Tanya Singh, Director, IPE Global features in The Week – Smartlife

Gaurav Bhandari, a Mumbai-based IT professional, is content with the work-life balance he has been able to achieve thanks to his company’s wellness programme. Constant work-related travels across India and a sedentary lifestyle coupled with night shifts were taking a toll on his health. With the encouragement and help of his company, he moved a lot closer to his workplace. “Today, my office is just a walk away from home at Airoli in Navi Mumbai, so no long hour travels to work. My body mass index (BMI) is under check. Besides, I am able to spend quality time with my wife and daughters,” says Bhandari. Bhandari, 38, represents the archetypal corporate employee who was facing the rigours of a hectic work schedule that drained him physically, mentally and psychologically a few years ago. However, corporates are increasingly chalking out wellness programmes for their employees that are ‘need and evidence-based’, as they are beginning to see how it could influence the profitability index graph in the long term.

Holistic as the buzzword

A full-fledged gym, meditation sessions, customised food menu in office canteens, flexible work hours and a preventive health package remain a given as part of a company’s wellness initiative. However, a key difference between the approach a few years ago and now is the shift from being voluntary health offerings to the mandatory introduction of holistic wellness programmes. “We believe health is no longer only the responsibility of particular functions of an organisation. Instead, it is an integrated part of a company’s strategy, governance and operational framework, underpinned by tailored and targeted interventions to assessed need and engagement—both at an individual and employer level,” says Sailesh Shetty, vice-president, Toyota Kirloskar Motor Pvt Ltd.

The evolution of a healthy workplace at Toyota Kirloskar comprises four levels. For example, the first level focuses on sports, the second level stresses on exercise and fitness, the third level identifies and prevents health risk factors, and the fourth level focuses on enhancement of health and productivity. A tailor-made Art of Living programme, as well as a 24×7 free counselling service known as ‘Aasare’ to provide emotional support to workers on personal and workplace issues, stress management through occupational health management (OHA), obesity and overweight prevention programmes called ‘Lean works’ are some of the initiatives that are practised regularly through plan, do check and action (PDCA). In addition, specific health programmes are designed to suit the needs of different employee lifecycles considering their advancing age factor. The wellness programmes are also more holistic than before and also include employee engagement which can affect health. For instance, more companies are realising that presenteeism is a larger issue than the impact of absenteeism on the workplace.

Ideally, presenteeism is defined as the practice of coming to work despite illness, injury or other distress, often resulting in reduced productivity. “About five years ago, we introduced flexi work timings wherein an employee needs to be present in the office only between 11am and 4pm and can choose to come early and leave soon or walk in late and go back home accordingly. Besides, an employee has been given the flexibility to operate from any of the offices that are close to their home. In addition, an employee can choose to work from home two days in a month,” says Lancelot Cutinha, headhuman resources, Mahindra Lifespace Developers Ltd. Moreover, the company has also relooked at the number of maternity leaves being extended. It now provides 40 weeks of maternity leaves, which includes four weeks of part-time work as well. Similarly, paternity leaves are also now provided at Mahindra & Mahindra group, which operates in 12 key business sectors.

Anand Roop

Anandroop Bahadur

Group Head – Human Resources

Expertise

Human Resource Expertise, HR Strategy, Oragnisational Design, Talent & Leadership Development, Policy Governance

Anandroop Bahadur is a seasoned HR leader and strategic advisor with nearly two decades of experience across the development, consulting, and social impact ecosystem. She brings a strong blend of deep technical HR expertise, organizational design acumen, and a people-centric ethos to her work.

At IPE Global, Anandroop leads the Group Human Resources function across IPE Global and its associated entities, including Triple Line Consulting and IPE Africa. Her focus is on strengthening organizational foundations, enabling leadership effectiveness, and building scalable people systems aligned with the organisation’s global growth ambitions. Her remit spans HR strategy, organizational design, talent and leadership development, compensation and performance frameworks, policy governance, safeguarding, and culture integration across geographies.

