Rejected by College, Gautam Adani Now Invited to Speak After Building $220 Billion Empire

Gautam Adani, who was rejected by a Mumbai college in the late 1970s, has built a USD 220 billion empire. Decades later, he was invited to deliver a lecture at the same institution on Teachers Day. Adani moved to Mumbai at 16 and began working as a diamond sorter. Around 1977 or 1978, he applied to Jai Hind College but was not accepted.

Adanis College Rejection to Lecture Invite

Early Career and Challenges

Adani's elder brother Vinod had studied at Jai Hind College, which influenced his decision to apply there. Despite the rejection, Adani pursued business, starting with diamond sorting. Vikram Nankani, President of the Jai Hind College Alumni Association, introduced Adani as a "deemed alumni" during his lecture. Nankani said, "Fortunately or unfortunately, the college did not accept him and he went on to work full time and pursued an alternative career."

After nearly two years in Mumbai, Adani returned to Gujarat to manage a packaging factory run by his brother. In 1998, he launched his own firm trading in commodities. Over the next two-and-a-half decades, his companies expanded into various sectors including ports, mines, infrastructure, power, city gas, renewable energy, cement, real estate, data centres and media.

Expanding Horizons

Adani's ventures now include operating 13 seaports and seven airports in India. He is also the largest private player in power and renewable energy production. His company is the second-largest cement producer in India and is involved in building expressways and redeveloping Asia's largest slums.

During his lecture titled "Breaking Boundaries: The Power of Passion and Unconventional Paths to Success," Adani shared insights from his journey. He said he chose to leave education at 16 to move to Mumbai for new opportunities. "People still ask me, 'Why did you move to Mumbai? Why did you not complete your education?' The answer lies in the heart of every young dreamer who sees boundaries not as barriers but as challenges that test his courage," he said.

Lessons from Mumbai

Adani described Mumbai as his training ground where he learned about business through diamond trading. "The field of trading makes a good teacher. I learnt very early that an entrepreneur can never be frozen by over-evaluating the choices in front of him," he said. He emphasised that Mumbai taught him to think big and dream beyond boundaries.

In the 1980s, Adani established a trading organisation importing polymers for small-scale industries. By age 23, his venture was successful. Following India's economic liberalisation in 1991, he set up a global trading house dealing in polymers, metals, textiles and agri-products. "Within two years, we had become the largest global trading house in the country," he said.

Public Market Success

In 1994, Adani Exports (now Adani Enterprises) went public with an IPO that was highly successful. This experience highlighted for him the importance of public markets. He realised that breaking new boundaries required challenging his own status quo and investing in assets for a solid foundation.

In the mid-1990s, global commodities trader Cargill approached Adani for a partnership to manufacture and source salt from Kutch in Gujarat. Although the partnership didn't materialise, they were left with about 40,000 acres of marshy land and approval to build a jetty at Mundra for salt export.

Mundra Port Transformation

Adani saw potential in what others considered barren land. Today, Mundra hosts India's largest port and industrial Special Economic Zone (SEZ), among other significant facilities. "And yet, we’re only about 10 per cent of what Mundra will eventually become," he said.

Currently, Adani is developing the world's largest renewable energy park in Kutch's deserts and redeveloping Dharavi slums in Mumbai. He stated that their journey is defined not by victories but by overcoming challenges.

The article concludes with Adani's reflection on their achievements: "While we have helped redefine India's infrastructure across airports, ports, logistics, industrial parks and energy it is not the victories that define us. It is the mindset to take on and overcome challenges that have shaped the Adani Group's journey."

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