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NIMBLE AND AGILE
The list of the Fastest Growing Mid Cap Companies in the Sultanate
of Oman throws up quite a few surprises
Here is a quick quiz; name the company behind A’Safwah Dairy products
and Dahabi. The answer is Dhofar Cattle Feed and Oman Flour Mills
respectively. This is not a check on how knowledgeable readers are
about brands, but a proof that there are companies which are
redefining the market with innovative and strong offerings. These
may not be companies that are in the limelight as some of the bigger
companies but they are the stars of tomorrow.
On the move
The best performers never stay still, especially if they are small.
The smaller a company, is the more paranoid it can be, given a
certain amount of ambition, about beating the competition and
outwitting the behemoths who dominate the market. For a small
company survival depends on efficiency and agility.
Globally large corporations have always focused on turning
themselves into oligarchs and reducing competition to the point
where profits are easy and the future reassured. That move has
worked for some conglomerates but sounded the death knell for
others. Content, flabby large companies have increasingly seen their
businesses melt in the face of competition from new players who
change the dynamics and rules of the market through innovation and
boldness. This is the reason why the list of OER’s Top 20 companies
(the largest companies in Oman) for 2008 reads differently from five
years back and will read even more different 10 years hence. The
future belongs to today’s hungry entrepreneurs. It is they who will
have the ideas, inventions and investor backing required to change
the rules of the game.
As Oman’s economy develops and opens up, it is new entrepreneurs who
think big and act fast who will be able to read the changing
mindsets of consumers and provide them with the products and
services that they desire.
Only the paranoid survive
It can all go wrong for a number of these companies if not all.
Playing to be a winner is a dangerous, high risk strategy. But
that’s what makes watching mid-sized companies all the more
compelling and exciting – and rewarding. For, the companies which
will make it will enrich investors beyond anything that they can get
by parking money in blue chips.
While no research can identify the companies which will be the next
big thing, broadly companies can be divided into two types – those
which are driven primarily by money and those infused with a mission
– a goal or challenge that goes beyond money making. Such passion
combined with a healthy dose of savvy is what determines long term
success.
Young companies have a greater chance of making it in a young
country like Oman than anywhere else in the world. But this is not a
message meant to reassure. Indeed assurance of any kind is like the
kiss of death for the companies that have featured on OER’s Fastest
Growing Companies survey. Only the paranoid and hungry will make it.
Only the relentless but calculated pursuit of growth, without
sacrificing costs and quality, will allow the mid-cap of today to
blossom into the blue chip of tomorrow.

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December - 2008 |
| Cover
Story |
In The Fast Lane
An OER-United Securities survey of
the Fastest Growing Large Cap Companies in the Sultanate of Oman |
Nimble and Agile
The list of the Fastest Growing Mid Cap Companies in the Sultanate of
Oman throws up quite a few surprises |
| Other
Headlines |
New phase in fixed lines
The awarding of the second fixed line licence to Nawras signals
the end of monopoly in the telecom sector, writes Visvas Paul D
Karra |
The Perfectionist
Dr Andy Wood, Shell Country Chairman has struck a perfect balance
between the call of duty and his personal life writes Mayank Singh |
A Stellar Platform
Ali Rashid Al-Jarwan, General Manager - Abu Dhabi
Marine Operating Company (ADMA-OPCO) and Chairman of the recently
held Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition & Conference (ADIPEC)
2008 speaks to Jessica Brookes of OER on the sidelines of the
conference in Abu Dhabi |
IN DEPTH
The Best
10 of 2008
OER draws up a list of the best policy initiatives, newsmakers,
automobiles, gadgets, and books this year |
NEW BEGINNING
Luxury cars are not
something we would normally associate with Korean cars, but
Hyundai was looking to change that image. MALCOLM XAVIER CRASTA
WRITES |
eCASH
The ePayment Gateway promises to revolutionise the way we do
transactions. All that we may need is a bank card and a secure
Internet connection to buy and sell and pay our phone bills,
writes Visvas Paul D Karra |
IF YOU HAVE IT,
FLAUNT IT
Samsonite’s positioning as a luxury lifestyle brand has
helped it graduate from being a commodity to an aspiration.
Mayank Singh reports |
Scaling-Up
Despite being a late entrant in the Middle East market, the
Malaysian auto major Proton has chalked out an aggressive plan
to penetrate the regional market. Akshay Bhatnagar reports from
Malaysia |
CREATIVE THINKING
The third Infiniti Power Talk delivered by Mind Mapping Guru
– Tony Buzan empowered Oman’s powerful business leaders with
effective inputs on creative thinking and leadership |
An Enviable
Track Record
Majan Consolidated has grown from from strength to strength,
thanks to a penchant for quality products and uncompromising
service standards |
Football fever in
the air
Sports’ marketing
takes off in a big way as companies make a beeline to associate
themselves with football before the forthcoming Gulf Cup. Mayank
Singh reports |
AN ACE PLAYER
Domain knowledge,
patience and reinvesting in the business have helped Muscat
Sports to become a leading company in sports merchandising
company. Mayank Singh reports |
OBAMA AND THE CURRENCY MARKETS
Barack Obama’s
constituencies in the US trade unions and Detroit automakers may
lead to a more hawkish rhetoric against China endangering the export
potential of the Middle Kingdom |
Banking on the
Future
Oman’s banking sector seems poised to go through the global
financial meltdown without much of an impact, though it may lose
some steam in the short-to-medium term |
FDI
flow and economic reforms
Saudi Arabia has become the highest recipient of foreign
direct investments in the region, thanks to its economic reforms
and liberalisation policies |
Ducab Enhances its
backward integration
Late Sheikh Rashid
bin Saeed Al Maktoum founded Ducab in 1979 as a joint venture
between the Government of Dubai and the BICC group |
Against all odds
Dr Nasser Zaher Nasser
Al Mauly, CEO, A’Saffa Poultry Farms, stuns you with his
never-say-die attitude both professionally and personally. He
believes in and has immersed himself in the maxim ‘living life to
the fullest’ |
|
What is the best way to survive an economic
slowdown? |
| Regulars |
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