Mukesh Ambani, chairman of Reliance Industries, discusses his childhood upbringing and education in an interview. He was given independence during his childhood which helped foster self-discovery. He chose chemical engineering in college which aligned with his father's company Reliance's move into chemicals. Ambani joined Reliance full-time after business school and helped establish new petrochemical plants, implementing systems to scale the business beyond dependence on individuals.
Solved Comprehensive Project Cbse Class 12 Accountancy ProjectDan John
I assure you that this project of mine will fetch you a very good score.
Good Luck!!
Go to the links below for the following...
Solved Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Full Project(Comprehensive Project, Ratio Analysis and Cash Flow Statements with Conclusion)
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cbse-class-12-accountancy-full-projectcomprehensive-project-ratio-analysis-and-cash-flow-statements-with-conclusion
Solved Accounting Ratios with Balance Sheet(vertical) and Statement of Profit and Loss - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-accounting-ratios-with-balance-sheetvertical-and-statement-of-profit-and-loss-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Cash Flow Statements with Balance Sheet (vertical) and Notes to Accounts - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cash-flow-statements-with-balance-sheet-vertical-and-notes-to-accounts-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Business Environment project class 12 cbseJacky Chain
PROJECT WORK IN THE SUBJECT OF BUSINESS STUDIES ON THE TOPIC "BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT" AS THE PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF AISSCE, MARCH 2018 CONDUCTED BY CBSE.
This project contains the information regarding the accountancy project which is to be made by the students of class 12th boards... This project is made by jigar vaishnav for the session 2017-18 with the latest guidelines as per CBSE... Hope this will help the upcoming students who want a help regarding the business studies project....
VIEW THIS PROJECT AT YOUTUBE:- https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=V7b6VQQrjsg
This project work contains all the necessary information for class 12 accountancy project
This Project Contains three part. They are as follows.
1. Comprehensive Project
2. Specific - 01(Ratio Analysis)
3. Specific - 02(Cash Flow Statement)
Survey of 14 Principles Of Management followed by a company!Sejal Gaikwad
Basically,this Power Point Presentation is based on survey of a company as in do they follow 14 principles of management in their company!
*Content referred from other presentation*
Solved Comprehensive Project Cbse Class 12 Accountancy ProjectDan John
I assure you that this project of mine will fetch you a very good score.
Good Luck!!
Go to the links below for the following...
Solved Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Full Project(Comprehensive Project, Ratio Analysis and Cash Flow Statements with Conclusion)
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cbse-class-12-accountancy-full-projectcomprehensive-project-ratio-analysis-and-cash-flow-statements-with-conclusion
Solved Accounting Ratios with Balance Sheet(vertical) and Statement of Profit and Loss - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-accounting-ratios-with-balance-sheetvertical-and-statement-of-profit-and-loss-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Cash Flow Statements with Balance Sheet (vertical) and Notes to Accounts - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cash-flow-statements-with-balance-sheet-vertical-and-notes-to-accounts-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Business Environment project class 12 cbseJacky Chain
PROJECT WORK IN THE SUBJECT OF BUSINESS STUDIES ON THE TOPIC "BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT" AS THE PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF AISSCE, MARCH 2018 CONDUCTED BY CBSE.
This project contains the information regarding the accountancy project which is to be made by the students of class 12th boards... This project is made by jigar vaishnav for the session 2017-18 with the latest guidelines as per CBSE... Hope this will help the upcoming students who want a help regarding the business studies project....
VIEW THIS PROJECT AT YOUTUBE:- https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=V7b6VQQrjsg
This project work contains all the necessary information for class 12 accountancy project
This Project Contains three part. They are as follows.
1. Comprehensive Project
2. Specific - 01(Ratio Analysis)
3. Specific - 02(Cash Flow Statement)
Survey of 14 Principles Of Management followed by a company!Sejal Gaikwad
Basically,this Power Point Presentation is based on survey of a company as in do they follow 14 principles of management in their company!
*Content referred from other presentation*
Class 12 Accountancy Project
Analysis of Financial Statements of Deepak Nitrite Limited.
Specific 1=> Calculation of Accounting Ratios. (2018-19, 2019-20)
Specific 2=> Cash Flow Statement and comments on it. (2018-19, 2019-20)
Specific 3=> Segment analysis of 4 segments on the basis of Revenue, PBIT, Capital Employee and Combined Comparative Statement.
The data used for this project is from the annual report of Deepak Nitrite Limited taken from www.bseindia.com.
From the data of the financial year ended 31st March 2020
Marketing Management Project Business Studies Class 12 CBSE Sahil Kumar
Class Xll Business Studies - B.st Cbse Project Practical File on Marketing Management sample last year topper cbse usp unique selling proposition
Start a company of your choice, brand name, product name conclusion acknowledgement teachers signature
Syllabus of Project Work Practical File Class 12
1. Elements of Business Environment:
a) Changes in mode of Packaging. (milk supplied in plastic bottles to vending machines)
b) Change from Coca cola and fanta in the seventies to pepsi and coke in nineties.
c) Change in role of women in the past 25 years relating to joint families, Women as bread earner of family , Changes in the requirement of trend of mixers , washing machines , micro wave and standard of living.
An Internship Project Report on Reliance Industries LimitedSagar Sharma
I had interned in Reliance Industries Ltd. jaipur in the marketing field, during my internship i learnt the marketing strategies which are adopted by the reliance in retail zone.
My project was on "Launch of a new retail store 'Reliance Super' at Element Mall, Jaipur.
Solved Accounting Ratios with Balance Sheet(vertical) and Statement of Profit...Dan John
I assure you that this project of mine will fetch you a very good score.
Good Luck!!
Go to the links below for the following...
Solved Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Full Project(Comprehensive Project, Ratio Analysis and Cash Flow Statements with Conclusion)
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cbse-class-12-accountancy-full-projectcomprehensive-project-ratio-analysis-and-cash-flow-statements-with-conclusion
Solved Comprehensive Project Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-comprehensive-project-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Cash Flow Statements with Balance Sheet (vertical) and Notes to Accounts - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cash-flow-statements-with-balance-sheet-vertical-and-notes-to-accounts-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Full Project(Comprehensive Project, Ratio An...Dan John
I assure you that this project of mine will fetch you a very good score.
