A rewind of the key milestones in India's corporates and startups, through the lens of 13 years of Forbes India
The six companies on Forbes India's Hidden Gems operate in sunrise sectors—think infrastructure, high precision components, solar panels—on a steady growth trajectory and could well be IPO candidates soon
Awata started out with a modest ambition of owning three restaurants, yet today Tokyo-listed Toridoll Holdings has a network of nearly 2,000 quick-service restaurants across 28 countries and regions covering 21 brands
Titan Engineering and Automation Limited, Titan's only B2B business, provides factory automation and manufacturing services to global customers and counts some of the biggest auto companies as clients
The co-founders of Silicon Valley unicorn PsiQuantum convinced the Australian government to hand over A$940 million ($632 million) of taxpayers' money to build the first usable quantum computer in Brisbane. What's at stake is nothing less than the future of computing
Vishwa Samudra Group is taking advantage of government infrastructure projects, and delivering tech-centric and quality-centric solutions
Brothers Sahil and Rushabh Vora bootstrapped their entrepreneurial journey for nearly a decade, embraced value, shunned valuation and befriended KPIs that remain alien to most new-age founders. The result is a flourishing and profitable real estate business in SILA
Three private equity players started FirstMeridian in 2018, which is now India's third-largest staffing company by revenue
Kolkata-headquartered Vikram Solar is among the new crop of solar module makers that are in a sweet spot
From the fabulously rich to the fabulously famous, this remote patch of Montana wilderness has fewer than 900 homeowners, who are worth more than a combined $290 billion