| General manager,
chef, musician, family man Anil Mohan wears many
hats and he wears them well. Currently the general manager
of the Taj Pamodzi in Lusaka, Zambia, he started his career
training as a chef with the Oberoi Hotel in Delhi where
he specialised in French cuisine. Mr Mohan chose this line
of work because a cousin whom he greatly admired was a successful
chef. Four years down the line, took a break to see the
world and get some international exposure.
When he returned to India, two events occurred almost
simultaneously. He got married and joined the Taj Group,
initially at the Taj Mahal, New Delhi. "I still find
it difficult to recall which happened first," says
Mr Mohan with a smile. "In fact, I sometimes tease
my wife about her being in such a hurry to marry me that
she didn't even wait to find out whether I had a job or
not."
Mr Mohan says being a chef is not easy. "In the
kitchen, energy levels are very high. Chefs can be extremely
temperamental and it's a high-pressure area to work in."
The worst disaster that can happen to a chef is when he
has forgotten to make a dish that is on the menu. "You
can do nothing at that time, except try and innovate."
While that has never happened to Mr Mohan, he did have
his share of interesting experiences. Like the time they
had to cater for a Muslim wedding and the guest list expanded
from 300 to nearly 1,200 through the evening. Mr Mohan
and his mates quickly raided every freezer in the hotel
for meat, which was speedily cooked with rice to make
delicious biryani. "At the end of the evening, all
the guests were fed and our freezers were empty."
That's what kitchen management is all about. "To
be a good executive chef it's not enough to be a good
cook," explains Mr Mohan. "You must also be
a good manager, skilled in leadership, cost management,
customer relations, employee welfare, process management
and innovation."
Learning for Mr Mohan has over the years meant much more
than developing culinary skills. "I think one of
the biggest learning experiences in the kitchen is operational
skills; you learn to work under pressure. And that has
brought out the best in me, professionally as well as
personally. I have always enjoyed my work because I am
giving it my best shot."
"It was my first experience of handling the other
side of the food area. I had to do a virtual tightrope
walk, balancing the interests of the different sections.
I was holding a meeting with the chefs followed by a catering
meeting. Historically, there has always been some difference
of opinion between the two departments, but I became a
bridge between the two because I could understand both
sides, and issues were addressed immediately. Things worked
smoothly and in harmony during my time there."
"It was my first experience of handling the other
side of the food area. I had to do a virtual tightrope
walk, balancing the interests of the different sections.
I was holding a meeting with the chefs followed by a catering
meeting. Historically, there has always been some diiference
of opinion between the two departments, but I became a
bridge between the two because I could understand both
sides, and issues were addressed immediately. Things worked
smoothly and in harmony during my time there."
His stint at the Bangalore Taj Residency was well rewarded
when he moved to Taj Manjuran in Mangalore as a general
manger. It was certainly different from managing a kitchen.
"To be a good and successful general manger of a
hotel you need to be clearly focused on three main areas:
customers, finance and employees," he explains. "You
cannot prioritise between them, because each is intimately
connected to the other. Financials are very important.
So must be your customer focus, without which your financials
take a dive. And, unless you have a strong, dedicated
team to take good care of your customers, you cannot run
a hotel successfully."
Another important lesson: "When you are starting
a new hotel, you need to first create a team that will
bring in the customers." That is exactly what Mr
Mohan is doing in his current assignment. He arrived at
the Taj Pamodzi in 2003 after a four-year stint as general
manager of the Lake Palace Udaipur. His primary challenge
here has been to bring back the occupancy rate to the
level it was before the hotel embarked on a two-year-long
renovation project. And he began by building a great team,
including many local people.
Living in Lusaka has not been much of a culture shock
for Mr Mohan. He says that it's more difficult to be an
Indian in different parts of India than an Indian in Zambia.
"Moving from north to south in India is like moving
to another country: the language, culture, food, even
the attitude of people is completely different."
When he moved to Udaipur after many years in the south,
Mr Mohan realised he had almost lost touch with spoken
Hindi.
But his roots are deeply embedded in India and Mr Mohan
has tried to inculcate those traditions and values in
his children. "Living in a five-star culture can
easily get you alienated from reality. Children today
are quite exposed to that culture and it's important that
they realise the difference."
His happiest times have been spent with his family. The
highlight of many a Sunday used to be his cooking. In
the morning, Mr Mohan would take his children to the market
to buy meat and groceries, and then cook the afternoon
meal himself. "It was like a family party and the
kids used to look forward to the Sunday ritual."
His children are now grown up; his son is studying hotel
management in Australia and his daughter is in Lusaka,
studying music.
"I should have been a musician instead of a hotelier,"
confesses Mr Mohan. Working in this industry hasn't give
him much time or opportunity to learn professionally so,
over the years, he has trained himself to play various
musical instruments. "I have been gifted with a good
ear for music and can play the harmonium, the harmonica,
and a bit of piano." He also has a good collection
of other instruments like the sitar, the flute, the santoor,
the violin and the tabla. An Indian music buff, Mr Mohan
enjoys Hindustani classical and semi-classical music,
ghazals and old Hindi film songs. He writes the lyrics
of the songs he likes in a precious notebook and, when
he finds the time, practises them on the harmonium.
Spontaneous music sessions with family and friends at
home or at family functions have always been a part of
his life. He displayed the same spontaneity at a Diwali
dinner in Lusaka for the Indian community last year. "Usually
at parties here, the men and women get together in separate
groups. That day I decided to break the monotony and make
the evening more interesting," he recalls with a
smile. He asked for his harmonium to be brought down and
started an impromptu musical evening. "The music
broke the ice completely and people soon joined in. They
still talk about that party around here."
Mr Mohan has always been willing to go the distance,
in his work as much as in his personal life. Considering
how far the quality has taken him, it's no surprise that
he's disinclined to change. |