Good Luck!!
Go to the links below for the following...
Solved Comprehensive Project Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-comprehensive-project-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Accounting Ratios with Balance Sheet(vertical) and Statement of Profit and Loss - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-accounting-ratios-with-balance-sheetvertical-and-statement-of-profit-and-loss-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Cash Flow Statements with Balance Sheet (vertical) and Notes to Accounts - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cash-flow-statements-with-balance-sheet-vertical-and-notes-to-accounts-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
A report on the Financial Analysis of Nestle India Ltd. and its comparison with the other leading Fats Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) players in India. The Analysis also includes Trend Analysis and Industry Analysis.
Commercial Bank and its Functions - Economics Class 12 ProjectStud Mentor
Briefly information about the Commercial Bank and its Functions. Class 12 Economics CBSE Project. all agenda of Commercial Bank and its Functions covered. See More Stuff on our Official Website : http://www.studmentor.com
Class 12 Accountancy Project
Analysis of Financial Statements of Deepak Nitrite Limited.
Specific 1=> Calculation of Accounting Ratios. (2018-19, 2019-20)
Specific 2=> Cash Flow Statement and comments on it. (2018-19, 2019-20)
Specific 3=> Segment analysis of 4 segments on the basis of Revenue, PBIT, Capital Employee and Combined Comparative Statement.
The data used for this project is from the annual report of Deepak Nitrite Limited taken from www.bseindia.com.
From the data of the financial year ended 31st March 2020
Marketing Management Project Business Studies Class 12 CBSE Sahil Kumar
Class Xll Business Studies - B.st Cbse Project Practical File on Marketing Management sample last year topper cbse usp unique selling proposition
Start a company of your choice, brand name, product name conclusion acknowledgement teachers signature
Syllabus of Project Work Practical File Class 12
1. Elements of Business Environment:
a) Changes in mode of Packaging. (milk supplied in plastic bottles to vending machines)
b) Change from Coca cola and fanta in the seventies to pepsi and coke in nineties.
c) Change in role of women in the past 25 years relating to joint families, Women as bread earner of family , Changes in the requirement of trend of mixers , washing machines , micro wave and standard of living.
An Internship Project Report on Reliance Industries LimitedSagar Sharma
I had interned in Reliance Industries Ltd. jaipur in the marketing field, during my internship i learnt the marketing strategies which are adopted by the reliance in retail zone.
My project was on "Launch of a new retail store 'Reliance Super' at Element Mall, Jaipur.
Solved Accounting Ratios with Balance Sheet(vertical) and Statement of Profit...Dan John
I assure you that this project of mine will fetch you a very good score.
Good Luck!!
Go to the links below for the following...
Solved Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Full Project(Comprehensive Project, Ratio Analysis and Cash Flow Statements with Conclusion)
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cbse-class-12-accountancy-full-projectcomprehensive-project-ratio-analysis-and-cash-flow-statements-with-conclusion
Solved Comprehensive Project Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-comprehensive-project-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Cash Flow Statements with Balance Sheet (vertical) and Notes to Accounts - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cash-flow-statements-with-balance-sheet-vertical-and-notes-to-accounts-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Full Project(Comprehensive Project, Ratio An...Dan John
I assure you that this project of mine will fetch you a very good score.
Good Luck!!
Go to the links below for the following...
Solved Comprehensive Project Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-comprehensive-project-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Accounting Ratios with Balance Sheet(vertical) and Statement of Profit and Loss - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-accounting-ratios-with-balance-sheetvertical-and-statement-of-profit-and-loss-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
Solved Cash Flow Statements with Balance Sheet (vertical) and Notes to Accounts - Cbse Class 12 Accountancy Project
http://www.slideshare.net/dankjohn/solved-cash-flow-statements-with-balance-sheet-vertical-and-notes-to-accounts-cbse-class-12-accountancy-project
A report on the Financial Analysis of Nestle India Ltd. and its comparison with the other leading Fats Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) players in India. The Analysis also includes Trend Analysis and Industry Analysis.
Commercial Bank and its Functions - Economics Class 12 ProjectStud Mentor
Briefly information about the Commercial Bank and its Functions. Class 12 Economics CBSE Project. all agenda of Commercial Bank and its Functions covered. See More Stuff on our Official Website : http://www.studmentor.com
After interviewing Jerry Smith, a social entrepreneur in Detroit, Michigan, I made a narrated PowerPoint displaying the information I gained through the interview.
This is a Feasibility Study conducted by a group of students "The Incorporators" from Capitol University's Bachelor of Science In Business Administration major in Marketing Management and Human resource Management.
Note: This document is not available to download, sorry for the inconvenience.
India Leadership Conclave 2019 - "Opportunities" - The 5 Trillion Dollar Miss...Indian Affairs
India's $5 trillion-economy plans looks good on paper but it needs to address gaps. India Leadership Conclave is of the opinion that India needs foreign direct investment (FDI) urgently, and lots of it. Since FDI, unlike portfolio investment, is long-term patient capital, entrepreneurs and bankers like to examine proposals very carefully.
India’s record on the dispute resolution front has also proved to be extremely worrying. That is why most investors prefer to insert a clause allowing for international arbitration from a seat outside of India.
: Fashion, movies art, wellness, reviews, and much more... Hashtag Magazine provides users with an eclectic mix of lifestyle content that is shrouded with interactive features. Change the way you read
Fashion, movies art, wellness, reviews, and much more... Hashtag Magazine provides users with an eclectic mix of lifestyle content that is shrouded with interactive features. Change the way you read
we have from the latest news about movie stars to fashion trends currently becoming popular and for the art lovers we have exclusive art and culture section where they can look out for new and interesting choices.
As an aspiring marketer reading books can take me up to a certain level; beyond that it is only observation of people, brands, culture and stories. Taking this aspect in my mind I have ventured into a weekly publishing of all my observations, stories and ideas.
Vinodrai Engineers introduces Bi-Axial Rotolining Machines for Substituting exotic metals by innovative low-cost high-performance Rotolined Pipes, Process and Storage Vessels.
