---Home Page --------Join Us ??? --------Team Info --------Xtras --------Gallery --------Supporters
More Search
TATA CEO Continued
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
From front page..

Among his other distinctions, Ramadorai is a Fellow of the Indian National Academy of Engineering, Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Member of the National Council of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), President of the Indo-American Society, Member of the Corporate Advisory Board, Marshall School of Business (USC), and is also on the Advisory and Governing Boards of a number of reputed Indian academic institutions. Ramadorai continues to maintain strong links with the world of academia. He is a member of the Corporate Advisory Board, Marshall School of Business (USC) as well as other Boards of reputed Indian academic institutions.
Among his other distinctions, Ramadorai is a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and of the Indian National Academy of Engineering. In 2006, on India's Republic Day, he was awarded the Padma Bhushan, India's third highest civilian honour. In 2004, he won Business India's "Business Man of the Year" award. During 2003, Ramadorai received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Indore Management Association, the Distinguished Achievement Award from the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, and a Fellowship of the Institute of Management Consultants of India. He has also been honoured with CNBC Asia Pacific's prestigious 'Asia Business Leader of the Year' Award, as well as the 'Management Man of the Year' award by the Bombay Management Association.
He was named in June 2002, by Consulting Magazine (USA) as being among the Top 25 Most Influential Consultants in the world, the only Indian CEO on the list. He has been honoured with the position of ' IT Advisor to Qingdao City', People's Republic of China. Silicon.com has named him as an agenda setter ( position 22 ) in 2006.
WYD Team
posted by Win Your Dreams @ 7:59 PM   0 comments
The Founder of Reliance Industries Continued
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
In 1965, Champaklal Damani and Dhirubhai Ambani ended their partnership and Dhirubhai started on his own. It is believed that both had different temperaments and a different take on how to conduct business. While Mr. Damani was a cautious trader and did not believe in building yarn inventories, Dhirubhai was a known risk taker and he considered that building inventories, anticipating a price rise, and making profits through that was good for growth.During this period, Dhirubhai and his family used to stay in an one bedroom apartment at the Jaihind Estate in Bhuleshwar. Mumbai. In 1968, he moved to an up market apartment at Altamount Road in South Mumbai.
Reliance Textiles

Sensing a good opportunity in the textile business, Dhirubhai started his first textile mill at Naroda, near Ahmedabad in the year 1966. Textiles were manufactured using polyester fibre yarn. Dhirubhai started the brand "Vimal", which was named after his elder brother Ramaniklal Ambani's son, Vimal Ambani. Extensive marketing of the brand "Vimal" in the interiors of India made it a household name. Franchise retail outlets were started and they used to sell "only Vimal" brand of textiles. In the year 1975, a Technical team from the World Bank visited the Reliance Textiles' Manufacturing unit. This unit has the rare distinction of being certified as "excellent even by developed country standards" during that period.

Death

Dhirubhai Ambani was admitted to the Breach Candy Hospital in Mumbai on June 24, 2002 after he suffered a major "brain stroke". This was his second stroke, the first one had occurred in February 1986 and had kept his right hand paralyzed. He was in a state of coma for more than a week. A battery of doctors were unable to save his life. He breathed his last on July 6, 2002, at around 11:50 P.M. (Indian Standard Time).His funeral procession was not only attended by business people, politicians and celebrities but also by thousands of ordinary people. His elder son, Mukesh Ambani, performed the last rites as per Hindu traditions. He was cremated at the Chandanwadi Crematorium in Mumbai at around 4:30 PM (Indian Standard Time) on July 7, 2002.He is survived by Kokilaben Ambani, his wife, two sons, Mukesh Ambani and Anil Ambani, and two daughters, Nina Kothari and Deepti Salgaocar.Dhirubhai Ambani started his long journey in Bombay from the Mulji-Jetha Textile Market, where he started as a small-trader. As a mark of respect to this great businessman, The Mumbai Textile Merchants' decided to keep the market closed on July 8, 2002. At the time of Dhirubhai's death, Reliance Group had a gross turnover of Rs. 75,000 Crore or USD $ 15 Billion. In 1976-77, the Reliance group had an annual turnover of Rs 70 crore and Dhirubhai had started the business with Rs.15,000.
WYD Team
Save Trees
posted by Win Your Dreams @ 7:38 PM   0 comments
The Amgen CEO continued
Monday, February 23, 2009
SHARER ARRIVES AT AMGEN


Amgen (the name stands for Applied Molecular Genetics) was founded in 1980 to develop effective human therapeutics in the form of proteins from recombinant DNA technology. The company produced its first major drug in 1984. The company focuses its research and development efforts on human therapeutics delivered in the form of proteins, monoclonal antibodies, and small molecules. Sharer became president of Amgen with science training limited to high school biology and college chemistry. When he was contacted by a recruiter about the position, he had never heard of Amgen. To his credit, he did put himself through a crash course in biotechnology so that he could talk to the scientists who are at the heart of the business.


