A rewind of the key milestones in India's corporates and startups, through the lens of 13 years of Forbes India
Aamir Khan scruffy and toting a gun? Catch his pre-Rangeela angst
The slowdown has had an impact on the average age of new students at B-Schools
An old market hand, a fresher and a bar. The chat begins
Indians have had a long love affair with gold; right now they need to spend a little time apart
Have you wondered why Indian passengers wind up sleeping on the floor in French airports? Or about those weird clunks and clanks from the plane’s innards? Captain Vijay Bhaskar, pilot with Air India, and former IAF commander, has answers
Rakesh Mohan never gave up academics even while in policymaking. As he leaves RBI to take up teaching, Forbes India catches up with him
A year after Japan’s third largest drug maker bought Ranbaxy, skeletons continue to pop out of the closet
The rock stars of Infosys are getting ready to leave the stage to a new band of boys. Will Infosys be the same ever again?
The world's largest private equity firm took two contrarian bets in India nearly two years ago. Making them work will be quite a challenge
There could not have been a more difficult time to take over the reins at Ranbaxy Labs, India’s leading drug maker. The Singh family, which sold the company to Japan's Daiichi Sankyo last year, has moved out. But skeletons are tumbling out of the closet in the form of a ban on some of its drugs in the US, forex losses etc.
As the founders of Infosys approach the age of retirement, they must hand over charge to a new generation of leaders. R Narayana Murthy discusses his plans with Forbes India
Farmers have profited as both the government and the private players place them in the spotlight
The India head of Gates Foundation defends a high-cost project for the fight against HIV in India
With the original founders bracing for a graceful exit, Infosys is looking to groom the next generation of leaders
The American Retail Giant, made its entry into India as a wholesale player, though they choose to call it Best Price
The global innovation head of Unilever returns to his village with a business plan
Great Sporting Rivalries That Changed the Sport
A small town in Madhya Pradesh has become the focal point for a battle between private players and the government for the wholesale grain trade. Their focus of attention? The farmers
The stories of a village boy studying under the streetlight to a highflier with his own fleet of cars are overdone; however, none of them returned to the same village from where they once started. Khan did
Succession planning in companies doesn’t end with identifying the new CEO. The incoming leader will face a number of challenges and that’s where coaching comes in.
As Infosys is preparing for a future beyond its founders, the company's independent director Claude Smadja talks about the need for entrepreneurs to know when to pass on the baton to the next generation
Mehmood Khan returned to Mewat treasuring a dream of reform
Want more sizzle on TV at your US motel room? This Mumbai company will serve it up hot
Has the world economy begun its recovery? This is the question occupying the minds of economists and overenthusiastic journalists. Let us join the debate and read the signals that have come so far
The time is ripe for India to break down barriers and win over its neighbour
Want more sizzle on TV at your US motel room? This Mumbai company will serve it up hot
Indians have had a long love affair with gold; right now they need to spend a little time apart
At last, Wal-Mart is in India. But its first store in Amritsar is only a wholesale operation because India hasn't yet allowed foreigners to open retail outlets. Wal-Mart's country head Raj Jain shares his India agenda with Malini Goyal
Daimler rode through many a socialist bump in India before hitting the free-market highway
Gary Bennet finds India busy, full of warmth and sometimes frustrating
How Federer, arguably the greatest tennis player of all time, can overcome the Nadal hoodoo
Bertrand D'Souza got to put pedal to the metal. In a real F1 car. He hasn't stopped talking about it since
What's it like doing 300 kmph in one of the most mental supercars on the planet?
The world suffers as US mismanages the dollar. There is a way out though.
Mehmood Khan, Unilever’s global innovation head, goes back to his native village with a plan to turn it around
The Metal complaints and vows to entice Metal rights activists to vote against burying gold
The world's most democratic storehouse of knowledge really began in a one-room school in Alabama; it took shape in a little girl's hospital bed
A piece of metal realizes inter-metal mingling has always been frowned upon in the periodic table. Thankfully support by Uranium has helped gold through this tough phase
I'd encourage our political class to read our cover story on Infosys
An experiment in Madhya Pradesh shows farm procurement mandis can be as efficient as their private competitors
Oxytocin: The hormone that the world needs a lot more of
China’s largest city wants to be the new Singapore; but, beneath the sheen, the ghosts of its ribald, carousing past still lurk
William Bissell unveils his business philosophy
The purpose was noble, the money generous. But the software mogul's charity for HIV prevention in India has failed to make a lasting impact
Logistics and grievances: The world's largest online marketplace is struggling to cope with the sudden Internet surge in India