Chandra looks toward retirement
Billionaire Zee founder wants to bow out within two years
Nov 4, 2009
"I would certainly want to retire within a year or two in order to do better things than making money," he said after receiving a lifetime award at the Cable & Satellite Association of Asia annual convention.
He did not definitively announce a successor, but spoke highly of Punit Goenka, currently CEO of Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited, at one point describing him as "like a son."
Credited with creating the market in India for direct-to-home satellite TV and the Indian pay-TV model, 58-year old Chandra explained that there comes a time when people need to work on spirituality and prepare for the next life. His early career began far from the media business and spanned rice exporting and later toothpaste-tube manufacturing.
Asked about the future of the Indian pay-TV market, which is currently served by six DTH platforms, Chandra forecast that consolidation over the next five years would reduce that to four; state-owned Doordarshan, one local player and two nationwide services.
In 2007, Fortune rated Chandra as the 407th richest man in the world, with a fortune then estimated at $2.3 billion.
Chandra looks toward retirement
Billionaire Zee founder wants to bow out within two years
Nov 4, 2009
"I would certainly want to retire within a year or two in order to do better things than making money," he said after receiving a lifetime award at the Cable & Satellite Association of Asia annual convention.
He did not definitively announce a successor, but spoke highly of Punit Goenka, currently CEO of Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited, at one point describing him as "like a son."
Credited with creating the market in India for direct-to-home satellite TV and the Indian pay-TV model, 58-year old Chandra explained that there comes a time when people need to work on spirituality and prepare for the next life. His early career began far from the media business and spanned rice exporting and later toothpaste-tube manufacturing.
Asked about the future of the Indian pay-TV market, which is currently served by six DTH platforms, Chandra forecast that consolidation over the next five years would reduce that to four; state-owned Doordarshan, one local player and two nationwide services.
In 2007, Fortune rated Chandra as the 407th richest man in the world, with a fortune then estimated at $2.3 billion.









