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Shaking
the foundations
Time
Asia June 19, 2006
A Time magazine
report on how Ratan Tata turned the country's oldest
conglomerate into a global force
You wouldn't expect the
head of Tata Group, India's largest conglomerate, to
say the rich are boring. But Ratan Tata comes close.
Acting rich doesn't interest him. "I've never had
the desire to own a yacht, to flaunt," he says.
"It's not really [the point]." Nor does the
Prada-wearing class excite him as a marketing opportunity.
China and India, with their growing ranks of tycoons,
should attract multinational businesses not because
of the spare million in a few fat wallets, he argues,
but because of the spare change in a billion slim ones.
"Everyone is catering to the top of the pyramid,"
says the 68-year-old at his office in Bombay House,
Tata Group's elegant Edwardian headquarters in India's
business capital. "The challenge we've given to
all our companies is to address a different market.
Pare your margins. Create new markets."
The Tata Group's global
clout means its chairman's thoughts on the world economy
are worth listening to. The group comprises 93 companies,
including the world's second largest tea business (Tata
Tea); Asia's largest software firm (Tata Consultancy
Services); a steel giant (Tata Steel); a worldwide hotel
chain (Indian Hotels); and a sprawling vehicle-manufacturing
arm (Tata Motors) that includes a bicycle factory in
Zambia and a project to make a car selling for $2,200.
Since Ratan Tata became chairman in 1991, he has multiplied
Tata group revenues seven times to an annual $21.7 billion.
Since 2000, the group's market value has jumped 14 times
to $39.9 billion. And over the past six years Tata has
been on a $1.9 billion acquisition spree that has netted
Britain's Tetley Tea, South Korea's Daewoo Commercial
Vehicles, Singapore's NatSteel and New York's The Pierre
hotel, among 14 others. "Nothing succeeds like
success," says Sanjay Bhandarkar, managing director
of N.M. Rothschild in India. "All credit goes to
Ratan Tata. He clearly has a vision and knows what he's
doing."
Tata is one of Asia's most
influential businessmen. And perhaps more than any other
company, Tata Group exemplifies India's metamorphosis
into a modern economy. For much of their 138-year history,
the Tata family companies were the heart of India's
insular business establishment-the last business group
you'd have turned to for radical thinking, or owning
anything abroad. The group's founder, J.N. Tata, was
a nationalist driven by the idea of a strong, self-reliant
India. He gave the country its first steel plant, first
hydroelectric plant, first textile mill, first shipping
line, first cement factory, first science university,
even its first world-class hotel. His successors-among
them J.R.D. Tata, India's first pilot-created the first
airline, first motor company, first bank and first chemical
plant.
But after independence
in 1947, the group came to symbolize all that was bad
about Indian business. It lost its airline and insurance
arm to nationalization. To avoid giving up more to the
Congress Party socialists who ruled India for half a
century, J.R.D. Tata, a distant cousin of Ratan Tata,
emphasized individual companies over the group, keeping
the conglomerate's stakes small and demanding little
coordination. Meanwhile, shielded from competition by
the restrictive bureaucracy of the "license Raj,"
Tata's companies became bloated and calcified. "We
weren't driving ourselves hard enough in a protected
environment," says Ratan Tata.
Ratan took over from J.R.D.
in 1991. India was beginning economic reforms, and,
with state-sponsored monopolies on the way out, the
new chairman saw the need to overhaul the firm's culture.
He raised the conglomerate's stake in all its companies
to a minimum 26%. And he ordered each to meet performance
targets-to be first or second in its industry, and to
meet quantified goals for leadership and innovation-or
be sold. Most shaped up. Tata Steel, for example, shed
half its 78,000 workers between 1994 and 2005 using
retirement and voluntary redundancies to lower costs
and boost productivity. "The Tata group's relationship
with its employees changed from the patriarchal to the
practical," reads the Tata Code of Honor, which
sets group-wide standards of conduct. Subir Gokarn,
chief economist at ratings agency Crisil, says Ratan
Tata read the runes of change and largely avoided the
rash of business failures in India that followed reform:
"He survived the bloodbath. Those who made no changes
became extinct."
After nine years of consolidation
and streamlining, Tata signaled a new prominence for
the emerging Asia conglomerate in 2000 when the most
Indian of brands bought one of the most English, Tetley
Tea. At $435 million, the deal was the biggest in Indian
history, and it presaged a wave of international expansion
by Indian and Chinese businesses like Mittal Steel and
Lenovo. For Tata, entering the West was not an end in
itself. Buying Tetley was simply a way to grow Tata
Tea. "We look for the acquisition of companies
that fill a product gap or have a strategic connection
with what we do, wherever that company might be,"
says Tata. Says Rothschild's Bhandarkar: "Other
Indian groups look at things opportunistically. Tata
is the only one with an international strategy."
If the group has a geographical tilt, it is towards
the developing world. And that's based on a business
approach that has not changed since its foundation.
