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BUSINESS MAHARAJAS
by
Gita Piramal
A freelance journalist with a Ph.D. in business history, GitaPiramal is
the author of the best-selling Business Legends and the co-author of a
pioneering work on business history, India's Industrialists. She has
also contributed to the seminal volume Business and Politics in India-A
Historical Perspective, edited by Dr. Dwijendra Tripathi and published
by the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad. She has been writing
and commenting on the corporate sector for over eighteen years for
leading Indian and international newspapers such as the UK's Financial
Times and Economic Times.
Piramal has been involved in the making of television programmes on
Indian business for the BBC and for Plus Channel.
She is married to industrialist Dilip G. Piramal and they have two
daughters, Aparna and Radhika. Piramal divides her time between Mumbai
and London.
Ess MAHARAJAS
PENGUIN BOOKS .
Penguin Books India (P) Ltd." II Community Centre, Panchshccl Park,
New Delhi 110 017. India Penguin Books Ltd." 27 Wrights Lane,
London
W8 5TZ, UK
Penguin Putnam Inc." 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014, USA
Penguin Books Australia Ltd." Ringwood, Victoria, Australia
Penguin Books Canada Ltd." 10 Alcorn Avenue, Suite 300, Toronto,
Ontario M4V 3B2. Canada Penguin Books (NZ) Ltd." Cnr Rosedale and
Airborne Roads, Albany, Auckland. New Zealand
First published in Viking by Penguin Books India (P) Ltd. 1996 First
published by Penguin Books India (P) Ltd. 1997
Copyright Gita Pirama11996
All rights reserved
Typeset in Times by Digital Technologies and Printing Solutions, New
Delhi
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of
trade or otherwise. be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise
circulated without the publisher's prior written consent in any form of
binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a
similar condition including this condition being imposed on the
subsequent purchaser and without limiting the rights under copyright
reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored
in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or
by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or
otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright
owner and the above mentioned publisher of this book.
For
Aparna and Radhika my two little gurus
Acknowledgements
The maharajas for their time
Dilip for his confidence in me
Khozem Merchant, Nishit Kotecha, Subniv Babuta and Sailesh Kottary for
their suggestions
David Davidar for his encouragement
Krishan Chopra for his constructive criticism Sindhu Sabale for my data
bank my parents for their support
Harsh Goenka for the title
Contents
Introduction ix
Dhirubhai Ambani 1
Rahul Kumar Bajaj 85
Aditya Vikram Birla 135
Rama Prasad Goenka 211
Brij Mohan Khaitan 261
Bharat and Vijay Shah 313
Ratan Tata 363
Appendix 408
A Note on Sources 411
Select Bibliography 415
Index 462
Introduction
Like the territorial rajas of the past, businessmen today rule vast
empires, maintain a watchful eye inside and outside their boundaries,
and protect their turf against invaders. The eight featured here are
among India's most powerful men. Between them, they control sales of
roughly Rs 550bn through over 500 companies and directly employ at
least 650,000 people. Switch on a light, sip a cup of tea, have a
shave, listen to music, drive to work, see a movie, snuggle into a
pillow and you'll find yourself using their products through the day
and into the night.
They are a study in contrasts. Their businesses are distinct and
varied. Some are highly educated, others are college drop-outs. Some
are inheritors, others self-made. Some topped their chosen field in
their thirties, others didn't approach the starting line until their
fifties. Some dominate a particular business, others control more than
one industry. What they do,. what they think, how they react impacts
the entire economy, not just their customers, shareholders, employees,
and bank managers. So how do they think? How do they conduct their
businesses, arrive at complex investment decisions involving
*
Sums have mostly been expressed in millkm,lkm. The equivalents in of
iakh/crore arc: ten lakhs: one million; ten million: one crc; 100 cro:
of billion
(1,000 million).
x / BusinessMaharajas billions of rupees, or hire and fire the
executives who manage their dominions?
For me, the challenge has always been to find out why a company behaves
the way it does, to understand the people and the compulsions behind
business events. Inevitably, therefore, this is a book about business
personalities. Management gurus love to talk about strategy and
strategic decisions, but the. more I learn about business, the more
I'm convinced that management decisions are based on the personal
experiences, aims and vision of one person. Usually it's the head of a
business house or the chairman of a company, but sometimes crucial
decisions can be taken by unexpected people, as I found to my surprise
while researching this book.