Over the course of her career, Anandroop has held senior HR leadership and consulting roles with organisations such as Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI), Ford Foundation, NASSCOM Foundation, Central Square Foundation, Amity Education Group, and other international institutions. She has advised leadership teams and boards through periods of scale, transition, and transformation, and has led HR operations in high-growth, high-complexity environments.

She holds an Executive Degree in Human Resources from XLRI Jamshedpur and is a SHRM–SCP (Senior Certified Professional), reflecting her grounding in global HR standards and best practices. She has also completed advanced executive and leadership programmes, including training in coaching and organisational transformation, and is an ICF-trained executive coach, currently working towards her ACC credential.

 

Nikos Papachristodoulou

Nikos Papachristodoulou

Director

Expertise

Urban, Infrastructure, Disaster and Climate Resilience, Inclusive Growth

Nikos has expertise in urban and regional economic development, infrastructure, disaster and climate resilience, and inclusive growth. He oversees and manages projects for Triple Line’s cities and infrastructure portfolio.

Nikos is an urban specialist, with principal areas of expertise in urban and regional economic development, infrastructure, disaster and climate resilience, and inclusive growth. Over the past 12 years he has worked for a range of clients including the World Bank, FCDO, EU, USAID, Cities Alliance, Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI), Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), and local authorities.

Nikos’s work has incorporated the full spectrum of the project cycle, from analytics and programme scoping and design, through implementation, and evaluation and learning.

He has a high level of familiarity with HMG business cases and ODA eligibility criteria having led and supported the development of FCDO’s urbanisation strategy and options for future investments in Somalia’s cities, Prosperity Fund Global Future Cities Programme (GFCP) scoping in Nigeria, and the development of the business case for an urban resilience programme in Tanzania.

Nikos also brings excellent understanding of World Bank latest trends and procedures as a result of his involvement in a number of analytics and technical assistance projects, including on informal settlements upgrading in Mogadishu, climate change adaptation planning in Latin American and Caribbean cities, assessment of the climate resilience of Dar es Salaam’s transport infrastructure, spatial development in Nigeria, and preparation of a handbook on integrated urban flood risk management.

Nikos holds a BSc in Economics from the University of Piraeus and an MSc in Social Development Practice from the Development Planning Unit at University College London (UCL).

 

Ricardo Pinto

Ricardo Pinto

Associate Director

Expertise

Private Sector Development, Regulatory Reform, Regional and Local Economy

Ricardo has 35 years´ experience in private sector development, regulatory reform, regional and local economic development in the European Union, Western Balkans, Easter Partnership Countries, Middle East, Africa, etc. He is tasked with developing our strategic operations in continental Europe and Ukraine.

Ricardo is a seasoned international development professional with over 30 years of experience designing and delivering Private Sector Development and economic growth initiatives across more than 50 countries spanning Central, Eastern and Southeast Europe, the CIS, Africa, MEDA, and Asia. He holds both a bachelor’s degree and PhD from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) and is a Certified Management Consultant (CMC).

Ricardo brings a unique combination of strategic insight and practical implementation expertise. He has led high-impact assignments for key development institutions, including the European Commission, OECD, GIZ, FCDO/DFID, UNDP, UNCTAD, EBRD, ILO, ADB, World Bank, USAID, and Danida.

With a deep and practical understanding of institutional architecture, policy environment, and post-conflict recovery dynamics, and a career spanning over 30 years across transition economies, Ricardo brings not only technical depth but also a trusted reputation among donors, policymakers and peers.He is leading Triple Line’s strategic expansion into continental Europe, including Ukraine, while strengthening our credibility across the broader region and beyond. Proven Expertise Across Our Core Pillars. Ricardo’s work focuses on the areas central to Triple Line’s evolving service offering: Governance & Institutional Reform: advising public institutions on regulatory impact, policy reform, and donor coordination, Private Sector Development: strategy development for SME ecosystems, innovation, and competitiveness, Infrastructure Enabling Conditions: support for investment climate improvement and regional/local economic development and Cross-cutting themes, including green transition, women’s economic empowerment, and inclusive growth

 
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