Author: Sutun Nayak

  • Last Call: Applications for Stanford Seed Transformation Program in South Asia Close Soon

    Last Call: Applications for Stanford Seed Transformation Program in South Asia Close Soon

    New Delhi [India], May 7: Entrepreneurs and business leaders across South Asia are being urged to submit their applications soon for the Seed Transformation Program offered by the Stanford Graduate School of Business, as the final deadline approaches on 1 June 2026.

    The 10-month leadership program, delivered by Stanford Seed, a Stanford Graduate School of Business institute,  is designed specifically for CEOs and founders of growth-stage companies seeking to scale their businesses, strengthen leadership capabilities, and drive long-term economic and social impact in emerging markets.

    The Seed Transformation Program is designed for founders and senior leaders of established companies with annual revenues between USD 300,000 and USD 15 million (approximately INR 2.7 crore to INR 135 crore). Through a blend of in-person classroom sessions, online modules, practical workshops, and peer learning, participants gain access to proven business frameworks and tools developed at Stanford Graduate School of Business.

    As part of the program, entrepreneurs continue to run their businesses while applying the lessons directly to real operational challenges. The curriculum focuses on strategic clarity, financial discipline, leadership development, and execution excellence. Participants also attend two intensive in-person learning weeks in Chennai, providing opportunities for collaboration with fellow entrepreneurs and guidance from Stanford faculty and experienced facilitators.

    Since its launch, Stanford Seed has partnered with more than 2,700 entrepreneurs across Africa, South Asia, and Indonesia.  Past participants of the program have collectively secured over USD 2 billion in capital and contributed USD 1.7 billion in additional revenue to their local economies after completing the program.

    Participants receive a certificate from the Stanford Graduate School of Business and become members of the Seed Transformation Network, gaining long-term access to global peers, Stanford Seed resources, and continued learning opportunities.

    “As the application deadline approaches, we encourage founders and CEOs across South Asia to apply for the Seed Transformation Program,” said Harish Arnezath, Regional Director, South Asia. “Entrepreneurs gain practical tools, global insights, and a strong peer network to help scale their businesses and create lasting impact.”

    Stanford Seed is hosting in-person information sessions across multiple cities in South Asia from March until May , where founders can hear from past participants , meet the Seed team, and explore how the program can help scale their businesses.

    The application deadline is set for 1 June 2026. To learn more, register for an information session, or apply, visit http://stanfordseed.co/IPR 

    About Stanford Seed

    Stanford Seed is an initiative of Stanford Graduate School of Business that partners with entrepreneurs in emerging markets across Africa, Indonesia, and South Asia to build thriving enterprises that transform lives. Through world-class business training and ongoing support, Seed helps founders and CEOs increase revenues, create jobs, and positively impact their communities.

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  • Credent Connect N Care Crosses INR 200 Crore Revenue, Strengthens India’s Healthcare Diagnostics Supply Chain

    Credent Connect N Care Crosses INR 200 Crore Revenue, Strengthens India’s Healthcare Diagnostics Supply Chain

    New Delhi [India], May 8: As India’s diagnostics sector continues to expand rapidly, the spotlight is increasingly shifting toward a lesser-discussed but critical component of healthcare delivery: pre-analytical logistics. At the center of this transformation is Credent Connect N Care Limited, which has crossed ₹200 crore in revenue in FY 2025–26, while maintaining profitability and sustaining an approximate 40% compound annual growth rate (CAGR).

    The company operates in a highly specialized segment of the healthcare supply chain—ensuring the safe, timely, and temperature-controlled transportation of patient samples from collection points to diagnostic laboratories. This layer, often invisible to patients, plays a decisive role in determining the accuracy and reliability of diagnostic outcomes.

    In modern healthcare, diagnostic accuracy depends not only on laboratory capabilities but also on how effectively samples are handled before they reach the lab. Delays, temperature fluctuations, or compromised handling can significantly impact test results.

    Credent has built its business by addressing these challenges at scale. Its logistics network is designed to manage time-sensitive biological samples under strict protocols, ensuring consistency across geographies.

    By focusing on this pre-analytical phase, the company enables diagnostic laboratories to expand operations without compromising on quality—an increasingly important factor as demand for testing grows across urban and semi-urban India.

    Over the years, Credent has developed a nationwide network that reflects both reach and operational depth. The company is currently present in over 450 cities and covers more than 20,000 PIN codes, supported by a trained field force exceeding 6,500 professionals.

    ₹200 Cr+Revenue FY26 ~40%Revenue CAGR 10L+Samples / Month 450+Cities 6,500+Field Professionals 20,000+PIN Codes

    It handles over 10 lakh samples every month, providing a mix of intra-city and inter-city logistics, along with home collection and supply chain management services for healthcare providers.