Mr Sanjay Trikariya, A Jalna Icon. He is dedicated promoter of Science with his innovative creation of " My Small Experimental Lab" "माज़ी छोटुशी प्रयोगशाला".
Jalna is synonymous with Mahyco and Mahyco with Shri
Badrinarayan Barwale. He is known as the Father of the
Indian Seed Industry for blazing a trail in the field of agriculture.
His mega empire of Mahyco is built upon his threefold principle of precise situational awareness, readiness to work hard, and the constant pursuit of innovation. It
is an exceptional project worthy of study and also a matter of pride for the residents of Jalna.
This is the amazing story of Badrinarayanji and Mahyco’s
journey.
Encryption in Microsoft 365 - ExpertsLive Netherlands 2024Albert Hoitingh
In this session I delve into the encryption technology used in Microsoft 365 and Microsoft Purview. Including the concepts of Customer Key and Double Key Encryption.
SAP Sapphire 2024 - ASUG301 building better apps with SAP Fiori.pdfPeter Spielvogel
Building better applications for business users with SAP Fiori.
• What is SAP Fiori and why it matters to you
• How a better user experience drives measurable business benefits
• How to get started with SAP Fiori today
• How SAP Fiori elements accelerates application development
• How SAP Build Code includes SAP Fiori tools and other generative artificial intelligence capabilities
• How SAP Fiori paves the way for using AI in SAP apps
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
State of ICS and IoT Cyber Threat Landscape Report 2024 previewPrayukth K V
The IoT and OT threat landscape report has been prepared by the Threat Research Team at Sectrio using data from Sectrio, cyber threat intelligence farming facilities spread across over 85 cities around the world. In addition, Sectrio also runs AI-based advanced threat and payload engagement facilities that serve as sinks to attract and engage sophisticated threat actors, and newer malware including new variants and latent threats that are at an earlier stage of development.
The latest edition of the OT/ICS and IoT security Threat Landscape Report 2024 also covers:
State of global ICS asset and network exposure
Sectoral targets and attacks as well as the cost of ransom
Global APT activity, AI usage, actor and tactic profiles, and implications
Rise in volumes of AI-powered cyberattacks
Major cyber events in 2024
Malware and malicious payload trends
Cyberattack types and targets
Vulnerability exploit attempts on CVEs
Attacks on counties – USA
Expansion of bot farms – how, where, and why
In-depth analysis of the cyber threat landscape across North America, South America, Europe, APAC, and the Middle East
Why are attacks on smart factories rising?
Cyber risk predictions
Axis of attacks – Europe
Systemic attacks in the Middle East
Download the full report from here:
https://sectrio.com/resources/ot-threat-landscape-reports/sectrio-releases-ot-ics-and-iot-security-threat-landscape-report-2024/
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
This is a hands-on session specifically designed for automation developers and AI enthusiasts seeking to enhance their knowledge in leveraging the latest intelligent document processing capabilities offered by UiPath.
Speakers:
👨🏫 Andras Palfi, Senior Product Manager, UiPath
👩🏫 Lenka Dulovicova, Product Program Manager, UiPath
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
Le nuove frontiere dell'AI nell'RPA con UiPath Autopilot™UiPathCommunity
In questo evento online gratuito, organizzato dalla Community Italiana di UiPath, potrai esplorare le nuove funzionalità di Autopilot, il tool che integra l'Intelligenza Artificiale nei processi di sviluppo e utilizzo delle Automazioni.
📕 Vedremo insieme alcuni esempi dell'utilizzo di Autopilot in diversi tool della Suite UiPath:
Autopilot per Studio Web
Autopilot per Studio
Autopilot per Apps
Clipboard AI
GenAI applicata alla Document Understanding
👨🏫👨💻 Speakers:
Stefano Negro, UiPath MVPx3, RPA Tech Lead @ BSP Consultant
Flavio Martinelli, UiPath MVP 2023, Technical Account Manager @UiPath
Andrei Tasca, RPA Solutions Team Lead @NTT Data
Elevating Tactical DDD Patterns Through Object CalisthenicsDorra BARTAGUIZ
After immersing yourself in the blue book and its red counterpart, attending DDD-focused conferences, and applying tactical patterns, you're left with a crucial question: How do I ensure my design is effective? Tactical patterns within Domain-Driven Design (DDD) serve as guiding principles for creating clear and manageable domain models. However, achieving success with these patterns requires additional guidance. Interestingly, we've observed that a set of constraints initially designed for training purposes remarkably aligns with effective pattern implementation, offering a more ‘mechanical’ approach. Let's explore together how Object Calisthenics can elevate the design of your tactical DDD patterns, offering concrete help for those venturing into DDD for the first time!
When stars align: studies in data quality, knowledge graphs, and machine lear...
Mukesh Ambani Interview
1. Vinodrai Engineers Pvt. Ltd.,
12 Km. Stone, Jalna-Aurangabad Road,
Village Dawalwadi, District : Jalna
Jalna – 431 203 ( India )
Ph: +91-2482-221061 Fax: +91-2482-221448
Web: vinodrai.com , E-Mail : vinodraieng@rediffmail.com
If Dhirubhai Ambani was a larger-than-life patriarch and Anil was the public face of
Reliance, Mukesh Ambani was an enigma. Those who knew him well credited him with
leading Reliance's turbo-charged growth over the last two
decades.
But very little is publicly known of his beliefs, vision and
motivation. In his most expansive interview ever to
MoneyLIFE, a personal finance magazine, Reliance Industries
chairman Mukesh Ambani tells
MoneyLIFE editors Sucheta Dalal and Debashis Basu, what
drives him and his business decisions
A lot of details about your life are already known. But we
don't know things from your end. Your life has changed
dramatically in just about three decades; will you take us through that process?
From my point of view, very little has changed (Laughs). In terms of attitude to life, little
has changed. There are important lessons I have learnt during my upbringing. It is
important to share these, though these are tough to practise as a parent (smiles).
We were like a joint family and I was the first child of the family of that generation.
There were advantages in being the first child those days. My father navigated through
life from Aden in Yemen to Bhuleshwar (a congested commercial precinct in Mumbai),
to Usha Kiran (Mumbai's earliest skyscraper) at Altamount Road to Sea Wind (an
exclusive tower which is the Ambani residence).
