Wednesday, 26 March 2025

*Meet the man with 27,500 daughters* That’s why they call him – Appa.

*Meet the man with 27,500 daughters* That’s why they call him – Appa. His real name? KP Ramaswamy. Owner of KPR Mills, Coimbatore. A textile baron by profession. A father figure by choice. While corporate honchos talk about employee retention, cost-cutting, and bottom lines, this man is busy transforming lives. How? By turning mill workers into graduates. By making education their stepping stone to a better life. It all started with a simple request. A young girl at his mill once told him – "Appa, I want to study. My parents pulled me out of school because of poverty, but I want to study further." That one sentence changed everything. Instead of giving his workers just a paycheck, he decided to give them a future. He set up a full-fledged education system – right inside the mill. 📌 Four-hour classes after an eight-hour shift. 📌 Classrooms, teachers, a principal, even a yoga course. 📌 All fully funded. No strings attached. And the result? 🚀 24,536 women have earned their 10th, 12th, UG, and PG degrees. 🚀 Many are now nurses, teachers, police officers. 🚀 20 gold medallists from Tamil Nadu Open University this year alone. Now, you’d expect a businessman to worry about attrition. What if these women leave? What about workforce stability? Here’s what KP Ramaswamy says – "I don’t want to keep them in the mill and waste their potential. They are here because of poverty, not by choice. My job is to give them a future, not a cage." And that’s exactly what he does…. They leave. They build careers. And then? They send more girls from their villages to the mill. The cycle continues. This isn’t just a CSR initiative. This is Human Resource Development in its truest sense. At a recent convocation, 350 women received their degrees. And KP Ramaswamy made an unusual request – "If you or your friends can hire them, it will give other girls the hope to study further." Think about it. A man running a multi-crore empire isn’t asking for business. He’s asking for jobs – for his workers. How often do we see this? This story isn’t just about KPR Mills. It’s a lesson in leadership, in corporate ethics, in nation-building. B-Schools should teach this. HR professionals should study this. And the world needs to know this. A story worth spreading.

No comments:

Post a Comment