
Google’s Start-up Schools in India: Aim to Initiate 10000 Schools in Small Cities like Tier 2 and 3.Today, July 6, Google announced the Startup School India programme, which aims to aid 10,000 companies in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities by compiling pertinent material on startup building into a structured curriculum.
Fireside conversations involving Google leaders and partners from the whole startup ecosystem will take place during the nine-week virtual programme.
What subjects will be taught at the startup school?
Fintech, language, social media and networking, job search, and business-to-business and business-to-consumer e-commerce are just a few of the subjects that will be discussed.
Creating apps for the next billion users in places like India, effective product strategy, product user value, and user acquisition are just a few of the other subjects covered in the curriculum’s instructional modules.
The programme offers the flexibility of a virtual curriculum and lets participants pick and choose the sessions they’d like to tune in for, according to a blog post by Google. It is targeted at early stage creators with a minimal viable product.
Entrepreneurs will also have the chance to benefit from discussions about what makes a successful founder, formalising hiring, and other crucial factors.
With about 70,000 enterprises, India is the third-largest startup hotspot in the world. The success stories of Indian entrepreneurs have fueled expectations among young Indians across the country as more of them successfully take their companies public or achieve unicorn status, creating a positive feedback loop.
Not just in larger cities like Bengaluru, Delhi, Mumbai, or Hyderabad, but also in centres like Jaipur, Indore, Gorakhpur, and other places, are promising businesses mushrooming. In actuality, these currently account for close to 50% of all recognised startups in India.
Why is a startup school necessary?
Even though there are many companies in India, 90% of them fail during the first five years of business. This is frequently brought on by the same significant problems: unchecked financial burn, incorrect demand predictions, ineffective feedback loops, or a lack of leadership.
The most recent initiative recognises this gap and the need for programmes that can organise gained knowledge into a structured curriculum and spread it across a wide geographic area.
In a blog post, the business stated that “Startup School India, a Google for Startups initiative, is meant to achieve precisely that as we synchronise our efforts to support this expansion.”
Google claims that Indian entrepreneurs have acquired a wealth of institutional knowledge. Information sharing is one of the community’s defining traditions, which helps others learn more rapidly, avoid frequent pitfalls, and adopt useful growth strategies.
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