. We were perceived not
as just a commercially driven
company but one with a larger
purpose. Despite the lockdown,
our factory workers came to
the production line because at
that point soap was the only
deterrent against Covid and
our salesforce was constantly
in the market stocking soap.
In Pakistan, we are the largest
company that makes soap, and
it was not about selling, it was
about rendering a service. We
were the first brand to run an
agnostic ad campaign urging
people to buy any soap because
saving lives was more important.
When the pandemic ended
and things started to ease, we
saw how for the first time our
people had felt emotionally
connected to the company, and
we felt that we had to keep this
spirit alive. So we decided to
stick with ‘Unilever for Pakistan.’
Then the question was what would be the manifestation of
‘Unilever for Pakistan’ after
Covid? There were three
roads: protecting the planet,
propagating healthier eating or
protecting livelihoods. We opted
for protecting livelihoods.
A: This was the subject of your
Independence Day campaign?
AP: Yes. We started this
initiative in 2021. To be a
company that is focused on
providing a fair living wage.
A: Was this a local initiative or
a global one?
AP: The idea was there at
the global level, but it was not
integral to the overall strategy
or a rallying cry for everyone in
the organisation. We wanted to
make it a rallying cry. We set a
target that by 2025 all our people – approximately 90,000 – would
be earning a fair living wage.
Predominantly, they are people
who are not on our books; those
on our books – 700 permanent
employees – are already on
a fair living wage. It is more
about the factory workers who
are third-party workers and the
salesforce who are employed by
our distributors. Let me add that
in doing this we are not led by a
desire to be ethically compliant;
we are led by a commercial
case. There is a commercial
reason why we believe that a
fair living wage is not a cost but
an investment.
A: What is a fair living
wage conceptually and in
monetary terms?
AP: That people should earn
enough to have a buffer against
any emergency or unaccounted
expense. It provides people
with a dignified living so that
without having to borrow they
can survive. The Government of
Pakistan has set the minimum
wage at Rs 32,000 per month,
and a fair living wage today
would be around Rs 60,000.
Families in Pakistan need Rs
60,000 to have a decent life; one
that is free from worries about
managing school fees or paying
for medical expenses or the rent.
A: What would be the
commercial case?
AP: In 2013 when I was in sales,
my attrition rate was 40% –
meaning that over a two-year
period, the entire workforce
changed. We discovered that there is a direct correlation
between the more experience
a person has, the better the
results they produce – and this
convinced us that we needed to
find ways to retain them. The fact
was that they were paid so little,
that if offered an extra Rs 500
they would quit. We decided to
double their salary over the next
three years and take care of their
medical and education expenses.
In three years, the attrition went
down from 40 to four – and sales
went up. A direct correlation. So
when people say that a fair living
wage is an ethical consideration,
my response is, on the contrary,
it is a commercial one. Unilever
is a for-profit organisation and
we look at it as an investment.
We have also taken the concept
to other industries and we have
formed an industry coalition. To
date, it comprises 11 companies
and they made a pledge to take
their workforce to the fair living
wage. But it is a journey and
you can’t do it overnight. In fact,
the idea is starting to become a
movement and there is now an
understanding of the concept
across industry. For Unilever
Pakistan it is not about being the
biggest or the most successful
company anymore, we want to
be the most soulful company of
Pakistan – and we have done
very well commercially in the
last three to four years. People
come to Unilever beyond purely
commercial reasons. They come
because it gives them purpose;
that they are performing a service
for the country and its people.
A: How does it work in
practice? As it also involves
third-party workers, does
this mean an entity other
than Unilever will have to
absorb an increase in their
HR overheads?
AP: There are two ways to do
it. You grow fast enough and
create enough leverage within
the system to partially self
fund it. Or you start a massive
saving programme within
the company. We have taken
McKinsey on board to work on
identifying savings. We are a
big operation and there is a lot
of wastage. We are extracting
that wastage without creating
any additional cost pressure
on ourselves or our partners.
The idea is to do it in a way
that does not increase the cost
of doing business, otherwise,
you become uncompetitive and
in this game you have to stay
competitive. Of course, it is
easier said than done. It has to
be done very intelligently and
the entire organisation has to
be galvanised. This is a four
year journey and we are doing
this in a way that ensures the
company remains competitive
and profitable. It is about putting
together a road map. The
concept rests on two metrics.
Ability to pay and willingness
to pay. In this respect, there
are four kinds of organisations.
Organisations that are able
to pay but are not willing.
Organisations that are willing but
not able. Organisations that are
able and willing. Organisations
that are neither able nor willing.
We are trying to engage with
organisations to at least come
up to a level of willingness. If
I broaden the canvas to the
country level, the reality is that
inequality of income in Pakistan
is highly concentrated. According
to our Human Development
Index, inequality has gone
up; we were 120 out of 160
countries; today we are 151. But
the situation can be improved
with a fair living wage. When
incomes go up, living standards
go up, and when they go up,
people buy more products more
often. It’s like a boomerang.
When the overall prosperity
of the country goes up, the
companies operating in the
country benefit.
A: Why did you decide to
publicise this initiative now?