My first memories are of the early '60s at Altamount Road which was then an emerging
area. We were a close-knit family and the four of us -- Dipti, Nina, Anil and I -- were left
to do what we wanted. There were boundaries, of course, but within those, we were not
micro-managed. Things have changed so much now. When my kids, Isha and Akash,
were in the third standard, we behaved as though it was our exam.
Our own childhood was totally different. I guess when you are left on your own, you find
your true potential. I remember my father never came to our school even once.
Nevertheless, he was hugely interested in our all-round development for which he did
some amazing things.
Give us an example.
Imagine this. In the mid-60s, he put out a newspaper ad for a teacher, but specified that
his responsibility would be non-academic; he would have to impart general knowledge.
He interviewed several persons and selected Mahendrabhai Vyas who taught at the New
Era School. Mahendrabhai used to come every evening and stay with us till 6.30-7 pm.
Pursuing excellence in rotational moulding.
2. Vinodrai Engineers Pvt. Ltd.,
12 Km. Stone, Jalna-Aurangabad Road,
Village Dawalwadi, District : Jalna
Jalna – 431 203 ( India )
Ph: +91-2482-221061 Fax: +91-2482-221448
Web: vinodrai.com , E-Mail : vinodraieng@rediffmail.com
His brief was our all-round development. We played hockey, football and different kinds
of games, watched matches at Cooperage, travelled in buses and trains and explored
different parts of Bombay. We went camping and stayed in a village for 10-15 days every
year.
These experiences have helped us a lot, but at that time, we were not very aware of all the
learning that was going on. The two hours with Mahendrabhai every evening were great
fun. A third track running at that time, apart from academics and the fun stuff, was that
my father shared with me his passion for business and entrepreneurship from very early
on. Even when I was in high school, I used to spend long hours at office on weekends.
So, these were the four components of my upbringing -- the academic stuff where I was
left to myself, Mahendrabhai, my father's passion for creating Reliance and the last piece
was his deep links with the family.
A lot of what I have learned from these influences has stayed with me. From the external
perspective, my life may have changed a lot, but when I look back at myself in the 1970s,
1980s and now, I see consistency.
How would you describe this?
For my father, life was uni-dimensional. Reliance was his life. Yet, some of my most
vivid memories are about spending time with him. However busy he may have been,
whatever the pressure, Sunday was for his wife and kids. I try to do the same with my
family.
And it has to be non-academic. It is easy to be with your kids and say let's do homework
together. But we try to do things, beyond doing lunches and dinners. I learnt that from my
father. He was a big nature lover and during our school days, we went to different places
every Sunday -- we walked through the forest or had a bath in streams.
I have turned into a big nature fan as well. The change in my life that you talked about is
that I can afford it more today. These childhood influences have shaped me into what I
am today.
What about your choice of higher education, why did you choose chemical
engineering?
In fact, the choice illustrates what I meant about academic decisions being left to us.
Nobody asked me to do chemical engineering. I chose to study science and which college
I would go to.
By that time -- the early '70s -- Vimal was a fairly successful textile brand. So everybody
expected me to do textile engineering. I shocked them by saying that I would go to IIT.
Interestingly, 4-5 of us friends studying together for Inter-science were all among the top
10. Ajay Parekh, who runs Pidilite, topped Bombay University. I stood fifth or sixth.
Pursuing excellence in rotational moulding.
3. Vinodrai Engineers Pvt. Ltd.,
12 Km. Stone, Jalna-Aurangabad Road,
Village Dawalwadi, District : Jalna
Jalna – 431 203 ( India )
Ph: +91-2482-221061 Fax: +91-2482-221448
Web: vinodrai.com , E-Mail : vinodraieng@rediffmail.com
Since Inter-science results were announced after the IIT entrance, I joined IIT, Bombay.
After the Inter-science results a few weeks later, I left and joined University Department
of Chemical Technology (UDCT) along with my friends.
Did your academic choices help you in the process of self-discovery?
From the beginning, it was clear that we would have to find our own path. Along with
that came the self-realisation that we would have to propel ourselves to achieve
excellence. I am trying to learn how to do that as a parent. There is a trick somewhere;
sometimes we do a lot. I feel that I am more ready for ICSE exams than my daughter. I
know everything and I can beat any parent of my age in ICSE exam hands down.
How do you get the time to do it?
I am passionate about it, so one makes the time. My daughter says it is wrong. 'I will have
to study it myself,' she says. The trick is to light a fire. It is not about pouring knowledge
into the brains of kids but lighting that spark so that they learn by themselves.
With us, my father achieved it without trying as hard as we do. It also depends on
circumstances, friends and luck. Probably, we were fortunate to have everything in place.
Many of your childhood friends are still working with you -- you clearly forged
lasting bonds.
Anand and I have been friends since the sixth standard; he then went on to study
commerce. I met Manoj at UDCT. (Anand Jain now leads the Reliance effort in SEZ and
Manoj Modi heads the retailing venture). I have other friends as well from that period.
Kiran Manelkar became a doctor; because of him, I have many friends who are doctors.
Why did you choose chemical engineering?
Nobody had anticipated that chemicals was the direction in which Reliance was headed. I
did chemical engineering because it was supposed to be the future. Think of the line from
the movie The Graduate, which was very popular in our times -- "There's a great future in
plastics." (Laughs) I guess, it left a mark on my mind.
In a sense, it also reflected two of the tenets on which my father built Reliance: always
invest in businesses of the future and invest in talent. We believe in these two principles
even today.
When did you start working for Reliance?
Even when I was doing chemical engineering, I was working almost full time for
Reliance. I finished college at 2.30 pm and went straight to the office. I remember, we
were raided and my father was in the US.
Pursuing excellence in rotational moulding.
