DMart has become an investor favourite by focusing on costs and unit economics
Neville Noronha is on point about how to win in the big bad world of modern retail. Big ideas don’t work, he tells Forbes India’s Associate Editor Samar Srivastava. The better strategy, he says, is in “relentlessly pursuing small incremental improvements”. Noronha, 42, knows a thing or two about retail and what it takes to succeed. Under his watch, Avenue Supermarts, which runs the DMart retail chain, has become India’s highest valued retail company, ahead of big boys like Kishore Biyani’s Future Retail, Aditya Birla Fashion and Trent of the Tata group. Ever since the retail chain was listed on the stock exchanges in March this year, its stock has rocketed 260 percent. In the process, Noronha has helped his boss, DMart founder-owner and celebrated investor Radhakishan Damani, stage a dramatic comeback to the 2017 Forbes India Rich List at rank 12, with a net worth of $9.3 billion.
(This story appears in the 27 October, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)