Ratan Tata

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Ratan Tata

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

A profile

India Today

He remains India's most respected industrialist, passionately involved in new businesses despite stepping down as chairman of the Rs.6 lakh crore salt-to-software Tata Group in December 2012.

In June 2014 he took up the mantle of chief adviser to AirAsia India, a new venture the Malaysian airline has set up with Tata, and tied up with Singapore Airlines to launch Vistara, a new carrier, and invested in e-commerce firm Snapdeal and online jewellery retailer Bluestone in his personal capacity. As chairman of four philanthropic Tata trusts, he oversees the group's contribution to charity, where it offered Rs.310 crore for the underprivileged in 2012-13.

New power centre

South Mumbai's Bakhtawar building in Colaba, where Ratan Tata has set up his office.

Confession of the yearbb

That it was a mistake to pitch Nano as the world's cheapest car; it should have targeted the two-wheeler owner with "an all-weather, safe form of affordable transportation"pitch.

Must Love dogs

Known for being a dog-lover, he feeds strays in his Colaba neighbourhood regularly.

Ahead of the curve

"I hate to see corporations disappearing from the scene because someone has cashed out, because managers are unable to escape their comfort zones, or because boards have not been sufficiently nimble to change with the times."

Tetley tea taken over by Tata tea

India Today Nandini Vaish

December 19, 2008

In 2000,Tata Tea took over Tetley Tea, the company which was twice Tata Tea’s size and had introduced the world to tea bags, for £271 million via a leverage buyout. The move turned the company into the world’s second-largest tea marketer. While Tata was strong on the production front, Tetley’s strengths lay in marketing. At the time of acquisition,The two companies were merged a year later. The Tetley brand name would give Tata Tea access to markets in Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, and the CIS countries, said the company’s vicechairman, R.K. Krishna Kumar,whose mandate for the acquisition was simple: to eliminate the competition, Unilever. “Tata Tea’s transformation is an eloquent example of the group becoming market-focused and consumer centric”(India Today, February 2003).

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