Category : Employee Relations


awadeshk@indianoil.in, kumaria5@indianoil.in

Imagine a giant public notice board that never sleeps. Anyone can walk up to it, write their thoughts, share a photo, tell a story, or react to what others have written—and within seconds, thousands or even millions of people can see it. This is social media. Social media is not just about information-it is about stories. It turns facts into feelings, data into emotions, and events into narratives.
Social media transforms uncertainty into outrage long before reality has the chance to speak. It doesn’t wait for the facts, it rushes to fear the future. Before the future arrives, social media already judges everything. Imagine a message as a spark. In the past, a spark would take time to turn into a flame. Today, it is like a gust of wind that can turn that spark into a wildfire in seconds.
In the epic Ramayana, the formidable warrior who remained invisible while attacking was Indrajit. As the son of Ravana, the king of Lanka, he used his powerful magical skills and celestial weapons to become invisible during battle, causing immense trouble for Rama’s army. His ability to strike unseen made him exceptionally dangerous, not because of physical strength alone, but because of invisibility and surprise.
Social Media and Industrial Relations
In modern industrial relations, social media has become an understated catalyst. It is shaping collective opinion through selective information, emotional framing and repetition, all while remaining an unseen stakeholder. Much like Shakuni in the Mahabharata, whose influence lay not in open battle but in manipulation through half-truths, calculated suggestions and strategic silence. Social media today is not merely a communication platform; it is a tool for narrative building and capable of shaping perceptions rapidly, often without verification or balance.
Industrial Relations in the Age of Instant Narratives
Industrial Relations had well-defined stakeholders. However, there is one another presence in the room. It does not carry an identity card, does not sign settlements, and is never formally invited. Yet, it listens to everything, amplifies emotions instantly, and influences outcomes silently but powerfully. Earlier rumours travelled slowly, allowing time for clarification, dialogue, and course correction. Today, a message typed in haste during a tea break can travel across the country in seconds. A half-truth, an emotional video, or an out-of-context photograph can shape perceptions long before facts find their footing.
What makes social media an “invisible stakeholder” is its ability to influence the Industrial Relations climate without being accountable. Traditional stakeholders sit across the table, they listen, speak, compromise, and sign. Social media does none of these-but it watches. The contemporary IR ecosystem has expanded beyond traditional stakeholders. Alongside management, unions and employees, social media has emerged as a powerful and influential player.
Its Impact and Potential –
The cumulative effect is long-term damage to trust, morale, and organizational stability.
For example – A striking example is the widespread misunderstanding surrounding the Codes on Wages, it was quickly interpreted as wage reductions or loss of benefits. Messages circulated claiming “take-home pay will reduce” or “allowances will vanish,” triggering anxiety across the country. In reality, the codes aim for broader good by consolidating 29 archaic laws into four modern ones, expanding social security to gig/platform/unorganized workers, providing gratuity after just 1 year for fixed-term employees, mandating appointment letters/timely wages, improving dispute resolution and boosting formalization, employment and coverage to the organised sector.
Similarly, periodic chatter around the 8th Pay Commission, often unsupported by any official notification, spreads rapidly across platforms. Expectations get inflated, rumours become demands, and disappointment sets in when reality does not match digital speculation. What may be intended as light-hearted may be interpreted through countless lenses – some empathetic, some critical, and some completely removed from the original intent.
The Way Forward
But when social media activity crosses beyond permissible limits, appropriate remedies may be adopted depending on the nature and gravity of the offence. The objective should not be suppression, but responsible correction and protection of trust.
Conclusion
In recent years, the nature of industrial relations in the country has undergone a visible shift, with social media amplifying grassroots voices and altering traditional power dynamics-necessitating far more proactive and responsive engagement strategies. Organizations must therefore invest in robust social listening mechanisms and well-defined crisis response frameworks, even as policymakers strengthen oversight through digital audits. While social media undoubtedly introduces volatility into industrial relations, it can also serve as a channel for fair and balanced resolution-provided openness and engagement are chosen over denial or suppression. In the contemporary digital public sphere, silence amid escalating public outrage often only compounds mistrust rather than containing it.
One poorly handled post or unchecked controversy can ignite a chain reaction that affects everything from job applications to employee morale.
In the end, every ripple starts small but can become a wave.
References
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