Title: RATAN TATA
1RATAN TATA
2- Born on dec 28, 1937 to Soonoo Naval tata
- Brought up by grand mother
- Engineering degree from cornell university and
management programme from harvard in 1974-75 - Turned down job in IBM to join his own business.
3Was given 2 sick units Nelco, Central India
Textiles. In 1991, he took over as group
Chairman from the legendary J.R.D. Tata, pushing
out the old guard and ushering in youthful
managers. Since then, he has been instrumental in
reshaping the fortunes of the most respected
conglomerate of India.
4- Tata sons were honest and solid but risk-averse
- Tata understanding India is changing has
followed acquisitions to expand its horizons. - In 2000 he shelled out 435 million for Tetley
Tea, making Tata the world's No. 2 tea company. - Two years later he paid 530 million for a 46
stake in VSNL, India's state-owned international
telecom carrier. - He bought Daewoo Motor Co.'s truck unit, Daewoo
Commercial Vehicle Co., for 120 million. - In July, the company will make another splash
the initial public offering of Tata Consultancy
Services, expected to raise 1.1 billion
5Under him Tata Consultancy Services went public
and Tata Motors was listed in the New York Stock
Exchange His dream is to manufacture a car
costing Rs 1 lakh. In 1998, Tata Motors
introduced his brainchild, the Tata Indica.
Ratan retired from his executive post in 2003
after turning 65, as per the rules he set.
6- Down-to-earth, witty and startlingly
straightforward, Tata upholds the group's
traditions and refuses to pay bribes to get a job
done. - His commitment to ethics and values has
permeated through the organization. In India's
corporate circles he is known for his credible
business practices. The price of integrity has
been high. - Even his critics accept that Tata is a
determined and persistent manager. It was his
determination that gave him an upper hand in his
fight with Russi Mody and his persistence that
saw the successful creation of the Indica. - Talk cars to Ratan Tata and his face lights up
immediately. He has an undying passion for
automobiles. "I like a car with a lot of power
and torque
7- Tata is his company's biggest critic. He knows
exactly where his strengths lie and where they
don't. As a result, he has no qualms in seeking
outside help in key areas if it improves his
products, even at the risk of ruffling feathers
in his management. - Ratan Tata established himself to be the right
leader who could help the company sail through
the turbulent waters and reach the desired lands.
These targets never existed or were thought not
feasible by the company earlier. Prior to his
handling the mantle, these were hard even for
conceiving. When Ratan Tata became the Chairman
of century old, well respected Indian business
group, Tata, it was a conservative company,
dominated by the paradigm of manufacturing. It
was deriving dominant share of revenues from the
domestic market when domestic market itself was
marked by two important trends. First, it was
making shift towards services and secondly was
moving towards opening up.
8- Realizing that when the economy as whole is
shifting to more of services, the future belongs
to the one that belongs to that segment and the
need for globalization is important when your
domestic economy itself is opening up, he
initiated right moves. To be there when it
happens, he had to lead the company from
over-dominantly manufacturing paradigm to
services based one and from domestic focused to
the one with global mindset. This was not to be
achieved by compromising on the existing focus or
by resorting to hasty retreat from the areas of
operation. It was to be accomplished while with
continuity (may be diluting/withdrawing from
some) but more through furthering towards new
areas. - Human resource is another issue. That Tata has
personally led the company for almost 15 years
and set up the Tata Business Excellence Model to
trade best practices, hasn't improved his
reputation.
9"Our aim is to make Tata an international company
with a global workforce and global delivery,"
says Tata
- "We should become a younger organization, an
organization of our time, more risk-taking, less
risk averse."
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