We've got to create a more enabling environment for more first-time entrepreneurs to emerge
Kishore Biyani can sometimes get overly aggressive in betting on the future. He’s also prone to occasional flights of fancy—and to top it all, often fails
to pass the test on execution.
But in my book, he has one trait that perhaps overrides all his other flaws: He is an original thinker. Or else, he wouldn’t have succeeded in creating a $2.5 billion enterprise from scratch in about 15 years. During this period, I’ve watched him from the sidelines as he fought against all odds to create retail businesses based on astute insights about the lives of millions of Indians.
(This story appears in the 22 June, 2012 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)