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Globalisation,
Ranbaxy style
US
to become largest market by 2003
Corporate
India is only beginning to respond to the challenge of globalisation.
To be sure, quite a few companies do indeed aspire to be global
players, but they have only succeeded up to a point or in
specific conjunctures like being the world’s lowest cost producer
of scooters, aluminium or steel. The transition from being
lowest cost producers to becoming world class hasn’t happened
till now. A low ranking in Asia’s 1,000 largest companies
is all that has been achieved so far. Corporates like Ranbaxy
Laboratories Ltd, however, are different than the rest in
their strategies of globalisation. The company was guided
by a clear vision of becoming a research-based international
pharmaceutical company and has made determined strides to
acquire an international profile since the 1990s. These efforts
appear to be paying off, if the speech of Mr D S Brar, CEO
of Ranbaxy — at a meeting on “Globalising Indian business
— The way forward” organised by the Confederation of Indian
Industry — is any indication. The company’s US operations
will become the largest contributor to its global sales by
2003. Ranbaxy’s sales to the American market, which started
only in February 1998, are expected to cross $220 million
by then. Ten years from now, the company’s corporate strategy
also will be dictated by its US strategy. These are noteworthy
statements from one of India’s multinational companies. But
how did Ranbaxy succeed in getting this far?
Like most Indian corporates, the company also had to overcome
the “liability of Indianness” — to borrow an expression of
Sumantra Ghoshal, Gita Piramal and Christopher Bartlett in
the book Managing radical change. Expectations of low cost,
low price and low margins bedevil their efforts to go global.
Amidst such expectations, margins obviously cannot be raised
to enhance global competitiveness. Despite such constraints,
however, Ranbaxy responded by moving up the value curve: from
bulk drugs and intermediates to generics and conventional
dosage forms. Then on to value added and branded generics
and later to new drug delivery systems. The ultimate ambition
is of course to participate in new drug discoveries in the
future. Moving up such a curve improves the bottomline as
margins on bulk substances and intermediates do not exceed
10 per cent but go up to 100 per cent or more for new drug
discoveries. Ranbaxy also realised that it cannot make headway
in going global without having a major US presence — which
it sought to do by acquiring critical mass through acquisitions.
Ranbaxy’s surefooted moves to stake a major American presence
deserve to be closely tracked by corporate India as it comes
to terms with globalisation.
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