4. Vinodrai Engineers Pvt. Ltd.,
12 Km. Stone, Jalna-Aurangabad Road,
Village Dawalwadi, District : Jalna
Jalna – 431 203 ( India )
Ph: +91-2482-221061 Fax: +91-2482-221448
Web: vinodrai.com , E-Mail : vinodraieng@rediffmail.com
I was literally in charge, handling the problem. I must have been about 16 or 17. After
chemical engineering, everybody said, 'what would you do'? My friends and I wrote all
sorts of competitive exams. It was mainly driven by a desire to prove to ourselves that we
are no less than anyone in the world. That attitude has not changed either. We even took
the civil services exams just to see whether we can get into the list. Then we said, let us
apply to Harvard, Stanford and other colleges. I was lucky to get into the top 2-3 business
schools. I joined Stanford.
Our class and faculty were outstanding. Nobel Laureate, Bill Sharpe was a professor of
financial economics. He made a great impact on me. I hit it off with him on day one --
just as I did with Professor MM Sharma. These are the kinds of professors who make you
think out of the box.
Prof MM Sharma's first lecture was on how you make money in the chemical business.
Bill Sharpe started by asking 'how do you make a difference to the world.' It was my
good fortune that I had a good set of professors and, of course, a great peer group.
While I was at Stanford, Reliance got a licence to make polyester. At that time (early
'80s), the World Bank's Young Professional's Programme (YPP) was extremely
prestigious. I was very keen to do it too. I had the choice of completing the Stanford
graduate programme over the next six months, do the YPP for a year and then return to
India. I planned to do this and return to work on the polyester plant.
But you didn't do that. What happened?
When I explained my thoughts to my father, he said, 'you are right in the way you have
planned your things. I am starting work on the polyester plant.' I said, 'Oh you are not
going to wait for one and a half years?' He said, 'No, I won't wait.' So, I decided to come
back immediately.
This was in 1981. Rasikbhai Meswani, Nikhil and Hital's father, was my first boss. The
management style used to be very open. We could walk into each other's cabin, join in a
meeting or get involved in any discussion. My father encouraged it. But when I joined
Reliance formally, he said you need to have a boss and I was put under Rasikbhai's
charge.
He was running our polyester business, which consisted of importing polyester fibre,
texturising it and selling it to textile mills. It was a new business compared to our own
textile mill at Naroda (near Ahmedabad) that brought in almost 60%-70% of the profits.
When we started work on setting up a polyester filament yarn project, my chemical
engineering and business school background helped me in organising the work, creating
reporting structures, motivating people. . . in all this, my father and Rasikbhai were two
steps ahead of me.
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We worked liked a partnership; I was fortunate to be able to contribute from day one.
One of my biggest obsessions today is that senior people must give bright 25-year olds
the opportunity to contribute meaningfully.
The time was different. Reliance has been in the middle of so much of tumultuous
growth. You did many things for the first time in India. Isn't it difficult to replicate
your own experiences?
Well, I will share with you my perspective. Even before we went public, my father used
to say, we need capital but we don't want to be dependent on traditional sources of
capital. It was very difficult to convince banks about his ambitious plans.
In the journey of an entrepreneur, the most important thing is self-belief and the ability to
convert that belief into reality. He believed that we could raise money from the capital
market and return it with profits. His second belief was that India is a great opportunity.
While going public was relatively a new thing, he also wanted to change the status quo
and unleash disruptive changes. May be he did not articulate all this then.
The actions were loud enough. For instance, for many years, Reliance was not part
of any trade or business association. It also had nothing to do with the old
established houses.
Absolutely. That was his belief. He said, 'let's build a different company.' This is my 25th
year in Reliance as a full-time employee.
When I look back over the years, what did we change? We changed the mindset and we
showed the way. Dhirubhai propelled the Indian capital market forward. We raised
money only till the middle of 1985 and then in 1989. Then many others came along and
raised money. That was a paradigm change.
The first 200-odd people who built Patalganga with me are still around, running different
businesses. It has gone into their psyche that we do things differently here. We have
taken money from ordinary Indians and we are their trustees. When this is drilled into
thousands of people, you automatically get performance.
The other thing that is not visible externally is methods, processes, systems that moved
Reliance away from a system that is totally owner-driven. We were among the last to put
up a polyester plant. Before us there were Birlas, Modis, Singhanias, the multinationals --
everybody except the Tatas.
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You were first among the new crop of licencees for Partially-Oriented Yarn.
Yes, but whoever already had a licence, had a business advantage. So, what competencies
did we build? One was to get a licence in a licence-permit raj. Getting a licence is
nothing; you have to build a sustainable business. Raising the money is another
competence.
In the '80s, when I came in, the ground rules were made clear to me. 'Build this business
from scratch, without taking anyone from Reliance.' That forced you to be very
disciplined. I looked around and figured out in three months that this industry runs on
heroes.
Experts came in with their notebooks on which they had written down all the process
conditions, temperatures, pressures and carried these readings back with them.
Are you talking of the consultants?
Even the managers. It was all a feudal style of management. If we had accepted that style,
we would not have grown. It was simply not a scalable model. Of course, the easiest
thing would have been to follow it. But we had a disruptive style of management. So we
said, 'we don't want people carrying their wisdom in notebooks as if it is some kind of
secretive operation.'
We tried to create an open environment. In today's language, we created SOPs and SOCs
(standard operating procedures, standard operating conditions) so that everybody was
on the same page. We wanted an organisation where everybody contributes but the
business is not dependent on a few individuals.
When our competitors were buying licences for half a million and one million dollars, we
agreed to pay DuPont $5 million, because we wanted to work with the best in the world.
We had limited capital but our approach was different. We got a few experts from
DuPont and put some 25-year-olds with them to learn how to manage operations and
sustain chemical processes.
The vision of the top person, in deciding that this was the right path, was totally different
from what existed in India. It was a big thing.
Reliance went through turbulent times in the mid-80s when there was this long
battle with the government and the media. Then Dhirubhai suffered a stroke. From
the outside, it seemed that Reliance would be sorely tested because the perception
was that so much was built by "managing the system."
This is where investing in talent works. We had different sets of competencies in
Reliance. If it meant getting licences to import something quickly to reduce the cycle
time or to get steel from Steel Authority -- there were people with relevant competencies
handling those things to ensure that the project is completed in time.
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There was another set of competencies for the operational part -- how do you run things
efficiently. That strength of Reliance was underestimated.
What went on in your mind during the crisis?