Although there were some in the company who questioned whether Sharer was the right person to lead Amgen when he was hired, his predecessor, Gordon Binder, said the company already had people with strong science backgrounds. It needed, he noted, people with basic business experience as the company entered an intensive commercial environment. Sharer did not lack confidence in himself. He told Charles Fishman, the author of the article "A Dose of Change: Face Time with Kevin Sharer," that he was not in the slightest concerned about moving into a leadership position in a biotechnology company. He said, "Moving among different environments has been a pattern in my life, and I've been able to succeed in all of them" (Fast Company Magazine, August 2001). Sharer said that he was not cocky but that he had no hesitation about his ability to learn the new technology.


At Amgen, Sharer was determined to become an insider and to avoid making dramatic moves, as he had done in some of his previous jobs. When he felt he could reasonably expect to get the CEO position, he put himself on a partial sabbatical to learn all he could about the management of the research and development end of the business. Sharer noted that strategic competence is critical to success. An October 2001 article titled "Amgen's CEO Provides Candid Reflections on Leadership" (a report on an earlier speech) quotes Sharer as saying, "Get the operational stuff under your belt early" (Harbus Online, October 29, 2001).


Sharer spent a lot of time reading textbooks and visiting the laboratories at Amgen. He hired a tutor from McKinsey & Company to instruct him in pharmaceuticals and biotechnology. Sharer made no claim to be qualified in the science end of the business, but he felt he could participate in any discussion at a level that was appropriate for the company's CEO.


AMGEN GETS A NEW CEO


In May 2000 Sharer was made CEO of Amgen. He brought with him a goal he had for Amgen to become a major competitor in health-care markets, comparable to Johnson & Johnson. He used Johnson & Johnson as a benchmark because Amgen, as a young and less experienced company, had licensed a successful drug to Johnson & Johnson and had to sue to regain the U.S. marketing rights.


Sharer was known for both grand ambitions and little patience. Under his leadership Amgen acquired another biotech company with a blockbuster drug, Immunex Corporation, in July 2002, making Amgen's sales on the order of three times those of its nearest U.S. biotech competitor. With sales in 2002 of over $5.5 million, Amgen was competitive with the pharmaceuticals division of Johnson & Johnson, although Johnson & Johnson's total sales were over eight times Amgen's sales for the same period.


In the foreword to the book Building Global Biobrands: Taking Biotechnology to Market, Sharer says that Amgen is reaching a certain critical mass, something that he predicts will make Amgen a "world-scale biopharma" company. He credits success to the company's having scientific expertise, technical depth, focused infrastructure, customer-focused commercialization, and a world presence on the market. Under Sharer, Amgen had three key objectives: portfolio diversification, technology integration, and geographic expansion. In addition to acquiring Immunex Corporation, the company accelerated its alliances and licensed technologies to complement in-house capabilities.


AN AGGRESSIVE STYLE


Described variously as being blunt, having blustery confidence, and demonstrating an unflappable certainty of purpose that carried over from his navy experience, Sharer admitted to being a "little intimidating, so people don't feel comfortable giving their true opinions" (Harbus Online, October 29, 2001). He expanded the sales force and at the same time tightened the demands on reporting efforts so that any ineffective sales tactics could be quickly corrected. Sharer initiated luncheon meetings to teach strategy and leadership to the company vice presidents. He also planned ski outings with some of them, and then he insisted that they take ski lessons. One vice president commented, "Even when you relax with Kevin, you're working" (BusinessWeek Online, March 18, 2002).


Sharer had enormous self-confidence, but he did not try to be a one-man show. He used the expertise of a handpicked executive committee when he made decisions. He put together a team of experts that included a former research executive from Merck & Company to oversee R&D, a head of marketing who developed his skills at what was the drug giant Glaxo-Welcome in the 1990s, and a longtime veteran from Amgen who grew up in the business to be in charge of operations. Sharer believed in making decisions as a team because he said the business is so complicated that "no one person alone can be maximally effective in making those decisions" (Fast Company Magazine, August 2001).


So that he would never forget the dangers of overconfidence, Sharer hung a stark portrait of General George A. Custer, who led the doomed battle of Little Big Horn, across from his desk in his office at Amgen. He said of the picture, "It's good when you have a job like this to look at someone who overestimated his ability, underestimated his enemy, and lost everything" (BusinessWeek Online, March 18, 2002).

WYD Team

Save Trees

posted by Win Your Dreams @ 7:35 PM   0 comments
The other MS man continued
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
In September 2003, Allen founded the Allen Institute of Brain Science pledging $100 million in seed money to the Seattle-based organization. Its inaugural project is the Allen Brain Atlas, a map of the human brain which will be made publicly accessible. The Brain Atlas is a component of the loosely formed Human Cognome Project.

Starting in 2003, Vulcan Ventures began funding Project Halo, an attempt to apply Artificial Intelligence techniques to the problem of producing a digital Aristotle that might serve as a mentor, providing comprehensive access to the world's knowledge.