    This scale positions the company as a key operational partner for diagnostic labs seeking reliability in sample movement—a requirement that has grown in importance with the rise of preventive healthcare and home-based diagnostics.

    India’s healthcare industry is projected to grow at a steady pace, with diagnostics emerging as one of its fastest-growing segments. However, industry experts note that laboratory expansion alone is insufficient to meet rising demand.

    Credent operates at this intersection of healthcare and infrastructure, building a network-driven model that combines logistics precision with domain-specific expertise. The operational complexity involved in handling biological samples—ranging from compliance requirements to temperature sensitivity—creates a high barrier to entry, offering long-term competitive advantages to established players.

    According to Tarun Sharma, Managing Director of Credent Connect N Care Limited, the company’s role goes beyond logistics. “Healthcare growth in India depends on how efficiently we can move patient samples to diagnostic services even from remote towns.

    Credent is building that connectivity infrastructure—ensuring samples move faster, safer, and more reliably across the country.”

    As healthcare delivery in India evolves toward preventive care, decentralized testing, and home diagnostics, the importance of pre-analytical logistics is expected to increase significantly.

    Industry observers believe that companies capable of building robust, compliant, and scalable logistics networks will play a pivotal role in shaping the next phase of diagnostics growth.

    With its expanding footprint, operational scale, and focus on reliability, Credent Connect N Care Limited is positioning itself as a foundational player in this ecosystem—quietly powering the systems that make timely and accurate diagnostics possible.

  • Inside the rise of India’s logistics operating system: how courier aggregators are quietly powering D2C’s next decade

    Inside the rise of India’s logistics operating system: how courier aggregators are quietly powering D2C’s next decade

    A new generation of Indian e-commerce brands is moving away from single-courier dependency and onto orchestration platforms that treat logistics as software. Shiprocket has emerged as the category leader,  and the operational data behind that shift is striking.

    New Delhi [India], May 8: For most of the last decade, an Indian e-commerce founder making a logistics decision had two real options: sign with one of the big national couriers and accept whatever performance variance came with it, or attempt to manage three or four courier relationships in parallel and absorb the operational cost of doing so. Both paths had ceilings. The first capped delivery quality. The second capped how fast the business could grow.

    What has emerged in the last few years is a third path, one that increasingly looks less like shipping and more like infrastructure. Shipping orchestration platforms, which integrate multiple couriers, warehousing, payments, returns and customer communication into a single software layer, have moved from a niche category to the default operating model for India’s direct-to-consumer economy. Shiprocket, which today has worked with over 4,00,000 sellers, including leading D2C brands such as Boat, Mamaearth, Snitch, Lotus Herbals and Levi’s, is the clearest expression of where this category is heading. The economics behind the shift are worth examining because they explain why so many Indian D2C brands have quietly migrated to this model.

    The hidden cost of single-courier shipping

    Delivery performance in India is not uniform. A courier that performs well in Delhi NCR can underperform in Tier-2 markets. Weather disruptions, regional capacity constraints and inconsistent last-mile execution affect timelines and success rates in ways that are difficult to forecast at the contract stage. For brands operating on thin margins, even a small increase in return-to-origin (RTO) orders or delayed deliveries has a disproportionate impact on profitability.

    Industry estimates put RTO rates for Indian e-commerce shipments at 20-30 per cent for certain categories, particularly cash-on-delivery orders, according to Redseer. At those levels, the cost of a failed delivery isn’t just the reverse logistics charge. It includes the lost margin on the original sale, the working capital trapped in inventory cycling back through the network, the customer support overhead of handling the failure, and the opportunity cost of a customer who may not return.

    Single-courier contracts, by their nature, can’t respond to this variance. Every shipment goes through the same partner, regardless of whether that partner is the right choice for that specific pin code, product category, or payment type.

    Logistics as software

    Aggregator-led platforms approach the problem differently. Rather than treating fulfilment as a linear movement of parcels, they operate as orchestration layers that route each shipment to the courier and pathway best suited to that specific order. The decision is made by software, using pin-code-level performance data, historical delivery success rates, average transit times, RTO trends, rather than by a procurement contract negotiated months earlier.

    Shiprocket’s platform is the most widely adopted version of this model in India. It connects merchants to a network of 40+ active courier partners and extends to over 19,000 PIN codes domestically and 220+ countries internationally. According to platform data, brands using its multi-courier allocation and Non-Delivery Report management workflows have reported RTO reductions of 15–25 per cent. For a brand shipping 10,000 orders a month, even a 10 per cent reduction in RTO translates into measurable savings in reverse logistics, inventory holding costs and working capital efficiency.

    The operational implication is significant. RTO stops being a fixed cost of doing business in India and becomes a variable that brands can actively manage.

