Here the shocking news about Apple....
Apple India new business head
Apple may appoint an interim head
for its India business from within the company, while it hunts for a permanent
successor to Dhir in the meantime, one of the people mentioned above said.
Apple declined to comment.
Apple currently generates close to $1.3 billion in revenues from India, taking
into account current dollar-rupee exchange rates, the people mentioned above
said, requesting anonymity. Apple currently has less than a 2% share of India's
burgeoning smartphone market and the company is trying to change that and
launching an aggressive campaign to increase its wallet share in the country,
according to telecom experts.
Apple India new business head

Dhir joined Apple in 2010 as India country manager. The exit comes at a time
when Apple is doubling down on the Indian smartphone market, which has the
potential to become a multi-billion dollar market for the Cupertino,
California-based company, given the explosive growth of handset devices in the
country over the past decade.
Apple is currently fighting hard
against rivals such as Samsung for a greater share of the smartphone market in
a country that boasts of an ever-increasing population of urban, data-hungry
consumers.
According to documents filed with the Registrar of Companies (RoC) in November,
the smartphone behemoth posted a 44% increase in sales to Rs 6,472.89 crore
(about $1 billion) from Rs 4,500.35 crore and net profit doubled to Rs 242.85
crore from Rs 119.48 crore as the company widened its retail network and
stepped up marketing efforts, including buyback schemes, installment programmes
and discounts in India.
Apple has launched a hunt for a new head for its India
business, following the exit of long-time country manager and former AOL
executive Maneesh Dhir, under whose watch sales from India grew from a mere
$100 million to over $1 billion, according to three people directly familiar
with the developments. 
When contacted, Dhir declined to offer specific comments but
confirmed his departure from Apple. Dhir's departure marks the second top-level
exit from the company's India business, after Sharad Mehrotra who used to head
the company's enterprise mobility unit in India also resigned late last year to
set up his own handset company called Hyve Mobility.
Dhir's departure also comes at a time when Apple is attempting to open its own-brand stores in India. ET had first reported earlier this week, that Apple India has filed an application to open its own Apple branded stores in India with the department of industrial policy and promotion (DIPP).
Dhir's departure also comes at a time when Apple is attempting to open its own-brand stores in India. ET had first reported earlier this week, that Apple India has filed an application to open its own Apple branded stores in India with the department of industrial policy and promotion (DIPP).
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