Harsh mariwalla biography of mahatma gandhi
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MUST READ: Harsh Mariwala's ADVICE for entrepreneurs
Marico Chairman Harsh Mariwala shares his career lessons and success mantras.
When Harsh Mariwala joined his family business in his college days in the early s Marico was a Rs 50 lakh (Rs 5 million) commodity company.
More than four decades later, Marico with a market capitalisation of about Rs 40, crore (Rs billion) has become a consumer product behemoth that sells everything from edible oils to skin care products to personal hygiene products.
As Marico's chairman, Mariwala, who has seen many ups and downs not only as a young entrepreneur but also after he established himself as a leader, shares his life and career lessons as an entrepreneur with 's Prasanna D Zore in an e-mail interview.
"Being an entrepreneur myself, I have gone through the cycle of building an enterprise and then scaling it. This journey of an entrepreneur is challenging; often times the journey of an entrepreneur can become a lonely one," Mariwa
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Lessons on Leadership Series: How Harsh Mariwala transformed Marico from a small family-run enterprise in into a FMCG major with a market capitalization of billion INR today.
The corridor leading up to Harsh Mariwala’s office on the 8th floor of Marico’s headquarters, overlooking the Mumbai International airport, is adorned with inspirational quotes sculpted on the walls. There is a quote from Shankaracharya – “vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others”– that caught my eye. Another one from Graham Bell read, “When one door closes, another opens. But often, we look so long at the closed door, we don’t see the open one.”
As inom reach Mariwala’s office, a contemporary, minimalistic space with glass walls separating a wonderfully manicured lawn, I notice a collection of management books. At the time of walking into his office, Mariwala was No. 35 on the Forbes India Rich List, with a net worth of over US $ billion. But if I were to go by hi
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Harsh Mariwala's midweek wisdom: Doing right outweighs being always right
For most people, when they are wronged, the need to be right takes precedence over understanding or any faint chance of forgiveness. While we cannot agree with each other all the time, this also does not mean that those who disagree with us are wrong.
Founder and Chairman of Marico, Harsh Mariwala, took to LinkedIn to share a valuable lesson with his followers. The founder of the Fortune India company reminisced his earlier days.
He enumerated how as an individual he believed that having things his way made him victorious. “When I was younger, I believed that having things go my way meant I was victorious,” he wrote in his LinkedIn post.
Mariwala said that as a young individual he would bulldoze his way through negotiations and how he momentarily felt good about it. “