Isha Ambani to Rishad Premji: Seven next-gen tycoons furthering family businesse...
From taking new roles in their family businesses to starting their own, here's how the new generation of flag-bearers are moving up


Akash Ambani, 27Director, Reliance Jio Infocomm and Reliance RetailIsha Ambani, 27Director, Reliance Jio Infocomm and Reliance Retail The twin children of India’s richest man, Mukesh Ambani, were in the spotlight when they each got married within three months of the other. Their weddings, held in December 2018 and March 2019, drew thousands of guests, including bigwigs such as former U.S. Secretaries of State Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, KKR’s Henry Kravis and Sundar Pichai of Google. But the siblings, who sit on the boards of Reliance Jio Infocomm and Reliance Retail, the fast-growing telecom and retail arms of Reliance Industries, haven’t been taking it easy. “Work comes first,” says Akash, who leads Jio’s business development. Jio acquired more than a dozen tech startups this year in areas such as AI, last-mile delivery and music streaming. Jio became one of India’s biggest mobile carriers just three years after launch thanks to a price war that forced some competitors to shut down. Isha is involved with the Reliance Foundation and branding and marketing for Jio. She recently forged a partnership between Jio and the Connected Women Program at GSMA, a global group of mobile carriers, to help Indian women gain digital access.
Rishad Premji, 42Executive chairman, WiproPremji in July succeeded his father—IT tycoon Azim Premji (No. 17)—as executive chairman at Wipro, India’s fourth-largest software services provider. His father, who was at the helm for 53 years, remains on the board as founder chairman. A Harvard M.B.A., Premji joined Wipro in 2007 and was chief strategy officer prior to his latest appointment. He led a slew of acquisitions, including the purchase of Danish design firm Designit, San Francisco-based cloud tech firm Appirio and German IT consultancy Cellent. Premji also conceptualized the $100 million Wipro Ventures fund, which has invested in 15 startups across India, Israel and the U.S. Premji takes the reins at a challenging time. In the past five years, Wipro’s growth has lagged rivals Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services. Now weakness in the European banking sector and global capital markets pose another problem. Banking, financial services and insurance accounted for nearly a third of Wipro’s $8.5 billion revenue in the last financial year. But Wipro has projected that sales in the three months ended Sept. 30 will grow by no more than 2%.
First Published: Nov 04, 2019, 13:29
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