Founder Thesis

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Dickens said, it was the best of the times, it was the worst of the times. The words have never been truer.  Best because there’s never been a better time to be an entrepreneur.  Worst because the clutter is mind-numbing. Founder Thesis breaks through the noise to bring you stories of success & failure, grit & struggle, bouquets & brickbats from some of the most brilliant entrepreneurs in India. 

  1. From Zero Funding to India's Only Listed Cybersecurity Firm: Quick Heal

    8H AGO ·  VIDEO

    From Zero Funding to India's Only Listed Cybersecurity Firm: Quick Heal

    In this conversation, Sanjay Katkar, Founder, Quick Heal Technologies, India's only listed cybersecurity firm, breaks down 30 years of fighting hackers, the real mechanics of ransomware, and why your Gmail password may already be for sale on the dark web.  Sanjay Katkar started debugging viruses on floppy disks as a college student in Pune in 1990, eventually building Quick Heal Technologies into India's only publicly listed cybersecurity company with over 25,000 channel partners, a ₹350 crore revenue run rate, and an enterprise security brand, Seqrite, that competes directly with CrowdStrike and SentinelOne in the Indian mid-market.   In this episode with host Akshay Datt on Founder Thesis, Sanjay reveals the counterintuitive truth that being a small business does not make you safe - it often makes you the easiest backdoor into a much larger organisation, a tactic called supply chain attacks that is reshaping India cybersecurity risk for every SMB. He explains how the AIIMS ransomware attack involved months of silent reconnaissance before a single file was locked, how North Korea's Lazarus Group stole ₹89 crore from Cosmos Bank using coordinated ATM withdrawals across multiple countries, and why ransomware gangs actively protect their own brand reputation to ensure victims keep paying.  With India's DPDP Act now law and AI enabling 10,000 personalised phishing emails per second, this episode arrives at the most consequential moment in India's digital security history.  👉How Quick Heal bootstrapped to ₹100 crore in revenue before raising a single rupee, and why Sequoia Capital approached them, not the other way around 👉Why the AIIMS ransomware attackers spent months silently mapping the hospital's entire infrastructure before locking every system in a single night 👉How hackers use one stolen password from a food delivery app to reset your Gmail, and then use Gmail to break into your bank account 👉What the difference between EPP, EDR, and XDR actually means in plain language, and why even a 10-person company needs to care about endpoint security India 👉Why India's geopolitical moment, combined with bans on Russian and Chinese cybersecurity products, is opening a genuine global opportunity for Quick Heal Technologies in Southeast Asia and the Middle East 👉How AI is replacing L1 and L2 SOC analyst jobs entirely, and what Sanjay Katkar believes will be left for humans to do in cybersecurity operations  Subscribe to Founder Thesis for weekly founder conversations and follow Akshay Datt on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/akshay-datt for daily insights from India's most compelling builders  00:00 - India's Cybersecurity Problem Is Everyone's Problem  00:02:05 - What Quick Heal and Seqrite Actually Do  00:04:32 - Breaking Down the India Cybersecurity Market  00:14:07 - EPP vs EDR vs XDR Explained Simply  00:20:51 - How Ransomware Really Works in India  00:29:30 - The Quick Heal Origin Story: Floppy Disks to IPO  00:41:24 - Why Sequoia Came to Them, Not Vice Versa  00:46:22 - How Cyber Threats Evolved From Nuisance to Crime  00:53:55 - Inside the AIIMS Ransomware Attack  00:56:38 - The Cosmos Bank Heist and Lazarus Group  01:19:04 - AI Is Now the Attacker and the Defender  01:33:38 - Quick Heal's Global Expansion and 3X Growth Plan   #IndiaStartups #QuickHeal #SanjayKatkar #CybersecurityIndia #RansomwareIndia #FounderThesis #AkshayDatt #EndpointSecurity #QuickHealTechnologies #Seqrite #DataProtectionIndia #DPDPAct #AIcybersecurity #IndianFounder #BootstrappedStartup #CyberattackIndia #SupplyChainAttack #StartupIndia #CybersecurityStartup #AIMLIndia Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the speaker, not necessarily the channel

