ENTREPRENEUR SPOTLIGHT SERIES
Upaya has the privilege of working with so many passionate entrepreneurs. These entrepreneurs are our heroes, leading businesses that provide employment opportunities for people in some of the world’s most marginalized communities. In this blog series, we shine a spotlight on the entrepreneurs in our accelerator program and share what has inspired them to take the leap into entrepreneurship. Check back during our accelerator program as we post more weekly spotlights!
2023 DIGNIFIED JOBS ACCELEARTOR
Check out our conversation with the founders Karghewale about their goal to support wage-weavers as they transition to weaver-entrepreneurs, in addition to building agency and ability in artisans.
Bimal Lakra founded Gangpur Ventures in Rourkela, Odisha to create livelihood opportunities for tribal communities by addressing the acute shortage of fodder in the dairy farming industry.
MoneyBin Resources is a dry waste management company addressing the issue of improper waste segregation by employing unskilled women laborers to collect and segregate it into multiple categories and selling it to recycling factories.
In 2018, Varun Raheja founded Raheja Solar Food Processing Pvt. Ltd. in Indore, Madhya Pradesh with the aim of helping Indian farmers increase the shelf life of their produce, thereby allowing them to derive greater value from it. Raheja Solar provides farmers with an affordable and foldable solar dryer that can be installed even in the remotest of farms. The dryers dehydrate produce in a way that preserves its color, taste, fragrance, and nutrients.
Farmology is an app-based platform which assists farmers by providing integrated crop advisory in real time. They manufacture agri inputs and also partner with other agri input companies to provide farmers with access to seeds, fertilizers, and pesticides — all of which is available on the Farmology app.
In 2015, Parikshit Borkotoky left his corporate career in financial services and moved back to the rural Assam community of Jorhat to start Kraftinn to create jobs for semi-skilled artisans in his hometown.
With an aim to create livelihood opportunities for women by building a women-serviced mobility fleet, today Jai Bharathi is redefining urban mobility in India through her startup, MOWO Fleet, which she founded in Hyderabad in 2019.
2022 Upaya and YSP Accelerator Program
YellowBag is a family run business that focuses on sustainability and livelihoods by working with women to make cloth bags as an alternative to plastic bags. Gowri RG and Krishnan Subramanian were inspired to find a way to make a difference after they became parents. It was impossible for them to ignore the impact something as small as a plastic bag might have on their child's future.
Sunil Kumar is the founder of reThela, a social venture that aims to build an organized retail market infrastructure for fragmented and unorganized street vendors. Before becoming an entrepreneur, Sunil worked with Uniliever selling chocolates on the streets of Mumbai. Now he is helping the fragmented street vendor market get organized.
Senthil Kumar spent 15 years in the corporate sector, but felt like he was wasting his time. So he pledged all of his assets to focus on self-fulfillment and his vision to improve what he calls “the village economy.”
When Aastha and a small team of four began building Gramshree Kisan they started with very little funding, but found an audience on YouTube. Through this platform, not only were they able to build a following, but also earn enough to build upon a training facility.
Krishnaiah is the founder of Pasidi Panta, a company working with spice growers. Coming from an agricultural family, he has firsthand experience with the difficulties smallholder farmers face. In 2014 Krishnaiah did the unthinkable. He sold parts of his farmland to become an entrepreneur, despite the concerns of his family. He had a vision and the drive to start a business that could help smallholder farmers improve their profits.
Manjari and Asmita are the founders of FarmDidi where they are on a mission to provide healthy, natural, and authentic food products by empowering over one million rural women. Their work is helping Farmer Didis (sisters) to become successful and compliant food entrepreneurs through services like food testing, compliance, packaging solutions, and training.
How can technology help to make the lives of farmers easier and allow them to become more self-dependent? This is the question Sharayu and Hemant sought to answer when they founded Bharat Krushi Seva. Hailing from farmer families, Sharayu and Hemant were better equipped than most to help find innovative solutions for the agricultural industry.
West Bengal is historically famous for its textile industry, but who are the artisans behind these beautiful fabrics? Entrepreneur Amit Singha’s father worked closely with these skilled craftsmen and women and encouraged Amit to pursue work to support these communities.
Do you know exactly where the rice on your dinner plate came from? Entrepreneur, Rahul Prakash, is on a mission to connect consumers around the world with farmers in India through his company, Amalfarm.
2021 Scale-Ups Accelerator Entrepreneurs
Having grown up in a smallholder farming family in a poor agriculture region of India, Shweta Thakare was all too familiar with the plight of the farmers there. That’s why she became determined to help farmers increase their incomes and bring dignity to their work.
When Geetika Anand Gupta set out to introduce her son to the authentic Indian street foods, parathas and pakodas, little did she know it would turn into a much broader mission to create jobs and uplift her community.
Meet Amita Desphande, founder of reCharkha, a company that employs rural women to upcycle waste into beautiful textiles and crafts using the traditional chakra and handloom.
Taxshe is an all-woman cab service aiming to create jobs for thousands of women from marginalized communities in India. Founded by ex-investment banker, Vandana Suri, Taxshe trains women to drive and runs a cab service exclusively for women and children.
Woman entrepreneur and founder of the Roots Reforms Initiative, Aruna Sampige, believes she has a solution to empower women through last-mile financial inclusion.
Sisters and business partners, Smita and Shuchi Singh, expanded their established handwork export business, Mirandola Designs, to work directly at craft clusters with artisans and their families.
Sumeet Kaur, a lawyer-turned-farmer, is on a mission to create an equitable and sustainable food system in which smallholding farms are profitable and farmers are prosperous.