We lost Rasikbhai on 30th August, 1985. That was a huge blow. Then my father suffered
a stroke in February-- two major events in five months. From three of us running the
business, for some time, I suddenly became alone. But my father recovered reasonably by
June-July.
There was no sense of panic. The whole picture was in my head. That was the strength of
the open system. If I had kept everything close to my chest, it would have been difficult.
We had excellent people across the company. The polyester business was
institutionalised and there was a plan in place. We just kept our heads down and executed
it.
When the economy opened up in 1992, there was a lot of apprehension about
whether Indian companies would survive. What was your gameplan?
We were clear that we had to be internationally competitive and were passionate about
building competencies that were the best in the world even when the tariffs were very
high. It was an obsession with me to beat the Taiwanese and the Koreans who dominated
the polyester business in the '70s.
That was possible only when all aspects of the business were better than them. One
critical factor is scale. We understood that, unless we had scale, we won't be world-
beaters. Remember, with enormous effort and all the limitations of the licence-permit-raj
(between 1981 and 1991), we had built a polyester capacity of 75,000 tonnes. But we had
also built a different mindset by looking outside India.
So, when the deregulation came, we were ready. By the middle of '95, we were producing
1 million tonnes. A spring was released. Tariffs also fell sharply from 150% to 30% and
later to 10%. We wanted to be internationally competitive even when the tariffs were
300%, but being based in India became a competitive advantage when the tariff level fell
to 30%.
By that time, we had developed superb project execution capability. We had more than
300 top quality people to execute the projects. From the '80s till today, we have not
struggled to start up any plant. The biggest companies in the world do not have this kind
of record.
How did Reliance develop this mindset? There was hardly anything, except some
public sector companies as a reference in India.
My reference points were US companies. We were hugely influenced by large US
chemical companies, especially DuPont. It was a very open company and we could take
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advantage of their learnings. The US is also a very open society. I could to go the US
Association of Chemical Engineers and get the standards, data, etc.
It was not the Internet age, but it was easy. It sometimes cost us money to buy what we
needed but the investment was worth it to put the right thought process in place.
Critically, some of the leadership came from public sector managers. For instance, KK
Malhotra, who was with us for 15 years from 1985, made a fantastic contribution. He was
my guru. He ensured that we imbibe all the best practices.
You see, all the right things are written in books and research papers. The trick is to
ensure that there is no gap between what is written in the books and your vision; from
what is happening on the shopfloor and what is going on in the marketplace. That is
execution. That is what makes the difference.
So, in short, we had a huge US bias and great public sector talent. It was not a large
group, just 5-6 outstanding people. I always believe that so-called ordinary people can
achieve extraordinary results as long they are given a sensible framework. We have been
able to do it in industry after industry.
Till 2000, Reliance always said it wanted to capture the entire value of the oil and
petrochemicals chain, but after 2000, you have gone in different directions. What
caused the change in thinking?
We had three thoughts. One was the fundamental belief that we will invest in businesses
of the future and we will invest in talent. We clearly saw that from oil to fabric was a
value chain of opportunity and it will remain so for many future decades.
We executed that well and created enough disruptions in the polyester, plastics, refinery
and the upstream business of oil and gas. We had very good cash flows. In late '90s, we
had two options. One was to make the current business more global, bigger and better.
The other option was to use our cash flows to do something else.
We were sitting right in this room and my father said 'now it is your call, what you would
like to do.' I said, 'we must use the competencies and cash flows to make a difference to
millions of Indians'. He said, 'that's exactly what I had mind. Let's do it.' The strategy
was: while we strengthen our current business, we will use our cash flows to invest in the
businesses of the future. That's how Infocomm was born.
There is a sense that, in the early 1990s, you missed the bus on the biggest
opportunity of the future -- the IT business.
We saw the IT business coming. I lived in Silicon Valley. I knew it was a big
opportunity. I mentioned it in a speech in 1995 -- the clear arbitrage opportunity for
software development. But for us, it was a question of focus and trade-off.
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I was very focussed on building various competencies in Reliance and we were not ready
to do two things at the same time. It was a big risk for us to get into IT, especially
because it was hugely effort-intensive. In my language, I said we have too much soap on
our body and we need to take a bath in the chemicals business.
We had signed a JV with Microsoft, but decided to pass up that opportunity. To my mind,
I was right. We still needed to build that focus.
So, in the late '90s, you zeroed in on telecom, life sciences and retailing. . .
Actually, my father was very keen on the agri-business. He said, that is the real big
business in India. We looked at three or four businesses. We got into life sciences as a
defence mechanism in the late '90s. In 1996-97, we were big in plastics already when
Dow announced that they would make plastics from E Coli.
It looked like our business would be ruined because we would buy naphtha and these
guys would make plastics from salt and water. We quickly put four or five guys together
to understand what Dow Chemicals was doing. That is when we started the industrial
biotech business.
Then, we stumbled on human and plant biotech. We were fortunate to have some good
people and decided that Reliance can build this business over 5-10 years without any
great revenue pressures. In the mainstream business, there was telecom or what I call
infocomm.
We got into telecom in the '90s by bidding for cellular licences. But I felt that the real
value is in the convergence of information and communication; pure communication will
not deliver a sustainable value; that is why we called ourselves infocomm. It was learning
a whole new domain. We brought in experts from the outside but we essentially did it
with proven Reliance people.
And then you got into retailing. . .
Within organised retailing, we are really talking of agri-based retailing. For a variety of
reasons, our economy did not get a chance to develop a sustainable value chain in the
foods business.
The US and Europe saw large players in foods by the '50s and '60s; but in India, food has
always been a disorganised, fragmented value chain. We believe that India's purchasing
power will be food-dominated. The first thing we need is safe to eat food that will, in
turn, meet many other needs.
But all kinds of mindless legislation remains in place and other players like
Hindustan Lever have tried to get around it without real success.
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True. But we are in a different era. It is easier for people to see the value proposition --
28% of our GDP comes from agriculture, but 60% of the people depend on it. So, if we
want to make a difference to this 60%, we will have to bring agriculture to its true
potential.