I learnt, for example, that the Williamson Magor group's Rs 2.9bn
decision to acquire Union Carbide India was not taken by blue-ribboned
directors in its boardroom at 4 Mangoe Lane but in the tranquil drawing
room of Shanti Khaitan. In 1994, every financial journal covered the
sale, billed as the biggest takeover in Indian corporate history.
Discussing the deal with the Khaitans, I found that their bid was based
not so much on the advice of bean counters but on human factors.
Worried that their son Deepak was spending too much time in their
stable of three hundred horses and not enough in his garage of
engineering companies, Shanti persuaded her husband, Brij Mohan, to
make an offer for the famous battery maker. Deepak needed to settle
down, and she was convinced that a big company like Union Carbide would
be just the right ticket.
At one time, Bhiki Shah was a far more worried mother than Shanti. In
the late '70s,her younger son Vijay had established a tiny office and
:a state-of-the-art factory at Saphadz, outside Tel Aviv. It did so
well that in 1981 it received the Israeli government's highest export
award and the
Business Maharajas / xi next year, sales surged from $2m to $21m.
Persuaded that the future for him lay in Israel, Vijay who speaks
fluent Hebrew wanted to settle there but Bhiki protested. "My mother
used to hear about bomb scares an dall those things on television. So
we thought we hhd better settle down in Antwerp," says Vijay. Thereby
he altered the course of B. Vija3'kumar & Company.
I doubt if there's a more fascinating businessman than Dhirubhai
Ambani. As a petrol station attendant, he used to dream of heading a
huge company, maybe a global multinational like his first and only
employer, Burmah Shelll All teenagers dream but how many have the
ability and doggedness to turn fantasy into reality? Ambani founded a
brash, upstart company which challenged the established business houses
and their way of conducting business. He fought for and seized paper
liscence, converting them into large textile mills and huge
petrochemical complexes.
Through the process of building Reliance Industries into a corporate
behemoth, he rewrote management theories, fought with India's most
fearsome newspaper, made friends with prime mitaisters, became the only
businessman to be lampooned as often as Rajiv Gandhi. He nailed his
nameplate onto an office door in 1966: From next to nothing, within two
decades, sales had ballooned to Rs 9bn, making Reliance one of India's
top ten companies, but Ambani wasn't satisfied. Sitting at his desk
one day in 1984, he drew up a flow chart. If he built such-and-such
factory, added a division here and a unit there, ten years down the
road, Reliance could become a Rs 80bn company. Sceptics laughed when
he announced his plans, but he proved them wrong. In 1995, sales
nudged Rs 78bn. Some say Ambani is an acronym for ambition and money.
It's probably true.
In the '80s, Reliance grew at an astonishing 1,100 per cent,
s
with sales moving up from Rs 2bn to Rs 18.4bn, but it wasn't India's
fastest growing company. Its expansion trailed behind Bajaj Auto's
incredible growth rate of 1,852 per cent. Under Rahul Bajaj, the
Pune-based scooter company's sales swelled from Rs 519m to Rs 18.5bn
during the same decade. Both Reliance and Bajaj Auto are lean and
owner-driven corporations, yet in terms of character, style,
background every parameter that countsmthere couldn't be two more
dissimilar chairmen than Dhirubhai Ambani and Rahul Bajaj.
Ambani is a first generation entrepreneur, the Bajajs were rich long
before Ambani was born. Ambani hustled in Bombay's teeming markets
selling yarn and later fabrics. Bajaj didn't have to hustlemthere were
long queues of people outside his airconditioned office patiently
waiting to be allotted scooters. Ambani Cultivated political contacts,
Bajaj was born into a family of patriots. Mahatma Gandhi referred to
Rahul's grandfather as his fifth son; Rahul's father was a Congress
member of Parliament. Yet the government raided Rahul Bajaj twice,
stalled his repeated applications to build new factories and expand
production, and wouldn't let him diversify. In 1987 he wanted to buy
into Ashok Leyland, a truck maker, but to clinch the deal, he needed
dollars. The government wouldn't exchange his rupees and he lost the
opportunity. Despite the difficult conditions he worked under, Bajaj
established Bajaj Auto as one of India's rare world-class
organizations.
