At the recent Bengaluru leg of the Forbes India One CEO Club roundtable, India's top chief executives spoke about what's holding India back from being a global innovation hub, and bringing digital technologies to bear
Four chief executives from different new-age ventures sat down on September 24, 2019, to discuss ‘Innovating in India for the world’, at the Bengaluru leg of the Forbes India One CEO Club’s Digital Leadership series roundtable, conducted in partnership with Google Cloud India. The round table saw Adhil Shetty, CEO, BankBazaar; Amisha Jain, CEO, Zivame; Sashank Rishyasringa, co-founder, Capital Float; and Sanjiv Kathuria, founder and CEO, DotZot – an arm of DTDC, discussed the structural challenges that keep India from becoming an innovation hub for the world, and the way forward.
Kicking off the discussion, Sashank Rishyasringa, co-founder of online lender Capital Float pointed out that in Silicon Valley the focus has been on inventing something that didn’t exist, before people even imagined a need for it—say social media. But in India, the focus remains on how to deliver products and services which are desperately needed by the wider population. India’s vast population spread and the urban and rural divide has created a need gap of accessibility and providing that easy access at low costs and with better customer experience. It is, he said, the perfect opportunity for startups to come in and fill the gap while at the same time create sustainable and scalable businesses.
This focus of making products and services available to the bottom or middle of the pyramid at lightning speed and at the lowest possible operational expenses is a combination that hasn’t been cracked perfectly by anyone, he said. “When it is, it’s something that can easily be taken to markets like Africa or South East Asia,” Rishyasringa added. Indian fintech companies are also well-poised to go to the US or European shores and significantly disrupt counterparts there, he added.
Rishyasringa hit the nail on the head when he said, “Innovation is at two levels. One, is India a good country for innovation for its own citizens? Yes, thanks to demand and now venture capital supporting it. Second, is it a good country to innovate for anyone? Singapore and Israel have done a good job here, but we fall quite short,” he added. “In India, architecture of public sector is closed, access to public sector institutions is tough, and the tender process is opaque. Opening up the architecture of the government and making it porous to make it easier for regular people to interact with it, would help,” he shared.
The other challenge—which has plagued India for as long as one could care to remember—is of cumbersome processes. Programs like Digital India, Startup India and Make in India have started oiling the engine, but significant problems remain. Rishyasringa said entrepreneurs will figure out a way to work with the government if there are opportunities, but process simplification by the government will help entrepreneurship in India in the long run.
Zivame’s Amisha Jain shared three intrinsic challenges of the lingerie industry. One, the very broken shopping experience; second, lack of the right fit for Indian women’s body types and a lack of innovation in the area; third, before companies like Zivame began to experiment — women had accepted that ‘this is all we get’. Zivame has used technologies like Artificial Intelligence (AI), and data analytics to develop several proprietary tools like the ‘fit code’, which helps women calculate the right bra sizes. “Personalisation is the key here, and Zivame applies a lot of data analytics to achieve it.” These are innovations that can be easily adapted in other markets, she said, adding that “I think we have a rocking product that can go to global markets, and this is not technology, but technology-backed product innovation.”