The Great Indian Startup Summit 2024 — The Builders Club

The Great Indian Startup Summit – Highlights

The Great Indian Startup Summit 2024 — The Builders Club
The Great Indian Startup Summit, 13th September 2024 | 500+ Founders · 100+ Investors · 50+ CXOs

India’s Startup Ecosystem Got a Room — And Then Got Honest

By The Builders Club  |  September 2024  |  8 min read


There are events, and then there are conversations. Most events are polished panels with rehearsed answers and decks that nobody will read again. Occasionally, you get a room where the questions are real, the speakers haven’t been briefed on what to say, and the person sitting next to you turns out to be exactly who you needed to meet.

The Great Indian Startup Summit, held on 13th September 2024, tried hard to be the second kind. By most measures — and certainly by the people who were in the room — it succeeded.

Over the course of a single day at one of Bengaluru’s most energetic venues, The Builders Club brought together over 500 founders, 100+ investors, and 50+ CXOs — without spending a single rupee on paid marketing. Not a Google Ad. Not a sponsored LinkedIn post. The entire event was filled through the trust and reach of community partnerships — a fact that quietly made its own statement about how relationships still outperform retargeting in a world drowning in content.

What followed was a day of conversations that India’s startup ecosystem needed to have — about content, community, D2C, AI, EV mobility, and the stubborn, unglamorous business of building something offline in a country obsessed with apps.


The Creator Economy Has a Shelf Life Problem — And Brands Are Paying the Price

Abhishek Asthana — Gabbbar Singh at the Content Panel
Abhishek Asthana — the brain behind Gabbbar Singh — on the Content Panel

The first hard conversation of the day came from an unexpected place: a man who built one of India’s most recognisable internet personas and then had to reckon with what it meant to sustain it.

Abhishek Asthana, the creator behind Gabbbar Singh — a social media account that became a cultural reference point for an entire generation of Indian internet users — didn’t come to the stage to celebrate viral success. He came to interrogate it.

His central argument: influencers have a shelf life, and most brands that partner with them don’t account for it. The internet’s attention economy rewards novelty. The moment a creator’s content becomes predictable — even if that predictability is high-quality and consistent — the algorithm and the audience begin to drift. What looked like brand equity was often just borrowed attention, and brands writing six-figure cheques for influencer campaigns rarely asked what happened in 18 months when the creator’s reach had peaked and started its slow decline.

Asthana’s broader point, which landed harder in the room, was about what brands should actually be building instead: their own content identity. The brands that would outlast influencer cycles were the ones creating content that stood on its own — not just amplifying someone else’s audience, but building one. He dissected how brands should think about social media not as a distribution channel but as a relationship infrastructure, where the investment is in producing content that earns repeated engagement from the same person, rather than a single spike of borrowed visibility.

For founders who had been throwing money at influencer collaborations and seeing diminishing returns, this was both a diagnosis and a direction.


Content Isn’t a Marketing Function — It’s the Product of a Great Community

Udayan Walvekar — GrowthX at the Content Panel
Udayan Walvekar from GrowthX on why content is the soul of community

If Asthana addressed brands, Udayan Walvekar from GrowthX addressed community builders — and his thesis was equally uncomfortable for the room.

GrowthX has built one of India’s most respected communities for growth professionals, and Walvekar has observed first-hand what separates communities that compound in value from ones that plateau after their initial enthusiasm. His answer, stated with the confidence of someone who has tested it: content.

Not content as newsletters sent to a subscriber list. Not content as a LinkedIn post announcing the next event. Content as the living memory of a community — the documentation of every insight shared, every debate had, every pattern observed by the people inside. When a community consistently surfaces and articulates the thinking of its best members, it creates something far more valuable than access: it creates a body of knowledge that makes membership feel necessary.

Communities that don’t invest in content production, Walvekar argued, inevitably become WhatsApp groups — where conversations happen and then disappear. Every insight is lost the moment it scrolls out of view. The communities worth belonging to are the ones that treat their members’ knowledge as an asset worth capturing.

For the founders in the room building community-led businesses, this reframed the content question entirely. Content isn’t something you do for marketing. It’s the proof that your community produces value — and the mechanism through which that value compounds over time.


