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"Indians have the ability to adapt to any situation they are faced with. They are also used to doing more with less (resources)... These factors make Indians successful," Hay Group's director Arvind Pandit said.
Considering the regulatory environment and conditions here, "people who have done business successfully in India, can be (image-Sanjay Jha, CEO, Motorola Mobility).successful anywhere in the world," he added.
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The businesses headed by these ten persons recorded revenue worth $410 billion last year and are said to be on a robust growth path for the years to come.
This figure is nearly double the value of Indian exports worth about $245 billion last fiscal and approximately one-third of total size of the Indian economy.
(image-Vikram Pandit, CEO, Citigroup).
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Germany-based global banking major Deutsche Bank has become the latest to join this league with the recent appointment of cricket-freak Anshu Jain as its co-CEO.
Jain, who once held a small stake in Indian Premier League cricket team Mumbai Indians of the Ambanis, was already handling a large part of $55-billion banking giant's businesses and his elevation to the top has been long awaited.(image-indra nooyi)
Another India-born banker Vikram Pandit was asked to head $111-billion Citigroup at a time when it was deep in financial crisis and he has successfully handled a turnaround.
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So, it does not come as a surprise when CEOs are being billed as the latest and leading export from India, given the multi-national giants like Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, PepsiCo, Unilever, Adobe, Mastercard and Motorola having Indian-origin persons in their top leadership positions.
International magazine Time also recently termed CEOs as India's leading export and said that the subcontinent could be 'the ideal training ground for global bosses'.
Experts believe that Indians' inherent focus on good education and their ability to work in difficult situations is aiding to the trend and more and more Indians could rise to top positions at global companies in near future.
Image: Anshu Jain, co-CEO, Deutsche Bank.
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Besides Indian-origin persons in their leadership teams, the other common factor for many of these companies is their focus on new frontiers for business growth.
Also, many of them are into consumer-focused businesses and are looking to target the growing purchasing power of Indian middle-class in a big way.
Image: Ajit Jain, CEO, Reinsurance Division, Berkshire Hathaway Inc.
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"Our country's education system is good... then, Indians are by nature oriented to do things (in a good manner) in whatever they want to do," he added.
Executive search firm GlobalHunt's director Sunil Goel said that professionals in India have become global professionals and "they have capabilities, skills and wide exposure to manage cross geographical business and they are being identified by many of the global giants for top roles."
Image: Shantanu Narayen, CEO, Adobe.
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Not
surprisingly, most Indian-origin persons holding top positions at
global giants have risen through ranks in their professional career,
with the sole exception of steel giant ArcelorMittal, which also happens
to be promoted by Mittal.
The list includes food and beverage
major PepsiCo with Indra Nooyi as Chairman and CEO, FMCG giant Unilever
as Harish Manwai as its global COO, IT firm Adobe having Shantanu
Narayen as CEO, Mastercard with Ajay Banga as its chief and Sanjay Jha
heading Motorola Mobility.
There is also Ajit Jain, who heads reinsurance business of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway empire and has been termed as most productive CEO of his group by the legendary investor himself. Besides, his name has been doing the rounds as potential successor of Buffett for a long time.
Image: Harish Manwai, COO, FMCG giant Unilever.
There is also Ajit Jain, who heads reinsurance business of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway empire and has been termed as most productive CEO of his group by the legendary investor himself. Besides, his name has been doing the rounds as potential successor of Buffett for a long time.
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Vindi Banga has previously held top level positions at Unilever, while his brother Ajay Banga, now with Mastercard, was previously retail banking head of Citigroup.
In the past, there have been many other Indians at the top positions, such as Arun Sarin as CEO UK-based telecom giant Vodafone.
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Also, Europe's top business school Insead has Dipak Jain as its head, while Harvard has Nitin Nohria as its dean.
Global HR major ManpowerGroup India's managing director Sanjay Pandit said that India was fast emerging as the key source for providing talent to drive the global economy.
"I feel we would see more and more Indians making to the top positions with global organisations," he said.
Image: Ajay Banga headed Mastercard as its CEO. Global HR major ManpowerGroup India's managing director Sanjay Pandit said that India was fast emerging as the key source for providing talent to drive the global economy.
"I feel we would see more and more Indians making to the top positions with global organisations," he said.
Deloitte's
Thiruvengadam also said that Indians were becoming more mobile and have
always been talented and hard working, which help them in achieving
success.
Hay Group's Pandit said that "Indians have the right
mindset, which is suited to succeed in crisis situations. And they are
also good at complimenting the systems in the West."
He, however, cautioned that Indians are used to doing things themselves and might sometimes find it harder to get work done through others (like in Western countries).
Image: Arcelor Mittal chairman Lakshmi N Mittal. 
He, however, cautioned that Indians are used to doing things themselves and might sometimes find it harder to get work done through others (like in Western countries).
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