    1h 39m
  2. Siddhant Jatia on Pickleball's Rise in India

    APR 27 ·  VIDEO

    Siddhant Jatia on Pickleball's Rise in India

    Picklebay Founder Siddhant Jatia walks Founder Thesis host Akshay Datt through the full pickleball business in India model - from rooftop conversions and court construction costs to tournament prize pools and the platform layer that no one has built yet.   Siddhant Jatia grew up inside a 120-year-old Kolkata business family and started working at 16, but it took a single session of pickleball to set him on the path to building Picklebay, India's first end-to-end pickleball platform, which now lists 700 verified courts across six cities and has developed proprietary venue management and tournament software to solve what he calls a critical information asymmetry harming venue investors.    In this conversation, Siddhant unpacks three counterintuitive ideas: that the explosive growth of the pickleball business in India is fundamentally a yield-per-square-foot real estate story, that in this sport the spectators are almost entirely the same people as the players - upending conventional sponsorship logic entirely - and that the largest gap in Indian sports tech is a channel management layer that aggregates all the booking aggregators, the same way hotel software syncs rates across MakeMyTrip and Booking.com.    With the Indian Pickleball Association now officially recognised as a National Sports Federation and India actively bidding for the 2036 Olympics, this conversation sits at a genuine inflection point for the sport and the businesses being built around it.   👉How a single tennis court footprint converts into four pickleball courts, multiplying player throughput and generating ₹9-10 lakh in gross monthly revenue at 60 percent occupancy across an 18-hour operating window  👉Why the ₹20 lakh total investment required to build a four-court pickleball venue in India typically pays back in 8-10 months, making it one of the shortest real estate payback timelines in sports infrastructure today  👉What Siddhant Jatia identifies as the single biggest missing layer in Indian sports tech - a channel management system equivalent to what hotels use, that aggregates all booking platforms into one unified inventory and pricing dashboard for venue owners  👉Why Ahmedabad runs its 500-plus pickleball courts to full capacity past midnight every night, and what this demand signal reveals about where the next wave of venue investment in India's pickleball business should go  👉How the Indian Pickleball Association's recognition as a National Sports Federation in 2024 is set to unlock government funding, standardised coaching certification, and a national ranking system for the first time in the sport's India history  👉What separates a profitable pickleball venue from an expensive mistake - the specific location, construction, and community factors Jatia says most new operators overlook entirely #PickleballIndia #Picklebay #SiddhantJatia #FounderThesis #AkshayDatt #PickleballBusiness #SportsTechIndia #IndiaStartups #PickleballCourtInvestment #SportsInfrastructureIndia #IndianSports #StartupIndia #PickleballPlatform #IndiaOlympics2036 #PickleballCommunity #IndianPickleballAssociation #HowToStartPickleballBusiness #PickleballVenueIndia #FounderInterview #realestateindia    Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the speaker, not necessarily the channel

    51 min
  3. The Uncomfortable Truth about your Wealth Management | Manu Awasthy(Centricity WealthTech)

    APR 9 ·  VIDEO

    The Uncomfortable Truth about your Wealth Management | Manu Awasthy(Centricity WealthTech)

