How have you managed to keep the family together over the past two decades?
Ashish: We were brought up knowing family is more important than the individual. For us it is not about 'I' but about 'us'. It is not about 'me' but about 'we'. In any family business, you must take singularity out. Everything must be plural. The day you start looking at everything from a 'we' and 'us' perspective, life is different. That is what has worked for us. It goes back to a mantra: Business is about capitalism; family is about socialism.
Kartik: The learning came from previous generations. First, my father and his brother split from their cousins in 1989. Then, my father and his brother split in 1999. Ashish and I would have been in our late 20s, early 30s then. We were very close as a family. We discussed at the time that we must try to figure out how we can stay together. We realised the company would lose value if there were constant splits.
Have you put together a document to manage the family?
Kartik: We put a [family] constitution together in about 6-8 months [in 2006]. We went through various iterations and even involved the spouses. There were strong guidelines on how the family should be run. The idea was if you run your family as well as your business, both will thrive. By 2006 we had our first constitution. Initially, the rules were very strict, but over time we liberalised.
Ashish: Any family business must have rules governing the family just as rules govern business. In our case, all of us knew that when you run a business, you will have policies for travel, immigration or anything else. Similarly, families need to have policies for dividend distribution, liquidity or the freedom to act on their own.
Why did you feel the need for a family constitution?
This story is from the August 2024 edition of Outlook Business.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the August 2024 edition of Outlook Business.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
SHANKAR PRASAD
C'EST LA VIE - MY FAVOURITE
Star Plus
Actor Keerthy Suresh's talents extend far beyond the silver screen. In a chat with Prachi Khanna, she talks about her growing interest in the world of investments - from real estate to tech to co-owning a cricket team
Shelter From the Storm
Taking care of 500-plus homeless was only the first of the challenges; the 24-year-old social worker has done more since
Saying No to Jugaad
In India, people often rely on a quick-fix approach to manage the daily challenges of taking insulin shots. But a Gen-Z innovator has other ideas
Green Skills Champion
An unexpected career choice was the beginning of efforts to demystify the conversation around climate change and raise awareness
Force of Change
An educator's journey that started in the municipal schools of Andheri West is helping bridge the learning gap among young students
An Appetite for Health
The 'food pharmer' has taken on some of the biggest names in the FMCG sector. His mission: to get consumers to read product labels
More Than Medals
India's success at the Paris Paralympics can inspire a new era of inclusivity
Checkmate
A new generation of chess elite, backed by early mentorship and building on the wins of the previous generation, is cementing India's place at the top
On A Strong Wicket
Team India has had a mixed month but a good year. This was the year Rohit Sharma and his boys brought the T20 World Cup back home