Allen is a major contributor to the SETI, or Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence project. He is also the founder of the Experience Music Project, originally inspired by his interest in a museum to house his considerable collection of Jimi Hendrix memorabilia.

Allen runs a venture capital firm, Vulcan Ventures, and has created the Experience Music Project, a museum of music history, in Seattle, Washington.

He owns (through Rose City Radio Corporation) some Portland radio stations. When he heard Seattle's Cinerama movie theater was about to shut down, he bought, restored, and updated it into a showplace for movies of all formats. He is also one of the principal financiers behind the SETI project, having stepping in to rescue the project when NASA stopped funding it in the 1990s.

Allen owns the Flying Heritage Collection.Currently Allen is the owner of the Portland Trail Blazers (an NBA basketball team) and the Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League. He also owns Rose Garden Arena, the home court of the NBA Blazers team. Due to declining attendance in 2002 and 2003, as well as difficulties renegotiating the terms of a 1993 loan, the Rose Garden corporation filed for bankruptcy on February 27, 2004.

In June of 2004, Allen opened the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame, located at the Experience Music Project.

Chronology

1953Born on January 21, Seattle, USA
1967At Lakeside Primary School
1971Washington State University, leaves the university a few years later to pursue other goals.
1975Allen and Gates found Microsoft (initially "Micro Soft") in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
1983Allen develops Hodgkin's disease; leaves Microsoft in 1983
1984/5Founds Asymetrix.
1986Vulcan Ventures is founded by Paul Allen to manage his investments.
1992Allen started Starwave, a producer of online content sites.
1998April Allen buys Marcus Cable, his largest investment so far
2000On September 28, Paul Allen is assuming a new role as senior strategy adviser at Microsoft Corp.
2003In September Allen founded the Allen Institute of Brain Science
2004As of this year he is ranked by Forbes magazine as the fifth richest, worth an estimated $21 billion, $5 billion of which is in Microsoft stock.
In June SpaceShipOne, sponsored by one of Allen's foundations, became the first successful commercial spacecraft when it passed the 100 kilometer threshold of space.

Honors and awards

Awarded Life-Time Achievement Award by PC Magazine. Inducted into the Computer Museum Hall of Fame.
WYD Team
posted by Win Your Dreams @ 8:00 PM   0 comments
The BIG Entertainer Continued
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
After a hostile takeover in 1987, Redstone won voting control of Viacom and led a series of acquisitions to make Viacom one of the top players in modern media (along with Bertelsmann, General Electric & Vivendi's NBC-Universal, News Corporation, Time Warner, Sony, and Disney).

Redstone's next acquisition came in the form of the purchase of Paramount Communications, parent of Paramount Pictures, in 1993, which he fought over with Barry Diller (former board member of Vivendi Universal and CEO of IAC/InterActiveCorp) and John Malone (president of TCI/Liberty Media), where he had to raise his bid three times. Some say that Redstone overpaid, but after he shed certain assets (the Madison Square Garden properties to Charles Dolan's Cablevision and Simon & Schuster's educational publishing units to Pearson plc for almost $4 billion), Redstone turned Viacom's expenditure into a substantial profit. Under Redstone's leadership, Paramount went on an almost ten-year streak of record performance, producing such films as Saving Private Ryan, Titanic (one of the highest grossing film of all time and Best Picture Academy Award winner), Braveheart (Best Picture Academy Award), and Forrest Gump (also a Best Picture winner) and the creation of the hugely successful Mission Impossible series of pictures.


Redstone replaced the team of Jonathan Dolgen and Sherry Lansing in 2004 after their nine-year winning streak ended and the studio has struggled since with the relatively inexperienced team of Brad Grey and Gail Berman who both came from the TV business. The Dolgen and Lansing years were the high point of Paramount in many other regards as well.

In addition to the aforementioned award winning films, They also doubled the size of Paramount's music publishing division, Famous Music; expanded UCI Cinemas into 13 foreign countries; created the Digital Cinema Initiatives standards body for the new digital film technology; introduced the DVD; and launched the UPN Network (later part of CBS and now called the CW). The current Paramount Pictures consists only of the movie studio, the other groups having been sold or parcelled out to other divisions given Grey's lack of prior management experience.

The Paramount acquisition was only the tip of the iceberg. Redstone purchased Blockbuster Entertainment, which included Aaron Spelling's production company and a huge library of films, much of which has been merged into Paramount Pictures. Blockbuster has now been spun off into its own independent entity. Redstone acquired CBS Corporation in 2000 and then spun it off as a separate company in 2005, taking with it all of Paramount's television shows and catalog. Following the CBS and Blockbuster Spinoffs, Viacom consists of MTV Networks (MTV, Nickelodeon, VH1, Noggin etc.), music publishing (Famous Music) and Paramount Pictures.

