When Forbes India first put Francisco D'Souza on the cover in May 2012, he was christened 'Chief Emerging Officer' for his efforts to reinvent Cognizant and the role of the CEO. Eleven years later, D'Souza, now co-founder of private equity firm Recognize, writes about another transformation of the technology services industry that's today being driven by radical technology innovation and the prospect of artificial intelligence, among other drivers
In 2020, Amit Chandra, chairperson of Bain Capital India and co-founder of the ATE Chandra Foundation, was featured on our cover signifying how philanthropy is moving beyond billionaires to include professionals. Three years later, he reflects on how things have moved forward, and why he is optimistic about professional giving in India
The Salesforce India CEO for Forbes India's 14th anniversary special about her experience of leading SBI, how she has changed since featuring on our cover in 2014, and why we must try harder to keep women in the workforce
New research suggests that being funny helps leaders gain influence, and that women benefit more than men from using humour in public speaking
Arvind Krishna believes business mindsets will help unlock a quantum computing revolution
Debashis Chatterjee, CEO and MD of LTIMindtree, on making most of the opportunities, his faith in s-curves, takeaway from dealing with crises, and more
Startup Skyroot Aerospace might be small in scale, but its founders Pawan Kumar Chandana and Naga Bharath Daka have made Indian spacefaring history with the successful launch of their Vikram-S rocket—the first privately built space rocket from India
Through their big bets to advance affordable healthcare, these four philanthropists are setting an example for their peers
In just three years, Tata Communications has shed the heavy cloak of a government-backed, loss-making telco. It is now a financially stronger and profitable commtech, selling holistic digital solutions globally
The Khatri brothers, cousins, have built Noise by remaining bootstrapped for over eight years. But now, India's biggest wearable brand needs to build a war chest to sustain its high decibel growth
Over the last five years, manufacturing services firm Zetwerk has leveraged niche opportunities to grow its revenues 310 times. Now it is finetuning its business model to look beyond India