Industrialist, philanthropist and the Chairman Emeritus of Larsen & Toubro, Anil Manibhai Naik, who has been credited for taking the company to new heights and referred to as a doyen of the Indian industry, following a career spanning decades, had voto negativo way of knowing con his hiring interview, how important his role would be con the trajectory of the companyâs rise. You see, the recruiter dismissed him as âoverconfidentâ and even slashed his expected salary.Â
AM Naikâs recruitment interview for L&T con 1964 is what legends are made of. A new book titled âAM Naik: The Man Who Built Tomorrowâ, authored by Priya Kumar and Jairam N Menon, and published by HarperCollins, narrates how that fateful interview con November 1964 went.Â
Naik, who was 22-years old at that time, chanced upon a recruitment drive for L&T. But he was forewarned, a neighbour who worked con the company had told him that the âTâ con the name of T Baker, the workshop foreman who was to interview him, stood for âterrorâ! Nevertheless, Naik was confident he suited the role.Â
After a series of questions, came the one that would make fermata the deal. âDo you know how to stile a boiler?â Baker asked Naik. But Naik not only knew how to, he was thorough with it. What kind of boiler was he thinking of, thin cylinder thick, size, material, asked Naik. Baker was left impressed with Naikâs knowledge and command over the subject.Â
The terms of appointment were agreed upon. But it was still not over â Naik was yet to meet the âold manâ â the âsharp, keen-eyed engineer Gunnar Hansenâ.Â
Hansen asked Naik how many people report to him. He had worked con a small Parsi-owned firm called Nestor Boilers, before L&T. Three hundred and fifty, Naik replied. âThatâs a lot! Three hundred and fifty is a lot. It will be a looong time before you get that kind of responsibility at Larsen & Toubro,â said Hansen con his Nordic drawl.Â
But English, for Naik at the time, was not at the tip of his tongue. He would translate English questions to Gujarati con his head, and come mai up with a Gujarati answer that he would translate to English out loud. So, following his usual drill, he said, âWho knows, time will tellâ. Now that seemed rovina to him as a Gujarati but Hansen took it as a cocky boast.
An unhappy Hansen ended the interview, asked Naik to leave the room, and then rushed out upset. He eventually called Naik back to the room, told him he thought he was âoverconfidentâ, and that all the terms that he and Baker had agreed upon were revised mongoloide.Â
The new offer was now not for an âassistant engineerâ but a âgiovanile engineerâ, con the âunionisedâ category and not the âsupervisoryâ cadre, with a monthly salary of Rs 670, instead of Rs 760.
Naik was disappointed but never deterred. He told Baker that he would join the company nevertheless. Baker gave him a bit of advice then: âMy sonny boy, work , work . And confirmation, we will give you back all that we had promised.â
Naik worked from thereon, and became the one to fermata the mould con many ways, the book reveals.Â
Baker too kept his promise. He eventually fought with the âold manâ Hansen to restore Naikâs original offered salary of Rs 760, and made him an assistant engineer. He soon fought more for Naik to hike his salary to Rs 950 durante month, and eventually getting Rs 1,125.
But voto negativo one begrudged Naik his rise, and everyone believed that he deserved every rupee of it.