    Manu Awasthy spent over two decades managing wealth for India's ultra-rich at Citibank, IIFL Wealth, and 360 ONE before founding Centricity WealthTech in 2022. In under three years, he has built one of India's fastest-growing wealth management platforms, crossing ₹10,000 crore in AUM, onboarding 17,000 financial advisors across 70 cities, and raising a $20 million seed round led by Lightspeed at a $125 million valuation.    In this episode, Manu breaks down why India's wealth management industry is 20 years behind e-commerce, how most PMS and AIF products fail to beat a simple index fund, and why the laziest investors consistently win. He reveals the three levels of conflict of interest hiding inside India's most prestigious wealth firms, the structural reason why every wealth manager eventually becomes an asset manager, and why he has deliberately chosen not to. He shares Centricity's contrarian B2B2C model, his risk-first founder philosophy, and his bold vision for a single-window investment platform for India's global diaspora. He shared the full story in this candid, no-holds-barred conversation with host Akshay Datt.   Here is what you will learn in this episode:  👉Why 80 to 85% of PMS and AIF products underperform a basic index fund over 15 years, and what it means for every Indian investor  👉How Manu grew Centricity WealthTech from ₹20 crore revenue in Year 1 to ₹100 crore in Year 3, with 60% recurring ARR  👉The three hidden conflicts of interest inside India's biggest wealth management firms, and how Centricity is built to eliminate all three  👉Why India's passive investing penetration is near zero compared to 55% in the US, and the massive opportunity this creates  👉How Centricity's B2B2C model is turning 17,000 mutual fund distributors into full-spectrum wealth managers across tier-2 and tier-3 India  👉Manu's risk-first operating philosophy - why he says markets and geopolitics are uncontrollable, but asset allocation always is   If you found this episode valuable, subscribe to Founder Thesis for weekly conversations with India's most ambitious founders and investors. Follow host Akshay Datt on LinkedIn and X for real-time insights, episode drops, and founder stories you won't find anywhere else.   00:00 - Manu Awasthy and Centricity WealthTech Introduction   02:52 - India's Wealth Management Industry Explained Simply   11:20 - 85% of Fund Managers Fail the Index Test   34:50 - The Conflict of Interest Destroying Wealth Firms   47:30 - Wealth Management Is 20 Years Behind E-commerce   58:40 - India's Passive Investing Gap and the Opportunity   01:08:00 - Lazy Investors Win, Here Is the Math   01:13:00 - How Centricity's B2B2C Model Scales to 60,000 Advisors   01:19:30 - The NRI Wealth Corridor, India's Biggest Untapped Market   01:39:00 - Manu's Advice for Founders, Go Slow Grow Big   01:47:55 - Risk First, the Philosophy Behind Centricity's DNA   #ManuAwasthy #CentricityWealthTech #WealthTechIndia #IndiaWealthManagement #FounderThesis #AkshayDatt #PassiveInvestingIndia #IndexFundsIndia #PMSvsIndexFund #AIFIndia #WealthManagementStartup #IndianStartups #FintechIndia #HNIInvestingIndia #B2B2CStartup #IndiaWealthTech2025 #PrivateBankingIndia #MutualFundsIndia #FinancialAdvisorIndia #WealthTechFunding #LightspeedIndia #StartupFounderIndia #IndiaFintech #UHNIIndia #WealthManagementConflictOfInterest Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the speaker, not necessarily the channel

    1h 54m
  4. How EtherealX and Manu Nair Are Challenging SpaceX from India

    MAR 27 ·  VIDEO

    How EtherealX and Manu Nair Are Challenging SpaceX from India

    In this episode, Manu Nair, Co-Founder and CEO of EtherealX, breaks down the engineering breakthroughs, fundraising battles, and geopolitical forces reshaping the future of space tech in India and beyond.   Over 85% of the world's commercial satellite launches depend on a single rocket from a single country. That's not a monopoly - it's a dependency, and Manu Nair believes it is one of the most dangerous structural flaws in global space infrastructure today. Manu is the Co-Founder and CEO of EtherealX, the Bengaluru-based deep tech startup building the Razor Crest Mk-1 - India's first fully reusable medium-lift launch vehicle that recovers both its booster and upper stage.   In a conversation with host Akshay Datt, Manu traces the journey from bootstrapping on personal savings and a loan from his father, to closing a $20.5 million Series A co-led by TDK Ventures and Accel, to signing binding launch agreements with Japanese, Taiwanese, and European space agencies. He reveals the proprietary rocket engine cycle EtherealX developed, the first new feed cycle in six decades of rocketry, which harnesses re-entry plasma heat as a thermodynamic resource rather than fighting it with heavy ceramic shields.   He also shares why the economics of partial reusability are a dead end, why super-heavy rockets make no commercial sense for everyday satellite deployment, and why EtherealX's long-term roadmap extends from orbital launch vehicles all the way to small modular nuclear reactors.    A candid, technically rich, and deeply inspiring episode at the intersection of space tech, deep tech investing, India's policy renaissance, and civilisational ambition.   Key Highlights  👉Why 85% of global payloads riding one rocket is a civilisational risk, and how EtherealX is building the alternative the world needs  👉The FFSCC breakthrough - how EtherealX invented a new rocket engine cycle that turns re-entry heat into fuel, enabling full upper-stage recovery for the first time in the medium-lift class  👉How Manu and his co-founders bootstrapped for a year, raised a $360K milestone round, and eventually closed $26.3 million across four rounds to build India's highest pressure-rated private rocket engine test facility  👉Why the economics of large rockets like Starship don't work for routine commercial LEO deployment, and why the medium-lift segment will remain the engine of the global space economy for the next decade  👉India's regulatory renaissance - the FDI reforms, the Rs 1,000 crore IN-SPACe VC fund, and how ISRO's shift from gatekeeper to enabler created the conditions for EtherealX to exist  👉Why EtherealX's long-term roadmap includes fusion-based small modular reactors to power AI data centres on Earth, and why putting data centres in orbit is a dangerous mistake #ManuJNair #EtherealX #EtherealExplorationGuild #FounderThesis #AkshayDatt #ReusableRocket #IndiaSpaceTech #SpaceTechStartupIndia #RazorCrestMk1 #DeepTechIndia #SpaceXAlternative #IndiaSpaceStartup #MediumLiftRocket #FFSCC #IndiaSpacePolicy #INSPACe #MultipolanSpaceAccess #SpaceFundingIndia #DeepTechFunding2025 #ReusableLaunchVehicle #FounderStoryIndia #IndiaStartupFunding #SmallModularReactors #SpaceTechPodcast #StartupPodcastIndia #ISROPrivateSector #IndiaDeepTech2025  Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the speaker, not necessarily the channel

