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DQ Path Breaker Award 2000
Dataquest, Easwaradas Satyan, December 31, 2000
Heard of serial entrepreneurs? Well. Ajit Balakrishnan, chairman and CEO, Rediff.com India (Nasdaq: REDF) is a shining
example of one. Engaged in an Internet venture since 1995, and awfully successful at that too, Balakrishnan today stands atop a
heap of accolades and achievements for giving the country its only global Internet brand. The man has guts and vision on
business and commerce. He steered the company to an IPO on Nasdaq in June this year amidst the global meltdown in
dot-com valuations. The IPO was oversubscribed 19 times and the stock price climbed 61% to $19.31 on the first day of
trading.
Balakrishnan founded “Rediff-on-the-Net” in December 1995, funding the company himself using profits from the advertising
hotshop that he had built—Rediffusion Advertising. "The early designs were inspired by AOL. Over time, it has evolved into
the 'portal look' in keeping with the international trends," says Balakrishnan. He had to spend a lot of time evangelizing about
the Internet even as commercial Internet access began barely three months earlier. "We had to even convince people that there
was something in India called the Internet," reminisces Balakrishnan.
Balakrishnan later managed to raise nearly $20 million from offshore investors including Draper International, Intel, Citicorp,
General Electric and Warburg Pincus.
Says Balakrishnan, "The major concerns in the past five years were not to be too early with services, not to spend too much
before the market develops ...careful pacing and controlled release of the risks."
On how he went about building his organization, he said, "Hiring talented, independent thinking, hands-on top management,
being clear and unequivocal on business strategy, creating a culture of free-flowing, open discussion of issues...setting a
personal example of responsibility and accountability." He hired talented professionals who were masters at their own
functions—be it editors, programmers or salespeople—but knew nothing of the Internet. He then spent time teaching them the
Internet rather than hiring young enthusiasts who had no professional skills.
The company's sound business practices revolve around strong financial and control systems, and relentless measurement
against international metrics. For example, the company targets a revenue of over $3 per 1,000 page views and a 40% increase
in revenue every quarter. It also plans to put a tight control on receivables--last quarter less than 40 days, and pulling gross
margins of over 50%.
So what do the stats say? Financial statements for quarter ended September 30, 2000 reveal net revenues increased by 53%
to touch $1.34 million compared to last quarter.
The future direction of growth for Rediff is in internationalization. Having acquired Thinkindia.com, a portal in the US,
Rediff.com is now looking at making appropriate acquisitions in the UK, Middle-East and Far-East by early next year. It plans
to provide access across various devices--extending beyond PCs--and various language sites apart from English, Hindi,
Gujrati and Tamil, which have already been launched.
A small-town boy from Kannur in Kerala, Balakrishnan was catapulted into the world of big business after his graduation in
Physics and a business degree from IIM Calcutta. Embarking upon a career with a small advertising agency, eschewing the
multinational career offers that came so easily to an IIM graduate, Balakrishnan proved his originality. He went on to found
Rediffusion Advertising, a creative hotshop along with two other friends from the industry, Arun Nanda and Mohammed Khan.
The agency won many awards in the advertising industry in 1974, its very first year. A moment of triumph, unerased from his
memory. He moved with the times and plunged into the infotech industry co-founding PSI Data Systems.
Balakrishnan's sense of timing is infallible. He entered and exited businesses with razor sharp precision. He sensed the advent of
the Internet at the right time. In 1995, he brought alive the first Web server in India (www.rediff.co.in). Another moment of
pride for Balakrishnan came when the first trade for Rediff flickered on the Nasdaq trading terminal in June.
At 52, Balakrishnan is an enormous success story of an Indian professional entrepreneur. Among his role models are Gandhiji,
Kennedy, Steve Case and Sarnoff, all institution builders who changed the way people live. He works ferociously hard putting
in 16 hours a day at the office for even seven days of the week. Talk of leisure for the CEO of a Nasdaq-listed company! The
Balakrishnan "family" is a threesome--his wife, himself and a basset hound. An avid reader of business, technology and
science, he is also passionate about portrait painting. Balakrishnan's long-term plans center around public service: his ultimate
definition of success as opposed to the banal yardstick of wealth. His only maxim in life: keep the faith. Balakrishnan, the serial
entrepreneur, fervently hopes to build an Indian brand respected throughout the world. And he is very well on the way.
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