The son of a Parsi trader
from Bombay, group founder Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata
knew how to turn a profit. But J.N. also had a patrician
vision of spreading wealth and lifting a nation. In
a 1902 letter to his son about building a workers' city
around his Tata Steel works, he deplored the squalor
of industrial England and anticipated what would become
a standard for urban planning: "Be sure to lay
wide streets planted with shady trees, every other of
a quick-growing variety. Be sure that there is plenty
of space for lawns and gardens." After his death
in 1904, the city took his name, becoming Jamshedpur.
Tata Steel introduced a series of worker benefits that
would become common only much later in the West, such
as the eight-hour working day in 1912, maternity benefits
in 1928 and profit-sharing in 1934. Today Jamshedpur,
with free housing, free hospitals and free schools,
sports stadiums and clean streets, remains the envy
of the country. In 2004, the U.N. chose it-along with
Melbourne and San Francisco-as one of six examples of
urban-planning excellence.
J.N. Tata's ideals survive
today. Tata Sons, the holding company that manages the
group, is 65.8% owned by 11 charitable trusts, which
spent $379.2 million on social causes in 2003-04 alone.
Over the following 12 months, Tata companies donated
another $97.8 million. Beneficiaries range from a host
of Tata educational, health and scientific institutes
that dot India to the Ganges River's giant mahseer fish,
saved from extinction by a Tata-funded breeding program.
The group's corporate piety
extends to the boss' pay. Though the business house
carries his name, Ratan Tata merely draws a salary from
Tata Sons. And while hardly poor, he takes personal
modesty seriously. Tall, guarded and retaining the outsider's
accent he picked up in an earlier life as a trainee
architect in the U.S., he is famously private. He lives
with his two German shepherds, Tito and Tango, in the
same second-floor apartment in Bombay that he has kept
for 20 years. He is one floor below his stepmother,
and neighbors say they have never known him to throw
a party. His one indulgence apart from his dogs-he is
frequently spotted muddying his pinstripes as he plays
with them in a park near his home-is a collection of
cars. Apparently embarrassed by the extravagance, he
excuses his interest as stemming from a love of design,
not show. "I drive them periodically," he
says, "and then back to the garage."
What really excites Tata
is his ability to combine the group's philanthropic
heritage with modern business sense. Targeting the bottom
of the income pyramid a lot of people with a
little, rather than a few with a lot ticks both
boxes. It's almost as if he's reciting from last year's
hit book, C.K. Prahalad's The Fortune at the Bottom
of the Pyramid Eradicating Poverty Through Profits.
Tata points out that consumption, as it is understood
in the West, is still a dream for all but a fraction
of 3 billion people in the developing world. Only 58
million Indians, out of the country's 1.1 billion population,
earn more than $4,400 a year, according to Delhi's National
Council of Applied Economic Research. The challenge
is to make consumers out of people whose disposable
income would be pocket money for many American children.
One of Tata's answers is
the $2,200 car, a four-door, rear-engine runabout that
he designed himself and that is currently under development
(he aims to sell a million of them a year in India after
its release in 2008). Another is the Ace, a 700cc truck
that Tata Motors sells for less than $5,000 and, since
its launch in southern India in May 2005, has accounted
for two-thirds of all trucks sold domestically. Purchases
of these vehicles are supported by low-interest consumer
loans from Tata Finance. Following the same model, Tata's
hotel chain is building 200 hotels across India under
the brand Ginger, offering rooms with wireless Internet
access, air conditioning and ensuite bathrooms for 1,000
rupees ($22), a fifth of the cost of a room paid by
budget business travelers in India today. Tata is also
eyeing low-cost housing.
That same desire to market
to, and invest in, some of the world's poorest countries
is behind Tata's affinity for Bangladesh and Africa.
Tata group recently finalized a $3 billion power, steel
and coal deal in Bangladesh, the biggest investment
in that country's history. In South Africa, the group
has investments in mining, tourism and engine manufacturing.
There is an instant-coffee plant in Uganda, a bus factory
in Senegal and a phosphate plant in Morocco. "We
look at countries where we can play a role in development,"
says Tata. "Our hope in each is to create an enterprise
that looks like a local company, but happens to be owned
by a company in India."
Tata says the group's success
proves his approach is good business, as well as good
karma: "We are not in anything for charity."
And lest this all sounds too good to be true, the group
is not free from controversy. In 2001, Tata Finance
sacked its managing director and five other senior managers
over alleged financial irregularities. In January, Tata
Steel's plans to build a mill in the eastern state of
Orissa went tragically awry when police fired on protesters
who were accusing the state government acting
as a broker in the development of making profits
on the sale of their land. Twelve were killed. But to
shed 40,000 employees at Jamshedpur, Tata Steel offered
to pay their current salaries until retirement age along
with free health care for life, and allowed them to
keep their company houses for three years. Initiatives
like these have kept the group free of strikes and other
industrial actions for 77 years.
After 15 years as chairman,
Tata is thinking of retiring. Asked how he would spend
his days, he says he gave up golf long ago and has almost
no free time outside the business. On rare evenings
off, he says he takes a half-hour boat ride across Bombay
harbor to a small, scruffy beach house. "It seldom
had power, so I had to put in a small generator,"
he says. "It's quiet and away from everywhere.
There is a town and there are neighbors, but I go quietly
on my own. I walk the beach and I read and I think about
what I should do." It's not how you conventionally
picture a tycoon's life. That's his point.
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