Diageo shakes up management team

Move underscores ambitions in emerging markets

Guinness parent company Diageo says China and India are “key growth engines” for the group. Photograph: Eric Luke
Guinness parent company Diageo says China and India are “key growth engines” for the group. Photograph: Eric Luke

Guinness parent Diageo vodka, has shaken up its management team in a move that underscores its ambitions in emerging markets and lays down a marker by chief executive Ivan Menezes.

Mr Menezes, who has been in the post for less than a year, said yesterday that China and India were “key growth engines” for the group and entrusted their development to a dedicated manager.

He appointed Gilbert Ghostine, head of Asia Pacific since 2009, to the role of president Diageo India and Greater China, and chief corporate development officer.

Mr Ghostine will also have responsibility for Moët-Hennessy, the upmarket cognac and champagne business owned by LVMH and in which Diageo has a 34 per cent stake.

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The role builds on the relationship established by Mr Ghostine with the luxury goods group from his days managing continental Europe. Moët Hennessy also distributes some Diageo drinks in China.

Paul Walsh, chief executive until Mr Menezes took over last July, made a number of acquisitions in his 12 years at the helm. Though Mr Menezes is also interested in bolt-on acquisitions, he has put the accent on integration and execution of these businesses. "Over the last few years the scale and shape of our business in Asia-Pacific has transformed, primarily by the acquisitions we have made in India and greater China," said Mr Menezes. He said the management changes "focus on growth".

Mr Ghostine will face challenges in both markets. In India, seen as a potentially huge whiskey market, Diageo has fallen short of its ambition to own a majority stake by now in tycoon Vijay Mallya’s United Spirits of India. Diageo holds 28.78 per cent, but is facing legal action over a portion of that stake.

In China, where Diageo took majority control of Shui Jing Fang, a premium baijiu (white spirits) company last year, the group has faced an economic slowdown. – (Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2014)