
“If a founder has passion and innovation, he needs to be supported. I am more intuitive than a numbers person, and I recognise that not all investments are going to be positive. Some may fail, and some may have problems for other reasons. That is life.”
― Ratan Tata
“When you see in places like Africa and parts of Asia abject poverty, hungry children and malnutrition around you, and you look at yourself as being people who have well being and comforts, I think it takes a very insensitive, tough person not to feel they need to do something.”
― Ratan Tata
“I may have hurt some people along the way, but I would like to be seen as somebody who has done his best to do the right thing for any situation and not compromised.”
― Ratan Tata
“If there are challenges thrown across, then some interesting, innovative solutions are found. Without challenges, the tendency is to go on the same way.”
― Ratan Tata
“Challenges need to be given to an organization.”
― Ratan Tata
“Banana republics are run on cronyism.”
― Ratan Tata
“My most visible goal is to do something in nutrition to children in India, and pregnant mothers. Because that would change the mental and physical health of our population in years to come.”
― Ratan Tata
“A founder who is in for the short run, or has no passion for the sector he is in, doesn’t give me a great deal of comfort.”
― Ratan Tata
“If I were to look in the United States or in Europe, in some of the garages, you would have a Bentley or two Bentleys or a high-end Mercedes, and you may find a Smart also in that same garage because that person thinks it’s a fun extra car to have. He may have four cars but also have a Smart because he thinks it is cute.”
― Ratan Tata
“I have been constantly telling people to encourage people, to question the unquestioned and not to be ashamed to bring up new ideas, new processes to get things done.”
― Ratan Tata
“I followed someone who had very large shoes. He had very large shoes. Mr. J. R. D. Tata. He was a legend in the Indian business community. He had been at the helm of the Tata organization for 50 years. You were almost starting to think he was going to be there forever.”
― Ratan Tata
“I’ve often felt that the Indian tiger has not been unleashed.”
― Ratan Tata
“Jardine is the largest dealer of Mercedes in the world. They also sell cars for two or three Japanese makers.”
― Ratan Tata
“What are the crumple zones on scooters? The helmet is the only crumple zone I can think of.”
― Ratan Tata
“Some entrepreneurs talk of a high burn rate, high advertising rate, and so on, with no outcome, so it doesn’t impress me. But an entrepreneur who has that kind of a feeling of responsibility towards his investors is somebody who will have all my support.”
― Ratan Tata
“I have two or three cars that I like, but today, Ferrari would be the best car I have driven in terms of being an impressive car.”
― Ratan Tata
“If we dispense with some of our self-made boundaries, India can really take its place in the world as an economic power. It hasn’t happened because we, sadly, don’t look at ourselves as Indians but as Punjabis or Parsis, unlike the Americans. Don’t make such boundaries.”
― Ratan Tata
“I am interested in what I earn; I am interested in my growth.”
― Ratan Tata
“Since I got involved in Telco, we first developed the first modular truck, the 407, then the 709, and now the 2213. These trucks broke away from the old face of Telco trucks. I was also just as much involved with the Safari, but nobody talks about the Safari. My involvement has been there with all Telco’s projects -somehow the car has got hyped up.”
― Ratan Tata
“I would say that one of the things I wish I could do differently would be to be more outgoing.”
― Ratan Tata
“Telco is totally committed to commercial vehicles, where it is bound to remain a major player. What may well happen in the future is we may split the company into two business units.”
― Ratan Tata
“When you have to earmark human and monetary resources for such a long time, it starts to hinder your other activities.”
― Ratan Tata
“There has to be a drive to make the U.K. competitive in the motorcar industry or in the engineering industry. To do that, you have to give attention to the manufacturing sector.”
― Ratan Tata
“I came seriously close to getting married four times, and each time I backed off in fear or for one reason or another. Each occasion was different, but in hindsight when I look at the people involved, it wasn’t a bad thing what I did. I think it may have been more complex had the marriage taken place.”
― Ratan Tata
“What I would like to do is to leave behind a sustainable entity of a set of companies that operate in an exemplary manner in terms of ethics, values and continue what our ancestors left behind.”
― Ratan Tata
“The day I am not able to fly will be a sad day for me.”
― Ratan Tata
“I will certainly not join politics. I would like to be remembered as a clean businessman who has not partaken in any twists and turns beneath the surface, and one who has been reasonably successful.”
― Ratan Tata
“Indian car buyers have not really been exposed to customer care in a competitive environment.”
