Dhirubhai Ambani
![Dhirubhai Ambani](/assets/img/authors/dhirubhai-ambani.jpg)
Dhirubhai Ambani
Dhirajlal Hirachand "Dhirubhai" Ambaniwas an Indian business tycoon who founded Reliance Industries in Bombay with his cousin. He had been figured in the The Sunday Times top 50 businessmen in Asia. Ambani took Reliance Industries public in 1977 and by 2007, the combined fortune of the family was $60 billion, making the Ambanis the third richest family in the world. Ambani died on 6 July 2002. In 2016, He was honored posthumously with the Padma Vibhushan, India's second highest civilian...
NationalityIndian
ProfessionEntrepreneur
Date of Birth28 December 1932
CityChorvad, India
CountryIndia
Dhirubhai Ambani quotes about
One must have ambition and one must understand the minds ... of men.
Our dreams have to be bigger. Our ambitions higher. Our commitment deeper. And our efforts greater. This is my dream for Reliance and for India.
Secret of my success was to have ambition and know minds of men.
Challenge negative forces with hope, self-confidence and conviction. I believe that ambition and initiative will ultimately triumph.
There is no question about that. Business is my hobby. It is not a burden to me. In any case Reliance now can run without me.
I dream of India becoming a great economic superpower.
A motivated manpower is the most important thing.
Never. Till my last breath I will work. To retire there is only one place-the cremation ground.
Does making money excite me? No, but I have to make money for my shareholders. What excites me is achievement, doing something difficult.
We cannot change our rulers, but we can change the way they rule us.
Play on the frontiers of technology. Be ahead of the tomorrows.
Reliance's success is a reflection of India's capabilities, the talent of her people and the potential of her entrepreneurs, engineers, managers, and workers.
The success of the young entrepreneur will be the key to India's transformation in the new millennium.
Dhirubhai will go one day. But Reliance's employees and shareholders will keep it afloat. Reliance is now a concept in which the Ambanis have become irrelevant.