    There is a second-order effect that often gets overlooked. When courier selection is automated and outcome-driven, brands free up significant operational bandwidth that was previously consumed by managing carrier relationships, reconciling COD remittances, and manually triaging delivery exceptions. For founder-led D2C businesses in particular, this matters: the time and attention previously spent on logistics operations gets redirected to product, brand and growth, the activities that actually compound. The aggregator model, in this sense, isn’t just cheaper or faster. It changes what the operating team can focus on.

    The inventory placement question

    Beyond courier selection, the second lever unlocked by orchestration platforms is inventory placement. One of the most under-exploited levers in Indian e-commerce logistics is the location where stock is physically stored. Many brands continue to ship from a single warehouse, accepting the longer delivery timelines and higher shipping costs that follow when customers are far from that warehouse.

    Distributed fulfilment changes that calculus. By analysing order density across pin-code clusters, brands can identify high-demand regions and place inventory across multiple fulfilment centres closer to consumption. The result is shorter shipping distances, lower forward shipping costs and faster delivery, with compounding effects on customer satisfaction, cancellation rates and repeat purchase behaviour.

    Brands using Shiprocket’s warehousing and demand intelligence capabilities have reported reductions in average delivery timelines of nearly 20 per cent, alongside measurable shipping cost reductions for long-distance orders. Faster deliveries are not just an improvement in customer experience; they are a profitability improvement.

    Why it’s important for India’s D2C decade

    The pattern across the brands that have built logistics on platforms like Shiprocket is consistent. They have replaced fixed-cost thinking with outcome-based optimisation. The question they ask is no longer “which courier is cheapest?” It is “which combination of cost, speed and success rate produces the best overall business outcome?”

    That is a meaningfully different operating posture, and it has consequences beyond shipping. Faster, more reliable delivery timelines surface at checkout and influence purchase decisions. Improved delivery predictability reduces customer support load. Closed-loop NDR management, where automated IVR, SMS and WhatsApp workflows engage customers when a delivery attempt fails, turns failed deliveries from sunk costs into recoverable orders. Each layer compounds with the others.

    The strategic implication is that for the cohort of Indian D2C brands now scaling past their early growth phase, Shiprocket’s merchant base spans fashion, beauty, electronics, packaged food, home and a long tail of emerging categories; logistics has stopped being a back-office function. It has become a competitive moat.

    India’s e-commerce market is set to keep widening geographically and deepening in category mix over the next decade. The brands that will scale through that expansion are unlikely to be the ones managing courier contracts manually. They will be the ones running on an orchestration infrastructure that can absorb the complexity for them. The quiet shift toward that model is already well underway. The question for the next wave of D2C founders is not whether to build on it, but how quickly to do so.

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  • Ratul Puri on India’s Renewable Shift: From Rapid Expansion to Execution-Led Growth

    Ratul Puri on India’s Renewable Shift: From Rapid Expansion to Execution-Led Growth

    New Delhi [India], May 8: India’s renewable energy sector is transitioning into a more execution-driven phase, moving beyond headline capacity addition numbers with sharper focus on system-level optimisation, reliability and integrated power delivery, according to Hindustan Power Chairman Ratul Puri. This shift reflects a broader evolution in the sector, where the emphasis is no longer solely on adding capacity, but on ensuring that projects are delivered efficiently and perform consistently over the long term.

     “India’s renewable energy sector is now maturing where it is not merely about adding capacity but ensuring that projects are delivered on ground with focus on round-the-clock delivery,” said Puri. 

    While solar and wind capacities have scaled significantly, on-ground execution continues to face structural challenges. Issues such as land acquisition, tenancy constraints and forest clearances are affecting project timelines and slowing progress across multiple levels. At the same time, delays in transmission infrastructure have impacted over 50 GW of renewable capacity under development, highlighting the importance of grid readiness alongside generation growth and the need for more coordinated planning.

    The sector is also witnessing delays due to unsigned Power Sale Agreements (PSAs), driven by changing procurement strategies among DISCOMs and large offtakers. These challenges underline the need for stronger alignment between policy, infrastructure and execution, ensuring that projects are not held back by contractual or procedural uncertainties.

    In parallel, India’s battery energy storage system (BESS) market is shifting from aggressive tendering to execution-led deployment. Despite approximately 102 GWh of tenders issued in 2025, only about 0.7 GWh has been commissioned, reflecting a clear gap between bidding and implementation,

    Highlighting this, RatulPuri stated that “the gap between aggressive tendering and actual commissioning highlights a structural shift where success in this market will now be defined by execution capability, not just bidding strength.”

    Tariff compression has supported adoption but has also tightened margins, increasing the importance of well capitalised and serious bidders, lifecycle-based project evaluation, disciplined execution and supply chain readiness. Developers are increasingly focusing on projects with clear offtake visibility, and policy support to ensure long-term viability and stable returns in a competitive market environment.