    1h 32m
  5. AI-Powered Village Clinics: Inside CureBay's Plan to Serve a Billion Patients

    MAR 20 ·  VIDEO

    AI-Powered Village Clinics: Inside CureBay's Plan to Serve a Billion Patients

    In this episode, we uncover how Priyadarshi Mohapatra turned CureBay into one of India's most ambitious rural healthtech ventures, raising $37M and proving that Bharat will pay for quality care.   Priyadarshi Mohapatra has spent 25 years building businesses that others said couldn't be built. From co-creating the Tanishq brand's iconic purity positioning to scaling Microsoft's consumer division and leading Google Cloud's India enterprise push, he has always found opportunity where others saw obstacles.    Then COVID hit, and a broken Skype teleconsultation attempt for his wife ignited an idea that would become CureBay, a hybrid phygital platform delivering last-mile primary healthcare to rural India through a network of 200 AI-powered eClinics across Odisha, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand.    In a candid, wide-ranging conversation with host Akshay Datt, Priyadarshi unpacks the structural failures of India's rural healthcare system, the unit economics of the Kavach membership program, the Swasthya Mitra distribution model and why he believes 100 CureBays are needed to truly solve this problem.  This episode is essential listening for anyone tracking India's $45 billion rural health market, the future of AI in healthcare, and the next wave of impact-driven startups reshaping Bharat.   What you'll learn in this episode:   👉Why India's rural healthcare crisis is not a funding problem but a trust and access problem, and how CureBay's hybrid eClinic model solves both at once  👉How the Kavach membership program, priced at just Rs 499 per year, is built like an insurance product and is already seeing 60% renewal rates  👉The real reason doctors refuse to serve rural India, and why no policy mandate has been able to fix the structural economics behind it  👉How CureBay is training AI models on real patient data from 200 clinics to build diagnostics tools that outperform anything trained on synthetic data  👉Why Priyadarshi believes partnering with government, not competing with it, is the only way to build healthcare at scale in India  👉The "nodal point" strategy that replaced his early mistake of going too deep into single villages, and how speed of execution became his sharpest competitive weapon   If this episode gave you a new lens on India's rural health opportunity, subscribe to Founder Thesis so you never miss a conversation like this one. And follow host Akshay Datt on LinkedIn and X for daily insights on India's most ambitious founders and the startups they are building.   Chapters:   00:00 - Why Rural India's Healthcare System Is Broken   08:20 - The Doctor Shortage Nobody Can Fix   14:00 - How CureBay's eClinic Model Actually Works   24:30 - Kavach, The Rs 499 Plan Rewriting Rural Health Insurance   37:45 - Funding CureBay, The $37M Journey   43:00 - From Tanishq to Google to Village Clinics   54:00 - AI and Data, CureBay's Secret Long Game   1:03:00 - Why India Needs 100 CureBays   #PriyadarshiMohapatra #CureBay #RuralHealthcareIndia #HealthtechIndia #IndiaStartups #FounderThesis #AkshayDatt #PhygitalHealthcare #RuralBharat #AyushmanBharat #AIinHealthcare #ImpactInvesting #IndiaHealthtech #StartupFunding #SeriesBFunding #SwasthyaMitra #KavachMembership #TeleconsultationIndia #LastMileHealthcare #BharatStartups #HealthtechDisruption #RuralIndiaHealthcare #IndiaHealthcareMarket #StartupIndia #ImpactStartupsIndia  Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the speaker, not necessarily the channel

    1h 8m
  6. Pranav Pai (3one4 Capital) on Backing Licious, Darwinbox & India's Next Decade of Unicorns