Savitha Sridharan was an electrical engineer working for a semiconductor company before leaving her career behind to start her own clean-energy company, Orora Global, that has created 250 jobs for women in rural India.
Namrata Acharya never imagined she would become an entrepreneur. But, after learning about the struggles faced by farmers and rural villagers who rely on agriculture for their livelihood, Namrata knew she wanted to do something about it.
2020 Accelerator Cohort Entrepreneurs
Meet Deepa Pant, founder of SVATANYA, whose mission is to empower underprivileged women with financial independence that comes with a dignified job. SVATANYA is a Delhi-based social enterprise that trains women to make handcrafted products
Bastar se Bazaar Tak is working to fill a gap in available work for forest-dwelling families in one of India’s poorest regions.
The co-founders of EcoOpus are strengthening the biomass supply chain in India to benefit farmers, the local economy, and the environment.
AVAL is a social enterprise dedicated to providing skills training and sustainable livelihoods for women from socially and economically disadvantaged communities in rural Tamil Nadu.
Husband and wife duo, Yashwant Suthar and Neelam Singh, founded Lootel, a chain of smart restroom cafés that provides restroom services to the public, while creating dignified and well-paying work for its jobholders.
Shineel, Founder of The House of Artisans (THOA) has always been interested in the origins and stories behind every product she comes across. When she learned how little the talented artisans in India earn for their handcrafted products, she decided to help create better opportunities for them.
Entrepreneur, Neelam Jain, is creating equal opportunity for the Trans community in India through job training and placement with the aim of creating inclusive workplaces.
The co-founders of Shoegaro, an Agra-based footwear company, are equipping artisan shoemakers with the skills and network needed to revive the city’s cherished footwear art.
Megha and Shipra started their company, KalaGhar, to help the local artisans in Odisha design and sell eco-friendly home décor items on a global level.
Rajesh Kumar Oza has a vision to empower the tribal communities in Udaipur, Rajasthan through increased family incomes. His business, Jovaki Agro, is doing just that.
2019 Livelihoods Accelerator Entrepreneurs
Umang Shridhar grew up in a small village in Madhya Pradesh, and decided to use her commerce degree to start a company, KhaDigi, to employ and empower local artisans after seeing the poor conditions and poverty they face.
Jayanti Mahapatra started her business, Manikstu Agro to create local jobs and improve farmer incomes in Odisha, India. Her mission is to change the landscape of goat farming to keep farmers from migrating in search of work.
Yogesh Kumar left a career in engineering to start a company that’s fighting gender inequality and poverty by giving women access to jobs traditionally reserved for men.
Ketan Parmar, founder of Krishi Naturals, believes organic farming can be a solution to the insufficient incomes and poor milk yields faced by small-scale dairy farmers in India today.
Priyanka Khandelwal started her company, Abira Creations, with one sole purpose in mind: empowering women. She employs traditionally marginalized women in the slum regions near Pune, India, to create jewelry and fashion accessories.
Abhinav and Vasanthi share a passion for local crafts and nature-inspired design and together started their apparel brand, Peoli, to create livelihood opportunities for the women in Almora.
Sumanth and Sonali, had a vision to create a sustainable pottery in rural India and the drive to empower the underprivileged rural community in the process.
With a degree in Textile Design from the National Institute of Fashion Technology, Abhishek aims to bring design, innovation and technology to underprivileged and unorganized artisan communities.
Manan Majithia’s company, YouCare, provides training in caregiving services to young and low-income women and connects them with jobs as medical attendants and nannies.
2018 Agribusiness Accelerator Entrepreneurs
Jitendra Yadav comes from an agricultural family. That’s why he is passionate about offering safe, nutritious foods to consumers in a way that will increase profits for farmers.
Western Odisha Is one of the poorest regions of India. But that’s what drew Ambika Satapathy and Sadananda Satapathy to the region to empower small scale farmers and tribal women in the region.
Looking at the glaring gaps in the organic farming ecosystem in West Bengal, Ekta Jaju started an organic company called ONganic in 2015 with a vision to create better livelihoods for farmers, health & wellness for consumers and a sustainable planet.
Dr. Kavitha Sairam has had a passion for science since a very young age. That’s why she’s on a mission to use science to address global farming problems, particularly the issues surrounding biofertilizers.
Vinay Kothari’s company, GO DESi, is an Indian confectionery brand that sells candies and treats inspired by regional flavors in Indian cuisine. All of GO DESi’s products are sourced, packaged and branded by the farmers who grow them.
Founded by Rakesh and Namita in 2014, GramShree’s mission is to establish an innovative marketing system to market the produce of poor, rural families in India.
The Taank Brothers aim to create self-sustaining employment opportunities by helping tribal farmers farm and sell Kadaknath poultry on a commercial level. Read more about their aptly named social enterprise, TaankBrothers Ventures. >>
Aneel Kumar Ambavaram grew up in a Kadapa, a village in India known for its labor-intensive sweet orange cultivation. He left is 15-year corporate career to uplift sweet orange farmers, creating new sources of income for the poorest of the poor.
When Selvakumar Varadharajan, founder and Chief Executive of Laymen Agro Ventures settled in Bangalore to start a family, he and his wife soon began to long for the farm-fresh produce and dairy of their childhood that was not available in urban India. This prompted them to move back to Coimbatore to start a venture that would provide urban citizens with access to fresh agro-products while improving the livelihoods of small-holder farmers and rural youths in the process.
Reema Sathe is on a mission to improve the lives of small-holder farmers in India through her company Happy Roots.
The Tribal Hermit is a social impact venture that works closely with 130+ Dhokra craft artisans from Kondagaon, Bastar, and Raigarh districts of Chhattisgarh to design, create, and sell their products.