In December 2005, Redstone announced that Paramount had agreed to buy DreamWorks SKG for an estimated $1.6 billion. The acquisition was completed on February 1, 2006. A subsequent financing brought Viacom's investment down to $700 million. The animation studio, DreamWorks Animation, was not included in the deal as it has been its own company since late 2004, however Paramount now has the rights to distribute films by DreamWorks Animation.

One of Redstone's largest acquisitions came in the form of Viacom's former parent, CBS. Former Viacom President & COO Mel Karmazin (who was then the President of CBS) proposed a merger to Redstone on favorable terms and after the merger completed in 2000, Viacom had some of the most diversified businesses imaginable. Viacom had assets in the form of broadcast networks (CBS and UPN), cable television networks (MTV, Nickelodeon, MTV2, Comedy Central, BET, Nick at Nite, Noggin/The N, TV Land, CMT, and Spike TV), pay television (Showtime and The Movie Channel), radio (Infinity Broadcasting, which produced the immensely popular Howard Stern' radio shows), outdoor advertising, motion pictures (Paramount Pictures), and television production (Spelling Entertainment, Paramount Television, and Big Ticket Entertainment), and King World Productions (a syndication unit, which notably syndicates the runaway daytime hit, The Oprah Winfrey Show, as well as Dr. Phil, Wheel of Fortune, and Jeopardy!), among others.After CBS and Viacom split in late 2005, Redstone remained chairman of both companies.

Redstone's trusts make it clear that Shari Redstone (Vice-Chairwoman of the Board of Viacom and CBS, Chairwoman of the board of Midway Videogames as well as President of National Amusements) is set to assume his role upon his death. However, a November 22, 2006 New York Times article indicated that Redstone was reconsidering his daughter's role. Recently they have been feuding publicly over issues of corporate governance and the future of the cinema chain.There have also been numerous articles stating that Sumner's marriage is in trouble.
Documents have recently been made public which verify that, as part of a settlement from Sumner's first divorce, all of Sumner's stock is in irrevocable trusts that will be left for his grandchildren.
Redstone made arrangements to step down as CEO of Viacom in 2006. After Mel Karmazin resigned in 2004, two heirs apparent were named: Co-President & Co-COO Leslie Moonves (who was #2 to Karmazin at CBS; he was the former head of Warner Bros. Television and before that, Lorimar Television) and Co-President & Co-COO Tom Freston (who had been President & CEO of MTV Networks since 1987 and had been with the company since the formation of MTV Networks' precursor company, Warner-AMEX Satellite Entertainment). Since the Viacom split, Moonves has headed CBS, and Freston had headed the new Viacom, Inc.
When Moonves was promoted to Co-President & Co-COO with Tom Freston, there was speculation that he was on the short list of executives to replace Michael Eisner at the Walt Disney Company whose contract expired in 2006.[10] Redstone has confirmed publicly in Vanity Fair that he originally offered the position only to Freston who initially turned it down and later relented when Redstone made it clear he was going to ask Moonves next.

On September 5, 2006 Redstone removed Tom Freston as President and CEO of Viacom and replaced him with director and former Viacom counsel Philippe Dauman. He also brought back former CFO Tom Dooley. This was surprising to many, as Freston had been seen by many as Redstone's heir apparent and that Redstone touted that Freston would run the company after he retired. Redstone publicly stated that he let Freston go because of Viacom's lack of aggressiveness in the digital/online arena, lack of contact with investors, and a lackluster upfront (coupled with falling viewership) at MTV Networks.

The company split was approved by the Viacom board on June 14, 2005.Currently, Redstone owns over seventy percent of the voting stock of Viacom, which, in actuality, is a not wholly-owned subsidiary of National Amusements, which is his privately held, family-owned company. CBS Corporation, likewise, is controlled by Redstone through National Amusements. Redstone also owned over eighty-nine percent of Midway Games, both individually and through National Amusements.
WYD Team
posted by Win Your Dreams @ 7:58 PM   0 comments
The Airline CEO continued
Monday, February 16, 2009
While in Europe Jonathan formed Barlow Partners, an investment group created to invest in undervalued airline equities. Mesa's financial and operational performance had deteriorated significantly since 1996, with losses over the previous two years exceeding $100 million and by April of 1998 the company was experiencing losses of approximately $1 million per week and had approximately $8 million in cash. Barlow acquired approximately 8% of Mesa's common stock and placed two of its Partners on the Company's Board of Directors. While retaining his position as Chairman of Virgin, Jonathan resigned as CEO and accepted Mesa's offer to return as President and CEO where he orchestrated a comprehensive operational and financial restructuring, paving the way for Mesa's return to profitability.