    “In a tariff-compressed environment, long-term viability depends on accurately accounting for lifecycle costs, where even small variations can materially impact project returns,” Ratul Puri said.

    Hybrid energy systems integrating solar, transitional power, and storage are adding operational complexity, requiring advanced coordination through Energy Management Systems (EMS) for real-time optimisation. At the same time, digital solutions are becoming central to improving performance, enabling predictive maintenance, better forecasting and dynamic dispatch across markets.

    RatulPuri further noted that “digital solutions are becoming the nerve centre of energy operations, enabling real-time optimisation, predictive maintenance and stronger performance across assets.”

    Looking ahead, storage is expected to play a critical role in supporting grid stability and renewable integration, even as the sector navigates risks related to supply chains, pricing mechanisms and long-term sustainability. The next phase of growth will depend on the sector’s ability to combine scale with execution strength and operational efficiency, Ratul Puri added.

    Ratul Puri concluded by stating that “storage is emerging as a critical pillar of grid stability, supporting renewable integration while creating new opportunities through evolving ancillary service markets.”

    About Ratul Puri:

    Ratul Puri is the Chairman of Hindustan Power, an integrated power generation company with a strong presence in renewable and transitional energy. Over the years, Ratul Puri has been actively involved in developing large-scale energy infrastructure projects that support India’s growing power requirements and its transition toward cleaner energy sources.

    About Hindustan Power:

    Hindustan Power is a leading integrated power generation company in India with a focus on renewable and transitional energy generation. With a commitment to sustainability and innovation, the company has been an active contributor to India’s energy transformation.

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  • CLEAR Premium Water Launches Bold New Campaign With Hrithik Roshan Against Duplicate Brands

    CLEAR Premium Water Launches Bold New Campaign With Hrithik Roshan Against Duplicate Brands

    Featuring brand ambassador Hrithik Roshan, CLEAR Premium Water’s latest TVC tackles India’s duplicate water market with nostalgia, humour, and a strong message on authenticity.

    Surat (Gujarat) [India], May 7: India’s bottled water industry is expanding rapidly, but alongside this growth comes an increasingly concerning challenge — the rise of lookalike and duplicate water brands. Addressing this issue head-on, CLEAR Premium Water has unveiled one of its most assertive and culturally resonant campaigns to date: “Pani Ho Toh CLEAR.”

    Featuring brand ambassador Hrithik Roshan, the campaign combines humour, nostalgia, and a sharp consumer-first message to spotlight the growing problem of imitation products in the packaged drinking water segment.

    India has long been familiar with the culture of duplicates. From fashion accessories to electronics, imitation products have become commonplace across markets. However, CLEAR Premium Water believes that when it comes to drinking water, imitation moves beyond inconvenience and enters the realm of consumer safety and trust.

    With India’s bottled water market valued at over USD 7 billion and continuing to grow at a strong pace, CLEAR’s latest campaign positions the brand not merely as a market participant but as a category leader advocating authenticity and quality standards.

    According to the company, the creative direction behind the campaign draws a compelling parallel between Hrithik Roshan’s iconic public persona and the reality of imitation in the bottled water space. Over the past two decades, the actor’s dance moves, film characters, and style have been recreated countless times across popular culture. Yet, as the campaign subtly highlights, while imitation may replicate appearances, it rarely captures the substance behind the original.

    CLEAR applies the same analogy to the packaged water market. Several brands have attempted to mirror CLEAR’s visual identity through similar packaging aesthetics, label structures, and cap designs. However, the company emphasizes that the real differentiator lies in its rigorous purification standards, fully automated manufacturing processes, and commitment to quality assurance.

    Speaking about the campaign, Hrithik Roshan said:

    “Over the last three years, I’ve been witness to CLEAR’s commitment to quality. I admire their authenticity and drive to deliver safe drinking water to their consumers. I’m happy to be a part of their campaign that puts customer safety at the forefront.”

    The campaign also reflects a broader strategic positioning for CLEAR Premium Water. Rather than framing the narrative as a competitive market battle, the company is steering the conversation toward consumer awareness and category responsibility.

    Commenting on the initiative, Nayan Shah, Founder & CEO of CLEAR Premium Water, said:

    “This campaign is not about winning against competition, it’s about standing up for the consumer. In a space where imitation can blur perception, our responsibility is to restore clarity, reinforce trust, and remind people that when it comes to water, authenticity isn’t a choice, it’s a necessity.”

    Anchored by the tagline “Pani Ho Toh CLEAR,” the campaign functions both as a brand promise and a consumer call-to-action, encouraging people to make informed choices in a market where visual similarities can often create confusion.

    Founded in 2005 by Nayan Shah under Energy Beverages Pvt. Ltd., Ahmedabad, CLEAR Premium Water has established a strong nationwide footprint over the years. The brand currently operates through more than 45 plants, 1,100+ distributors, 1,600+ HoReCa clients, and over 1,75,000 retail outlets across India. Its distribution network spans airlines, luxury hotels, modern trade, quick commerce platforms, and general retail channels.