The late Aditya Birla came from a family with as rich a political
legacy as Rahul Bajaj. Birla had an appetite as voracious or morem if
that's possible for empire-building as Dhirubhai Ambani. To feed it,
Birla built 2.3 factories annually, on time and within budget, for
thirty consecutive years. His corporate feats were so awesome that
every
[...]... and much to be gained by joining up with others "We're too concerned about our individual sovereignty whereas we should be looking at alliances and aggregation of companies as it so often happens abroad Wh.ere partnerships are based on human chemistry and there is a business case, then the two partners really begin to work as one." Each of the eight businessmen featured in BusinessMaharajas has hacked... rise to meet these challenges Virtually all eight businessmen profiled here have either already initiated or are about to initiate far-reaching changes in their organizations, and an attempt has been made to outline their strategies and to explain the rationale behind the individual responses BusinessMaharajas doesn't limit itself to the top five or ten business houses but profiles India's most fascinating... priorities Ratan Tata, the head of India's biggest business house, has set for himself The group is at a watershed in its 125-year-old history and Tata knows he has to take urgent steps to prevent the group from plummeting into terminal decline It's hard being a Tara The surname doesn't permit failure and the early years of his business career were distinguished more by losses than profits In the five years... pages or three hundred? BusinessMaharajas tries to capture snapshots of critical or illustrative episodes in the action-packed careers of eight extremely busy people It doesn't claim to be definitive or a Ph.D thesis G.D Birla, no mean writer himself, used to say that no Indian can write biography Be that as it may, there is so much that is of interest in the lives of these 'maharajas' that one was... panic, starting at 1.35 p.m." the price of blue-chips like Century and Tisco crashed by ten per cent They fell like dominoes on the back of Ambani's Reliance Textile Industries which fell from Rs 131 to Rs 121 as 350,000 of its shares hit the market The free fall had been engineered by a Calcutta-based bear synd|cate led by a Marwari industrialist, perhaps a member of the powerful Birla clan Using the... today, he believes Reliance can be a Rs 300bn company by the end of the century In 1995, the petrochemical, oil and textile manufacturer was India's biggest non-government company by almost every yardstick including sales, profits, net worth, and asset base Its market capitalization that year was Rs 96bn The previous year, it was the only Indian entrant in Business Week's list of the fifty largest companies... advantages, but high achievers are usually good at most tasks they take up, even those unrelated to business However, all eight partly owe their remarkable success to two external factors, two elements totally outside their control, and completely unconnected to their personal abilities However talented, a businessman may still not achieve his individual s / xxi pinnacle unless these two outside forces... short selling whe're a speculator believes that prices will fall, sells shares he doesn't have, and covers the sale by buying them at lower prices laterwthe bear syndicate sold 1.1 million Reliance shares worth over Rs 160m They planned to later pick up these same shares very cheaply and thereby make a tidy profit on the difference For the plan to succeed, it was important that there should be no big buyers... the Marwari In an obvious attempt to teach the bear syndicate ales son for battering at his share price, Ambani delivered the coup de grace on that fateful Friday by demanding delivery Meticulously knowledgeable about every aspect of his business, Ambani knew that the sellers couldn't possibly have the shares they had sold Caught with their pants down, the panic-stricken bears bid for every Reliance... facility represented a major departure from the "normal" Indian business practice of the time Instead of creating a "safe" capacity based on reasonable projection of demand, Ambani applied for world scale capacity that could meet the cost and quality standards on a global basis," says Sumantra Ghoshal, head of strategic planning at the London Business School and author of a major case study oft Reliance . BUSINESS MAHARAJAS by Gita Piramal A freelance journalist with a Ph.D. in business history, GitaPiramal is the author of the best-selling Business Legends and the co-author. published in Viking by Penguin Books India (P) Ltd. 1996 First published by Penguin Books India (P) Ltd. 1997 Copyright Gita Pirama11996 All rights reserved Typeset in Times by Digital Technologies. on human chemistry and there is a business case, then the two partners really begin to work as one." Each of the eight businessmen featured in Business Maharajas has hacked an individual