Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
India

What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Apr, 2015 01:52 PM
    In early 2000, Ratan Tata, now the Tata Group's chairman emeritus, told journalists that he wanted to create an affordable four-wheeler for two-wheeler users who couldn't afford a car. That vision was developed into the Tata Nano.
     
    And when the Nano plant got entangled in a political quagmire in Singur in West Bengal over land acquisition issues and production stopped, Tata vision didn't blur. He moved lock, stock and barrel from Singur to Sanand in Gujarat and resumed production.
     
    "Challenge the unchallenged. There is always scope of addressing something that seems impossible and achieving surprising results," Tata says in a new book.
     
    The Singur incident points to the kinds of risks entrepreneurs have to take when faced with unexpected resistance and opposition. And it is their vision that has accelerated India's economy and offered solutions to simplify our stressful life.
     
    These enriching and inspirational journeys of India's 20 leading corporate giants are woven together in a new book, "Mantras For Success: India's Greatest CEOs Tell You How to Win" (Maven; Rs. 500), that encompasses narratives of those who took over family business and those who represent the business of modern ideas.
     
    Penned by adman and corporate writer Suhel Seth with Sunny Sen, each chapter ends with the featured businessman sharing his mantra for success.
     
     
    Another interesting success story is that of Anand Mahindra, chairman and managing director of the $16.5 billion, Mahindra & Mahindra (M&M) Limited, who was also a part of Fortune's list of 50 Greatest Leaders in 2014.
     
    One of his happiest moments was when Prime Minister Narendra Modi's grey Scorpio SUV entered Rashtrapati Bhavan for his swearing-in ceremony on May 26, 2014.
     
    The Scorpio is perhaps the biggest success stories of the group, but before 1997, when Anand decided to set up a factory to ingeniously develop an SUV, the group was mainly known for being the maker of rural and agricultural vehicles.
     
    He changed the rules of the game by changing with the times.
     
    "If you want to lead a large, complex and multi-business organisation, you have to know when and how to let go, and empower others. Empowerment is the algebraic outcome of curiosity and humility," Mahindra says in the book.
     
    Similarly, Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw, chairperson and managing director of leading bio-pharmaceutical company Biocon, has an appetite for taking risks, says the book.
     
     
    In 2002, Nilima Rovshen was diagnosed with breast cancer. For six years, Mazumdar-Shaw took care of her; they had been best friends for decades. Rovshen would recover, but the cancerian pincers would always pull her back - notwithstanding the number of chemotherapy and radiation sessions she underwent. Finally, cancer did get the better of her in 2008.
     
    Perhaps it was Rovshen's struggle that spurred Mazundar-Shaw's quest to make a home-grown cancer-treating drug. Doing so wasn't easy when all the international pharma companies were pumping in billions of dollars in research to make the next wonder drug. But she rose to the challenge, taking up a project to create a Made-in-India drug against cancer in 2007.
     
    "Driving sustainable growth through building continuous competitive advantage is a strategy I have encouraged in the organisation," she says in the book.
     
    It is these incredible journeys the book charts and throws light on what went behind building these corporate giants.
     
    "The choice of selecting these 20 people was entirely mine and I have tried to incorporate things like what has been said about them earlier and what background information can be given about them to put these stories in context," Seth told IANS at the launch of the book.
     
    These stories would invariably inspire young entrepreneurs with a dream in their eyes to make it big.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Indian Muslims must stand up to radical ideologies

    Indian Muslims must stand up to radical ideologies
    Spiritual leader Sri Sri Ravi Shankar has urged the likes of Syed Imam Bukhari and Zakir Naik to go to Iraq and preach peace to ISIS. Sri Sri is not only prodding them to take the responsibility of mitigating the sufferings in Iraq but also underlining that their brand of Islam runs the risk of encouraging ISIS-type of fanaticism in India.

    Indian Muslims must stand up to radical ideologies

    Ian Thorpe 'comes out of the closet' on television

    Ian Thorpe 'comes out of the closet' on television
    In a week that saw Australia's highest-profile sporting icon, Ian Thorpe, 'come out of the closet' on television, gay marriage is back on the national agenda with Liberal Democratic senator David Leyonhjelm hoping to push the divided government to allow a 'conscience vote' on the issue.

    Ian Thorpe 'comes out of the closet' on television

    Netanyahu vows more attacks, as rocket attack kills first Israeli

    Netanyahu vows more attacks, as rocket attack kills first Israeli
    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Tuesday said his country will expand its military campaign against Gaza, as rocket fire from the Palestinian enclave caused the first Israeli civilian fatality since launch of "Operation Protective Edge" last week, officials said.

    Netanyahu vows more attacks, as rocket attack kills first Israeli

    Kejriwal's audio accusing BJP of horse-trading released

    Kejriwal's audio accusing BJP of horse-trading released
    The AAP Tuesday released a recorded audio message of party chief Arvind Kejriwal accusing the BJP of indulging in horse-trading to form the government in Delhi.

    Kejriwal's audio accusing BJP of horse-trading released

    Cornered government condemns Vaidik-Hafiz meet, seeks report

    Cornered government condemns Vaidik-Hafiz meet, seeks report
    Facing opposition heat, a cornered government Tuesday denounced yoga guru Ramdev aide Ved Pratap Vaidik's meeting with Pakistani terrorist Hafiz Saeed and sought a report from the Indian High Commission in Islamabad.

    Cornered government condemns Vaidik-Hafiz meet, seeks report

    Haryana SGPC row: Akalis term it assault on Khalsa Panth

    Haryana SGPC row: Akalis term it assault on Khalsa Panth
    Terming it a "sinister move of the Congress government in Haryana to dilute, divide and break up the supreme, sacred and historic" SGPC, Punjab's ruling Shiromani Akali Dal Tuesday said the move to set up a parallel body was a "direct assault on the Khalsa Panth (Sikh religion), its history, traditions and spiritual values".

    Haryana SGPC row: Akalis term it assault on Khalsa Panth