AP: Because we have stress
tested the idea for the last three
years. Now when people ask
me questions about it, I can give
answers with conviction.
A: How was this initiative
received by other companies?
AP: I received a lot of flak in
the initial days. I went on a
talk show and spoke about it
and a post appeared on social
media saying: “Amir Paracha,
CEO, Unilever said that the
country should move away from
minimum wage to fair living
wage,” and it went viral. So
much so, that at some social
gatherings, people came up to me to say that I was creating a
big problem for them by making
such statements. My answer
is that I was speaking for my
company. Nevertheless, people
are starting to accept the idea.
This is why I don’t call this an
initiative, but a movement. It may
take another five or 10 years in
Pakistan for it to gain not just
acceptability but adoption. This
is a long-term movement, not a
flash in the pan.
A: Is the industry coalition of
11 companies as committed to
the idea as you are?
AP: Many of them have shown
willingness and taken some
steps. Will they continue to stay
invested? I don’t think I am in a
position to comment, but at least
they have endorsed the concept.
A: At the global level, how
invested is Unilever in this
programme? I ask because
what happens if and when
Amir Paracha moves on;
what are the chances of
the next CEO bringing the
same commitment you are
displaying to the project?
AP: Number one, Unilever
has clearly said that improving
overall livelihoods across their
entire end-to-end value chain is
a big part of their agenda – with
the caveat that whatever is done,
it has to be commercially viable,
because we are answerable to
our shareholders. Number two,
every Unilever company has
its own P&L to manage and
as far as Unilever globally is
concerned, if we can manage
our P&L, stay profitable and at
the same time implement this
initiative, we can go ahead. This
means Unilever Pakistan had
to work out its financial model
and make the business case.
To your question about what
happens if and when I leave, my
hunch is that given that we have
institutionalised this programme
all the way down to the lower
rank of the organisation; even
were I to move away, it will
sustain itself. One of the reasons
why people work for Unilever is
because this is a company that
has a larger purpose than selling
soap or ice cream. Millennials
want to join an organisation that
is driving a social cause; they
demand that the organisation
they work for has a position on social issues. It is becoming
integral to any commercial
organisation to take a position on
a social cause.
A: What are your thoughts about
the current economic crisis?
AP: I am an optimist, and the
last three months have been
better than the preceding six.
I don’t see any reason why
Pakistan cannot come out of
this crisis, although we have
never been in a crisis as bad as
this one. Before we were able
to get funding from somewhere,
but this time it is another story.
I think this could well be the
best thing to have happened,
because we have had to manage
on our own – and we have.
However, to get out of this crisis
for good, we need to take some
structural decisions. We need to
depoliticise the economy.
A: How difficult has it been to
maintain market share in the
face of heightened inflation?
AP: In a high inflation situation,
consumers either down-trade or
they downgrade.
A: What is the difference?
AP: Downgrade is when a Surf
Excel consumer starts to use
Rin, or if they already use Rin,
they downgrade to Sunlight – so
we have three tiers. Similarly, we
have TRESemmé, Dove, Sunsilk
and Lifebuoy. Consumers can
easily downgrade because these
brands are all doing the same
job but at different price points.
Down-trade is when a Surf Excel
user down-trades from a one
kilo pack that costs Rs 600 to a
Rs 100 pack every week, rather
than paying Rs 600 in one go.
A: Which one is more common?
AP: The downgrade. This is
how we hold on to our category
franchise, if not the brand
franchise. We have enough
brands within each category for
consumers to move down. This
has been our strategy and the
reason why FMCG companies
are usually called all-weather
companies – boom or bust, we
manage to keep consumers afloat.
A: To what extent is Unilever
affected by the trend to buy local?
AP: In the past, we used to
have what was called the
pipeline economy, whereby
a brand owned the entire
process from end-to-end.
They manufactured, marketed
and sold the product – it
was a pipeline. Today we
have a platform economy
and everything is more
democratised. If you want to
launch your own shampoo,
you can buy the formulation
off the shelf. So a lot of local
brands are coming up and
consumers are moving to them
because they are good brands – especially because they think
they are good value for money
rather than a way of supporting
the local economy. In fact,
multinational brands support
the economy more, because
they conduct their business
in the most responsible way
possible. Be it the value system,
the working conditions or
paying taxes. Looked at from
that lens, multinationals do
business a lot more responsibly,
and I think they have paved
the way for local companies to
come up to that level.
A: What leadership skills should
the CEO in the age of the
Millennials and Gen Z possess?
AP: When I started my career 27
ago, it was the era of command
and control and a leader had to
have charisma and awe. Today this
has turned into trust and inspire.
It is about humility, relatability and
ease and access. It has been a
tectonic shift. Today, rather than
dictate, you have to inspire people
to follow a vision – and then you
trust them. Trust that they will
work towards realising that vision.
Start-ups are a great example.
The humility young entrepreneurs
bring to their task of building and
scaling up a company. They are
the leaders of the future and
Millennials are inspired by such
personalities and that is how to
lead into tomorrow.
Amir Paracha was in conversation with Mariam Ali Baig. For feedback: aurora@dawn.com
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