Rishad Premji, the eldest son of Wipro Chairman Azim Premji, joined the company as a business manager.Both will have to deal with a prospective top boss like 'any other employee.' So serious is the company about this arrangement that it refuses to even share a picture of this 'employee.'So also will Girish S Paranjpe, head of the banking, finance and insurance vertical, in whose department Rishad will be working.
Learning the ropes the hard way is important as it is recognised that a degree from a premier B-school, which Rishad has, is not sufficient to be a successful businessman. Examples to illustrate this are available to the young Premji both near and far from home.
Addressing the annual convocation of IIM, Bangalore last year, Sunil Bharti Mittal recalled how he could not pursue an MBA degree and had to plunge into business fresh out of college. Yet, he is considered one of the most successful entrepreneurs the country has known.
So also Azim Premji, the chairman and CEO of Wipro. When he was just 21, he had to discontinue his studies due to the untimely death of his father M H Premji and take charge of a dying business.
"It's like being thrown into a swimming pool. To avoid drowning, you learn to swim quickly," Premji is quoted as saying in the recently published Bangalore Tiger by Steve Hamm.
"I think by bringing him into Wipro as an employee, Azim Premji has given the right kind of message to other people in the organisation as well as the business world. He will be trained and will get a chance like any other employee to be groomed for the top post. This is a standard practice in any professional organisation and Premji has followed the same," says Abhoy K Ojha, a professor in the organisation behaviour department at IIM-B.
After earning his MBA, Rishad worked with consulting firm Bain & Company, which had also groomed Vivek Paul, vice chairman until he left in 2005, and considered to be one of the most influential professionals in the development of Wipro. Paul was recruited from Bain & Co in 1990 to head Wipro-GE Medical Systems, the joint venture between Wipro and GE.
As Azim Premji owns 80 per cent of Wipro, the journey to the top of the firm, albeit professionally run and publicly listed, by his eldest son will be considered by many to be a fait accompli.
But those who are familiar with how important integrity and process are to Premji, will agree that in his own way Rishad will have to earn his spurs. That is what will make his progress within the firm worth watching.
WIPRO
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To focus on core IT Business, it demerged its non-IT businesses into a separate company named Wipro Enterprises Limited with effect from 31 March 2013. The demerged companies are consumer care, lighting, healthcare and infrastructure engineering
RECOGNITION
He is recognized as 2014’s Young global leader