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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalVinod Arora is HR Shared Services Leader for North America at Accenture, and he also serves as Global Mobility Manager. He works across the Hire 2 Retire cycle and brings 16 years of cross- functional experience across HR and operations. His earlier leadership roles include Vice President, Business Services HR at Wells Fargo, HR Shared Services Manager at Amazon, and HR Shared Services Lead for AIG at Genpact. Vinod’s work sits where people processes meet delivery pressure. He has led new hire onboarding, background validation, exit management, and day-to-day employee support, along with teaRead More...
Vinod Arora is HR Shared Services Leader for North America at Accenture, and he also serves as Global Mobility Manager. He works across the Hire 2 Retire cycle and brings 16 years of cross- functional experience across HR and operations. His earlier leadership roles include Vice President, Business Services HR at Wells Fargo, HR Shared Services Manager at Amazon, and HR Shared Services Lead for AIG at Genpact.
Vinod’s work sits where people processes meet delivery pressure. He has led new hire onboarding, background validation, exit management, and day-to-day employee support, along with team management, service-level delivery, outsourcing coordination, vendor management, and reporting for business leaders. He also has experience with process mapping, training, business presentations, and analytics dashboards that keep teams aligned on what is happening and what is pending. He completed a Developing Business Acumen program in 2020.
He holds an MBA in Human Resources from IMT CDL and a bachelor’s degree in HR Management and Services from St. Conrad’s Inter College, Agra. He is based in Delhi, India.
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Every workplace has two rulebooks: the one in the policy folder and the one people learn in the corridor. The first one promises fairness, equal opportunity, and “zero tolerance” written in neat fonts with neat headings. The second one is messier, and it spreads faster. It tells you who gets picked for the high-visibility work before the role is even announced. It tells you which names keep getting forgiven, which names keep getting questioned, and how a
Every workplace has two rulebooks: the one in the policy folder and the one people learn in the corridor. The first one promises fairness, equal opportunity, and “zero tolerance” written in neat fonts with neat headings. The second one is messier, and it spreads faster. It tells you who gets picked for the high-visibility work before the role is even announced. It tells you which names keep getting forgiven, which names keep getting questioned, and how a “great job” in a review can still end with you being asked to wait another year for promotion. It tells you that a complaint can become a label, that silence can feel safer, and that favouritism can live in the air without ever becoming a sentence anyone is willing to sign.
Somewhere in this gap, HR becomes a punchline. People reduce a complex function into a single caricature, either useless or conveniently missing when decisions get uncomfortable. This book asks a sharper question: if workplaces keep repeating the same problems, why do the systems designed to prevent them keep failing, and how did the function meant to hold the line even come into existence in the first place?
In HR : Hire to Retire , Vinod Arora unpacks the myths that keep HR weak, the mechanics that make bias look “normal,” the processes that can restore trust when they are done right, the career choices inside HR, and the future of the field as tools get smarter and work gets faster. Whether you sit at a desk, in the corner office, or in HR, this is a book you keep close, then return to when the next “tough call” arrives.
Every workplace has two rulebooks: the one in the policy folder and the one people learn in the corridor. The first one promises fairness, equal opportunity, and “zero tolerance” written in neat fonts with neat headings. The second one is messier, and it spreads faster. It tells you who gets picked for the high-visibility work before the role is even announced. It tells you which names keep getting forgiven, which names keep getting questioned, and how a
Every workplace has two rulebooks: the one in the policy folder and the one people learn in the corridor. The first one promises fairness, equal opportunity, and “zero tolerance” written in neat fonts with neat headings. The second one is messier, and it spreads faster. It tells you who gets picked for the high-visibility work before the role is even announced. It tells you which names keep getting forgiven, which names keep getting questioned, and how a “great job” in a review can still end with you being asked to wait another year for promotion. It tells you that a complaint can become a label, that silence can feel safer, and that favouritism can live in the air without ever becoming a sentence anyone is willing to sign.
Somewhere in this gap, HR becomes a punchline. People reduce a complex function into a single caricature, either useless or conveniently missing when decisions get uncomfortable. This book asks a sharper question: if workplaces keep repeating the same problems, why do the systems designed to prevent them keep failing, and how did the function meant to hold the line even come into existence in the first place?
In HR : Hire to Retire , Vinod Arora unpacks the myths that keep HR weak, the mechanics that make bias look “normal,” the processes that can restore trust when they are done right, the career choices inside HR, and the future of the field as tools get smarter and work gets faster. Whether you sit at a desk, in the corner office, or in HR, this is a book you keep close, then return to when the next “tough call” arrives.
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