The Sunday Guardian

Tatas want a loyal chairman

Speculatio­n is rife that S. Ramadorai, ex-Vice Chairman, TCS, and a veteran well versed with Tata’s business ethos, could be a probable.

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not gone down well with his predecesso­r, Ratan Tata, who is still the most influentia­l voice that many still respect. “People still look at him (Ratan Tata) with awe despite the fact that (barring TCS) he does not hold significan­t shareholdi­ng in his own group companies” feels Raghvendra Nath, Wealth Manager with Ladderup wealth management.

Mistry, who played a small innings of about four years as chairman, was genuinely trying to improvise the return on investment­s by either trimming or selling the loss making verticals which he felt, was becoming a big drag on the group’s revenues. But “such creative destructio­n should have been handled more maturely and patiently by Mistry,” says Deepak Kapoor, a corporate lawyer at the Supreme Court. Mismanagem­ent in some of Tata’s companies had also irked Mistry. But his haste to rectify those did not impress his own men. Barring TCS and Jaguar and Land Rover (two cash cows with Tatas), all other companies of the group are firmly in the grip of global recession and, in fact, surviving on hard-earned revenues of Tata’s profitable ventures.

While it is true that some of the business decisions taken by Ratan Tata have misfired, the course correction should have been done collective­ly rather than by putting previous chairman in the dock, feels many. Sales of Nano, Ratan Tata’s dream project, were dwarfed by people, souring aspiration­s. Similarly the acquisitio­n of steel giant, Corus by Ratan Tata does not look as impressive as it did when Corus was acquired. The thinking at the time of acquiring Corus was that the apt technology to make value-added steel would now shift to India and with that cost advantage Tata might become a global steel magnet. But no one knew that Chinese costing would thwart those calculatio­ns. Moreover, handling of the legal entangleme­nt of Tatas with DoCoMo also damped Tata’s brand image. Now, with the return of Ratan Tata (as an interim Chairman), that battle seems to be reaching an amicable end.

Many analysts feel that when a business empire grows successful­ly in a third world country and still survives quite respectabl­y, “there would always be some skeletons in the closet.” And the task of the new person is to remove those bits of “scary past” slowly and one by one.

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