Top 5 Investments in Indian Startup History

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00:00 Intro
01:24 Titan Capital- Urban Company
03:12 Anupam Mittal – Ola
04:46 Hero – Ather Energy
07:17 Accel – Flipkart
08:40 Info Edge – Zomato

India’s startup ecosystem transformation has been driven by strategic investments that provided not just capital but credibility. These five landmark investments shaped entire sectors and demonstrated India’s potential for building massive technology companies.

5. Titan Capital’s Investment in Urban Company (2015)
In 2015, when data costs were ₹250 per GB, three young entrepreneurs approached Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal with a vision to organize India’s informal home services sector through technology. Despite unproven founders and business models, Titan Capital invested ₹57 lakhs in seed funding.
This validation attracted institutional investors like Accel and Saif Partners. Urban Company raised $376 million across multiple rounds, achieving a $2+ billion valuation. Titan Capital’s 2024 exit yielded ₹111 crores, representing a 200x return.

4. Anupam Mittal’s Investment in Ola (2011)
Initially skeptical about cab-hailing services, Anupam Mittal’s perspective changed after facing transportation challenges in Delhi. He became Ola’s first investor, putting in ₹30 lakhs for approximately 5% equity at a ₹5-6 crore valuation.

This backing attracted Tiger Global’s $3.87 million Series A within months, launching India’s ride-hailing sector. Mittal’s partial exits generated ₹500-1000 crores, representing a 1500x return over 13-14 years while creating an entirely new transportation category.

3. Hero MotoCorp’s Strategic Partnership with Ather Energy (2016)
Hero MotoCorp’s investment in Ather Energy represents a paradigm shift in corporate-startup collaboration. Unlike typical acquisitions, Hero chose a strategic partnership to enter the electric vehicle space.

Ather emerged from IIT Madras in 2013, pivoting from battery technology to complete vehicle manufacturing. Hero’s initial ₹180 crore investment for 26% stake evolved into ₹1700+ crores for 40% ownership. With Ather’s $2 billion valuation, Hero’s stake is worth ₹7000 crores, establishing a new model for traditional-startup collaboration.

2. Accel’s Market-Making Investment in Flipkart (2008)
Accel’s $1 million investment in Flipkart stands as a watershed moment – the first major bet by a leading global VC firm on an Indian internet company. Operating from a Bengaluru apartment with eight team members, the Bansal brothers faced an untested e-commerce market.

This investment’s significance extended beyond monetary value, validating Indian consumer internet potential when Amazon hadn’t entered India. It attracted Tiger Global’s $10 million Series A within a year, establishing modern VC investing foundations in India. Accel’s $60-80 million total investment yielded $2 billion returns when Walmart acquired Flipkart, achieving 30x returns.

1. Info Edge’s Transformative Investment in Zomato (2010)
Sanjeev Bikhchandani’s investment in Zomato (originally Foodiebay) exemplifies experienced entrepreneurial judgment. While VCs viewed food delivery as limited in India, Bikhchandani’s experience building consumer platforms provided unique market insights.

Info Edge’s sustained partnership began with $1 million for 18.5% stake, followed by participation in every early round. By 2013, they invested ₹86 crores for majority ownership. Beyond financial investment, Bikhchandani provided strategic guidance on crucial decisions.

Info Edge’s ₹147 crore total investment generated extraordinary returns: ₹3000 crores from IPO stake sale plus ₹37000 crores current holdings, totaling ₹40000 crores for a remarkable 272x return.
Conclusion

These investments demonstrate that successful startup investing requires market vision, strategic support, and long-term commitment beyond capital. Each occurred at inflection points where founders needed validation as much as funding, establishing blueprints for future success in India’s startup ecosystem.

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Date: September 16, 2025

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