Startup Strategy
  • India has created 111 unicorns, with 20 led by women, showcasing diversity and growth in the startup ecosystem.
  • Bengaluru remains the top destination for startups, contributing significantly to funding and innovation.
  • Job creation and emerging sectors like EV and space tech highlight the ecosystem’s dynamic nature and potential for future growth.
  • Despite recent challenges, the Indian startup landscape is expected to continue its upward trajectory, supported by favorable demographics and a conducive regulatory environment.
Book Review

“12 Months to $1 Million” offers a roadmap for entrepreneurs, emphasizing mindset, opportunity, and practical steps to achieve seven-figure success.

Book Review

“WeWork’s rise and challenges, led by Adam Neumann’s ambition and vision, revealing the complexities of building a global startup empire.”

Book Review

One-stop resource for anyone looking to gain a solid understanding of business fundamentals. It combines theoretical knowledge with practical insights, making it a valuable resource for both aspiring and current business professionals.

Idea Almanac

“You scrutinize the check, looking again and again at the dollar amount. You make sure there are enough commas. That the date is correct. That the signature resembles the one you know. A part of you wants to drive all the way down to Santa Cruz, to the bank with the recessed lighting, the gleaming tile, the golden safe door half-open behind the counter, gleaming from the darkness like a yacht’s steering wheel. To change your shirt into something with a collar, maybe wear a tie—to dress up for the occasion. One point nine million dollars is a lot of money. You feel nervous handling it, like you’ve robbed it off someone else. Better to go to the closest bank you can find. Who cares if it’s in a strip mall in Los Gatos? You need to get this thing out of your hands, fast”

Excerpt From: Marc Randolph. “That Will Never Work: The Birth of Netflix and the Amazing Life of an Idea.”

Idea Almanac

“Sachin and Binny began to make preparations for a Flipkart that would be many, many times its current size. They had already established a foothold in books. Now the company hungrily entered new categories. In the second half of 2010, Flipkart started selling mobile phones, music and film CDs, DVDs, and cameras. To launch these categories and to move to the next stage in its evolution, the company needed a capable management team. When a startup receives venture capital, investors insist that the company hire experienced leaders. Its new executives are expected to have previously worked at larger companies so they are able to bring to the startup their subject matter expertise or general management abilities.”

Excerpt From: Mihir Dalal. “Big Billion Startup: The Untold Flipkart Story.”

Idea Almanac

“For most of us, failure comes with baggage—a lot of baggage—that I believe is traced directly back to our days in school. From a very early age, the message is drilled into our heads: Failure is bad; failure means you didn’t study or prepare; failure means you slacked off or—worse!—aren’t smart enough to begin with. Thus, failure is something to be ashamed of. This perception lives on long into adulthood, even in people who have learned to parrot the oft-repeated arguments about the upside of failure. How many articles have you read on that topic alone? And yet, even as they nod their heads in agreement, many readers of those articles still have the emotional reaction that they had as children. They just can’t help it: That early experience of shame is too deep-seated to erase. All the time in my work, I see people resist and reject failure and try mightily to avoid it, because regardless of what we say, mistakes feel embarrassing. There is a visceral reaction to failure: It hurts.”

Excerpt From: Ed Catmull with Amy Wallace. “Creativity, Inc.: Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration.” – Amazon Link

Idea Almanac

“As I put down the phone after Steve told me about Morgan Stanley’s rejection, all of my fears about Pixar came rushing back. Perhaps I had allowed Steve’s exuberance and the bankers’ early enthusiasm to cloud my view of Pixar’s business risks. Before we had engaged Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley in discussions, I would have said that working with either one of them was a long shot. I wouldn’t have been at all surprised if they had turned us down. But somewhere in the process I had let myself believe they would want to go forward. That made the rejection sting all the more. Over the next couple of days, the magnitude of what had occurred sunk in.”

Excerpt From: Lawrence Levy. “To Pixar and Beyond.”- Amazon Link

Idea Almanac

“Ballmer and other Amazon skeptics, like the hedge fund investor David Einhorn, who added Amazon to his “bubble basket of stocks” that fall, were looking at Amazon’s reported losses and significant investments in new initiatives. They were also underestimating the true performance of its older business units, which the company shrouded in secrecy. Amazon was profitable, particularly mature retail categories like books and electronics in the U.S. and UK. But rather than accumulating record amounts of cash and reporting it on its income statement, as companies like Microsoft and Apple were doing at the time, Bezos invested Amazon’s winnings like a crazed gambler at the craps table in Las Vegas.”

Excerpt From: Brad Stone. “Amazon Unbound.”