Celebrated on the 21st of
August every year, World Entrepreneurs’ Day recognizes innovation and global
advancement of entrepreneurship and leadership. It is well established that
high-potential entrepreneurship that drives jobs at scale is born out of a
culture of innovation and risk-taking. Entrepreneurship also breeds job
creators as against job seekers, a crucial and fundamental aspect of India’s
economic growth.
Commenting on World Entrepreneurs’
Day, Dr Ajay Kela, President and CEO, Wadhwani Foundation, said,
“Entrepreneurs are like Olympians; they go through a harrowing journey,
bringing glory to their teams and country by creating wealth and jobs. On this
World Entrepreneurs’ Day, we salute the entrepreneurs of the world. With
digitization and globalization, entrepreneurial ecosystems are rapidly
evolving. In less than a decade, India has become the leading nation for
startups and entrepreneurs, having crossed the mark of 100 unicorns, with 100
more expected in the next three years. Total established and recognized
startups in India stand at ~73K today. Besides India, Brazil, Mexico,
Singapore, Indonesia, and others are creating thriving startup ecosystems. We
are living in unprecedented times for startups. Let the force be with them to
produce the jobs the world needs for its growing youth population.”
The Indian startup ecosystem
skyrocketed in 2021 to become the third largest globally, with a 3x increase in
total funding over 2020. However, despite a stellar show, two challenges remain
predominant in the Indian startup space:
(1) Many unicorns in India lack a
compelling revenue base and require an infusion of cash flow for survival.
(2) The need to accelerate their
digital transformation with technology and platforms through policies and
support mechanisms towards domestic capital participation, favourable
investment climate in tier 2 and tier 3 cities, incentives to set up incubators
in every state, tax exemptions in foreign direct investments, and a high focus
on startup infrastructure.
Says Sanjay Shah, Chief
Operating Officer – India/SE Asia, Wadhwani Foundation, “At Wadhwani
Foundation, we strive to support entrepreneurs as they are job creators making
a significant and positive impact in emerging economies. They are true game
changers who constantly innovate and rise by lifting others. On the occasion of
World Entrepreneurs’ Day, I urge entrepreneurs to look at emerging fields like
green technology (Electric Vehicles, Wind Energy, Solar Energy, Recycling and
Waste Management etc.) because apart from the obvious benefits related to
sustainability, India has the potential to create 50 million jobs by 2070 by
enabling a green economy.”
India, no doubt, has a rich,
vibrant ecosystem of startups, both in terms of entrepreneurs and the best and
brightest in the country wanting to pursue entrepreneurship. However, to
mitigate the startup failure rate, Wadhwani Foundation’s advice to startups,
especially in the early stages, is to spend with caution, focus on the customer
and the problem that they are striving to solve, and have clear answers to
these questions:
A. How
does the unit economics of the solution work?
B. What
does it take to produce the solution?
C. What
is the customer willing to pay for that pain?
D. How
large is the addressable market?
The YoY annual growth in the Indian
startup ecosystem is projected at 12-15%. However, to consistently achieve this
growth, the startup growth needs to be concurrent with the growth of ecosystem
enablers and market catalysts like accelerators, incubators, venture
capitalists, angel investors, support groups, technology corporations and
mentors.