Don’t Charge Too Early — How Premature Monetization Kills the Communities With the Most Potential

Samit Khanna — Signal Ventures at the Community Panel
Samit Khanna, Signal Ventures — on the trap of early monetization

Following naturally from Walvekar’s framework was a panel that addressed the question every community founder eventually faces: when do you start charging?

Samit Khanna from Signal Ventures — who has seen hundreds of community-led startups from the investor side of the table — offered a counterintuitive position: the communities most likely to destroy themselves are the ones that find revenue early.

The logic is straightforward once you hear it. In the early stages of a community, the social contract between members is built on value exchange — not financial transaction. People show up, contribute, refer others, and evangelise because they believe they’re part of something worth believing in. The moment a paywall enters that relationship, the nature of the contract changes. Members begin to evaluate: is this worth the money? The emotional investment shifts to a rational calculus. And communities, Khanna argued, cannot survive rational calculus in their early stages.

The communities that win — the ones that eventually command premium membership fees and strong retention — spend their first phase obsessively focused on the quality of connections and the usefulness of conversations. Monetisation is a consequence of trust, not a driver of it. Founders who reverse the order, who see early member growth and reach for the revenue lever too quickly, often find that the very people who made the community worth monetising are the first ones to leave.


D2C Grew Up — And the Brands That Don’t Realise It Are About to Get Left Behind

Arjun Vaidya — D2C Panel at the Great Indian Startup Summit
Arjun Vaidya on the evolution of India’s D2C ecosystem

The D2C panel brought together two sharp perspectives on where India’s consumer brand ecosystem actually stands — and where it is going.

Arjun Vaidya — who has lived D2C as a founder with Dr. Vaidya’s and now views it as an investor — was direct about what the first wave of Indian D2C got wrong. The early playbook was essentially a performance marketing arbitrage: find a product with reasonable margins, pour money into Facebook and Google ads, grow GMV, raise at a multiple of revenue, and repeat. It worked, until it didn’t.

CAC crept up as every brand discovered the same audience on the same platforms. Retention remained weak because few brands had built any reason beyond convenience for a customer to come back. Gross margins that looked healthy on paper collapsed under the weight of logistics, returns, and platform fees that the original pitch decks hadn’t modelled.

The next generation of D2C, Vaidya argued, looks very different. The winners are brands with genuine product differentiation — not marketing differentiation. Brands that have invested in the depth of their customer relationship rather than the width of their funnel. Brands that can hold a conversation with a customer offline, not just online. The playbook has matured, and so has the bar.

Rishi Batra from TWID added a dimension that D2C brands consistently undervalue: loyalty. In a world where acquisition costs make second-time buyers significantly more valuable than first-time ones, the infrastructure of how you reward and retain a customer matters enormously. TWID has built a platform that allows brands to let customers spend their reward points from banks and loyalty programs on purchases — effectively turning dormant points into real consumer demand. Batra’s point was that loyalty infrastructure isn’t a nice-to-have for a D2C brand at scale; it’s a structural advantage that compounds.

Rishi Batra — TWID on loyalty platforms
Rishi Batra, TWID — on building loyalty infrastructure that actually works

The Offline Opportunity Nobody Is Talking About

Ravi Raghav — Laundrokart at the Great Indian Startup Summit
Ravi Raghav, Laundrokart — building a scalable offline business in India

One of the more grounding conversations of the day came from Ravi Raghav, founder of Laundrokart, who is building a franchise-based laundry business in a market that most venture-funded founders wouldn’t touch.

India’s laundry market is valued at approximately $4.7 billion — a number large enough to command attention, and yet almost entirely unorganised. Most of the country’s laundry still happens through the local dhobi or an unreliable neighbourhood service. The consumer experience is inconsistent, the pricing is opaque, and the quality varies wildly. Raghav saw all of this as a systems problem — not a market problem.

His argument on stage was a useful corrective for a room that tends to default to digital-first thinking. The hardest and most defensible businesses in India are often the ones that require the most operational discipline at the local level. Building a scalable offline franchise model demands solving for unit economics, quality consistency, franchisee training, local operations management, and customer trust — all simultaneously. It doesn’t move as fast as a SaaS company. It doesn’t raise at the same multiples. But the moat it builds, once the operations are proven, is extraordinarily difficult to replicate.

For the investors in the room, Raghav’s session was a reminder that the most interesting Indian businesses may not always be the most algorithmically legible ones.