― Ratan Tata
“I am in favour of disinvestment. But if a disinvested company has to tie up with a government company for its livelihood, there is a problem.”
― Ratan Tata
“I have always been bullish about India’s potential. I still am, and I feel India is a country that really has an enormous amount of potential and has the human capital to succeed.”
― Ratan Tata
“As you grow older, you become – everybody becomes – less inflexible and a little more accommodating.”
― Ratan Tata
“I quite frankly enjoy the touch and feel of a store, so I am a big bookshop person. Or, I go to an electronics store; Best Buy and Croma are places I could spend a lot of time in.”
― Ratan Tata
“New startups embody the creativity, the innovation of young people, and for me, it was and is a very worthwhile experience to interact with them.”
― Ratan Tata
“If it stands the test of public scrutiny, do it… if it doesn’t stand the test of public scrutiny then don’t do it.”
― Ratan Tata
“Apart from values and ethics which I have tried to live by, the legacy I would like to leave behind is a very simple one – that I have always stood up for what I consider to be the right thing, and I have tried to be as fair and equitable as I could be.”
― Ratan Tata
“I have always been very confident and very upbeat about the future potential of India. I think it is a great country with great potential.”
― Ratan Tata
“Power and wealth are not two of my main stakes.”
― Ratan Tata
“There are many things that, if I have to relive, maybe I will do it another way. But I would not like to look back and think what I have not been able to.”
― Ratan Tata
“I think there are many honest businessmen.”
― Ratan Tata
“People of great power wield great power, but people of lesser power or people who have fallen out of power go to jail without adequate evidence, or their bodies are found in the trunks of cars.”
― Ratan Tata
“The government should do its job. The government’s job is, in fact, to run the country, to manage the country, to govern the country. And governance is an important thing, not application where it suits one so, to micro control where it suits them on the other hand.”
― Ratan Tata
“People still believe what they read is necessarily the truth.”
― Ratan Tata
“I buy a lot of electronics, some which I never take out of the box!”
― Ratan Tata
“I probably have everything that Apple has made and everything Bose has made; I am very loyal to certain brands.”
― Ratan Tata
“The most expensive part of any manufacturing unit is the paint shop.”
― Ratan Tata
“Fiat has assembly plants in Brazil and Argentina.”
― Ratan Tata
“I would say that I’m blessed with a very, very good executive team that operates, reasonably autonomously, each of the companies.”
― Ratan Tata
“The early Rockefellers made their wealth from being in certain businesses and remained personally very wealthy.”
― Ratan Tata
“India needs to come out of its socialist pattern of doing things on a rationing basis.”
― Ratan Tata
“I can tell you in all honesty that I am highly connected to my family, my wife, and my three children, though I don’t get to spend dollops of hours with them.”
― Ratan Tata
“The economic situation, the high cost of undertaking manufacturing, the supply chain – which is, by the way, dying out also as manufacturing undergoes hardship – make the U.K. not the first place you would look at to make a manufacturing investment.”
― Ratan Tata
“There has not been a conscious view of re-energising manufacturing. So, in some form, someone has to wave the Union Jack in the area of manufacturing.”
― Ratan Tata
“I always felt that Nano should have been marketed towards the owner of a two-wheeler because it was conceived giving the people who rode on two wheels with the whole family an all-weather safe form of affordable transportation, not the cheapest.”
― Ratan Tata
“There’s a lot of interest in Nano outside India.”
― Ratan Tata
“Flying, I continue to be involved with. I love flying, and I hope to keep doing it so long as I can pass my medicals and stay proficient.”
― Ratan Tata
“After I retired, it seemed to me that there was a whole new world out there, which was a digital world driven by a marketplace, basically, which had a huge potential driven by handheld devices, which would one day become the virtual retail store of India.”
― Ratan Tata
“I’m the non-executive chairman of nine or so major companies, and on the nine companies, it’s a little trying because you jump from one industry to another, as the case might be. But one had the reasonable knowledge of those nine activities, and it’s been an exciting job.”
― Ratan Tata
“The – the early Rockefellers made their wealth from being in certain businesses and – and remained personally very wealthy. Tatas were different in the sense the future generations were not so wealthy. They – they were involved in the business, but most of the family wealth is put into trust, and the family did not, in fact, enjoy enormous wealth.”
― Ratan Tata
“Perhaps the loneliest time was during the Tata Tea issue in Assam. For some reason, everyone believed that we had conspired with the extremists, ULFA. People still believe what they read is necessarily the truth. Sometimes it is based on inadequate or wrong information.”
― Ratan Tata
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