TheCapTable
TheCapTable
search icon
Sign In

Investments

The incubator illusion: Why India’s startup factories rarely deliver

thumbnail
December 04, 2024  |  12 Min Read
While India boasts close to 800 public-funded and academic startup incubators, data from YNOS Venture Engine shows that less than 7% of these actually go on to secure angel or VC funding.

Key Takeaways

  • Only 6.7% of 14,103 startups produced by India's 772 academic and public-funded incubators secure VC funding, exposing a significant startup ecosystem weakness
  • Incubator status doesn't guarantee success. Investors care more about startup quality, founder potential, and scalability, rather than incubation itself
  • Incubator effectiveness varies widely, with just 261 incubators having nurtured more than ten startups, and most major incubators being located in major cities
  • While offering mentorship and grants, many incubators struggle to connect startups with investors, with many experts placing the blame on how these incubators are run

Earlier this year, Chennai-headquartered spacetech startup Agnikul Cosmos made history when it successfully launched a rocket equipped with the world’s first single-piece, 3D-printed engine. The eight-year-old startup’s breakthrough moment, though, likely wouldn’t have been possible without its early tryst with the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras Incubation Cell (IITMIC)—the country’s leading deeptech startup incubator. “We were building deeptech company when no one else was, and at that time, IIT-Madras’ tag was crucial for us to get the validation we required,” he recounts.

Ravichandran adds that the programme taught Agnikul, which was scarcely six months old when it entered IITMIC’s programme, how to manage the legal and compliance part of the business and provided it with access to the wider startup community. “Luckily for us, when we were at IITMIC, TiE (an entrepreneurship-focused non-profit) organised an event in Chennai, which is where we met our first investor,” he tells The CapTable.

Agnikul is hardly IITMIC’s only success story. EV 2-wheeler maker Ather Energy and MediBuddy, which claims to be India’s largest digital healthcare platform, also found their feet at the incubator.

As the name suggests, incubators are organisations that support startups in their early stages, helping develop their businesses and providing necessary training. This includes holding workshops on relevant domains, classes on fundraising, bookkeeping, pitching, and even organising sessions with industry veterans.

This is a premium article and available only to subscribers.

Already a subscriber? Sign In

What's your right fit?

Be the smartest person in the room. Choose the plan that works for you and join our exclusive subscriber community.

premium_articles

Premium Articles

4 articles every week

archives

Archives

>3 years of archives

archives

Org. Chart

1 every week

newsletter

Newsletter

4 every week

gifting_credits

Gifting Credits

5 premium articles every month

session

Session

3 screens concurrently

₹1,999 / Year

₹3,999

Subscribe Now

Have a coupon code?

Join our community of 100,000+ top executives, VCs, entrepreneurs, and brightest student minds

company1
company2
company3
company4
company5
company6
company7
company8
company9
company1
company2
company3
company4
company5
company6
company7
company8
company9
Trusted by the best
Headshot of Karthik Reddy from Blume Ventures
Karthik Reddy

Blume Ventures

quote

The CapTable brings a refreshing set of insights for us at the Blume team, highlighting stories that bring together the underlying business and founders with that of investors' journeys with these startups. It's an important perspective that very few bring to startup ecosystem enthusiasts.

Latest Articles

subscribe_graffiti

Convinced that The Captable stories
and insights will give you the edge?

Subscribe Now

If you want to see more, Sign Up for access to our Crux newsletter and several free articles

Sign Up Now