True Grit: The phenomenal growth of the Indian entrepreneurial spirit
From JRD Tata to Dhirubhai Ambani and Sanjeev Bikhchandani, how entrepreneurs helped India through its transition from an agrarian economy to state-controlled industry and on to an era where unicorns
Ushering in social entrepreneurship was the milk co-operative trio Tribhuvandas Kishibai Patel, Dr Verghese Kurien and HM Dalaya. Amul was born in response to the exploitation of marginal milk producers by traders and agents. Dalaya&rsquos innovation of making skim milk powder with the world&rsquos first buffalo milk spray-dryer was a technological breakthrough that revolutionised India&r
Image by Forbes
2/21
From the late 1950s, the government pursued a strategy directed at conserving foreign exchange, producing heavy capital and intermediate goods domestically, building science and technology infrastructure, and maintaining ownership of industries in areas such as electricity, petroleum products, steel, coal, and engineering goods. The large, integrated steel plants established after 1950 we
Image by E. O. Hoppe / Getty Images
3/21
In 1948, JRD Tata launched Air India International, the country&rsquos first international airline. Under his guidance, the Sir Dorabji Dadabhoy Trust established Asia&rsquos first cancer hospital and the Tata Memorial Center for Cancer, Research and Treatment. It founded the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research and the National Centre for Performi
Image by (Left)Mukesh Parpiani / Dinodia Photos and Dinodia Photos / Getty Images
4/21
In 1956, Brijmohan Lal Munjal and his siblings got a licence from the Punjab government and a bank loan of about ₹50,000 to set up a factory named Hero Cycles. In 1975, this company became India&rsquos largest manufacturer of bicycles, making 7,500 cycles a day. By 1986, it was producing over 18,500 cycles a day, becoming`g the world&rsquos largest cycle manufacturer.
Image by Soltan Frederic/Sygma via Getty Images
5/21
Dhirubhai Ambani is the lighthouse example of an entrepreneur, who created an equity cult in Indian stock markets. A dispatch clerk at A Besse & Company, he was sent to manage an oil filling station at Aden, in Yemen, where he roamed the souks to watch merchants trading goods worth millions in global currency. In 1958, he returned to India and set up a textile trading company. The brand&r
Image by Dinodia Photos / Getty Images
6/21
Jaswantiben Popat and six others&mdashJayaben Vithalani, Parvatiben Thodani, Ujamben Kundalia, Banuben Tanna, Chotadben Gawade and Laguben Gokani&mdashthought up this enterprise on the terrace of their building in Girgaum, Mumbai, in 1959. Their first production, a kilo of papad earned 8 annas. Shri Mahila Griha Udhyog Lijjat Papad became a revolution that changed the face of cottage indu
Image by Indranil Mukherjee via Getty Images
7/21
Har Prasad Nanda and his brother Yudi arrived in Delhi from Lahore after Partition. To impress and revive his business contacts, Har Prasad hired a suite of rooms at The Imperial, Delhi&rsquos most expensive hotel. It worked. The Escorts Group played a pivotal role in India&rsquos agricultural growth, especially in farm mechanisation. In 1961, it started manufacturing its own tractors, an
Image by Courtesy Escorts
8/21
Agricultural scientist Dr MS Swaminathan is renowned for his leading role in introducing and developing high-yielding varieties of wheat and rice in India. India&rsquos Green Revolution started in 1966, leading to an increase in food grain production, especially in Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh.
Image by Soltan Frederic/Sygma via Getty Images
9/21
Azim Premji was studying electrical engineering in Stanford University, USA, in 1966 when he was called upon to handle the family business, due to the sudden demise of his father. He was just 21. Under Premji&rsquos leadership, Wipro metamorphosed from a ₹70-million company making hydrogenated cooking fats into a pioneer of integrated business technologies and process solutions.
Image by Pallava Bagla / Corbis via Getty Images
10/21
Karsanbhai Patel graduated with chemistry and worked as a lab technician at Gujarat&rsquos geology and mining department. In 1969, he started an after-office business of detergent powder, made and packed in his backyard. Patel would sell these packets door to door for ₹3 per kg, a third of the price of leading detergents. It was an instant success. Patel&rsquos Nirma brand of detergent,