    MAR 12 ·  VIDEO

    Pranav Pai (3one4 Capital) on Backing Licious, Darwinbox & India's Next Decade of Unicorns

    Pranav Pai, Founding Partner and CIO of 3one4 Capital, has spent a decade betting on Indian founders at the earliest possible stage, often when they are just two people on a laptop.   From backing Licious when 50 investors said no, to spotting Darwinbox before enterprise HR software was considered a credible category in India, Pranav has built a track record that speaks for itself, including a 6x Fund I return, a single-digit loss ratio in a market where 30 to 45 percent of VC capital typically goes to zero, and five unicorns across a $570M portfolio.    In a candid, wide-ranging conversation with host Akshay Datt, Pranav shares why he deliberately caps fund size, how he fires people for persistent poor judgment, and why AI can now write your investment thesis but can never replace genuine market instinct. He also delivers one of the sharpest takes on India's foundational AI debate, the myth of the vegetarian Indian consumer, and what it actually takes to build a performance culture inside a VC firm.   What you will learn in this episode:  👉How Pranav Pai and 3one4 Capital built India's highest-performing early-stage VC fund without an investment banking or IIT pedigree, by betting on operators over financiers  👉Why 3one4 turned down capital to stay sub-$250M, and the precise mathematical logic that makes fund size a performance variable, not a vanity metric  👉The real story behind the Licious and Darwinbox investments, two of India's most celebrated startup bets, both rejected by 50-plus investors before 3one4 said yes  👉How Pranav evaluates founders using three non-negotiable criteria, including one he rarely admits publicly, and why pain and anger are features, not red flags  👉Why AI can write a 90 percent accurate investment thesis today, what that means for the future of VC as a profession, and where the actual edge now lives  👉Pranav's unfiltered view on India's AI sovereignty debate, the $10 trillion GDP trajectory, and the third path India must take between the US and China models   If you found this conversation valuable, subscribe to the Founder Thesis Podcast so you never miss an episode. Follow host Akshay Datt on LinkedIn and X for sharp takes on Indian startups, venture capital, and the founders building India's next decade.   Chapters   00:00 - Pranav Pai's Journey Into Indian VC   05:10 - Why 3one4 Capital Stays Sub $250M   13:00 - The Math Behind Fund Size and Returns   20:30 - How 3one4 Backed Licious Against All Odds   31:00 - Prepared Minds: Luck vs Decision Quality   37:00 - Darwinbox, Decision Logs and Firing for Bad Judgment   47:00 - How to Judge Founders at the Seed Stage   01:03:00 - Two Unicorns in Fund One: The Inside Story   01:09:00 - What VCs Actually Need to Be Great At   01:17:00 - Pain, Anger and the Fuel Behind Great Founders   01:25:00 - Market Truth, AI and the New VC Edge   01:39:00 - 3one4's Four Big Investment Themes for the Next Decade    #PranavPai #3one4Capital #FounderThesisPodcast #IndianVentureCapital #VCIndia #IndiaStartups #EarlyStageVC #StartupFunding #Licious #Darwinbox #UnicornIndia #IndiaVC2025 #VentureCapitalIndia #StartupIndia #IndianFounders #FundingIndia #AIStartupsIndia #IndiaStartupEcosystem #VCFundStrategy #AkshayDatt #HomegrownVC #IndiaGDPGrowth #DecisionQuality #FounderEvaluation #SeedFundingIndia  Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the speaker, not necessarily the channel

    1h 46m
  7. From ISRO Scientist to $25M Deep Tech Founder | Prateep Basu (SatSure)

    MAR 5 ·  VIDEO

    From ISRO Scientist to $25M Deep Tech Founder | Prateep Basu (SatSure)

