Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

A driven veteran, "Chandra" signals continuity for India's Tata group

- By Suvashree Choudhury and Aditi Shah

MUMBAI, Jan 13 (Reuters) - A three-decade veteran of the Tata conglomera­te and front-runner for the top job since the day his predecesso­r was ousted, Natarajan Chandrasek­aran is one of the group's most highly regarded executives and the man behind its best-performing unit.

A former Tata intern, Chandrasek­aran, known as “Chandra”, is cited by employees and rivals both for the focus that got him through several marathons and for a prodigious memory.

But a selection panel's unanimous choice on Thursday of the self-effacing Tata lifer to take the reins at holding company Tata Sons is also about a strong desire for loyalty and continuity - even if he is unrelated to the Tata family and will be the first non-Parsi to hold the role.

India's largest conglomera­te has been badly shaken by a bruising months-long fight between former Chairman Cyrus Mistry, ousted in October, and patriarch Ratan Tata.

Like the Tatas, the Mistrys are part of Mumbai's tight-knit Parsi religious minori- ty, and Cyrus Mistry's sister is married to Ratan Tata's half-brother. Chandrasek­aran, by contrast, was born into a south Indian agricultur­al family, joining Tata in 1987.

To pick Mistry, who succeeded Tata in December 2012, a five-man selection team spent 15 months searching. Chandrasek­aran, who also sits on the board of India's central bank, was chosen in less than three months.

“Chandrasek­aran's foremost challenge will be to regain the trust and loss of reputation of the Tata group and addressing inves- tor concerns,” said Shriram Subramania­n, founder of Ingovern, a proxy advisory firm.

“One has to see what his relationsh­ip will be with the Tata trust and Mistry's holding companies, and whether he will be a yesman to Ratan Tata. But from the competency perspectiv­e he is fully capable.” Backroom operator An avid photograph­er turned marathon runner later in life, Chandrasek­aran has run Tata Consultanc­y Services - India's most valuable company, accounting for the single largest share of Tata Sons profit - since 2009.

Before taking on TCS from his leaffringe­d, colonial office in south Mumbai, Chandra, now 53, was seen by rivals and insiders as a backroom operator. He was strong on technology, they said, but low on charisma compared with industry peers such as Infosys Ltd founders N.R. Narayana Murthy and Nandan Nilekani.

Then 46, he was one of the youngest CEOs of the Tata group.

Critics forecast his quiet presence would struggle to engage the top bosses of overseas clients to win deals and retain existing clients in the cutthroat Indian outsourcin­g industry.

 ??  ?? Tata Sons chairman-designate Natarajan Chandrasek­aran. Reuters
Tata Sons chairman-designate Natarajan Chandrasek­aran. Reuters

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