Unitech founder and chairman Ramesh Chandra gets into office at 9.30 am every weekday and leaves at 4 pm sharp.
That has been the work schedule for Chandra, 70, over several years, perhaps decades.
A routine unchanged even after younger son Sanjay Chandra was taken into judicial custody early last week in connection with the telecom spectrum scam.
That's one of the main points put forward by senior company officials when asked whether the working structure had undergone any change after Sanjay got arrested.
Sanjay Chandra is managing director of Unitech and chairman of Unitech Wireless, the telecom venture with Norwegian partner Telenor.
It is here that Unitech is making a distinction between the real estate business and the telecom venture, to preserve its brand.
"The two (realty and telecom) are separate businesses, operated from different officesÂ… There are no operational linkages between them. . . There is only the ownership connection (Unitech holds around 33 per cent in the telecom venture) ," said Unitech vice president (corporate planning) R Nagaraju, in an interaction with Business Standard.
Sanjay's elder brother, Ajay Chandra, has been at the helm of the real estate business ever since Sanjay went fully into telecom in 2009.
Was entry into the telecom sector a mistake for Unitech? Company officials preferred to skip that question, saying Sanjay Chandra would be the right person to answer that.
Nagaraju claimed brand Unitech was not hit by the recent developments, so there was no immediate need to launch a marketing strategy.
The reality, according to officials, is that customer response to Unitech's ongoing projects, around 10 of these spread across multiple cities, has been good.
Going by the customer response and timely delivery of projects, the brand has not been impacted, they said.
On addressing shareholder concern over the 2G