The India's Top Business Women’s | Top 5 Business women’s
Entrepreneurs in India | India's Top 5 Business Women’s | India's Top Five
Business women’s | India's Top 5 Business women’s List | India's Top 5 Business
women’s All Details are given below........
WOMENS
List:
Entrepreneur Dr. Kiran
Mazumdar-Shaw, Chairman & Managing Director of Bioon Ltd., who became
India's richest woman in 2004 (an estimated Rs.2,100 crore )~US$480 million),
was educated at the Bishop Cotton Girls School and Mount Carmel College in Bangalore.
She founded Biocon India with a capital of Rs.10,000 in her garage in 1978 -
the initial operation was to extract an enzyme from papaya. Her application for
loans were turned down by banks then - on three counts - biotechnology was then
a new word, thecompany lacked assets, and (most importantly) women
entrepreneurs were still a rarity. Today, her company is the bigget
biopharmaceutical firm in the country. In 2006, Shaw caused a few Page 3
ruffles after a much hyped photograph showed her in an embraceand lip-lock with
senior BJP leader Vasundhara Raje Scinidia.
Ekta Kapoor, creative
head of Balajji Telefilms, is the daughter of actor Jeetendra, and sister of
actor Tushar Kapoor. She has been synonymous with the rage of soap operas on
Indian TV, after her most famous venture 'Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi',
which started airing on STAR Plus in 2000. Ekta dominates Indian television,
producing more than eight television soaps. At the 6th Indian Telly Awards
2006, she bagged the Hall of Fame award for her contributions. Most of her
creations begin with the letter'K' due to her superstition that it brings her
good luck.
Sunita Narain, an
environmentalist and political activist as well as a major proponent of the
Green concept of sustainable development, was awarded the Padma Shri by the
Government of India in 2005. Narain, who has been with the India-based Centre
for Science and Environment since 1982, is currently the director of the
Centre, and the director of the Society for Environmental Communications, and
publisher of the fortnightly magazine, 'Down to Earth'.
Neelam Dhawan,
Microsoft India managing director, leads Microsoft's sales and marketing
operations in the country. A Stephenian (graduated in 1980), she passed out of
Delhi's Faculty of Management Studies in 1982. Back then, while she was keen to
join FMCG majors like Hindustan Lever and Asian Paints, both companies rejected
Dhawan as they did not want to appoint women for marketing.
Naina Lal Kidwai was
the first Indian woman to graduate from the Harvard Business School. Fortune
magazine listed Kidwai among the World's Top 50 Corporate Women from 2000 to
2003. According to the Economic Times, she is the first woman to head the
operations of a foreign bank in India (HSBC). Kidwai was awarded the Padma Shri
this year.
Sulajja Firodia
Motwani, Joint Managing Director of Kinetic Engineering Ltd., is in-charge of
the company's overall business developmental activities. She is also the
Director of Kinetic Motor Company Limited and Kinetic Marketing Services
Limited. A fitness freak and avid sports enthusiast, she even played badminton
at the national level. The magazine 'India Today' has honoured her with the
title of business 'Face of the Millennium'. She was ranked among the top 25
business entrepreneurs of the country,and was also presented with the Society
Young Achiever's Award for Business in 2002. The same year, she was chosen as
the 'Global Leader of Tomorrow' by the World Economic Forum.
Mallika Srinivasan,
Director of TAFE India (her husband is automobile tycoon Venu Srinivasan, CMD
of TVS Motors) was named Businesswoman of the year in 2006. When she joined the
company in 1986, its turnover was Rs.85 crore, and at the time of her
award,TAFE and its allied companies were earning revenues of Rs.2,900 crore. A
couple of years after her marriage in 1982, and less than a year after her
daughter was born, Srinivasan went to Wharton to pursue her MBA. It's no
surprise that TAFE also runs hospitals and schools. A serious votary of woman
power, Srinivasan says women's contribution to society has often been
underestimated.
Dr. Jatinder Kaur
Arora, an outstanding scientist from Punjab, was conferred a national award for
her work on women's development through science and technology. Dr. Arora, perhaps
the first scientist to get such an award, is a doctorate in microbiology and
has a brilliant academic record. An unlikely and fairly new contender on this
list, she is serving as a joint director in the Punjab State Council for
Science and Technology at present.
Indra Krishnamurthy
Nooyi, chairman and executive officer of PepsiCo, was according to Forbes
magazine's 2006 poll, the fourth most powerful woman in the world. She was also
named the #1 Most Powerful Woman in Business in 2006 by Fortune magazine. She
got her bachelor's degree from Madras Christian College in 1974, entered the
Business Diploma programme at the Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta, and
later moved to the US to attend the Yale School of Management. Nooyi serves on
the board of directors of several organizations, including Motorola, the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the International Rescue Committee, and the
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. Among her friends are former Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger, who describes her asa 'wild New York Yankees fan'.
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