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Narasimhan has engineering degrees from IIT Madras and Purdue, and a management degree from the Haas School at UC Berkeley. The book serves in part as a memoir and in part as a textbook. The title itself is a play on words: not “startups” in the Silicon Valley sense, but “upstarts” — entrepreneurs building their way to success brick by brick. For readers who tend to zone out over detailed passages, he has thoughtfully included a summary of key takeaways at the end of each chapter.
After a solid career in the US with multinationals like Yahoo, Logitech and PricewaterhouseCoopers, he realised he did not want to remain a manager in a global corporation. Instead, he wanted to build something of his own. He returned to India and chose the decidedly unglamorous world of logistics, convinced that the fundamentals of intracity commercial transportation were fragmented — even broken — and ripe for change.
Starting with around ₹50 lakh in savings, Narasimhan spent over a decade building a national company that employed thousands before eventually selling it to Delhivery, one of India’s largest logistics and supply chain companies.
What makes his highly readable account particularly useful for first-time entrepreneurs is that Narasimhan had to “bootstrap” his way to success, learning from mistakes and building steadily on small wins.
“As a novice founder with no background in entrepreneurship, little background in my chosen sector of logistics and no experience working in India, I had to learn the ropes from the ground up,” he writes.
He deliberately chose a traditional sector with modest capital requirements, where customers understand what they are buying and producers have clarity on demand, pricing and profitability. Logistics was his entry point, but he also points to sectors like food, healthcare and retail as fertile ground, given India’s persistent supply constraints and fast-expanding market with the country’s 1.45-billion population.
He set up in Chennai, where he had cultural familiarity, language comfort and family support, and where he did not need large amounts of capital to begin.
From the outset, his goal was not to burn through investor capital and build a hyperscale startup chasing rapid market dominance. Instead, he focused on creating a sustainable, profitable business that could grow steadily without the pressure of delivering quick returns.
He also made the conscious decision to remain a solo founder rather than bring in an equity partner, choosing instead to hire experienced professionals to build his team and scale the business.
Being an entrepreneur, he argues, is “all about trusting people beyond yourself to do things that you cannot do alone. Control is illusionary, and good faith in your colleagues is critical for success.”
He was wary, too, of the risks that arise when co-founders fall out, citing Harvard Business School professor Noam Wasserman’s finding that 65 per cent of startups collapse due to such disagreements.
So what underpins his success? A firm rejection of short-term, jugaad-style fixes, and a commitment instead to building a “culture of process consistency”.
His operating mantra is “product-value-fit”, which means staying laser-focused on what customers are willing to pay for, while steadily improving processes and adopting technology incrementally to enhance competitiveness and profitability.
Narasimhan points to companies like Marico, Haldiram’s and Agarwal Packers and Movers as examples of businesses that grew steadily in both scale and value over time.
He walks readers through the mechanics of building a business in India: managing cash flow, expanding services, navigating taxation and regulation, and building teams. One of his clearest warnings is to expect the unexpected. In the early years, he faced crises that could easily have sunk the company — a lost truck, a flooded warehouse, even an employee who stole customer goods — but managed to work through each setback.
He also stresses that entrepreneurs do not need to be workaholics. There is limited productivity a founder can sustain beyond eight hours a day over the long term. As Marc Randolph, Netflix’s co-founder, has observed: “You don’t lose the deal at 2 am because you didn’t check the fonts. You lost it four weeks ago when you didn’t get the fundamentals right.”
Ultimately, having nurtured his company from infancy to scale, Narasimhan concluded that his mission was accomplished. To take the business forward, he decided the best course was to sell it to the right corporate custodian that could expand its footprint. As he puts it, the upstart had grown up — and “it was time for it to step into bigger shoes”.
The reviewer is a former Reuters correspondent who writes on business
Title: Building India’s Upstarts: A Bootstrapped Entrepreneur’s Playbook for Success
Author: R Narasimhan
Publisher: Penguin Business
Price: ₹499
Published on May 22, 2026
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