
In 2003, visionary industrialist Ratan Tata conceived an audacious dream — to create a safe, affordable car for India’s emerging middle class
The story of the Tata Group and Ratan Tata over the past 20 years is one of growth and competition, productivity and efficiency gains, and globalization and innovation. The Tata story is replete with run-ins with the establishment and the political opposition, and failures and frustrations. And, in some ways, it is the story of India itself, only with a happier ending.
“Tata was at the right place at the right time, and could see what was happening around him and respond accordingly,” said business historian and author Gita Piramal.
The Tata Motors Story Under Ratan Tata
Indica:
In January 1998, Ratan Naval Tata, chairman of Tata Motors Ltd and head of the Tata group, walked out onto a brightly lit stage in a hall in New Delhi’s Pragati Maidan to announce something that would forever change the fortunes of India’s largest truck maker.
The dimensions of a (Maruti) Zen, the cabin size of an Ambassador and the fuel efficiency of a Maruti 800—that was the promise with which Tata announced the Indica, the company’s car.
The launch was presided over by then industry minister Murasoli Maran and Tata dedicated it to India. The symbolism wasn’t lost on anyone present at the launch during Auto Expo, India’s biennial car show: Maran was fighting a bruising battle with Suzuki Motor Corp. over the management of Maruti Udyog Ltd (now Maruti Suzuki India Ltd) in which the state and the Japanese firm were equal partners.
Later that year, bookings opened for the car, and a little over 100,000 people signed up and paid an advance for the Indica.NextMAds
Despite the manufacturing and quality problems the initial lot of vehicles ran into (and the Rs 500 crore loss Tata Motors declared in 2001), the Indica became a best-seller and marked the real entry of Tata Motors into cars, although the company had already signalled its intent with the launch of the Sierra, which would be called a cross-over vehicle today, and the Estate, a station wagon.
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