    This episode with Prateep Basu, Co-founder and CEO of SatSure, is the deep-tech founder story India's startup ecosystem has been waiting for.   Prateep Basu left a career building propulsion systems for India's GSLV MK-III rocket at ISRO to ask a deceptively simple question - why do urban Indians get 10 loan offers a day on WhatsApp while farmers wait a month for a single approval? The answer became SatSure, a Bengaluru-based Earth intelligence company that uses satellite imagery, AI, and government land records to deliver alternate credit scores for farmers, monitor crop health across bank portfolios, and help airports, insurers, and FMCG companies make smarter decisions from space. Bootstrapped for four and a half years before raising $25 million across multiple rounds, SatSure now monitors 1.95 lakh villages and has analysed over 2.1 million farmer plots.    In this candid, wide-ranging conversation with host Akshay Datt, Prateep breaks down the physics of 40-pixel crop detection, explains why algorithms are never the moat, and reveals the strategic logic behind SatSure's audacious zero-bid for India's first private national satellite constellation. He also shares why AI is an accelerant, not a threat, for deep-tech companies that have built genuine domain depth.   What you will learn in this episode:   👉How SatSure built an alternate credit score for farmers using satellite crop imagery, land boundary data, and historical yield analysis, collapsing a 30-day loan process to under 30 minutes and creating a product that banks like ICICI and IDFC are paying for at scale  👉Why Prateep believes the algorithm is never the moat, and how SatSure's real competitive advantage is the nuanced translation of banking business processes into product and model design, something no open-source GitHub repository can replicate  👉The full story of SatSure's 4.5-year bootstrap, from a letter written by a young MP in Srikakulam to winning a Gates Foundation-backed challenge and securing a five-crore purchase order from the Andhra Pradesh government, all before raising a single rupee of institutional capital  👉How India's Digital Public Infrastructure, including AgriStack, the Unified Lending Interface, and digital land records, is assembling the exact pipeline that makes SatSure's products commercially unstoppable at national scale  👉The strategic logic behind Allied Orbits, the consortium of Pixxel, SatSure, Dhruva Space, and PierSight that won India's first private satellite constellation contract, and why the consortium chose to refuse government funding in exchange for full global commercialisation rights #DeepTechStartup #StartupIndia #EarthIntelligence #RemoteSensing #SatelliteImagery Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the speaker, not necessarily the channel

    1h 35m
  8. The Lending Business That Never Charges Interest or Late Fees | Nalin Agrawal (SnapMint)

    FEB 26 ·  VIDEO

    The Lending Business That Never Charges Interest or Late Fees | Nalin Agrawal (SnapMint)

    Nalin Agrawal, Co-founder of SnapMint, is a three-time entrepreneur and IIT Bombay alumnus who has quietly built one of India's most efficient consumer financing platforms, scaling from a tiny ₹5 crore revenue to ₹350 crores while serving 7 million monthly users across 23,000 pin codes.    In this candid, wide-ranging conversation with host Akshay Datt, Nalin reveals the contrarian principles behind SnapMint's success: why they have never charged a single rupee in late fees, how their data science moat achieves industry-beating credit loss rates, and why they believe India will leapfrog credit cards entirely and go straight to EMI on UPI.    What you will learn in this episode:  👉How SnapMint built a 2.5% credit loss rate versus the industry average of 6-8%, using machine learning models powered by 3,000 data factors and a sophisticated real-time fraud detection engine that catches organised fraud patterns in under 10 minutes  👉The four-quadrant framework, Market-Product fit, Product-Channel fit, Channel-Model fit, and Model-Market fit, that Nalin uses to evaluate every business idea and what investors are really looking for at Series A versus Series B  👉Why SnapMint calls itself a transaction-led business and not a lending business, and how this distinction creates fundamentally different and more predictable unit economics compared to traditional balance sheet lenders  👉The story of how a failed advertising campaign in 2016 revealed a 300 million consumer opportunity hiding in plain sight, and how that insight became the founding thesis for SnapMint 👉How India's digital public infrastructure stack, UPI, Aadhaar, Account Aggregator, and the Unified Lending Interface, is enabling fintech companies to serve tier 2 and tier 3 consumers at a cost that was previously impossible  If you find this episode valuable, subscribe to the Founder Thesis Podcast (Listed as one of the Top 45 Indian Entrepreneur Podcasts by FeedSpot) for weekly deep-dives with India's most compelling founders and operators. Follow Akshay Datt on LinkedIn and X for curated insights, episode drops, and startup ecosystem commentary delivered straight to your feed. #NalinAgrawal #SnapMint #BNPLIndia #IndiaFintech #EMIonUPI #ConsumerFintech #FounderThesis #AkshayDatt #FintechIndia2025 #SeriesBFunding #DigitalLendingIndia Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the speaker, not necessarily the channel

    1h 36m

About

Dickens said, it was the best of the times, it was the worst of the times. The words have never been truer.  Best because there’s never been a better time to be an entrepreneur.  Worst because the clutter is mind-numbing. Founder Thesis breaks through the noise to bring you stories of success & failure, grit & struggle, bouquets & brickbats from some of the most brilliant entrepreneurs in India. 

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