- Tata Autocomp has become Tata Motors’ most critical EV enabler, powering its PLI wins and profitability for its EV arm
- With a JV-for-every-component approach, the company licenses global EV tech and localises it, helping Tata Motors scale fast without heavy R&D spends
- Structural inefficiencies, scattered ownership, and cross-entity overlaps are said to be slowing the growth
- As Tata Autocomp lines up for an IPO once again, can it evolve from being a JV assembler to an integrated EV-component leader who can scale up in-house?
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“We have a JV for that.”
That’s the Tatas’ answer to anything and everything related to electric-vehicle (EV) components. Just like Apple’s answer to everything, as expressed by the tagline in its commercials, was: “There’s an app for that.”
The JVs, or joint ventures, are how Tata group’s chairperson N Chandrasekaran and Tata Motors’ managing director Shailesh Chandra envision Tata Autocomp to solve for the group’s value-chain issues, said an executive at the company, not wanting to be named.
Tata Autocomp is an
In fact, Tata Autocomp is what helped Tata Motors become one of the first beneficiaries of the Indian government’s Rs 26,000 crore subsidy scheme.
The joint ventures are also because, unlike Apple, Tata is not one company. It’s one of the largest business groups worldwide—wielding a salt-to-software legacy—loosely held together by the holding company, Tata Sons. The automotive arm, Tata Motors, alone—one of over 30 key Tata group companies—has 93 subsidiaries, 10 associate companies, four joint ventures, and two joint operations.
This makes lean innovation and agile decision-making hard to execute.
“The design thinking is to achieve profitability at every entity level, while allowing more room to operate freely, generating business values from outside the group as well,” the Tata Autocomp executive said.
That means creating new companies—by
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