MUMBAI: In 2007, Subrata N. Chakravarty wrote a remembrance piece on Forbes editor and his mentor James W Michaels for India Abroad. This what he had to say: “Jim was far more to me than my editor. He was also my mentor and friend. He brought me into journalism, taught me, supported me when others were sceptical of my analysis, and helped me succeed.”
Little did Subrata know that 18 years later another respected scribe Raju Narisetti would be writing to inform the world about his passing while at the same time thanking him for his goodness when he was alive. This is how Raju described Subrata: : “Mourning the loss of a pioneering Indian journalist in America and a friend to many of us who chose to be journalists in the US, and looked up to him and benefited from his friendship and counsel. Subrata was a founding board member of South Asian Journalists Association (SAJA) in 2001. Thank you, Subrata, for your kindness and generosity.”
Subrata passed away on 1 February 2025 in the United States after a career that saw him stay at Forbes for 27 years from June 1972 to November 998 with his mentor James Michaels and transform it from a struggling magazine to one of the most respected business publications in the US.
He then served as senior editor for The Boston Consulting Company from November 1998 through April 2000. He worked as an assistant manager and editor for Institutional Investor Magazine from January 2001 through June 2003, and as an editor and reporter for Bloomberg News from July 2003 through November 2006.
Born in Kolkata, and after an AB in Political Science from Yale University and an MBA from Harvard Business School, Subrata spent his time at Forbes mentoring scores of young journalists.
He was greatly influenced by Jim who had told him: in his early days “if a story wasn't fresh, it should not be written….. if the herd was running one way, the story was quite often in the other direction…..writers have to be "the drama critic of business," bluntly judging the performance of top management.”
He made those nuggets of advice his leitmotifs throughout his career always looking for a new angle to a story or development. He also passed on that advice to those he mentored. He set up a company SNC Media, helping journalists to polish their interviewing, research, analytical and writing skills. He used the problem-solving techniques learned at the Harvard Business School with a writing style and attitude developed at Forbes magazine to help journalists tell factually accurate, compelling and entertaining stories.
Subrata through his career did in depth interviews with the likes of futurist Herman Kahn of the Hudson Institute, management thinker Peter Drucker, Edwin Land of Polaroid, and Harold Geneen of ITT. But most of all he researched everything about companies and predicted the success of many and the downfall of some – rather with a high per centage of accuracy.
Subrata leaves behind the following members of his family : Barbara, Anjali and Joya.