In India, the sports and fitness market swings like a pendulum: a raft of premium multinational brands at one end and countless desi companies that pedalling cheap products at the other. 29-year-old Bihani is creating high-quality yet affordable products at Boldfit
Karnatac's YouTube channel KK Create has garnered 973 million views and two million subscribers from 466 videos that tell raw and bold stories, offering a view into the lives of everyday people who are often forgotten. Her aim: To visit India's 800 districts to experience and tell their stories
Designing for products or tech that need to be explained by visualisation is what sets Alva apart. She has worked on brands such as Amazon, Apple, and more
Morii collaborates with over 165 women artisans from 12 villages across India, combining techniques such as Sujani embroidery from Bihar, Bela block printing, and Rabari embroidery with contemporary abstract designs from Kutch and Kantha embroidery from West Bengal
With the confidence that India can resolve its trash problem, WeVois deploys an IoT-enabled app for efficient waste collection to reduce open dumping and burning of household trash
From an online travel agency amid the pandemic to finding its niche in the B2B online ticket booking market, Flyzy's co-founders have come a long way with an aim to be a unicorn in profit not valuation
169Pi.ai was set up after Sam Altman's India visit piqued the brothers' interest in information about India in language models, finding a unique opportunity to do something homegrown versus West-oriented information on the internet
Khan's collective called Gabba creates art with an effort to uphold the history of the site and generate political, social and domestic conversations that can create mutual learnings between the artists and the community
With the help of UAVs, the founder and MD of Fuselage Innovations is addressing critical challenges across the farming sector, infrastructure monitoring, and environmental conservation
From Nancy Tyagi, Rohit Saraf to Yashasvi Jaiswal, the 30 Under 30 Class of 2025 has people who dare to dream and will remind generations to come that the future belongs to those who believe in the power of possibilities
On the cover of Forbes India's 30 under 30 issue is cricketer Yashasvi Jaiswal, who has risen the ranks with exceptional talent and grit. The rising star speaks to Forbes India's Kathakali Chanda and Kunal Purandare about his emotional beginnings, what he has learned from Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli, and what his batting strategy has been