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India's billion-dollar AI blueprint: Pratilipi, Zolve, Stellaris, and Google DeepMind to unveil scaling secrets at ET Soonicorns Summit 2025

India's billion-dollar AI blueprint: Pratilipi, Zolve, Stellaris, and Google DeepMind to unveil scaling secrets at ET Soonicorns Summit 2025

Time of India08-07-2025
The ET Soonicorns Summit 2025 returns to Bengaluru on August 22, diving into the mission-critical AI question of scale. Here's what you need to know and why you should attend as AI leaders prepare to unveil the scale playbook.
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Shally Modi, Co-founder, Pratilipi
Shweta Rajpal Kohli, President & CEO, Startup Policy Forum
Manish Gupta, Senior Director, Google DeepMind
Raghunandan G, Founder, Zolve
Ritesh Banglani, Co-founder & CEO, Stellaris Venture Partners
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Shally Modi, Co-founder, Pratilipi: At the helm of India's most successful vernacular content platform, Modi brings insights from scaling language-first AI in a market as complex as India. Her on-the-ground view of AI's application in storytelling, personalisation, and creator monetisation is deeply relevant as India eyes a bottom-up AI revolution.
Shweta Rajpal Kohli, President & CEO, Startup Policy Forum: A former public policy head at global tech giants and now a policy entrepreneur, Kohli will offer a sharp, insider take on what Indian regulation gets right—and where it stifles scale. Expect her to weigh in on data localisation, AI governance, and startup compliance fatigue.
Manish Gupta, Senior Director, Google DeepMind: Gupta represents the R&D depth India must build at scale. His presence adds global heft and provokes a key question: Can India build its own DeepMind—or does it need to?
Raghunandan G, Founder, Zolve: Raghunandan is no stranger to scale. Having built and exited TaxiForSure, and now leading cross-border neobank Zolve, he brings a builder's clarity to a market obsessed with valuation over value. Expect grounded insight on talent models, GTM playbooks, and investor-founder alignment.
Ritesh Banglani, Co-founder & CEO, Stellaris Venture Partners: One of India's most respected VCs, Banglani has backed some of the country's sharpest tech startups. His perspective on what separates an AI soonicorn from an AI statistic will likely set the tone for how capital chases capability in the years ahead.
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AI Investments in India: Chasing Hype or Backing Real Disruption? This high-stakes session features top investors such as Sanjay Swamy (Prime Venture Partners), Hemant Mohapatra (Lightspeed Ventures), and Manish Singhal (pi Ventures) debating what's real in India's AI surge—and what's just branding.
This high-stakes session features top investors such as Sanjay Swamy (Prime Venture Partners), Hemant Mohapatra (Lightspeed Ventures), and Manish Singhal (pi Ventures) debating what's real in India's AI surge—and what's just branding. AI for Bharat: How Localised Data Centres Can Bridge the Digital Divide - Featuring Adarsh Natarajan (Aindra) and Ankit Bose (Nasscom), this panel focuses on India's unique advantage—solving for underserved populations using culturally and linguistically localised AI.
- Featuring Adarsh Natarajan (Aindra) and Ankit Bose (Nasscom), this panel focuses on India's unique advantage—solving for underserved populations using culturally and linguistically localised AI. Can India Build Its Own ChatGPT or DeepSeek? The Agentic AI Race Is On - From Hanooman.ai to Microsoft Innovation Hub, this session convenes the core players pushing India's AGI frontier. As the world races to build agentic, self-improving AI systems, India is no longer watching from the sidelines.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is no longer a buzzword in Indian startups; it's the battleground. As billions pour into AI-first ventures and government-backed infrastructure scales up, the big question isn't whether India will play the AI game; it's how Indian startups can win it.In 2024, Indian startups raised $30.4 billion in funding—a 6.5% dip from 2023 —according to Tracxn. Despite the decline, the ecosystem showed resilience, with new unicorns such as Rapido, Ather, Perfios, Porter, and Money View reflecting continued innovation and investor confidence.Amidst this sustained resilience, a receding funding winter, and an AI-driven momentum where Indian startups are increasingly building and leveraging AI solutions, a panel at the ET Soonicorns Summit 2025 will address the question every founder, investor, and policymaker is asking: What does it take to scale Indian AI startups into billion-dollar powerhouses over the next decade?Titled 'The Billion-Dollar AI Blueprint: Scaling Indian Startups in the Next Decade,' the session brings together some of the sharpest minds from product, policy, investment, and frontier AI research:The session aims to dive deep into the central question looming large over India's AI ecosystem: Can our startups scale before the window of global opportunity closes?India's startup ecosystem is entering a make-or-break moment. While the country is teeming with AI-first ventures, global scale remains elusive for most. As the US and China sprint ahead with capital, compute, and cutting-edge IP, India must confront a hard truth: innovation without scale won't cut it.From securing long-term capital and building AI talent at scale to owning sustainable IP, expanding into global markets, and staying ahead on ethical compliance and governance, the session's premise is clear: building foundational AI is just the starting point. To lead on the global stage, Indian startups must crack the scale equation.With $11.3 billion already flowing into Indian startups in 2025 and AI policy levers moving fast, this panel aims to define the strategy behind the slogans.Meet the power players on stage:The AI opportunity isn't just about building tools; it's about shaping a new economy. According to Statista, India's AI market is expected to hit $244.22 billion in 2025, on its way to a projected $1.01 trillion by 2031. But here's the catch: scale is not a by-product of good tech. It needs deliberate architecture—capital, compute, policy, and people.And India's making moves.If this infrastructure aligns with startup innovation, India could unlock both domestic dominance and export scale.While this session is expected to grab headlines, it is part of a broader AI and Deep Tech Dominance track at the Soonicorns Summit 2025, each panel addressing a critical lever in India's AI playbook:The Billion-Dollar AI Blueprint panel doesn't just ask whether India can build big in AI—it asks how it can do it differently, more inclusively, and at a velocity that rewrites the script.In a world where 99% of AI startups won't scale, this panel is a front-row seat to what the top 1% are doing right. And more importantly, what India needs to do to lead the AI age on its terms.The ET Soonicorns Summit 2025 returns to Bengaluru on August 22, bringing together unicorn and soonicorn founders, investors, policymakers, and AI leaders for a day of sharp dialogue, bold ambition, and hard questions. With the theme 'From Research Labs to Revenue Models: The Billion-Dollar Blueprint for Scaling Indian AI Startups,' this year's edition is poised to redefine what scale means in the Indian context.Whether you're building, backing, or regulating India's tech future, this is where the playbook will be written.360 One Wealth is the presenting partner of the ET Soonicorns Summit 2025
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Elon Musk's AI accused of making explicit videos of Taylor Swift, Sydney Sweeney without being prompted after enabling NSFW ‘Spicy Mode'
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Elon Musk's AI accused of making explicit videos of Taylor Swift, Sydney Sweeney without being prompted after enabling NSFW ‘Spicy Mode'

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India eyes policy reset to soften US tariff blow, plans ease of doing business hub for mfg, investment fillip
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India eyes policy reset to soften US tariff blow, plans ease of doing business hub for mfg, investment fillip

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Cert-In pivots cybersecurity audits to threat readiness
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Cert-In pivots cybersecurity audits to threat readiness

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