A rewind of the key milestones in India's corporates and startups, through the lens of 13 years of Forbes India
Raju Narisetti, the editor who came to India from the US to nurture business newspaper Mint, has gone back and joined The Washington Post. Forbes India wonders why and decides to ask Narisetti
The ability to move away from the herd is essential for investors now
T-Series is no stranger to music piracy. It is now using that familiarity to hunt down those who filch its music
This big daddy of business software gave Indian code-writers their first big break
Takes one to catch one. T-Series cracks down on piracy
It is not just the beauty of the tune that determines the right price for a piece of music
Premji is anticipating that by 2020, the global market for environment products and services will double from $1.37 trillion
After the hugely successful cardiac care facility, Devi Shetty set up a few other initiatives as well. Some of these are listed below:
CK Prahalad believed that the Devi Shetty model held immense promise from the very beginning
But there’s also a smart way to reverse the equation
Two decades ago, Ramesh Vangal fought hard to get Pepsi into India. He had his way. Today, Vangal and his associates own 25 percent in a bank controlled by Tamil Nadu’s close-knit, powerful Nadar community. They don’t want him. But he won’t walk away
With Navin Patnaik, sweeping the Orissa polls, the focus in Orissa have now shifted to Patnaik’s promise of industrialization. The companies will now be treading on thin ice in a bid to avoid backlash.
Ritesh Sidhwani has three rules of business: Never sell the rights to your creative work, build relationships but be selective, and go slow
Scary pictures on cigarette packs, ever increasing taxes, zone restrictions... Governments across the world have tried many tricks to discourage smoking. But do they work?
Australia is sending a new envoy to India in the aftermath of the Melbourne racial attacks. The retiring high commissioner, John McCarthy, reflects on this point in history
It is not just the beauty of the tune that determines the right price for a piece of music
Get up to speed on stocks this downturn that might prove to be winners
Companies are poised to do better, bankers are opening the money spigot, consumer wallets are opening up. It's time to invest again
But it is also an opportunity, say companies that look at the poor as a market
Azim Premji does not believe in wasting anything, least of all his time. That he spent over an hour talking to us shows how important ecology is to him
Premji is anticipating that by 2020, the global market for environment products and services will double from $1.37 trillion
Two decades ago, Ramesh Vangal fought hard to get Pepsi into India. He had his way. Today, Vangal and his associates own 25 percent in a bank controlled by Tamil Nadu’s close-knit, powerful Nadar community. They don’t want him. But he won’t walk away
In a chat with Forbes India, Scott Anthony, president of innovation consultancy Innosight , shares his insights of what the new generation leaders can learn from outgoing CEO, A G Lafley’s legacy
Telecom veteran Asim Ghosh believes in empowering his team and relying on them to bring success
Tribals in the state want to fence their mineral-rich earth from invading metal companies. Both sides need an open mind if this stalemate is to be broken
A drought in gold advertising in the South; but a deluge of umbrella ads
A three-way battle has changed the way cars are ferried from the north to the south of India
An expat must adapt to the genteel workplace in Singapore, says Bharat Puri, Cadbury’s global chocolate category director
Abolishing personal income tax is a smart way to spur a consumptive economy
Devi Shetty's doctors perform the most heart surgeries in India. He is using that scale to cut the cost of treatment
Ajay Relan launched his private equity fund in the most trying of circumstances. Retaining his Midas touch will be tough
What’s the deal with the couches anyway? Is Prozac over-prescribed? Do shrinks analyse themselves? We asked Dr. Dayal Mirchandani, a practicing psychiatrist in Mumbai for 28 years, for the inside story
Abhay Mehta studied in Melbourne and his family now lives there. He loves the place and spends nine months of the year in the city. He thinks it has been in the news in India for all the wrong reasons and that the brouhaha over the attacks on Indian students is overdone.
There's one man behind India's biggest oil find in two decades and Cairn Energy's rise to the oil industry's leaderboard. But Mike Watts isn't resting. He is out sniffing somewhere in icy Greenland