Having looked at it obsessively for the past year, I feel that we can convert all our
disadvantages into an opportunity. We have fragmented landholdings; but we can
integrate that with technology. With proper inputs, there is no reason why Indian farmers
cannot become world-class. What is missing? It is distribution.
We now have an opportunity to straightway catch the next wave of distribution logistics.
We don't have to go through what the world went through and we can build what even
the US will not have by 2010. That is possible today. In terms of sheer money, it may
take Rs 25,000 crore (Rs 250 billion).
In the earlier days, it was impossible for corporates to think of this. Today, it is possible
for the world to finance it and for you to execute a distribution network. We are not big
believers in contract farming. So we have removed the 'r' out of cont(r)act farming. I
believe that everyone should be able to relate to market economy. If you produce
something, you should be able to sell it at a market price.
What is the model that will deliver your vision?
We are working at putting the most modern technology in farms at Indian costs. I always
say whatever the US implements in dollars we should be able to do it at exchange rate of
Rs 10, then we would be globally competitive.
When we start off, this looks impossible. Then we think through it, value-engineer it and
come close to it. That is the cost part. Then comes the quality issue. While we are
working at improving the offering to the Indian consumer, we are ultimately interested in
connecting the Indian farmer to the global market. Global consumers have to accept
Indian agricultural products.
We all know India has a huge competitive advantage -- we have the largest arable land,
focused sunshine, sensible utilisation of water in 30% of land. The question is what
should we do to make the US market -- the most difficult market in the world -- accept
our produce. For that, we need traceability. It is a simple technology, which we are giving
the farmers. It needs certification and verification processes -- to us it is like a process
plant. You can then get the output, sort it and grade it.
At what point to grade is a decision that Reliance will make, at the farm level or at the
intermediary's level. . . what is least-cost, what works, what everybody is comfortable
with.
Coarse products are easy, the problem with fresh produce is perishability -- it becomes
worthless in seven days. That is why farmers are not producing fresh. That is the tallest
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mountain for us to climb. . . to put in place distribution and logistics to handle fresh. If we
can send fresh produce through technology and distribution from any farm in India to
anywhere in the world at their quality standards, then imagine the arbitrage.
What is the arbitrage? Can you give us an example.
We talked of IT. What is IT? It is the arbitrage between the per hour rate in the US and
India. We have gone from zero to $20 billion in exporting software, employing about 1
million people in 10 years. These million people changed the brand of India,
consumption pattern and gave us the confidence that we can do everything.
The arbitrage has narrowed but is still there. It will disappear in a few decades by which
time our software exports may be $100 billion. From a million people, it will benefit 10
million people. If that is what has happened in software, imagine what will happen in
agriculture.
Is there this kind of arbitrage in agriculture?
Let me give you some numbers. Take potatoes, the most common food across the world.
From Bill Gates to my driver, everybody eats potatoes. Now, plot the prices. Farmers in
Uttar Pradesh and Bihar get about Rs 4-5 a kilo; in the Middle East, the wholesale price is
about Rs 25-30 a kilo. In the US, Sam's Club, it is Rs 90 a kilo. In Europe, it is Rs 110 a
kilo. The arbitrage is 1:20. If we get our produce right, and if the US market is opened up,
you will be surprised how quickly we reach $20 billion.
The food market is much bigger than the software services market. And the money goes
straight into the hands of millions of farmers. The spinoffs are enormous -- jobs, houses,
durables, a whole new consumption boom will start in rural areas.
What about the front end -- the retailing sector?
The most employment-intensive industry in the world is retail and our next generation
needs these jobs. India has a strategy for the next generation of doctors, engineers and
biotech graduates, etc. But for the country as a whole, what we need to resolve is how to
create sensible jobs for undergraduates and or those even less educated.
Organised retail alone can absorb these people in large numbers. We estimate about 1.5
million jobs from this sector over the next three years. In the process, we will reduce the
cost to consumers by 20% and increase the efficiency of farmers thrice over. Farm
incomes can go up 600% to 900% over the next few years from the current base.
By higher prices or higher output?
Higher output. The country produces 150 million tonnes of fresh produce today. We can
go to 300-400 million tonnes fairly quickly over a few crop cycles, as long as we can
move those millions through the system and have world-class quality.
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This means that when you go to the market -- doesn't matter whether it is Reliance or
Bharti -- you should have the confidence that you are buying quality and it is safe to eat.
After meeting the needs of Indian consumers, how do we take advantage in fresh through
exports and value added industry such as processing?
It's really a yield-productivity-distribution story that we are involved with right now. Our
strategy is fundamentally different from the others.
In what sense?
Most other retailers come in when purchasing power has developed. That's what Wal-
Mart did in China. India is also at that inflection point, so retail chains would come in and
start in the urban areas and move backward.
Ours is a diametrically opposite strategy. We are driven by creating purchasing power
first. The farmers will have purchasing power and their staff will have purchasing power.
Today, the farmer with two acres of land has five people in his family. It is like running a
factory, but one that is only running 20% of the time because 80% of the time he cannot
sell his products.
He doesn't have the inputs to produce the right quality. What we have to do is win his
trust and bring him to his true potential so that he can run his two acres at 90% and
increase his income by nine times. Once we do it, it is such a big market that there is a
place for at least 5-6 players like us. We can't do it all alone. But we can show the way.
It is like in telecom; when we said we will get 10 million phone users, a lot of people
laughed. Today, there are 3-4 guys who are getting a million customers a month. We
think exactly the same needs to happen in farms. When that happens, we will have
created purchasing power.
We will start at the bottom and sell them their first cooking range, first washing machine,
first bed -- whatever is needed to improve quality of life. All this will create sustainable
employment. That is really retail as we see it. We need to execute it well and prove some
of these hypotheses. We might be wrong in some of them so we will have to fine tune,
adjust and learn.
We only have a superficial knowledge about the true rural India -- the power structure,
how to operate in tehsils, what are their true concerns, etc. But we think we can
significantly change purchasing power and how we live. That's what motivates us.
How far have your progressed in your plans?
We have pilot projects in Andhra Pradesh, Punjab and West Bengal. In all three places,
we are very encouraged. There will be some big learning involved but the potential
undoubtedly exists.
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You also have massive plans for SEZs. What is the thought process there?
