惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

D
DataBreaches.Net
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
博客园 - 聂微东
罗磊的独立博客
W
WeLiveSecurity
博客园_首页
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
V
Visual Studio Blog
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
G
Google Developers Blog
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
Latest news
Latest news
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
A
About on SuperTechFans
F
Full Disclosure
Y
Y Combinator Blog
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
博客园 - 司徒正美
博客园 - Franky
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
F
Fortinet All Blogs
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
S
Schneier on Security
雷峰网
雷峰网
博客园 - 【当耐特】
P
Privacy International News Feed
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
J
Java Code Geeks
T
Tor Project blog
V
V2EX
爱范儿
爱范儿
C
Check Point Blog
T
Threatpost
Project Zero
Project Zero
量子位
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
I
Intezer
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
GbyAI
GbyAI
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com

Corporate File Specials, Corporate News & Insights | The HinduBusinessLine

Eating together at work How TAFE is driving Technology and Talent Transformation? Cars24 flattens out Corporate trust in AI declines If you are reachable, you’re breachable: Zscaler’s Jay Chaudhry Global funds snap Indian stock selling streak as oil shock ebbs Monday Motivation: A vine of help is always there Why FMCG giants buy D2C brands Market leaders outpace the auto pack Horiba India’s growing yen for tests India dominates skilled migration flow Future of work Narasu’s Coffee’s besh! besh! rejuvenation RITES of passage to hyper-competition Corporate ‘austerity’ can’t cut it Freedom does not create failure or excellence - it reveals character The Art of Letting Go - at every stage, not just when we retire Fiduciary feuds threaten Tata’s legacy How Diageo’s doubled investment is scaling up Sober AI and office space Air India: Flying from turbulence to turnaround How India’s ethanol hedge is paying back How Indian IT majors are decoding AI When we are starstruck! Tech giant Adobe opens seventh office in India Costly, but AI is not yet a bubble JAL insolvency sees corporate titans cross swords New hope at HOEC These old reunions – Quo Vadis? GST reform is sweet news for Perfetti Van Melle India What an Oracle foretells about jobs and careers in the AI era Less engaged workforce TVS Motor bikes into global third spot Building Lalit hotels with emotion Lupin goes for bigger bites of innovation Does greater online penetration destroy profitability? From 200 hotels to 500: Radisson’s blueprint for growth in India AI talent transformation at LTM Ikea’s DIY plans for India How should CEOs respond to the West Asian crisis Finding a niche in air, water and carbon The Pygmalion effect on cricket and work! The hidden hub transforming rural livelihoods From agarbatti to aerospace — the radiating scent of success ‘We have to start thinking of AI as a public good’ How Suzlon’s ‘decoupling’ gambit is paying dividends ‘Biz leaders must find ways of using AI to deliver value for consumers’ Tariff-driven exim: Access does not guarantee success Behind the hype of Indian CEOs dominating global corporate giants Rane group looks for a resurgence Where can you find new jobs today? Gig workers and the cost of speed Profitability of start-ups is a measure of their efficiency: Kanwal Rekhi, founder of TiE ITC reaches Cloud: Get Biryani & Makhana delivered to your door! How InMobi’s Naveen Tewari got inspired by Mukesh Ambani Global opportunities ahead, but China is a competitive threat The shape of biz and trade blocs to come Right to disconnect: A bridge too far? How Shailesh Chandra put the spark back in Tata Motors Indian arms of MNCs find place in the sun How Sunil Munjal is ‘Heroing’ arts, culture and education Rise in fair pay perception Ageing as a corporate barrier BKT wheels into consumer segment How Balaji Wafers feeds Gujarat’s growth into a snack powerhouse Storytellers for the new age Temporary lull in hiring Nadir Godrej — the Renaissance man Hatsun earns its place in the sun Leadership is about hope and resilience Sandeep Goyal’s art of the audacious deal Motivation and career moves A fifth-gen scion steers a born-again conglomerate Exit dialogue: What would you consider a decent severance pay? From Matunga’s chawl to Crisil’s corner office Rebranded, TSF group lays road for future Can Rapido play spoilsport in the food delivery party? Wanted: A country without job fears! Lack of reliable tech a big pain point for Indians A guide to second innings Behind the rise and rise of SME IPOs on BSE A tale of two sisters, two States, two chains Vedanta holds course on bumpy demerger process How Bharat Kaushal is leading Hitachi India through its character change Schwing Stetter India has concrete plans in place The visual disconnect Real money gaming: Down but not out, and taking new bets Tyre to tech: Inside Anant Goenka’s leadership journey Weighing the rewards balance of a risky job Age of AI: It’s still human-first in corporate corridors ‘Minding’ its own business Google’s silver move Firing up venture capital ‘Colombo can be a good location for Indian corporate events’
Fire me if I fail: Pirojsha Godrej
By Amit Vijay Mohile · 2026-05-11 · via Corporate File Specials, Corporate News & Insights | The HinduBusinessLine
LEGACY-PLUS PUSH. Pirojsha Godrej, chairman-designate, Godrej Industries group

LEGACY-PLUS PUSH. Pirojsha Godrej, chairman-designate, Godrej Industries group | Photo Credit: SUPPLIED PIC

“The first person who should be fired if my performance is poor is me,” declares Pirojsha Godrej, the incoming chairman of the Godrej Industries group. Asked who in the company would dare to fire its top leader, Pirojsha points to the management and governance structure he reports to, underlining how the 129-year-old group is attempting to combine legacy values with sharper accountability, faster execution and disciplined scale-up.