    The campaign is currently live across digital platforms and mass media channels.

    Instagram:
    CLEAR Premium Water Campaign on Instagram

    YouTube:
    CLEAR Premium Water Campaign on YouTube

  • Dachepalli Publishers Reports Strong Q4 FY26 & FY26 Performance

    Dachepalli Publishers Reports Strong Q4 FY26 & FY26 Performance

    Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], May 7: Dachepalli Publishers Limited, a growing player in the education and academic publishing segment, announced its audited financial results for Q4 & FY26.

    Key Financial Highlights – Q4 FY26

    Particulars Q4 FY26 Q4 FY25 % Growth
    Total Income (₹ Lakhs) 3,585.02 1,850.26 93.76%
    EBITDA (₹ Lakhs) 579.40 275.27 110.48%
    EBITDA Margin (%) 16.16% 14.88% 128 Bps
    Net Profit (₹ Lakhs) 515.72 231.78 122.50%
    Net Profit Margin (%) 14.39% 12.53% 186 Bps
    EPS (₹) 3.44 2.10 63.81%

    Key Financial Highlights – FY26

    Particulars FY26 FY25 % Growth
    Total Income (₹ Lakhs) 9,139.02 6,425.26 42.24%
    EBITDA (₹ Lakhs) 2,352.48 1,317.52 78.55%
    EBITDA Margin (%) 25.74% 20.51% 524 Bps
    Net Profit (₹ Lakhs) 1,520.01 836.10 81.80%
    Net Profit Margin (%) 16.63% 13.01% 362 Bps
    EPS (₹) 12.62 7.59 66.27%

    Other Key Highlights:

    • FY26 Revenue grew 42% YoY to ₹91.4 Cr while Net Profit surged 82% YoY to ₹15.2 Cr, reflecting strong operating leverage and improved profitability 
    • EBITDA Margin expanded to 25.7%, driven by better operational efficiency and higher in-house production 
    • Borrowings reduced during FY26, strengthening the balance sheet and improving financial flexibility 
    • ROE and ROCE stood at 19.01% and 19.17%, respectively, reflecting efficient capital utilization 
    • Strong execution, expanding distribution reach, and growing institutional demand continued to support scalable growth momentum

    Operational Highlights – FY26

    • Printing Capacity: 15 TPD
    • Capacity Utilization: ~75% in FY26 (vs ~40% earlier)
    • Production Mix: ~85% in-house, ~15% outsourced during peak demand
    • Warehouse Footprint: ~40,000 sq. ft.
    • Geographical Presence: Expanded across 13+ states
    • Product Portfolio: 650+ titles across academic segments

    Commenting on the performance, Mr. Vinod Kumar DachepalliWhole Time Director, Dachepalli Publishers Limited, stated: “Our performance in Q4 and FY26 reflects the strength of our academic publishing portfolio and our disciplined approach towards execution. Improved capacity utilization, higher in-house production, and expansion across key markets have contributed to enhanced operational efficiency and profitability.

    The education sector continues to witness steady demand, particularly across Tier 2 and Tier 3 markets, supported by curriculum expansion and institutional requirements. We are also strengthening our distribution capabilities through platforms like Pelican Edu, while exploring opportunities to diversify into non-seasonal revenue streams.

    With a continued focus on operational excellence, technology integration, and scalable platform-driven growth, we remain confident in sustaining our growth momentum in the coming years.”

    About Dachepalli Publishers Limited

    Dachepalli Publishers Limited operates in the education and publishing sector, focusing on academic textbooks and supplementary educational content. The Company serves schools and institutions through a structured distribution network and remains committed to delivering high-quality educational resources while ensuring long-term value creation.

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  • IMTS Institute Launches WILP Course Counselling: Transforming Work-Integrated Learning for Working Professionals in India

    IMTS Institute Launches WILP Course Counselling: Transforming Work-Integrated Learning for Working Professionals in India

    New Delhi [India], May 7: In a significant move to empower India’s working professionals, IMTS Institute has officially announced the launch of its Work Integrated Learning Program (WILP). This industry-focused course is designed to help employed individuals upgrade their qualifications without leaving their jobs. The WILP program is gaining nationwide attention as it bridges the gap between academic learning and real-world industry experience.

    What is the WILP Course?

    The Work Integrated Learning Program (WILP) is a specially designed academic program that allows working professionals to earn a UGC-recognized degree while continuing their employment. It combines online classes, practical training, and project-based learning to ensure students gain both theoretical knowledge and hands-on industry exposure.

    Unlike traditional distance learning, WILP focuses on applied learning — where students directly relate their workplace experience to their academic curriculum.

