In today’s business environment, companies are investing heavily in technology, automation, and rapid expansion. Yet, one challenge continues to remain constant across industries — building strong, reliable people and creating organisations that can sustain growth over the long term.
In this insightful episode of Leadership Lounge with The CEO Magazine, Shweta Singh speaks with G. S. Ramesh, Founder & Chairman of Layam Group, a leader whose career spans more than four decades across some of India’s most respected industrial organisations.
From his formative years with the Tata Group and Hyundai Motor India to building Layam Group after retirement, his journey reflects a leadership philosophy rooted in discipline, ethics, trust, and people-first thinking.
Many organisations speak about employees as their “greatest asset.” Few truly build systems that treat people as long-term contributors rather than short-term resources.
According to G. S. Ramesh, leadership is not simply about managing operations or achieving quarterly numbers. It is about building individuals, creating accountability, and helping people realise their potential over time.
Throughout the conversation, he explains how strong organisations are not built only through strategy or capital — they are built through culture, consistency, and the ability to develop people at every level.
Reflecting on his early professional journey, Ramesh shares the influence that organisations like Tata and Hyundai had on his approach to management and workforce development.
These experiences shaped his understanding of:
Discipline and operational excellence
Respect for employees across levels
Process-driven thinking
Long-term organisational vision
The importance of ethical leadership
Rather than viewing workforces as replaceable, he learned the value of investing in people and creating systems where employees could grow alongside the organisation itself.
While many professionals slow down after retirement, Ramesh chose to begin a completely new entrepreneurial journey by founding Layam Group.
His motivation came from recognising a persistent gap in the workforce ecosystem. Companies often struggled not because talent was unavailable, but because hiring systems failed to identify potential beyond qualifications and resumes.
Layam Group was built around a larger purpose — helping organisations create stronger workforces while also opening opportunities for individuals who are frequently overlooked by conventional hiring systems.
One of the strongest themes in the conversation is the disconnect between recruitment and actual human potential.
According to Ramesh, many organisations hire based purely on:
Degrees and certifications
Immediate technical requirements
Short-term business pressure
Standardised hiring filters
But this approach often ignores qualities that define long-term success, including adaptability, discipline, attitude, and willingness to learn.
He argues that companies frequently miss capable individuals simply because they do not fit conventional profiles. In the long run, this creates both talent shortages and weak organisational culture.
Ramesh strongly advocates for identifying and nurturing untapped talent pools.
He believes that organisations must move beyond traditional hiring mindsets and create opportunities for individuals who may lack polished backgrounds but possess strong work ethic and growth potential.
This perspective becomes increasingly relevant as industries face:
Workforce shortages
Rapid industrial transformation
Evolving skill requirements
High employee attrition
Changing expectations from younger professionals
For sustainable growth, companies need workforce models that focus not only on recruitment — but also on development, retention, and long-term capability building.
The discussion also explores how technology and AI are reshaping industries and workforce structures.
While automation will continue to transform operational processes, Ramesh believes human values will remain central to organisational success.
Technology may improve efficiency, but trust, leadership, collaboration, empathy, and accountability cannot be automated.
As industries evolve, organisations that combine technological adoption with strong people cultures are likely to remain more resilient and sustainable.
Drawing from decades of leadership experience, Ramesh shares practical advice for younger professionals entering today’s competitive work environment.
He emphasizes the importance of:
Discipline and consistency
Patience in career growth
Continuous learning
Respect for work and people
Building credibility over shortcuts
Rather than chasing rapid success alone, he encourages professionals to focus on developing strong fundamentals and long-term character.
At its core, this conversation goes beyond business growth. It explores what it truly means to build organisations that endure.
For Ramesh, sustainable success is not defined only by scale or profitability. It is reflected in the quality of people an organisation develops, the opportunities it creates, and the values it protects while growing.
His journey offers an important reminder that leadership is ultimately about people — not just processes, targets, or expansion plans.
This episode offers valuable insights for:
Business leaders and founders
HR and workforce professionals
Young managers and entrepreneurs
Professionals navigating career growth
Organisations focused on culture and people development
It is a thoughtful conversation on leadership, ethics, workforce transformation, and the importance of building businesses that remain grounded in people-first values.
Because in the end, strong companies are not built only through systems.
They are built through people who are trusted, developed, and empowered over time.
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