Many people build a business, but Rajeev Mecheri has also made a success out of parting with it
Name: Rajeev Mecheri
Profile: Co-founder of iMetrex Technologies
He Says “I think an entrepreneur must learn to differentiate himself from his business. I would say, build an identity for yourself so that you can thrive in life-after.”
Rajeev Mecheri is grateful to student organisation, AIESEC for two reasons: It gave him his wife Rinku and his first business idea while he was interning in Europe as part of an AIESEC programme. Thus, when Rajeev returned to India, at the bright young age of 22, he was ready to start on his own. He asked his brother Anand to join in and the two started a building automation company from scratch.
Rajeev Mecheri, born in 1970, son of a public sector employee and raised in Tuticorin in Tamil Nadu, is not your classic techno-entrepreneur.
Rajeev actually studied commerce, if he studied at all, given the boyish good looks and all the pretty young things that must have milled around him! It was when in Europe, he felt that soon, Indian building construction standards would change and as greater sophistication arrived, the need for fire, intrusion and energy management was inevitable. So, in 1992, with a capital of Rs. 10 lakh borrowed from their father, Rajeev and Anand started iMetrex Tech. Along the way, they raised venture funding and Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Limited (ILFS) picked up a stake of 21 percent for Rs. 18 crore.
Quietly, and efficiently, Rajeev and his brother went about building their software solution, the service and the sales network and went about winning business. In time, they became the go-to organisation for every high-rise in town that required compliance with safety, security and energy management norms.
In 2007, Siemens noticed their work. And Siemens also noticed that their building solution software was comparable and in some ways, actually ahead of what Siemens offered. It wanted to buy them out but with a condition: The brothers came with the business. Rajeev came on board as the managing director of Siemens’ Building Technology business for an agreed period of five years. This year, the business having fully integrated, Rajeev has decided to move on and brother Anand has stayed on as the chief marketing officer of the Building Technology business, located out of Switzerland. The acquisition is valued at a whopping $100 million. If you have not heard about it, it is because in Chennai, folks do not crow about such things. I wanted to know about the experience of selling his enterprise.
The deal with Siemens was that we would work until 2012. The idea was that Siemens got our full support and involvement in integrating the business. Once that happened, given the inevitability of my own departure, I started questioning the value-add to me as an entrepreneur. So, we amicably agreed I could move on.”
(This story appears in the 19 February, 2010 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)