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The progressive, driven and enterprising Kiran Mazumdar,
is
almost everything one would look for in a woman of her
caliber.
With
a decent academic his tory from the Bishop Cot ton Girls
School and then the Mount Carmel College, she then went on
to Ballarat College, Melbourne, specializing in Malting
and Brewing Technology there to become India’s first
woman Brew master.
The
now 51 year old, set up a little operation in 1978 to
extract an enzyme from papayas in her garage in a leafy
neighborhood of Bangalore, few at that time in India had
ever heard of biotechnology. Her ambition was to build a
world-class institution using India’s own scientific
talent. Today she heads the leading biotech firm in India,
Biocon, a company that has evolved from a maker of enzymes
to a major pharmaceutical enterprise producing everything
from insulin to antibodies, with annual revenues of $122
million.
She
collaborated with an Irish firm to start of Biocon and
floated 2 joint ventures, Biochemizyme and Biocon-Quest
India Ltd. With her commitment to individual enterprise,
she has held positions in industry councils, including
Vice-President, Association of Women Entrepreneurs of
Karnataka (AWAKE). Rightly, she was awarded Rotary Award
for Best Model Employer, National Award for Best Small
Industry, and most note worthily, the Padmashri in 1989
from the Government of India.
A
more prestigious assignment came her way, after the S.M.
Krishna government came to power, which was that of a
Chairperson of the Vision Group on Biotechnology to draw
up the State's Biotech Policy. The policy was announced
recently, just before the ‘Bio.Com’ and is the first
ever such policy in the country with farsighted provisions
and help to the industry. It is only after Karnataka
announced its policy that Hyderabad did so.
Kiran
is very upfront about responding the way Biocon happened
to India. Kiran said she got the huge inspiration from
"A chance meeting with the founder of Biocon
International, Leslie Auchincloss marked the start of
Biocon India. I had dreamt of doing many things but never
of starting a company of my own," she admits.
However
it was not a silk route. Banks and financial institutions
had never heard of biotechnology back then and shied away
from her proposals. And being the so called weaker sex did
not make her quest facile.
This
was also the problem when she started recruiting, because
people were cagey of working for a woman. But it did not
take long for Kiran to dispel those myths. Ask her today
whether things have changed, and she will probably roll
out statistics of the number of people working for her and
remark with a twinkle in her luminous eyes.
Ever
since Biocon became the exhortation in the market for the
emerging field of biotechnology, Kiran has been a
much-quoted personality. But she will always tells you
that her belief in the field, a magnificent team of people
who shared her passion for the subject, determination and
urge to succeed have all contributed to Biocon's
reputation as the leader in the field
Kiran
is never the one to be satisfied with what she is doing or
started. New things ignite her imagination and she craves
to do something different. It was this same yearning,
which probably saw her researching, and publishing a book.
Even
though the book bespeaks of her field of expertise, she
says that the collaboration, she says, proved to be very
fruitful. Her first coffee table book ‘Ale and Arty’
was released a few months ago. It is all about brewing
beer and is juxtapose with paintings by some of India’s
best artists.
Finding
place in the book are some of the famous brewing families
in the world along with beer firms in the country. Artists
who have worked for it include S G Vasudev, Yusuf Arakkal,
Anuradha Nalapat, TM Aziz, Gurudas Shenoy, cartoonist
Ponnappa and, Jatin Das.
Besides
being lauded for the obvious there is another face of
Kiran, which many Bangaloreans are familiar with, though
it has been less visible of late. And that is her passion
for Bangalore. She has actively campaigned and raised her
voice for things, which she felt were need - civic
amenities, roads, cleanliness etc.
She
was the core member of a group of Bangaloreans who used to
meet regularly to discuss the problems ailing the city,
which included among others former Chief Secretary T.P.
Issar and former Union Minister Ramakrishna Hegde. Due to
her commitments and added responsibilities, she appears to
have discontinued these meetings.
But
her commitment is solid nevertheless. She was among the
first to hail the Bangalore Agenda Task Force (BATF)
initiative and added her mite to it by contributing Rupees
One Crore. Her donations went towards starting the
Swachcha Bangalore programme of door-to-door collection of
garbage.
Coming
back to the bigger picture, the ace entrepreneur has
mammoth ideas planned up, which is a vision to grow into a
global bio-therapeutics company with very innovative and
proprietary products and technologies. She hopes to
discover a few new drug molecules in three-four years
through a new in-house initiative.
Mazumdar-Shaw,
whose firm was singled out as a World Economic Forum Tech
Pioneer in 2001, aims to make Biocon one of the world's
top-five biotech companies in the not-too-distant
future. |