Sunil Bharti Mittal
India
Sunil Bharti Mittal
  • Founder and Chairman, Bharti Enterprises (Telecommunications)
Born Punjab, India, 1957. Punjab University, Bachelor of Arts (1976); Harvard Business School, OPM (1999).
“I have always been the kind of person who needed knowledge, and so rather than picking it up from consultants, like McKinsey and others, I was always willing to dive into new situations, learn, and bring knowledge back to the company.”

Summary

In this interview, Sunil Mittal, founder and CEO of Bharti Enterprises, narrates the circumstances and motivations that led him to found Bharti Enterprises, as well as some of the strategies he used to grow the company to a world leader in telecommunications.

His career began in trading, where he came into contact with large global corporations like Suzuki Motor Company from Japan, Siemens from German, and others. He became fascinated by the inner workings of these companies—how they operated so succinctly at such a large scale—and learned many important lessons in management that he would later incorporate at Bharti. This initial trading business was also what ultimately brought him to the telecommunications industry. Mittal describes how, at a trade show in Taiwan, in October 1982, he saw a push-button phone for the first time in his life and became determined that he would bring the technology back to India. In the interview, he explains how he ultimately achieved this goal by disassembling the telephones and building a manufacturing facility that could reassemble them in India.

Throughout the 1980s, his company—then known as Beetel—began adding other products like cordless phones and answering machines. By 1992, Mittal’s group had become well-known in India as a respected telecom business, and got an opportunity to bid for a mobile phone license. This, Mittal explains, was a major turning point for the group. Although he would be bidding against giants like Tata and Birla, he was determined to participate, and ultimately won the license for Delhi. This same determination—and drive to take on challenges that many small companies wouldn’t—has continued to characterize Mittal’s career ever since.

Mittal goes on to discuss management practices at Bharti, as well as his personal philosophies on the best trajectory of growth to achieve success and remain competitive in the long-term. He explains how his early interactions with Japanese companies gave him a great appreciation for empowering employees with the ability to take decisions on their own, and also his view about the evolving relationship between professional and entrepreneur-led management.

Mittal also talks at length about his unique approach to financing his business in the early years. He explains that “deep pocket” industries—like telecoms—are typically avoided by small companies, because they are perceived as requiring a significant initial capital investment. Mittal, however, realized early on that a more productive way to approach telecommunications was from a “modular” perspective. “You can start with a 10,000-line exchange and a few base stations,” he explains in the interview, and then go from there, depending on its performance. In the interview, Mittal describes how he applied this same strategy in deals with Ericsson, as well as global expansion—with varying degrees of success.

Mittal concludes the interview by sharing his views on how the industry has evolved over time, how his company is learning to adapt to competition from new players entering the market, and how Bharti is developing new strategies to streamline operations and improve efficiency.

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In this interview, Sunil Mittal, founder and CEO of Bharti Enterprises, narrates the circumstances and motivations that led him to found Bharti Enterprises, as well as some of the strategies he used to grow the company to a world leader in telecommunications.

His career began in trading, where he came into contact with large global corporations like Suzuki Motor Company from Japan, Siemens from German, and others. He became fascinated by the inner workings of these companies—how they operated so succinctly at such a large scale—and learned many important lessons in management that he would later incorporate at Bharti. This initial trading business was also what ultimately brought him to the telecommunications industry. Mittal describes how, at a trade show in Taiwan, in October 1982, he saw a push-button phone for the first time in his life and became determined that he would bring the technology back to India. In the interview, he explains how he ultimately achieved this goal by disassembling the telephones and building a manufacturing facility that could reassemble them in India.

Throughout the 1980s, his company—then known as Beetel—began adding other products like cordless phones and answering machines. By 1992, Mittal’s group had become well-known in India as a respected telecom business, and got an opportunity to bid for a mobile phone license. This, Mittal explains, was a major turning point for the group. Although he would be bidding against giants like Tata and Birla, he was determined to participate, and ultimately won the license for Delhi. This same determination—and drive to take on challenges that many small companies wouldn’t—has continued to characterize Mittal’s career ever since.

Mittal goes on to discuss management practices at Bharti, as well as his personal philosophies on the best trajectory of growth to achieve success and remain competitive in the long-term. He explains how his early interactions with Japanese companies gave him a great appreciation for empowering employees with the ability to take decisions on their own, and also his view about the evolving relationship between professional and entrepreneur-led management.

Mittal also talks at length about his unique approach to financing his business in the early years. He explains that “deep pocket” industries—like telecoms—are typically avoided by small companies, because they are perceived as requiring a significant initial capital investment. Mittal, however, realized early on that a more productive way to approach telecommunications was from a “modular” perspective. “You can start with a 10,000-line exchange and a few base stations,” he explains in the interview, and then go from there, depending on its performance. In the interview, Mittal describes how he applied this same strategy in deals with Ericsson, as well as global expansion—with varying degrees of success.

Mittal concludes the interview by sharing his views on how the industry has evolved over time, how his company is learning to adapt to competition from new players entering the market, and how Bharti is developing new strategies to streamline operations and improve efficiency.

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Video Clips by Topic

Corporate Culture

Sunil Bharti Mittal, Founder and Chairman of Bharti Enterprises, describes instilling a culture of entrepreneurial professionalism within the company, which was influenced by working with large companies and his formative exposures to Japan, Korea, and Taiwan.


Fundraising

Sunil Bharti Mittal, Founder and Chairman of Bharti Enterprises, explains the capital necessary to create a mobile service business and the power of modularity.
Keywords: India, Fundraising


Global Expansion

Sunil Bharti Mittal, Founder and Chairman of Bharti Enterprises, discusses the company’s internationalization process and that the expansion into 15 African countries has ultimately failed due to the lack of appreciation for the problems faced within Africa and the company’s overconfidence.


Start-up

Sunil Bharti Mittal, Founder and Chairman of Bharti Enterprises, discusses entering the telecommunications industry by creating India’s first pushbutton phones in the early 1980s as a result of India banning the import of generators – his previous business. In 1992, he bid for a mobile phone license and after being challenged in High Court, launched India’s first mobile phone in 1995.


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Interview Citation Format

Interview with Sunil Bharti Mittal, interviewed by Tarun Khanna, Delhi, India, November 17, 2017, Creating Emerging Markets Project, Baker Library Historical Collections, Harvard Business School, http://www.hbs.edu/creating-emerging-markets/.