GMR Group Presentation
GMR Group Presentation
GMR Group Presentation
ORIGINS
G.M.Raos father was a successful dealer of jute, food
grains and gold.
Division of Wealth Each son received some property
and INR 3,00,000.
G.M.RAO Mechanical Engineer from Andhra University.
Worked in a Paper Mill and with PWD.
The brothers joined together and opened a trading
venture, dealing in jute like their father.
In 1988, the brothers separated as they had different
ideas. G.M.Rao wanted to reinvest the profits and expand
whereas his brothers were interested in profits.
He received a jute mill as part of the settlement.
Joined the board of Vysya Bank in 1985.
FAMILY TREE
S.B
RAJU
KIRAN
CSR
In 1991 , motivated to ser ve those in need, especially in rural areas,
Rao established the GMR Varalakshmi Foundation (GMRVF).
Run as an entrepreneurial enterprise focused on developing education,
healthcare, vocational and other programs for local communities. 3 to
5 per cent of the groups profit af ter tax (PAT) went into the
Foundation .
Aimed at making high -quality educational institutions accessible to
Indias poorest segments, par tly through collaborations with the
government.
Healthcare initiatives also included par tnerships, such as collaboration
with Helpage India to operate mobile medical units that ser ve nearly
100 villages weekly.
Established five institutes for self -empowerment and vocational
training for unemployed youth and women. These institutes trained
unemployed youth in a variety of skills (e.g., repair of household
appliances and simple electronic products) and
Facilitated bank loans for aspiring micro -entrepreneurs. GMRVF worked
intensively with five disadvantaged communities in Rajam, providing
addiction counseling, creating health awareness,
Providing mentorship to youth clubs, developing village libraries and
facilitating par ticipator y rural development.
BUSINESS PROFILE
GMR Holdings Pvt. Ltd. Is the holding company with 2
subsidiary companies- GMR Infrastructure Ltd. &
GMR Industries(Airports) Ltd.
Ownership structures has remained consistent with
equity proposed to be distributed equally among
Rao, his sons and his son-in-law.
Decision making Council Rao, Raju, Kiran, S.B & 2
independent non-family executives.
Due to the rapid expansion of the group, Rao in 2006
hired strategy consultants Mckinsey & Company, so
as to assign roles and responsibilities to each family
member.
keeping the
family
together, from
generation to
generation.
Fostering
stewardship among
family members to
promote the Groups
long-term success
and sustainability.
New focus on
family governance
form a family council,
comprising the four
male members
working at GMR and
their wives, to begin
discussing the values,
mission, vision and
key policies that
should go into a
family constitution.
invited an
internationally
renowned familybusiness advisor,
Peter Leach, to
assess the
familys situation
and make
governancerelated and other
recommendations
at a two-day
retreat.
FAMILY PHILOSOPHY
aimed to create a long-term sustainable governance
structure and set policies to serve the family in the
current generation and beyond
The effort was to strengthen and
sustain bonding among family
members.
two separate, though overlapping,
sets of core values for the family and
the business.
The family constitution articulated
and elaborated on each set, as these
were considered pillars of the
businesss culture and continuity.
Fur ther stipulations were that Rao would retire by age 70 at the
latest, with a successor chosen three years before his actual
retirement date. Until that date, the successor would be appointed
deputy chairman or a similar designation, with the leadership
transition conducted in a phased manner.
The successor would ser ve for five years and then of fer himself for re election. The future family directors were to retire at 65 years of age.
To make his mantra of keeping the family together work in practice,
Rao also included several formal organizational structures in the
constitution. These included the family council, the family business
forum, the non -business family forum and the founders business
of fice .
The constitution also provided a family code of conduct to ensure
ef fective family governance. The family agreed that the constitution
would undergo a formal review in ever y generation and once ever y 10
years. Constitution -related proposals from at least two members
belonging to dif ferent units would go to the family business forum for
comments before the proposals were submitted for approval by the
family council
Throughout this process, family member s never felt that they had done
enough collective development to emotional bonding, togetherness,
healthy relationships and conflict resolution .
The founder s business of fice team had identified training programs and
mentoring sessions for the third generation and suggested courses and
programs they could under take as they matured, keeping in mind
emerging leadership requirements for the business and family.
In April 2007, the counselor s included an American -based leader ship
exper t and coach, an organizational psychologist, an
emotional
intelligence exper t and a spiritual-behavioral coach.
All were engaged to help the family maintain mature and positive
per spectives and develop emotional intelligence, openness and
constructive communication skills in order to foster bonding in
relationships, which was crucial to practising the values specified by the
constitution .
the familys male members felt that outside help would benefit
the family because all four of them were aggressively pursuing
business growth and spent very little time together or with the
family.
The facilitators drew up individual development plans with
emphasis on developing competencies, behavioral skills and
spiritual intelligence.
The family focused on team-building, cohesiveness and personal
development plans.
The family had clearly benefited yet Rao planned to reduce the
familys dependence on such experts.
In 2008, the family was planning to organize a series of training
programs on managing dif ferences or conflicts of interest, with
the implication that the family members would become more
skilled in engaging in a meaningful dialogue without outside
help.
The speed and intensity with which Rao had created structures and
systems in the family were considered, several new concerns emerged.
For example, maintaining role clarity for individual members was not an
easy task .
The family planned to move out of operations and restrict themselves to
strategy -making in the long run
Their desire for growth and the external pressure to sustain their track
record of per formance would require all the male members of the family to
continue to be deeply involved in business, leaving limited time for family
governance matters.
Would they be able to find a true balance between work and family life?
Would all of them deliver value equally as per the expectations of other
stakeholders, without creating any sense of division between sons and son in-law?
Overarching these concerns was Raos wish that GMR would continue its
strong per formance fueled by a happy and collaborative family well into
future generations, even as Indias economy became increasingly complex
and competitive.
ELEMENTS OF THE
FAMILY GOVERNANCE
SYSTEM
FAMILY COUNCIL
At GMR the family council composed of the four male
members and their wives.
Primarily responsibility of the council was to develop
responsible business stewardship among shareholders.
The council met very two months.
The council appointed family advisors.
The FBF served as bridge between the business and the family.
In 2010, the FBF included only the male family members.
The FBF met at least once in every two months.
It also determined the dividend split between the family fund
and trusts.
FAMILY VALUES
The constitution indicated eight family values.
Humility, entrepreneurship, trust and faith and managing
dif ferences formed core values.
While the remaining four values were viewed as operating
principles.
The family also collectively established several principles to
be respected by all.