Since returning in 1998, Jonathan oversaw the elimination of over 150 turboprops, the reestablishment of a partnership with United, raising of over $200 million of convertible debt financing; the ordering of 128 regional jets from Bombardier and Embraer -- valued at over $2.5 billion -- growing from 4 regional jets when he arrived to 132 currently, hiring a dynamic new management team; firming up long-term codeshare agreements with America West and US Airways and the institution of a number of innovative employee programs. In addition, following the attacks of September 11, 2001, Jonathan was the first CEO to voluntarily cut his pay by 50 percent, created a voluntary pay reduction / incentive program that resulted in all participating employees receiving effectively a 7.5% bonus and negotiated, in record-time, new pilot and flight attendant contracts. The Company was recently named 2005 Regional Airline of the Year by Air Transport World magazine.

Following the restructuring, Mesa has been at the forefront of the regional airline industry and has reported 26 profitable quarters out of a total of 27 quarters. However, on one point, Jonathan is clear; the turnaround at Mesa air Group continues. He credits Mesa's continued success with the teamwork and efforts of the airline's 5,000 employees. Jonathan and the Mesa team continue their efforts to provide job security and opportunities for all its employees. The focus moving forward is to maintain Mesa's superior operational performance, maintain its strong relationships with its airline partners; expand opportunistically and profitably, while increasing and shareholder value.

WYD Team
posted by Win Your Dreams @ 7:23 PM   0 comments
The QCI CEO continued
Sunday, February 15, 2009
When Notebaert became president and CEO of Ameritech in January 1994, he took charge of a company that had 12 million local phone customers, 2.5 million cellular customers, and $14.9 billion in annual revenue. Notebaert wanted Ameritech to have a share in the long-distance phone call market, but a court ruling and government regulators, both federal and state, forbade the Baby Bell from selling long-distance services where it had a monopoly on local phone service.Weiss and Notebaert had worked closely together to reorganize Ameritech's corporate structure from five divisions by state to one in which the state operations were merged into a whole and then divided by product lines, such as local telephone services and cellular services. When Weiss retired on April 20, 1994, Notebaert added chairman of the board to his other offices.

Notebaert hired marketing specialists to run the new divisions of Ameritech, and he changed Ameritech's stodgy style of advertising that emphasized its stability and long heritage to one that targeted specific aspects of the marketplace, such as small businesses, emphasizing Ameritech's high-tech new services. He worked with government regulators as partners, not foes, in opening the marketplace to competition.

Notebaert pressed hard to have Ameritech's local telephone territories opened to Ameritech's long-distance telephone services, and he took the daring step of opening Ameritech's five-state territory to local telephone competition. AT&T leaped at the chance and almost immediately began competing for the lucrative Chicago local market. Notebaert hoped that the move to set aside Ameritech's local telephone service monopoly in exchange for a competitive marketplace would encourage regulators and the courts to allow Ameritech to compete for long-distance services.

This plan put rural telephone users at a disadvantage because urban telephone income had traditionally subsidized the low-profit rural markets. Notebaert proposed a "universal service fund" that would help keep down rural telephone costs to consumers by having all American telephone companies contribute to it. In spite of these efforts and proposals, regulators refused to allow Ameritech to offer long-distance services in the five-state territory. By the end of 1994 Ameritech had 48,000 employees and had operations in all 50 states and in 40 countries.

In 1995 Notebaert targeted economic development, education, and quality of life for Ameritech's marketing. He hoped to develop services that helped businesses process their sales electronically, that helped people commute electronically by working at home and using telephone lines to connect them to their offices, that helped students attend classes from home through a blend of telephones and computers, and that enhanced the security of people through electronic alarms and swift contact of support and emergency services.

Further, he foresaw "electronic government" in which government business could be done with Ameritech Internet services—for example, allowing lawyers to file court briefs electronically. He also wanted voice-activated telephones that allowed a caller just to say a name and have the telephone automatically dial the appropriate phone number; when he found that the Ameritech research and development team was trying to create a voice-activated telephone with a capacity to understand 40 names but already had an inexpensive one that recognized 10 names, he trimmed the research and sent the 10-name telephone to market.

During 1995 he cut about 6,000 jobs, saving Ameritech $350 million. He asked regulators to allow Ameritech to keep the savings because regulations at the time forced such savings to be passed on as lower telephone rates—a practice that discouraged corporate efficiency and encouraged bloated corporate bureaucracies.

In spite of Ameritech's inability to offer long-distance services to its local customers, the company's fortunes boomed during Notebaert's tenure, and he became a very rich man.
Always busy in local affairs in Chicago, where Ameritech was based, he even donated $5 million to help build the Peggy Notebaert Natural History Museum in 1998; it quickly became a prime destination for visitors to the city. When Ameritech was sold to SBC Communications in 1999, Notebaert received a severance bonus of approximately $21 million. Ameritech had had five straight years of growth under Notebaert's leadership, with a 45 percent growth in revenues. Its market capitalization tripled to $70 billion. Notebaert sold Ameritech to SBC for $72 billion, a windfall for Ameritech's shareholders.