    Why the WILP Course Stands Out

    IMTS Institute, with over 17 years of experience in higher education consultancy, has partnered with top UGC, AICTE, and NAAC-approved universities to deliver this program. The institute has helped more than 5,00,000 students across India achieve their academic and career goals.

    Key Features of IMTS WILP Program

    • UGC Approved Universities
    • 100% Hybrid and Evening Class Learning Mode
    • Flexible Class Timings for working professionals
    • Affordable Fee Structure with EMI options
    • Globally Recognized Degree
    • Dedicated Student Support until course completion

    Eligibility Criteria

    • Candidates must be working professionals or self-employed
    • Minimum qualification: 10+2 for UG courses and a graduation for PG courses
    • Minimum 1 year of work experience preferred
    • Open to candidates aged 18 years and above

    Duration & Mode of Study

    • Duration: 1 to 4 years, depending on course level
    • Mode: Online classes, weekend sessions, and hybrid learning
    • Examinations: Conducted offline or at the designated Campus

    Popular Courses Offered Under WILP

    Students can pursue a wide range of programs under the WILP framework, including:

    • BBA / MBA (Work Integrated)
    • B.Com / M.Com (Work Integrated)
    • B.Tech / M.Tech (WILP)
    • B.A. / M.A. (Work Integrated)

    Fees & Scholarships

    • Course Fees: Starting from ₹15,000 per year
    • EMI Facility available for all working students

    Career Opportunities After WILP

    A WILP degree opens doors to multiple career growth opportunities, such as:

    • Promotions and Salary Hikes
    • Career Transition into IT, Management, or Engineering
    • Eligibility for Government Jobs
    • Higher Studies (PhD or International Programs)
    • Entrepreneurship and Startup Opportunities

    Why WILP is the Future of Indian Education

    India has over 50 crore working professionals, and many of them lack the time to pursue regular degrees. The WILP course by IMTS Institute solves this problem by offering flexibility, affordability, and recognition — three pillars that today’s learners demand.

    With increasing competition in the job market, employers now prefer candidates who possess both academic credentials and practical industry experience — exactly what WILP delivers.

    The launch of the WILP Course at IMTS Institute is a major milestone for India’s working class, helping them achieve higher education without career interruption. Whether you are aiming for a promotion, a career switch, or personal growth, this program is your perfect choice.

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  • Rahul Kanuganti: Redefining Logistics Through Energy Planning

    Rahul Kanuganti: Redefining Logistics Through Energy Planning

    Rahul Kanuganti, Co-Founder and CEO of Flytta Green

    Hyderabad (Telangana) [India], May 5: India’s logistics sector has traditionally been viewed through the lens of transport efficiency. The focus has been on moving goods faster, reducing turnaround times, and improving connectivity between industrial hubs. While these factors remain important, a deeper shift is beginning to take shape. Logistics is no longer just about movement. It is increasingly about how that movement is powered.

    This is where energy planning enters the conversation. As freight volumes grow and industries expand, the energy required to move goods becomes a critical factor. Diesel has long been the default fuel for heavy-duty logistics, but its limitations are becoming more visible. Price volatility, import dependence, and environmental concerns are forcing a reassessment of how energy is used in transport.

    Among those working at this intersection of logistics and energy is Rahul Kanuganti, who approaches freight not just as a transport problem but as an energy system that must be planned, managed, and optimised.

    Looking Beyond Transport Efficiency

    For decades, logistics improvements have been measured in terms of speed and cost. Faster deliveries and lower freight rates have been the primary benchmarks. However, these improvements often operate within the same underlying framework, one that depends heavily on fossil fuels.

    Rahul Kanuganti’s approach shifts the focus toward long-term sustainability and resilience. Instead of asking how goods can move faster, the question becomes how they can move in a way that is less exposed to fuel volatility and better aligned with domestic energy resources. This perspective changes the role of logistics. It becomes part of a broader economic system where energy, infrastructure, and supply chains are interconnected. Decisions about fleet deployment, route design, and operational planning are no longer isolated from energy considerations.

    Freight as an Energy System

    Heavy-duty logistics consumes a significant amount of energy because of the scale and intensity of operations. Trucks operate long hours, carry large loads, and form the backbone of industrial supply chains. This makes freight one of the most energy-intensive parts of the economy. Viewing logistics as an energy system brings new priorities into focus. It highlights the need to manage energy consumption more efficiently, reduce dependence on imported fuels, and explore alternatives that can be integrated into existing operations.

    Electric mobility plays a role in this shift, but it is not treated as a standalone solution. Instead, it becomes part of a larger framework that includes energy sourcing, charging infrastructure, and operational planning.

    Integrating Energy Planning into Logistics

    Energy planning in logistics involves understanding how, when, and where energy is consumed. In traditional diesel-based systems, fuel is purchased as needed, and consumption is often treated as a variable cost. Electric systems require a different approach. Charging infrastructure must be aligned with routes and schedules. Power availability must be assessed in advance. Energy consumption must be monitored and managed to ensure that vehicles operate without disruption.