That structure spans both family leadership and professional management. Pirojsha will oversee the broader Godrej group while continuing to chair Godrej Properties, Godrej Capital and Godrej Ventures. Burjis Godrej will chair Godrej Agrovet, while executives such as Sudhir Sitapati at Godrej Consumer Products and Sunil Kataria at Godrej Agrovet are being given larger operating mandates.

As the Godrej group prepares for a generational transition later this year, it is quietly reshaping how it operates, giving businesses greater independence, institutionalising board-led oversight and pushing each vertical to meet stricter return and execution thresholds. Internally, businesses are expected to deliver 18–20 per cent returns or demonstrate a credible path to leadership and scale. If they don’t then restructuring or even exits are on the table, irrespective of who is in charge.

Focus on the future

For decades, the Godrej group represented stability and stewardship-led growth.

“The key, as we see it, is combining the best of our past, the incredible set of values built consistently over generations, while avoiding the risk of looking backwards too much and keeping focus firmly on the opportunity ahead,” Pirojsha says

Portfolio discipline has been building for years under the next generation’s leadership. Businesses considered peripheral to the group’s long-term priorities were either exited, de-prioritised or realigned. For instance, Godrej sold premium grocery chain Nature’s Basket to the RP-Sanjiv Goenka group in 2019, while the 2024 family settlement formally separated capital-intensive businesses such as appliances, aerospace and heavy engineering into the Jamshyd Godrej-led Godrej Enterprises group.

At the same time, the group sharpened its focus on consumer products, real estate and financial services while increasingly shifting operating control toward professional executives rather than family-led management.

Capital first

Unlike conglomerates rushing into semiconductors, infrastructure and data centres, Godrej is avoiding sectors where capital intensity and execution complexity outweigh strategic advantage.

The group evaluated data centres but stayed away, citing technology risk and management bandwidth constraints, while newer bets such as Taj The Trees, a mixed-use community project in Vikhroli, Mumbai, aligns more closely with its strengths in urban real estate and premium consumption.

Fiscal discipline is most visible in Godrej Properties, which scaled up nationally through joint development agreements rather than warehousing large land banks. The company closed FY26 with ₹34,171 crore in booking value, making it India’s largest listed residential developer by sales value for the third consecutive year.

There’s a similar approach at Godrej Consumer Products, as managing director Sitapati initiated a “2040 backcast” strategy to identify categories that were likely to grow as India becomes wealthier and build portfolios around them.

That thinking drove bets in liquid detergents, fragrances and digital-first grooming categories, and acquisitions such as Raymond Consumer Care and men’s grooming brand Muuchstac. “Capital and management bandwidth are not infinite,” Pirojsha says, adding that the “99 per cent rule” will apply to all situations.

The ‘99% rule’

“Ninety-nine per cent of what the businesses do should not rely on each other,” elaborates Pirojsha. This highlights how the Godrej Industries group differs from other newer integrated conglomerate models.

So, while the businesses operate independently, the group centre focuses on talent, culture, sustainability and strategic alignment. The family name may be on the door, but the operating mandate is increasingly not a family matter.

Ironically, the biggest challenge identified by Pirojsha is not macroeconomic volatility but culture. Godrej Capital, which did not exist five years ago, now has around ₹25,000 crore worth assets under management. “We are a fast-growing organisation with a lot of new people coming in,” he says. “What we deliver is very important, but so is the ‘how’.”

That also explains why the Godrej group is relaunching its identity around the tag “Crafting Tomorrow Since 1897” — an attempt to balance continuity with reinvention. The transition is, ultimately, less about succession and more about redesigning how a legacy conglomerate functions in an India increasingly defined by scale, speed and execution.

The group has thrived for 129 years by being careful, deliberate and slow to overextend itself. What Pirojsha is attempting now is something more difficult: preserving the institutional trust while pushing the group to be faster, sharper and more performance-driven.

The redesign

When Nadir Godrej steps down in August to become chairman emeritus, the formal succession process will conclude. Operationally, however, the redesign is already underway. The 2024 split of the broader Godrej empire into the Godrej Industries group and Godrej Enterprises group removed ownership ambiguity and forced each side to define a clearer strategic identity.

“Values without performance is a bit empty, because our reputation and relevance ultimately depend on our ongoing results, not just what someone did in a previous generation,” Pirojsha sums up, on the need for a clear plan ahead.

More Like This

Published on May 11, 2026