MAKING PROFITS AMID DISASTER AT TELLABS

Notebaert promised his family that he would take some time off from work and spend it with them, but there seemed little doubt that he would take a job again. In August 2000, only 10 months after the sale of Ameritech, the board of directors of Tellabs offered him the offices of president and CEO, and he accepted. The management had hopes of tripling its revenues in the next three years, and the board of directors thought Notebaert had what was needed to guide the company through expansion. Notebaert was known for his combination of creativity and steady leadership, and Ameritech had been a customer of Tellabs, which meant that Notebaert was familiar with Tellabs' products.

Tellabs manufactured parts for communications systems. In 2000 its revenues were $3.3 billion. The dot-com revolution had spawned numerous companies that needed equipment for communications and for hosting Web sites, and the possibilities for electronics communications seemed limitless. But in 2000 the dot-com collapse began, with hundreds of communications and Internet companies going out of business. Surviving companies found themselves with overcapacity—more room for business than there was business to be had.The decline in business meant that many Tellabs customers had already purchased more Tellabs products than they could use, which in turn meant that Tellabs lost business it had counted on.

Tellabs was in danger of going out of business almost as soon as Notebaert settled into his new positions. During the first eight months of 2001, he cut 1,000 jobs at Tellabs, including managers, with 50 employees taking early retirement and the others being laid off. They represented 12 percent of Tellabs' workforce. The labor cuts saved Tellabs $120 million. Notebaert himself cut his pay for 2001 by 26 percent and took no bonuses. Revenues for the year were $2.3 billion, down $1 billion from the year before.

In 2002 Notebaert continued to cut jobs, reducing the workforce by a total of 38 percent from 8,900 when he first joined Tellabs to 5,500. "It was awful. You hate firing people—nobody enjoys it—but we did what we had to do," he asserted in 2002 (Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service, June 17, 2002).

During Notebaert's tenure at Tellabs, the company's stock dropped from $50 to $10 per share, yet when he left the company, he was praised by those who worked with him, and he was credited not only with saving Tellabs from extinction but also with making it profitable in 2002. He had done "what's right for the business as a whole," he said (DenverPost.com, June 23, 2002), and he left the company in sound financial condition, although much smaller than it had been, with $1 billion in cash reserves in the bank. He had accomplished his goals in part by focusing Tellabs on two profitable lines of products: the Titan optical products that helped networks interact and the Cablespan line of cables used in electronic communications. He aggressively pursued sales of Tellabs products globally in 80 countries. When it was announced that he was leaving Tellabs, the company's stock fell 6.76 percent in one day.

THE CHALLENGE OF QWEST

Qwest was America's fourth-largest telephone company, but it was in poor shape. In 1999 it had purchased the local phone service provider U.S. West, nicknamed U.S. Worst for its bad customer service, at a cost of $38 billion. Thereafter, the company was beset by problems, although the true extent of the problems became known only after Notebaert took over control and had the company's financial records examined.

During 2000 and 2001 Qwest's stock price fell 92 percent. It had revenues of $20 billion in 2001, but it also had $26 billion in debt. It was being investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for falsifying financial reports and perpetrating underhanded schemes that made it look like it was earning money when it was not. In one scheme Qwest sold access to its telephone network to companies that then sold Qwest access to their networks for the same amount of money, meaning that no one actually made a profit; however, Qwest entered the bogus sales into its financial books as income to inflate its reported revenues to fool investors into thinking Qwest was doing better than it really was. CEO Joseph P. Nacchio began fishing around Qwest's Yellow Pages business to potential buyers to bring in enough money to stave off disaster. Qwest was on the verge of bankruptcy when Note-baert joined it.

Nacchio was a flamboyant leader who drew publicity to himself and his company and who had pursued an audacious expansion of Qwest. When the company's board of directors looked for a replacement, they favored the low-key manner and traditional economics represented by Notebaert. The board of directors offered Notebaert $1.1 million in salary plus bonuses that would increase his annual income to $1.69 million, and the directors offered him a $14 million bonus if he remained leader of the company until age 65. In May 2002 rating agencies relegated Qwest's bonds to junk bond status. Yet Notebaert may have relished taking leadership of a huge corporation and the challenge of setting it straight. Still, it is unlikely that he realized just how badly off the company was when he became CEO and chairman of the board on June 17, 2002, and relocated to Denver, Colorado, home of Qwest's headquarters. The company was in danger of collapse at any time during 2002. Its fiber-optics network alone was losing more than $500 million annually.

Qwest stock rose 20 percent the day Notebaert was hired. In July 2002 he removed five Qwest executives from their posts and brought in three executives who had worked with him at Ameritech: Oren G. Shaffer, CFO at Ameritech from 1994 to 2000, was made vice chairman at Qwest; Joan H. Walker, vice president of corporate communications at Ameritech from 1996 to 1999 and senior vice president of global affairs for Pharmacia in 2002 when hired by Notebaert, became senior vice president of corporate communications; and Gary R. Lytle, leader of Ameritech's Washington office from 1992 to 2000, became vice president of policy and law. Shaffer went quickly to work, mending fences by visiting the SEC accountant in charge of the SEC's investigation of Qwest and by auditing the company's books. He found $1.1 billion in phony income listed for 2002.

