Manu Balachandran is a writer for Forbes India, based in Bengaluru. At Forbes India, Manu writes on automobiles, aviation, pharmaceuticals, banking, infrastructure, economy and long profiles among many others. He also moderates many of Forbes India's CEO and CXO events and hosts Capital Ideas, a podcast on the most riveting success stories from the business world. He has previously worked with Quartz, The Economic Times and Business Standard in Mumbai and New Delhi. Manu has a master's degree in journalism from Cardiff University and a degree in economics from the Loyola College. When not chasing stories, he is most likely obsessing over Formula 1 (Read: Lewis Hamilton), historical events and people, or planning long weekend drives from Bengaluru
Deepanjali Dalmia | 26 Founder, Heyday Care Before she spontaneously decided to quit her job, Deepanjali Dalmia was living the quintessential Indian dream with a high-paying job as a financial consultant at Ernst & Young in Manhattan. “I realised there was a fire in me that needed to be channeled in the right direction,” she says, explaining her turn to entrepreneurship.
Dalmia returned to India in 2015 and spent three months researching on her area of work, before finalising on personal hygiene. She learnt that nearly 87 percent of women in India do not use sanitary pads, and even among those who do, many do not have any idea about its constituents. “They are synthetic and plastic, which causes cervical cancer,” she says.
Dalmia then put together a team that developed a prototype of a sanitary pad using bamboo fibre, which has high absorbance levels, and corn, for its soft texture. Much of the funds came from her own savings, with some support from her family. “We wanted a product that was completely organic and natural and wouldn’t cause rashes or allergies,” says Dalmia.
Two years later, in September last year, her company Heyday Care began selling its sanitary napkins in New Delhi and Mumbai, with plans to sell online.
“The product is doing very well since its launch,” says Kunaal Kumar, the managing director of New Delhi-based retail chain, Modern Bazaar. “But it has a strong potential to do even better with improved awareness. She is doing something remarkably different.”
The company manufactures the products in China and Finland, and packages them in India. “Our plants can produce over 448 million units a year,” Dalmia says. “We are now getting a lot of interest from Bangladesh, Africa and Russia. So we are looking to ramp up our sales across India and globally.”