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The Forbes India 30 Under 30 List

Showcasing an enterprising new generation that dreams big and refuses to say die

Abhilasha Khaitan
Published: Feb 7, 2014 12:55:53 PM IST
Updated: Apr 3, 2014 02:40:45 PM IST
The Forbes India 30 Under 30 List
Image: Sameer Pawar

To borrow from Ayn Rand, ‘the question for this generation isn’t who is going to let them but who is going to stop them’. As a torchbearer of individualism, Rand would have approved of the first-ever Forbes India 30 Under 30 list. Sort of. The rider: This isn’t just a celebration of capitalism and profit; it is also in recognition of social value. Do-gooders, geeks, greens, musicians, sportspersons, creative-types and biz kids: The net was thrown wide to catch the best and the brightest.

As the names on the previous page will tell you, it was a worthwhile effort.

It was also an education. Generalisations, it appears, do not apply to the youth. Consider India’s reputation as nerd-land and a skew in favour of techpreneurs and IT geniuses would be expected. But while brilliant professionals dot the landscape, only a few seem to have translated an original thought into a viable, disruptive business proposition. Pallav Nadhani of FusionCharts, Rahul Yadav of Housing.com and Nischal Shetty of JustUnfollow , for instance, score high on both originality and utility.

If there is a slant, it is towards verticals that best suit the lone ranger: Sports, entertainment, the arts. Even there, though, we tried to separate the clichéd from the uncharted and zeroed in on Sushant Singh Rajput  and Rajkummar Rao; and Suhail Yusuf Khan  and Aathira  Krishna; and Rahul Dravid’s purported successor Cheteshwar Pujara.

Plot this list on a heat map and the social entrepreneurship and policy dots would glow red too. Sectors with the potential for real change are drawing them in hordes. There is Rwitwika Bhattacharya  who figured out the best way to get political leaders to perform is by helping them do it; Shashank Kumar  who is committed to empowering farmers. Even those with different skill sets—design, in this case—are not oblivious: So a communication designer, Aditi Gupta , tries to create awareness about menstruation, a taboo subject.

Then some are in it for the happiness quotient: Pooja Dhingra for her macarons and Shivan and Narresh for their bikini sari.

This might be a good point to ask: Where is Virat Kohli? Deepika Padukone? Any sub-30 list should lead with those names. Here’s the thing: They don’t even make our consideration set. The reason is in the purpose behind this search: Forbes India was looking for a spark, for a story that is still waiting to be told and, for the most part, only starting to unfold.

To that end, individuals who are already forces in their fields—household names—will feature on another day, on another list.

As for those who are part of this list of possibility, it really is a question
of who is going to stop them.

30 Under 30 list

Art & Culture
Suhail Yusuf Khan, 26
Sarangi Player / Vocalist

Aathira Krishna, 25
Carnatic Violinist


Design
Moneet Chitroda, 28
Sr Designer - Interiors, Renault Techno Centre

Aditi Gupta, 29
Co-Founder, Menstrupedia.com

Lokesh Karekar, 29
Visual Artist & Director, Locopopo

Alok Shetty, 27
Principal Architect & Founder, Bhumiputra Architecture


E-Commerce
Rahul Yadav, 24
Co-founder & CEO, Housing.com

Bhavish Aggarwal, 28
Co-Founder and CEO, Olacabs


Entertainment
Sushant Singh Rajput, 27
Actor

Rajkummar Rao, 29
Actor

Kishan SS, 18
Actor / Director


Fashion
Shivan Bhatiya & Narresh Kukreja, 29, 28
Swimwear Designers

Finance
Raghu Kumar, 28
Co-Founder, RKSV

Manju Bhatia, 27
Joint MD, Vasuli Recovery

Food & hospitality
Pooja Dhingra,  27
Founder-Chef, Le15 Patisserie

Greentech & sustainability
Abhishek Humbad, & Richa Bajpai, 26, 27 
Co-Founders, NextGen PMS


Healthcare
Kabir Chadha, 27
Founder & CEO, Epoch Elder Care


Law, policy & Politics
Rwitwika Bhattacharya, 27
Founder, Swaniti Initiative

Pranesh Prakash, 28
Policy Director, Centre for Internet and Society

Apar Gupta, 29
Partner, Advani & Co.


NGOs & Social Entrepreneurship
Shashank Kumar, 28
Co-Founder, Farms n Farmers

Tarique Mohammad Quereshi, 29
Founder, Koshish

Anoj Viswanathan, 26
Co-Founder & President, Milaap

Kuldeep Dantewadia, 25
CEO & Co-Founder, Reap Benefit


Social Media / Mobile / Digital
Nischal Shetty, 28
Founder, JustUnfollow


Sports
Deepika Kumari, 19
Archer

Cheteshwar Pujara, 26
Cricketer

Gaganjeet Bhullar, 25
Golfer


Technology
Pallav Nadhani, 29
Co-Founder & CEO, FusionCharts

Paras Chopra, 26
Founder, Wingify

Methodology
Will we find 30 under-30s? That was the question that troubled when we started work on this project. The numbers are easy enough to add up but the list had to be representative, relevant and, well, not half-baked.