Notebaert found himself in charge of a company of 56,000 U.S. employees that saw a 14 percent decline in revenue from January to September 2002 and therefore might not be able to meet its payroll. Fortune called Qwest "one of the biggest wrecks in America" (January 20, 2003). Notebaert began campaigning among the rank-and-file workers that summer, traveling to meet them in groups, usually small, to tell them of the future he saw for Qwest and to enlist their help, asking wage earners to cut back on the hours they worked. The company's 27,000 union members agreed to forego their scheduled 3 to 4 percent pay increases in exchange for performance bonuses in 2003. Notebaert opened permanent communication between himself and his employees. On the basis of his good name, Notebaert persuaded Bank of America to pull lenders together to lend Qwest $750 million to stave off immediate bankruptcy.

In an action that Notebaert later said he had never done before and hoped never to do again, he pressed Qwest bondholders to forgive much of the debt owed to them. He did this by noting that Qwest could go bankrupt and that those who agreed to exchange their bonds for bonds worth 40 percent less would be placed at the head of the line of investors who would be paid first from Qwest's assets, implying that those bondholders who did not exchange their notes might get nothing at all if the company died. This tactic angered bondholders, but enough of them accepted the offer to reduce Qwest's bonded debt from $5.2 billion to $3.3 billion. In 2003 some bondholders sued Qwest over the bond restructuring.

By the end of 2002 Notebaert had reorganized Qwest's corporate structure into three units: business customer services, general consumer services, and wholesale marketing. He tried to extend Qwest's long-distance services to the old U.S. West local service territories, but as at Ameritech, regulators refused the plan. As 2003 began Qwest had 25 million customers in 14 states, a formidable customer base if Qwest could dig out from under its debts, but the company lost 4.9 percent of its customers from June 2002 to June 2003. Due in May were $3.2 billion in debts that Notebaert and Shaffer managed to persuade debt holders to restructure into longer-term payments. In 2003 Notebaert sold Qwest's Yellow Pages for $7 billion, which was applied to debts. Both Qwest's $16 billion fiber-optics network of 190,000 miles of lines and its long-distance network (in areas where Qwest offered no local phone service) were losing money, and financial analysts suggested that Qwest should sell them, but Notebaert saw them as part of a profitable future and insisted that Qwest hang on to them. He reduced the fiber-optics network from 14 servers to seven because the network was not receiving enough customers to use more than seven; he then moved the fiber-optics network into the jurisdiction of the corporation's business unit. Notebaert shaved off costs even further by cutting 3,500 jobs during 2003. By the end of 2003 Qwest had lost perhaps $470 million for the year on $14.3 billion in revenue but had reduced its overall debt to $16 billion.

These results were achieved not only by cuts but also by new strategies. Notebaert changed the focus of business services from large corporations to midsize businesses, exploiting a new (for Qwest) market. He formed a partnership with Sprint for national wireless service, giving Qwest a big share of the cellular phone market. Part of his strategy rejected the possible sale of Qwest and rejected the possible acquisition of smaller companies; Notebaert pursued alliances such as that with Sprint to expand Qwest's markets without incurring more debts. He placed emphasis on good customer relations and would pose as a consumer to call Qwest customer service representatives to make sure they were delivering good service. Overall, he gave his employees the impression that he was always involved in the company's day-to-day business and that he cared about them and their work.

During 2003 Notebaert was appointed by President George W. Bush to the National Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee, where he worked to establish standards for new communications technologies and to find ways to secure America's communications networks from sabotage by terrorists. When Notebaert accepted his appointments at Qwest, he and his wife moved from Chicago to Denver, although they kept an apartment in Chicago so that they could visit with family and friends. In Denver they were active in the United Way and other local charities.
WYD Team
posted by Win Your Dreams @ 7:26 PM   0 comments
The Big Birla Continued
Thursday, February 12, 2009
With the completion of the copper capacity from 250,000 tpa to 500,000 tpa, Hindalco will be among the top 10 copper producers in the world. It will also elevate Birla Copper, the copper arm of Hindalco, to the world's single largest copper smelter in one location.

Indian Rayon is focussing more on high growth businesses, says Birla. Indian Rayon, which is being renamed Aditya Birla Nuvo has been deploying cash from its value businesses - viscose filament yarn, carbon black, textiles and insulators - into high growth businesses, namely garments, insurance, IT\ITeS and telecom.

Over the past five years, the company has recorded cumulative cash flows of Rs 764 crore (Rs 7.64 billion) from value businesses and deployed Rs 793 crore (Rs 7.93 billion) in high growth areas. Aditya Birla Nuvo aims to expand its high growth businesses in the near future.

For example, Madura Garments intends to transform itself into a lifestyle brand, a strategic tie-up with global brands is on the cards, and it aims to double retail space in three years. Transworks, the BPO division, wants to build scale and diversify. Aditya Birla Nuvo intends to enter pension funds and banks, if it is allowed to.

