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The Axe effect: Competition acquires an edge
Axe angels are working overtime these days. Ever since Hindustan Unilever launched the ‘Call Me’ campaign that shows a girl giving her phone number to a boy doused in Axe, the angels (as the girls in the commercials are called) have received 3.5 million calls. And the phones just don’t stop ringing these days.

More follow-on required
Business Standard / New Delhi November 11, 2009, 0:19 IST

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CM sets September 15 deadline for airport
The Mysore Mandakalli Airport will become operational by September 15 just before the Dasara, commencing on September 18, chief minister B S Yeddyurappa said in Mysore yesterday.
Public Company

Corus may get the Tata tag next year

The Tatas are planning a new-look for their first prestigious acquisition Corus Steel next year, a move that coincides with the company emerging from the financial burdens and the global downturn. - A K Bhattacharya: Sweet and bitter memories of a decade">A K Bhattacharya: Sweet and bitter memories of a decade - Tatas rejects 10 mn pound UK loan: report - Versace mulls to expand presence in India - Tatas to launch Freelander SUV on September 22 - DTH operators ask govt to rationalise taxes - Tata Sons wins cybersquatting case against MakeMyTrip The rebranding exercise for the Anglo-Dutch steel maker is underway and the process will start by the middle of 2010. "I can confirm that it has always been Corus" intention to adopt the Tata Steel brand as its visual identity," a Corus spokesperson said. "In fact, the transition began more than a year ago when Tata Steel Europe became the legal name for Corus, and our international operations already bear the Tata Steel brand. A gradual transition for the rest of Corus could start by the middle of 2010...," the spokesperson said, adding however, a final decision is awaited. Tata Steel had acquired Corus in 2007 for over $12 billion and rechristened it as Tata Steel Europe last year. Queries regarding the likely cost on this major exercise evinced no response from the company but the move, sources say, is likely to entail huge expenditure as the European arm is still widely known as Corus and therefore would require a massive exercise to change the names of offices, stationary, vehicles and locations. However, the Tata Group, sources added, sees no financial constraints for the exercise. Corus, which was formed following merger of British Steel and the Netherlands" Koninklijke Hoogovens in 1999, is now the second largest steel producer in Europe with an annual revenue of around 12 billion pound. Corus contributes to a hefty 70 per cent of the 28 million tonne crude steel production of the Tata Steel Group. The company has 40,000 employees.


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