Category: Startup


Spread that Idea!

January 7th, 2010 — 11:31pm

Imagine a place where artists, entrepreneurs, engineers, journalists and people from various streams come together with just one agenda: To let ideas flow. That is the kind of place we want “Mysore Santhe” to be. And for it to be a success, you need to be there too. Just walk into Samvaada vana at Yuvaraja campus, Mysore on any Sunday anytime between 11AM and 1PM. The first one will be on 10th January, 2010.

The initial plan was to create something similar to speaker’s corner (in Hyde park, London) or may be something similar to Coffee house at college street or may be an Algonquin round table. However, there are no set rules as to how Mysore santhe should evolve. The place belongs to you, the visitors to this place and it may become anything that you want it to be.

Read more about Mysore Santhe at Ashwin Krishna’s blog.

In case you need to know more, feel free to contact me (9900199201) or Ashwin Krishna (9886165220).

2 comments » | Mysore, Startup

Why aren’t there more entrepreneurs?

December 23rd, 2009 — 8:02am

A few days back, I had a conversation with a highly experienced CEO who had started his company more than 3 decades back. He had this to say:

When we started our industry, it was extremely difficult to bring foreign technology into India. If I required one, then I had to:

  1. Advertise that I required such technology product in about 40-50 business magazines so that Indian dealers could contact me first.
  2. Wait for some 40 day period in order to give the Indian dealers time to reply me back.
  3. Provide a detailed explanation to the government licensing authority on ‘why none of the Indian technology is suitable for my purpose’.
  4. Be at the mercy of the licensing authority for days together to obtain permission.

We used to wait for months to get permission.

In spite of such difficulties, people did business in India during those days and made it big. Those days are long gone now. There is almost nothing which stops one to do business in India now. Then, what stops more people to choose the entrepreneurship path?

Comment » | Startup

TIE CleanTech Conference Hyderabad – 17th Dec, 2009

December 18th, 2009 — 9:12pm

It was already 10AM and I had to catch the 12PM train from Mysore if I were to reach Hyderabad for the TIE cleantech conference which I had decided to attend just minutes earlier. A flight was possible but taking that when you have a cheaper option is out of question in a startup.
8AM next day, I was having breakfast at Hyderabad for the first time. A 5 year old American Desi child explaining her grandfather that it is ‘healthy’ and not ‘hyealdhy’ meant I was not too far from Bangalore. An hour later and after a bad episode with an autorickshaw, I was at the Marriott. As I entered the conference hall lounge, I started hearing people talk my language, the green language. This was the place I belonged.
In a world which talked of financial, climate and political crises, here was a micro world which talked only of the good things. The sun, the wind, the water, energy and of course the money in all of these. This was a world of hope.
One speaker talked of the 15 years he struggled with his solar product and how he subsequently became the market leader. Another tried to sell an electric scooter 25 years ago, failed, went away from India for a couple of decades, came back a few years ago, tried to sell the same again and succeeded superbly this time. Another started his cleantech business for the love of environment. Yet another started for the money in it.
Environment, Entrepreneurship and Money, all in one place. 40+ speakers and 15+ new contacts in one day and I was still looking for more. Unfortunately, time didn’t seem to be so green.
With more than 3 hours remaining for the train, I hired an autorickshaw and traveled Hyderabad. Hussain Sagar, Charminar, Karachi bakery and PullaReddy sweets later, I sat at the railway station Coffee Day looking at my 9 o’clock train writing this travelogue.

3 comments » | Startup

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