How Enterprises Actually Think About AI — and What That Means for Startups Trying to Sell to Them

Tejas Pandit — Dell Technologies on AI Panel
Tejas Pandit, Dell Technologies — the enterprise view on AI adoption

The AI panel could easily have been a showcase of enthusiasm. It wasn’t. Tejas Pandit from Dell Technologies — representing the infrastructure and enterprise side of the AI conversation — brought a rigour to the discussion that the room needed.

Large enterprises, Pandit explained, approach AI adoption with a very different psychology than the startup ecosystem imagines. The question in a boardroom isn’t “isn’t this incredible?” The questions are: what is the total cost of ownership? How do we secure the data? Where does liability sit when the model gets it wrong? How does this integrate with systems that were built 15 years ago and are not going anywhere? Who owns the governance?

For startups trying to sell AI solutions into enterprise, this is essential intelligence. The founders who close enterprise AI deals are not the ones with the most technically impressive demos. They are the ones who have mapped the buying journey — who sits on the procurement committee, what compliance requirements need to be cleared, what the IT team’s objections will be, and how the business case gets presented to a CFO who is managing cost pressure at the same time as being told AI is mandatory.

Pandit’s session was one of the more practically useful of the day for anyone navigating B2B sales into large organisations — which, given the mix of founders in the room, was a significant portion of the audience.


Building BluSmart: The Long Game on EV Mobility

Punit Goyal — BluSmart Fireside Chat
Punit Goyal, Co-Founder BluSmart — on the EV industry and the infrastructure bet

The day’s most watched conversation may have been the fireside chat with Punit Goyal, co-founder of BluSmart — India’s largest fully-electric ride-hailing platform.

BluSmart’s story is, at its core, a story about conviction over convenience. When Goyal and his co-founders decided to build a ride-hailing company that exclusively operated EVs, the ecosystem was not ready. Charging infrastructure was sparse. The range anxiety was real. Driver adoption required active evangelism. And the capital required to build a fleet before the unit economics were proven was significant.

What makes the BluSmart model interesting — and what Goyal unpacked on stage — is that they bet on the infrastructure layer, not just the product. Rather than aggregating third-party vehicle owners (as Ola and Uber do), BluSmart owns its fleet and its charging infrastructure. This creates a fundamentally different cost and quality curve. Every car is maintained to the same standard. Every charge is controlled. The customer experience is predictable in a way that aggregator models structurally cannot guarantee.

The broader thesis Goyal articulated is one that the room found worth sitting with: in categories where the infrastructure doesn’t yet exist, the company willing to build it — not just ride it — captures a structural advantage that is extremely difficult to compete against once it’s established. That’s not a thesis unique to EVs. It applies to cold chain logistics, rural fintech, offline healthcare, and a dozen other sectors where India’s infrastructure gap is also its opportunity.

BluSmart also served as the event’s official sponsor for speaker transportation on the day — a fitting detail that underlined the alignment between the company’s values and the community it chose to show up for.


The Great Indian Startup Pitch: 250 Applicants, 10 Finalists, One Winner

Ariro Toys wins the Great Indian Startup Pitch 2024
Vasanth Tamilselvan and Nisha Ramasamy from Ariro Toys — Champions of the Great Indian Startup Pitch 2024

Alongside the panels, the Summit hosted one of India’s most competitive early-stage pitch competitions of the year. Over 250 startups applied. Ten were selected — with the help of over 30 investment partners who reviewed applications and shortlisted founders they believed deserved the spotlight.

Each of the ten pitched on the main stage in front of over 100 investors. The atmosphere was closer to a real investor meeting than a performance event: pointed questions, follow-ups, and the kind of scrutiny that reveals exactly how well a founder knows their own business.

The ten finalists were Ariro Toys, FlexyPe, Find Your Kicks India, The Folding Company, Prodancy, WINhealth, AIOTEL, GoPllay, PRESET Building Systems, and Doodley — a diverse set of businesses spanning edtech, fintech, D2C, construction, and consumer platforms.

At the end of the day, the trophy went to Ariro Toys — the Bengaluru-based startup founded by Vasanth Tamilselvan and Nisha Ramasamy, which designs sustainable, culturally rooted wooden toys for children. Their win was more than symbolic: every startup that participated in the Pitch is being actively connected to the investment partners who evaluated them — turning the competition into a sustained relationship-building exercise rather than a one-day event.


