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JANUARY 16, ../2005
 From The
Editor-In-Chief
 Commentary
 Columns
 Trends
 Event
 From The Editor
   

 

The End Of Reliance
As We Know It

History will remember ../2004 as the year when it
all came to pass.

From The Editor-In-Chief
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From The Editor

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EVENT
Banking On The Very Best

There weren't any upsets in the BT-KPMG Best Banks awardees for the second year in a row, but the middle order is catching up. Read More

The New Convergence Paradigm
By Mukesh Ambani
more...

Educating The Poor Profitably
By Bala Balachandran
more...
 

Brand Power
By M.S. Banga
more...

  Leadership Challenges In
An Era Of Globalisation

By Kumar Mangalam Birla
more...
 

From Imitation To Innovation
By Bhaskar Chakravorti
more...
 

Creating Village Wealth
By Y.C. Deveshwar
more...
 

The Family Concern
By Adi B.Godrej
more...
 

It's The Stakeholder, Stupid!
By Ian Gomes
more...

CEO—Master or Coach?
By Vivek R. Gupta
more...
 

Women Call The Shots
By K.V. Kamath
more...

Clean And Connected
By Jagdish Khattar
more...
 

The Creative Future
By Anand Mahindra
more...

A Nation Of Fireflies
By Arun Maira
more...
 

The Next Big Thing
By Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw
more...

A New Energy Paradigm
By Rajiv Memani
more...

 

The Power Of Wireless
By Sunil Bharti Mittal
more...

Accelerating Urbanisation
By Nandan Nilekani
more...

 

Business With A Soul
By Azim Premji
more...

 

   
 

Trends ../2005
Log on to www.business-today.com for detailed perspectives on each
Trends articles.

More Web Exclusives
More Net Specials

Cities On The Edge
Favoured business destinations Gurgaon, Bangalore, Chennai, Pune and Hyderabad could become, thanks to poor infrastructure, victims of their own success. Read in-depth articles on each city. Plus personalised travel logs. Only at www.business-today.com.


Moving On
Diluting stake in GECIS was like a child growing up and leaving home, feels Scott R. Bayman, President and CEO of GE India. In an exclusive interview with BT, he speaks his mind on a wide range of issues.

The iPod Effect
Now you see it, now you don't. All sub-visible phenomena have this mysterious quality to them. Sub-visible not just because Apple's hot new sensation, the handy little iPod, makes its physical presence felt so discreetly. But also because it's an audio wonder more than anything else. Expect more and more handheld gizmos to turn musical.
 
The BRICs Dream
By Roopa Purushothaman
more...
 

The New Entrepreneur
By Ramalinga Raju
more...

The New Employee
By Jerry Rao
more...
 

The Future Of Medicine
By K. Anji Reddy
more...

The Networked Lifestyle In 2020
By Mohanbir Sawhney
more...
 

Ethical Businesses Will Never Go Out Of Fashion
By M.V. Subbiah
more...

Networked India
By Ravi Venkatesan
more...

 

 

Good, Bad Or Downright Ugly?
Budget ../2005: Chidambaram's Dream Budget?
Cities: The Watershed
Disinvestments: The IPO Route
Economy: Safe Haven
more...

Family Business:
Beyond The Surname
Government Spending: Razor's Edge
Healthcare: Point Of Inflection?
Infrastructure: Land Ho!
Joint Ventures: 18 No More?
more...

Kids: Prime Target
Lifestyle: An Ode To Consumerism?
M&As: More, Not Less
North South Divide: Sexy South
Offshoring: Bangalored!

Pharma: Year Of Reckoning
Quiet Period: Governance Premium
Retail: To Be Or Not To Be
more...

Stock Market: Shine On
Textiles: Northbound
Unions: Red Planet
Venture Capital: A Private Party
Wheels: Four Wheels Better
XXX Stuff: The Wrong End
Yellow Fever: The China Syndrome
Zealots: The Right To Protest
more...

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