It was never going to be exhaustive. We knew that. The landscape was too vast, the information too sparse and spread out. But limited though it may be in geographical scope, the rigour in research—and the depth in young talent—has produced quality that satisfies the parameters we had set at the beginning. These are: Trigger: The extent of achievement and his/her impact in a short span of time and the level of disruption/innovation that has been shown; Scope: Scalability of his/her business or line of work; Sustainability: Signs of being a flash in the pan or is there enough indication of a long-run play?

The research took on two legs: One, interviews by Forbes India staffers with sources across relevant categories as well as through studies of databases and media coverage. Two, an online application on forbesindia.com inviting applications from entrepreneurs/professionals who felt they qualified. This helped us arrive at a long list which went up to over 300 names across the 14 categories. (Even this number went through an initial vetting.)

The next step was narrowing down to a ‘short long’ list—the names most likely to make it to the top 30. This pool of 75 names was decided in consultation with experts and observers—and this was the toughest leg. Consider that we had entered the ‘first among equals’ phase where separating the final 30 from the other contenders was, really, a judgment call.

But armed with expert views, the Forbes India editorial team debated, argued and vetoed for hours to finalise the 30 individuals you will read about here. There are those outside the list that couldn’t be left out. They find mention too.

(This story appears in the 21 February, 2014 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)

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  • Jai Prakash

    EXCILLIENT IDEAS

    on Nov 29, 2014
  • Hardik

    housing.com It scores the best in design and uniqueness. One of the best startups

    on Mar 19, 2014
  • Chandrasekhar J

    Congratulations Pranesh Prakash !! You made it ...

    on Feb 23, 2014
  • Fellow Iitbian

    And why so many from IIT Bombay?? There is Krishna Ramkumar from IIT Bombay who has been a self PR machine since the day he came to IIT. Mediocre guy with average talents. But an absolute marketing and PR genius. No wonder he has made it to all the lists by dint of his own PR rather than any real work of substance till date. His Avanti is nothing but tuitions glorified! Sad day for Forbes

    on Feb 14, 2014
  • S. Gopal

    Dear Kuldeep: Congratulations and Best Wishes..

    on Feb 11, 2014
  • Nlsite

    Congrats Pranesh!

    on Feb 10, 2014
  • Nikhil

    PLease add education section

    on Feb 8, 2014
  • N

    Why none in education?!

    on Feb 7, 2014
  • Ramanuj

    please add an education section to this list in future, it is very incomplete otherwise.

    on Feb 7, 2014
  • Indu Chakraborty

    THE UNTOLD STORY: This is about Swapnil Tewari, a social entrepreneur with his venture Naked Colours. His story was covered by FORBES INTERNATIONAL in 2012. Wish Forbes INDIA writes about the Journey of this eccentric, insane, amazing Indian with a heart of GOLD. I had the honor of meeting him once in the Jungles. Dunno which ride he is into now. But he spoke of Magic around, LOVE (of all the things) changing people\'s lives! (He used to get abducted by Naxals, instead of runnin away, he taught their children!) Forbes did the start of his Journey. I know there is much more to unfold from this dyslexic genius. Sharing the story with the readers. http://www.forbes.com/sites/morganhartley/2012/11/12/the-social-entrepreneurs-dilemma/

    on Feb 7, 2014
  • K Venugopal Menon

    Can we see the List of 400 please. The 30 itself is inspiring, let\'s not be exclusive. A list of your shortlisted 400 under 30 Indians, would be an inclusive thing to do, plus, it would motivate the other 370 to work harder. VenuG(A Mentor, who has 200 protégés at this moment, between ages of 14 the youngest, to 24 the eldest)

    on Feb 7, 2014
  • Sundar

    Ola cabs? Seriously??

    on Feb 7, 2014
    • Roshan

      What's wrong with Olacabs? They have in a short while disrupted a huge industry.

      on Feb 7, 2014
      • Sundar

        Two stories from Bangalore: My wife booked a cab and was waiting at the allotted time. She called them to ask how long should she wait. A shocking reply: Sorry, there are no cabs available. This reply after confirmation of booking. Second, a female colleague took Ola cabs alone at 11 pm. The driver stopped to give a lift to another man and said, \'this is my friend. don\'t mind.\' Good luck if you still want to go ahead. I will stick to Meru or Cell Cabs.

        on Feb 7, 2014