DirectoryMix Web Resources » Article Details

Maybe Tata, Jaguar/Land Rover is not such an odd couple - Read More

Date Added: May 29, 2008 10:08:02 PM
Although Tata's deal to take over Jaguar won't close until June, Ravi Kant, chairman of Tat's motor division, already has issued a clear directive: Keep these vehicle lines separate and distinct. "Each is going to chart its own future and own course," he says. "The conflict would come if we were to try to put them together."

Category: Business & Economy » Consultancy


No comments are posted yet


 
Name:*
Email:*
Website:  (optional)
Comment:*
(html and bb codes are filtered and not allowed)

Do the math:*CAPTCHA - Do The Math
 

Related Articles

Haydar Abdul Reda Mashadi looks at utilities and infrastructure in Qatar in exclusive Oxford Business Group interview

The development of utilities and infrastructure in Qatar is focused on by Haydar Abdul Reda Mashhadi, Managing Director, Al Madar Group, in an exclusive interview in the forthcoming The Report: Qatar 2008, the latest of the annual business publications fr

Top Indian IT firms see sharp declines in growth

After three years of strong growth, India's top 20 information technology firms are reporting sharp drops in annual growth rates as the global economy slows.

The Museum of Antique Branding

All over the world, with so many different meanings and perceptions of the word "branding," it appears that it has lost its true meaning; the terminology is more like a walk through a museum with a glorious past. Loose words like "economy" carry diffe

Ficci. BBB partner to promote ethics in global marketplace

Washington, June 11: The Council of Better Business Bureaus (BBB) and the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (Ficci) has announced a formal partnership to promote standards and responsible business practices in the US and Indian market

Kapronasia Sees Large Domestic Challenges Ahead for China

A new article from Kapronasia, a Shanghai-based Financial Industry Consultancy, sees not only slowing growth in China, but critical domestic issues that could change the country's future.