The logic of SEZ is simple. India is long on talent and we need to create as many jobs as
possible in manufacturing and services.
India's land bank is about 750-800 million acres. Out of this, 500 million acres can be
potentially farmed, but today only 300-350 million is arable and used for agriculture. We
need to bring the remaining 150 million acres into productive use. More than 100 million
households rely on this land base. India is creating 800,000 engineers a year and 400,00-
500,000 semi-professionals. So we will bring in about 2 million professionals into the
workforce annually over the next 20 years. We need to create jobs for them.
Government jobs and self-employment in manufacturing are not enough. It is large
companies that create employment. That's the reality. So we have the supply of talent that
can potentially be of the highest quality and lowest cost for 10 years and we also have
large markets here.
What is missing? It is integrated infrastructure and a reasonable assurance of facilities
that are good for at least 10 years. My target company would want to come to India but
operate near the big metros. This is the example that you learn from Shanghai or
Shenzen. That is where our SEZs with integrated infrastructure come in -- they provide
an integrated airport, seaport, transportation, power and housing -- all at sensible costs.
When I put out a comparative chart, I should be able to tell big employers: this is how we
compare with Singapore, Dubai, Shenzhen or Malaysia and Korea. On every parameter, I
should beat others in cost and quality of infrastructure. India might be short of
infrastructure but here you have guaranteed infrastructure and talent.
You are near Bombay and Delhi and have access to the Indian market and global
markets. So ours is an employment-led SEZ. The strategy is first to get the employer. I
think we can create 5 million jobs in each of the two 25,000-acre SEZs. But we need
many more just to make sure that most of our educated youth is occupied.
The criticism is that SEzs are really land plays. . .
Most people don't understand that the residential commercial piece is also a big cost
element in SEZs. For employers to attract and retain talent, India has to be almost as
attractive as the US. So I have to provide for the cost of living -- housing, shopping
environment and everything else exactly like the US, but at an Indian cost.
We have a big talent pool in the US and they are coming back with huge enthusiasm. For
our agri-business, we are now bringing back a lot of talented Indians from the US who
have worked in Wholesale Foods, Kraft, etc.
We offer to protect their savings in a job here. If you earn $100,000 a year there, you also
spend $80,000 and save $15,000-$20,000. We say, if you work for us in India, we will
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ensure you save $15,000 dollars a year and are part of something exciting without a loss
to you.
But this doesn't work without a scheme. If you ask me to build a power plant, I cannot
give that power at 3 cents or 4 cents, unless I put up a 2000 MW project. It's the same for
an airport, seaport and all the other stuff. You need to spread costs over a sensible size to
keep unit costs low.
These projects will take time to fructify. When do you expect to start getting
returns?
Both agri-business and SEZs will make a sustainable return in the long run and we have a
strong enough balance sheet to sustain these. At the end of the day, it will leave us with
the satisfaction of having tried to show the way. The easiest thing for me is to go to
London and New York, sit in a hotel, talk to investment bankers and buy 10 companies.
Are you going to do that too?
(Laughs) Depends on the value we get and what excites us. But that's the easy stuff. What
does it take? It's deal-making followed by a PR pitch to justify it. That doesn't give me
the same satisfaction: of saying that we tried our hardest to blaze a new trail or change
the status quo. There are 300 to 400 of us who think the same way.
Young people want to go to Punjab and stay there for a month to figure out what works.
In telecom, when we said we would go into six lakh villages, a lot of our friends thought
it's all talk. Even the regulator was sceptical. Today, it is rural areas that are making more
money.
I have noticed that talent is automatically motivated by larger goals and some of the
brightest people want to do things that are different. After we hire from the IIMs and IITs
every year, we run them through a six-month induction programme where we teach them
the Reliance way and let them choose where they want to work through a competitive
framework.
Each business makes a presentation. In the '90s, finance and treasury was the in-thing.
Then, it was marketing. In the last two years, most bright young people want to work in
rural areas. This is a big mindset change.
In retailing, they are saying, we don't want to do merchandising; we want to create those
rural markets. In that sense, it is great fun. I always tell my young guys, we are going on
an expedition together. When you do that we need to support each other because we can
get lost quickly.
In this wide canvass, aren't you looking at the education sector?
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15. Vinodrai Engineers Pvt. Ltd.,
12 Km. Stone, Jalna-Aurangabad Road,
Village Dawalwadi, District : Jalna
Jalna – 431 203 ( India )
Ph: +91-2482-221061 Fax: +91-2482-221448
Web: vinodrai.com , E-Mail : vinodraieng@rediffmail.com
Education is one of the many services we aim to offer. I personally worked for three
months on education and healthcare as part of Prime Minister Vajpayee's advisory. It is a
tougher mountain to climb.
Education is the first aspiration of Indians, no matter what the prosperity level. In
that sense, you have a ready customer.
(Laughs) To learn what you said, we spent crores of rupees. After our restructuring, we
wondered what we should be getting into and got the best brains together to visualise
where the big opportunities are. We studied what people want to spend their money on at
all income levels and in different geographies.
People first want to spend money on food -- that is common across the world. The
second, in India, is education. In many parts of the world, it comes way down the list of
priorities. So, there is a huge opportunity.
What has been your best investment so far?
Our best investment has been in technology and in developing skills. For instance, we
invested Rs300 crore in technology that gave us unparalleled transparency and
accountability within the organisation.
It allows us to spend Rs 40,000 crore (Rs 400 billion) a year and sleep in peace. We were
among the first to introduce videoconferencing in India. In the 80s, we invested in
helicopters to go to Patalganga to save time. People saw it as flashy lifestyle. For us, it
was facilitating investments.
The other big investment we are now making is in talent. We are developing a culture of
creativity that will, in turn, create critical product-service differentials. You must see our
life sciences business to appreciate this. Another way to say this is that we are investing
to build the skills and experience of our people so that they can then believe in their
conviction, take risks and deliver results. Let me also answer the flipside.
We have not invested well in marketing ourselves. It is partly because of my trait. I
believe that if my conviction is right, I will not need to go and explain myself to anyone. I
believed that ultimately everyone will figure out what you are. We are changing this
approach
Pursuing excellence in rotational moulding.