The $0 Marketing Story — and Why It Matters More Than Any Panel

Ecosystem partners at the Great Indian Startup Summit
The ecosystem partners who made it possible — without a single rupee in paid marketing

Perhaps the most telling story of the day was one that happened before the event even began.

The Builders Club did not buy a single ad to fill 500+ seats. No paid influencer. No sponsored email blast. The event was seeded entirely through ecosystem partners — communities, accelerators, investor networks, and institutions who believed enough in the quality of what was being built to put their own reputation behind it and invite their members.

These included TiE Mumbai and TiE Bangalore, Headstart Network Foundation, NVIDIA, NSRCEL, The D2C Folks, GrowthX, Draper Startup House, BITS Pilani’s entrepreneurship society, ISBR Business School, Unwind Ventures, Introbot AI, Urban Vault, Women in Product India, and over a dozen others — each of whom brought their communities into a room that rewarded them with genuine conversations.

This is worth pausing on. In an industry that measures event success by headcount and measures marketing success by cost-per-registration, The Builders Club built something that ran entirely on trust and reciprocity. The result was not just a sold-out event. It was a room where almost everyone knew why they were there — and who else they wanted to meet.

That is significantly harder to manufacture than reach. And it is precisely what made the conversations worth having.


The Partners Who Made It Happen

Corporate Partners — Dell, Intel, Netcore, BluSmart, ixigo
Title Partners: Dell Technologies, Intel, Netcore for Startups, BluSmart, ixigo

The Summit’s title partners — Dell Technologies, Intel Corporation, Netcore for Startups, BluSmart, and ixigo — each brought something beyond a logo placement. Dell and Intel anchored the conversation on enterprise technology. Netcore brought its startup programme. BluSmart handled speaker logistics on the day, ensuring the experience of attending began before anyone walked through the door. ixigo — one of India’s most enduring travel tech stories — lent credibility to the ecosystem’s enterprise tier.

Exhibiting on the floor were Mixedware, Fly Camp, Vultr, and The Startup Zone — companies that put products in front of the most relevant possible audience without a single wasted impression.


What the Room Said Afterwards

The real measure of an event is not the panels — it’s the energy that follows. In the days and weeks after the Summit, founders, investors, and attendees took to LinkedIn to share what the day meant for them. The posts ranged from tactical takeaways to something rarer: a sense of having been in a room that reminded them why they were building in the first place.

A selection of those voices is documented below.

Attendee post on LinkedIn
Attendee post on LinkedIn
Attendee post on LinkedIn
Ravi Raghav post on LinkedIn
Attendee post on LinkedIn
Attendee post on LinkedIn
Attendee post on LinkedIn
Attendee post on LinkedIn
Attendee post on LinkedIn
Attendee post on LinkedIn

Session Recordings — Watch the Panels in Full

All panel conversations have been documented on LinkedIn. Watch each session in full below.

Abhishek Asthana — How Brands Should Leverage Social Media

https://www.linkedin.com/embed/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:7249584330044289024

Gabbbar Singh — The Shelf Life of Influencers

https://www.linkedin.com/embed/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:7249581839735009281

Udayan Walvekar, GrowthX — Content in Communities

https://www.linkedin.com/embed/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:7249588563032301568

Samit Khanna, Signal Ventures — Why Early Monetization Backfires

https://www.linkedin.com/embed/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:7249591524714291200

Arjun Vaidya — D2C Ecosystem Evolution

https://www.linkedin.com/embed/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:7249592583222403073

Rishi Batra, TWID — Loyalty Platforms & D2C

https://www.linkedin.com/embed/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:7249598648865464321

Ravi Raghav, Laundrokart — Building a Scalable Offline Business

https://www.linkedin.com/embed/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:7249597208562393088

Tejas Pandit, Dell — How Corporates Think About AI

https://www.linkedin.com/embed/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:7249607862480482304

Punit Goyal, BluSmart — The EV Industry in India

https://www.linkedin.com/embed/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:7253449241539293186

The Great Indian Startup Summit is an annual event by The Builders Club — a global community of founders and CXOs. To learn more about the community or attend the next event, visit thebuildersclub.me.