08/03/2026
When a woman learns a craft, she doesn’t just build jewellery — she builds a stronger future.
Happy Women’s Day
At Group Mars, empowerment is not a slogan.
It is something we practice every day on the workshop floor.
Over the years, we have witnessed an inspiring transformation — women who joined us with little exposure to jewellery manufacturing have grown into skilled professionals across our organisation.
Some began by learning Mangalsutra making, hand-made hollow ball work, and enamelling techniques.
With training, patience, and practice, they evolved into design assistants, production coordinators, QC specialists, packaging leaders, production managers, and skilled karigar artisans.
Skill building became the foundation.
But something deeper also happened.
Through exposure to Lean Manufacturing, TOC (Theory of Constraints), and structured QMS processes, many of these women began applying the same principles not only at work but also in their personal lives — managing time better, organising family responsibilities, and guiding their children with greater confidence and discipline.
What started as technical training slowly became life empowerment.
Today, many women at Group Mars are not only contributing to jewellery production but are also shaping the next generation of karigars by passing on skills, discipline, and pride in craftsmanship.
This is the kind of empowerment we believe in:
Not symbolic.
Not temporary.
But real, skill-driven, and sustainable.
Because when a woman grows in skill and confidence, she strengthens not only the workplace but also her family, community, and the future of our craft.
On this Women’s Day, we celebrate the women of Group Mars who continue to learn, lead, and inspire.
After four decades in jewellery manufacturing, I have learned one thing clearly — when women lead with skill, craftsmanship finds its true strength.
Real empowerment is not about giving a voice — it is about giving a skill that transforms a life.
— Rajesh Vyas
Group Mars | SVJPL | RAAYA | ZYGA