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India: Positive developments tracker thread

Tata's biggest strength is NOT captive consumption. Just to clear a common misconception, about 3% of TCS revenues. Useful but hardly the 'big chunk' you're talking about. Historically Tata's biggest growth has come from letting the conglomerate's group companies operate as independent entities paying dividends and royalties for the use of the name to the parent. Whenever the parent has tried to involve themselves in strategy, it's usually not turned out well.

Let's see where they go from here but the last 30 years haven't been very kind to conglomerates.

3% of TCS business is in billions of dollars and sometimes that is a difference maker. Of course no business is built on captive consumption alone only but when you have synergies working for group companies, its a huge leverage and often tough to deal with for competitors.
 
3% of TCS business is in billions of dollars and sometimes that is a difference maker. Of course no business is built on captive consumption alone only but when you have synergies working for group companies, its a huge leverage and often tough to deal with for competitors.
3% is a Billion Dollars...out of their $30 Billion Revenue in 2025. As I said, a nice bonus but not what's made TCS what it is over the years. And just to clarify, this 3% is a peak among Tata Group companies since most of them including the heavyweights like Tata Motors and Tata Steel have lower intercompany revenues.

The Tata group has traditionally derived not so much operational or business synergies but financial and brand synergies. As I said, they've done best when they've operated independently. Even traditional strengths like the famous TAS aren't what they once were in terms of hiring batch size and attractiveness at the B-Schools.
 
3% is a Billion Dollars...out of their $30 Billion Revenue in 2025. As I said, a nice bonus but not what's made TCS what it is over the years. And just to clarify, this 3% is a peak among Tata Group companies since most of them including the heavyweights like Tata Motors and Tata Steel have lower intercompany revenues.

The Tata group has traditionally derived not so much operational or business synergies but financial and brand synergies. As I said, they've done best when they've operated independently. Even traditional strengths like the famous TAS aren't what they once were in terms of hiring batch size and attractiveness at the B-Schools.
TAS was competitive once it’s insane. Lol the idea about moving within Tata industries was fascinating.
 
TAS was competitive once it’s insane. Lol the idea about moving within Tata industries was fascinating.
I interviewed for TAS back in the day though I didn't make it. Was already a Day 1 not Day 0 placement then.

My friend who did get in has stayed with the Group 25 years and is now a very senior guy with Titan.

It's lost a lot of it's glamour but it still attracts a certain kind of person.
 
I interviewed for TAS back in the day though I didn't make it. Was already a Day 1 not Day 0 placement then.

My friend who did get in has stayed with the Group 25 years and is now a very senior guy with Titan.

It's lost a lot of it's glamour but it still attracts a certain kind of person.
The used to select once within Tata companies as well, requirement was GMAT to be shortlisted , but majority didn’t make it after GD or another round.

Yes Tata C suites doesn’t have as much attrition as or didn’t back in the day.
 

Bengaluru-based startup VoxelGrids has introduced India’s first fully indigenous 1.5-tesla MRI scanner. The system is already functioning at a cancer care centre in Chandrapur, Maharashtra, marking a meaningful development in the country’s medical technology journey.

What makes this innovation stand out is not just that it is manufactured in India, but that it is engineered specifically for Indian conditions:
• No dependence on liquid helium
• Reduced power consumption
• Approximately 40% lower cost compared to imported alternatives
 
What kind of stupid reason is this :dhoni .

del.pngThe show that has Amir on it is blocked in India. I didn't realize this maybe because I'm usually on a VPN.
 

Bengaluru-based startup VoxelGrids has introduced India’s first fully indigenous 1.5-tesla MRI scanner. The system is already functioning at a cancer care centre in Chandrapur, Maharashtra, marking a meaningful development in the country’s medical technology journey.

What makes this innovation stand out is not just that it is manufactured in India, but that it is engineered specifically for Indian conditions:
• No dependence on liquid helium
• Reduced power consumption
• Approximately 40% lower cost compared to imported alternatives
Much needed manufacturing..
 
Heard Bill Gates is landing in India soon.To setup some center doing something to cows. (My conspiracy is: to introduce something that reduces cattle birth rates in India and hit Indian diary industry slowly, without alarm, so they can dump diary on us)




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