    This level of planning introduces greater discipline into logistics operations. It encourages operators to think in terms of predictable routes, consistent duty cycles, and structured energy usage. Over time, this approach can improve both efficiency and reliability. Rahul Kanuganti’s work reflects this shift toward planning-driven logistics. By focusing on how energy integrates with operations, the emphasis moves from reactive management to structured execution.

    Connecting Energy Security to Logistics

    India’s dependence on imported fuels has long been a concern at the national level. Logistics, as a major consumer of diesel, plays a direct role in this equation. Reducing fuel dependency in freight transport contributes to broader energy security goals. Electric mobility offers one pathway by shifting energy consumption from imported fuels to domestically generated electricity. As renewable energy capacity increases, this shift becomes more significant. Freight movement powered by electricity can gradually align with cleaner and more stable energy sources.

    This connection between logistics and energy security is often overlooked. However, it has important implications for economic resilience. When supply chains are less exposed to global fuel price fluctuations, industries can plan more effectively and operate with greater stability.

    Operational Realities and Industrial Use Cases

    While the idea of integrating energy planning into logistics is compelling, its success depends on practical implementation. Industrial environments provide a useful starting point because of their structured nature. Routes in these settings are often predictable. Vehicles move between fixed points such as factories, warehouses, and ports. This predictability allows for better planning of energy usage and charging schedules.

    Heavy-duty electric vehicles can be deployed in such environments without disrupting operations, provided that infrastructure and planning are aligned. This approach avoids the challenges of trying to apply the same model across highly variable or unstructured routes. Rahul Kanuganti, Founder and CEO of Flytta, has worked on applying these principles within industrial logistics, focusing on integrating electric heavy-duty vehicles into controlled operating environments where reliability and planning are critical.

    Technology as an Enabler

    Modern logistics increasingly relies on data and digital tools. Telematics systems, sensors, and performance monitoring platforms provide real-time insights into vehicle behaviour, energy consumption, and route efficiency. These tools are particularly important in energy-driven logistics systems. They allow operators to track how energy is used, identify inefficiencies, and make adjustments to improve performance.

    Technology also supports predictive maintenance and fleet optimisation. By analysing data, operators can anticipate issues before they affect operations and ensure that vehicles remain in service. This integration of technology and energy planning creates a more responsive and efficient logistics system, where decisions are based on measurable data rather than assumptions.

    A Shift Toward Long-Term Resilience

    The transition from diesel-based logistics to energy-planned systems will not happen overnight. It requires investment, infrastructure development, and changes in operational mindset. However, the long-term benefits are becoming increasingly clear. Reduced exposure to fuel price volatility, improved environmental performance, and better alignment with national energy goals all contribute to a more resilient logistics system. For industries that depend on reliable freight movement, these factors are critical.

    Rahul Kanuganti’s approach reflects a broader trend within the sector. Logistics is being redefined not just as a function of movement, but as a system that connects energy, infrastructure, and industrial growth.

    Rethinking the Future of Logistics

    As India continues to expand its industrial base, the demand for efficient and reliable logistics will only increase. Meeting this demand requires more than incremental improvements. It requires a shift in how logistics is understood and managed. Energy planning offers a framework for this shift. By integrating energy considerations into logistics operations, it is possible to build systems that are both efficient and sustainable.

    The future of logistics in India will depend on how effectively this integration is achieved. Those who recognise the link between energy and movement will be better positioned to navigate the challenges ahead. In this evolving landscape, redefining logistics through energy planning is not just an innovative idea. It is a practical response to the changing needs of industry and the broader economy.

  • Beyond Compliance: How Surat’s Earth Day Drive Brought India’s BRSR and EPR Frameworks to Life

    Beyond Compliance: How Surat’s Earth Day Drive Brought India’s BRSR and EPR Frameworks to Life

    Surat (Gujarat) [India], May 6: The transition to a sustainable world requires more than corporate vision; it demands rigid frameworks and collective, on-ground action. On April 29, 2026, EPR compliance leader Nirmal Vasundhara brought this reality to life in Surat. By spearheading a mega beach and riverfront clean-up drive in collaboration with Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages (HCCB), the organization orchestrated a powerful, live demonstration of India’s environmental regulations in action, uniting the four vital pillars of circularity—the Government, Corporates, Citizens, and Compliance Partners.

    The Regulatory Engines: BRSR and EPR In India, the shift toward a sustainable economy is driven by two critical mandates. The Business Responsibility and Sustainability Reporting (BRSR) framework is the Government of India’s ESG mandate for the top 1,000 listed corporates, designed to hardwire sustainable, transparent behaviors into corporate DNA. Parallel to this is Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), the statutory rule ensuring producers take physical and financial accountability for the recovery and recycling of their pre and post-consumer waste. The Surat drive was the very essence of these laws materialized into civic action.