At the same same time, the group is focusing heavily on cost reduction. "The cost reduction exercise differs from company to company, from one plant to another," adds Rathi. If you take cement, for instance, he says, the initiative is three-pronged -- reduce cost for power generation, consumption of coal, and transportation.

Does that mean consolidation within the group is over? "This is a continuous process. At the moment, we are more focused on expansion," says Rathi. Industry sources say UltraTech Cements and Shree Digvijay Cements, a privately held company of the group, may be merged with Grasim.

Birla, however, is not forthcoming on his plans: "UltraTech is a subsidiary of Grasim. Therefore, you can say that the cement business is being managed by Grasim. It's premature to say whether we will merge these companies."

Industry sources also say the textiles business will be brought under one umbrella. That may not happen very soon. A merchant banker says Birla will do this after he takes charge of Century Textiles and Century Enka whenever that is.

Birla himself does not like to talk about the issue as his grandfather manages them now. BK says, "Kumar Mangalam insists I continue. He will take charge as and when he finds time."

BK feels the most important reason for Birla's success is his education, which has taught him to think big. After returning from London, where he did his MBA, Birla was given charge of new projects -- such as a carbon black plant in Egypt, existing businesses like Indo Gulf Fertilisers, running Grasim's portfolio cement division, and HR.

"Kumar Mangalam's working model is completely different from his father's. Kumar Mangalam believes in delegation of power. His style is more group-oriented," BK says.

But even his grandfather was surprised by the speed with which Birla broke down all barriers in his quest for success. First, he started building a team. "We have a policy of not recruiting people from outside. He changed it," BK says, adding that Birla let 350 vice-presidents, who were over 60 years old, go at one shot -- unheard of in those days at the Birla empire.

He created a new team and put HR systems in place by roping in Santrupt Misra from Hindustan Lever in 1996. Then followed Bharat Singh (1996), Debu Bhattacharya (1998), Sanjeev Aga (1998) and Sumant Sinha (2002). This removed at one shot the impression that those who were not sure of finding a suitable job outside join the Birla companies.

The next thing he did was to replace the partha system of daily financial reporting with an economic value-added model. Partha was a manual system to determine input costs and the daily cash profits as compared to budgeted profits.

Ghanshyam Das Birla had developed the system of accountability based on partha, in which each company in the group had to draw up a series of informed estimates of how much it would cost to manufacture a particular volume of production, sell it and meet a profit target based on this estimate.

The amount of capital it takes to support the manufacturing was also taken into account. This has been replaced with a cash value added method that emphasises three aspects: profitability, asset productivity and growth.

No one today doubts Birla's ability to expand his empire even though concerns remain about what some say could be an uncertain line of reporting and accountability.

At the top sits Kumar Manglam Birla, and despite the delegation of authority, people still prefer to wait for "Babu's" orders directly. Changing this mindset is clearly Birla's biggest challenge now.
WYD Team
posted by Win Your Dreams @ 7:35 PM   0 comments
The P&G CEO-Continued
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Lafley, who oversaw the breakthrough development of Liquid Tide in 1984, is proud that most of P&G's growth in recent years has come from core products that are household names around the globe. "I really believe you should play to your strengths," he says. "Our business model is very simple. It commits us, first and foremost, to improving the everyday lives of consumers."

Despite P&G's successes, Lafley is well aware of the dangers that can loom on any operation's horizon. He has talked publicly, for instance, about the limitations faced even by a company that has more than 100,000 employees in 80 countries and that sells its products in 160 nations. "The biggest thing I worry about is that we'll make an acquisition or expand into a new market that stretches our capabilities beyond what we can really handle," he observes.

So far, Lafley's instincts have been right on the money. His decisions to purchase Clairol in 2001 for $5 billion and Germany's Wella in 2003 for $7 billion—P&G's largest acquisitions ever—are already paying off by making the company's beauty-care division one of the most profitable beauty-care operations in the world.

A history major at Hamilton College, Lafley initially planned on a career as a professor. He started a Ph.D. program in medieval and Renaissance history at the University of Virginia before leaving to enlist in the U.S. Navy. After several years of running grocery and specialty stores at a U.S. base near Tokyo, Lafley became "hooked" on merchandising and enrolled at Harvard Business School.

MBA in hand, he arrived at P&G at the age of 30 as an assistant brand manager for Joy dishwashing detergent. A variety of other assignments followed, such as helping turn around P&G's beauty products business in Japan and building the company from the ground up in China. After 27 years, he still can't imagine a better place to work. "I feel honored and lucky to be part of such an extraordinary organization."
WYD Team
posted by Win Your Dreams @ 7:50 PM   0 comments
About Me
Mission: To provide the best e-learning portal, which provide the basics to win your dreams
Previous Post
Archives
News Links
More from WYD
Powered by

BLOGGER

© 2008 Win Your Dreams FeedSite by WYD Team