If it's Mechanical manufacturing even Indian private cos sucks.
I would like to continue a bit along this subject (hence why I split this thread off to new one) as its not a black and white issue after all.
Let us look at an example of one success story to give a bit of contrast to the overall failure (given India's vast size and potential):
Mahindra first got into lot of North American market through its tractor and related products of that size.
But now they have moved to off-road/farm UTV based on the old (licensed under license raj time) willy jeep design and have created quite a successful reliable and popular product in the sector:
UTV not street legal (extra kit needed), and there is trademark/design dispute with Chrysler over Jeep similarity (that chrysler owns rights to exclusively in US) that mahindra lost in arbitration recently, but mahindra working on fixing that now.
But features that have really stood out to me are the RnD involved in especially the brakes and leaf spring suspension with this new development....having driven the old mahindra jeep in India to reference the traditional problems with those (baked in with little competition for 40+ odd years).
They have also adapted quite well to US market, in that the breakdown is roughly 50% import, 50% local by component value of stock builds (I believe assembled in Michigan, not surprising).
Here is example of one where the guy takes (re-sale) delivery of one and plans to make his street legal (his later videos show the upgrade process the goes through):
At end of video (after some use) is a good frank review, he is quite satisfied....he (well his dad) rates it even better than JD Gator.
So what can Indian manufacturing sector and industry consultants learn? What can case studies for say the best folks at IIM etc be?
I would say it has to involve identifying and understanding the mech engg. successfull stories like this one, especially those bought by "salt of the earth" folks in developed markets, since they are in the tough environment and plan to use to maximum etc...and then expand that earned credibility into urban areas etc...
All part of process to then backwork the "why" and "how" part and implementing more of those policies both in automotive and other mech sectors (marine, rail, power etc).
Just like how japanese and koreans did it (robust consumer + supply + policy studies) to fix reliability, improve credibility and then entrench positive USP in mech sector.
@Milspec @ANMDT @#comcom @Gautam @Paro @Joe Shearer @T-123456 @Saithan et al.
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