    Corporations Leading by Example: True sustainability happens when businesses view regulations not as a burden, but as a blueprint for impact. Organizations like HCCB exemplify this commitment. Through their active partnership backing of this mega drive, HCCB demonstrated the hard, on-ground work required to be genuinely sustainable, proving that well-compliant corporates are actively investing in the environmental health of their communities.

    The Role of Government and Citizens. No framework can succeed without local enforcement and public participation. With steadfast guidance from the Gujarat Pollution Control Board (GPCB) and the Surat Municipal Corporation (SMC), local governance provided the necessary regulatory backing and infrastructure. Meanwhile, environmentally conscious citizens and frontline Safai Sathis acted as the crucial grassroots engine, proving that source-level waste segregation is the absolute bedrock of a circular economy.

    Nirmal Vasundhara: Bridging the Gap. Navigating the complexities of BRSR and EPR requires deep expertise and operational muscle. This is where Nirmal Vasundhara steps in. Beyond facilitating physical circularity, the organization provides the strategic guidance required to align corporate actions with both national mandates and global ESG frameworks. Whether it is on-ground EPR execution, GHG accounting, or preparing for comprehensive global assessments like EcoVadis and CDP, Nirmal Vasundhara bridges the gap between policy and practice. During this event, they ensured complete circularity by channeling 100% of the collected plastic waste directly to their MRF Center for recycling.

    From the Director’s Desk: “Environmental compliance requires verifiable, on-ground action. By uniting government, corporates, and citizens, we turn BRSR and EPR frameworks into real impact. Our mission is to ensure every sustainability commitment translates into complete circularity.”— Miklesh Goel, Managing Director

    The Bottom Line: Achieving a circular economy cannot be done in silos. When the government establishes frameworks like BRSR and EPR, compliant corporates like HCCB fund the recovery, citizens segregate at the source, and partners like Nirmal Vasundhara provide the vital training and operational infrastructure, a zero-waste future transforms from a regulatory goal into a tangible reality.

  • BNI Ahmedabad to host Symposium 2026, bring together 10,000+ business leaders

    BNI Ahmedabad to host Symposium 2026, bring together 10,000+ business leaders

    Flagship networking event to be held on May 8–9 at GMDC Convention Centre

    Ahmedabad (Gujarat) [India], May 7: BNI Ahmedabad has announced the upcoming edition of its flagship annual event, the BNI Ahmedabad Symposium 2026, scheduled to take place on May 8 and 9 at the GMDC Convention Centre in Ahmedabad.

    Centred around the theme ‘Upward, Forward and Beyond’, the two-day symposium is expected to bring together over 10,000 business leaders and entrepreneurs from more than 50 industries, making it one of the largest business networking platforms in the region.

    Designed to promote meaningful connections and tangible business outcomes, the symposium will offer structured networking formats such as Industry Power Dates and pre-scheduled one-to-one meetings, enabling participants to engage in focused, high-value conversations. The event will feature the world’s first AI-powered networking by using AI to do one thing that it can never replace, which is building relationships.

    The event will also include a high-impact mix of curated networking opportunities, expert-led speaker sessions and a large-scale business exhibition, including over 150 stalls under the Sicilian Expo.

    Yash Vasant, Chairman and Executive Director of BNI Ahmedabad, said, “Symposium 2026 is where ambition meets opportunity at scale. Imagine 10,000+ business leaders in one room, not just exchanging cards but building real relationships that drive growth. This year, we are taking networking beyond numbers to create an ecosystem where the right conversations happen faster and collaborations take shape instantly. We are truly going upward, forward and beyond.”

    The symposium will also host a series of speaker sessions and masterclasses by industry experts. The keynote address will be delivered by investment banker, business educator and bestselling author CA Sarthak Ahuja, with a special talk on ‘Modern Management Lessons from the Bhagavad Gita’ by former IPS officer Ajay Tomar. Ahmedabad Municipal Commissioner Banchha Nidhi Pani will also be present on the occasion.

    A panel discussion featuring Sharvil Shridhar of A. Shridhar Group and Hiren Patel of PSP Projects, to be moderated by senior editor Ajay Umat, is another highlight of the symposium.

    Moreover, the expo will remain open for all on May 9, giving people of Ahmedabad an opportunity to experience the expo and see what BNI is about.

    With a thriving network of over 4,000 members, BNI Ahmedabad continues to play a significant role in facilitating business growth through structured referrals and relationship-driven networking. The symposium further reinforces its commitment to creating a powerful platform for collaboration, learning and growth.

    BNI Ahmedabad Symposium 2026 is presented by A. Shridhar and powered by Shyam Group.

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