Startup Singam is a Tamil pitch present on Star Vijay (Vijay TV), additionally streaming on JioHotstar.
The present’s title monitor slips an instruction into the refrain: “To succeed in the dream, knock on the door”. Its premise is that the knock might be in Tamil—nevertheless it nonetheless opens the door to individuals who converse in English, in metros.
Kannan, an electronics and instrumentation engineering graduate (class of 2008), spent nearly 15 years in IT earlier than quitting on 18 Might 2025, when his month-to-month wage was about ₹5 lakh.
In 2021, again house for a temple pageant in Nambiyanvilai village, in Tirunelveli district, he watched about 30 palm timber being lower down in bulk. He’d been seeing palms lower since childhood. This time, he stopped and requested why.
The farmer was afraid of what the fruit attracted. Fallen fruit drew wild pigs; the pigs destroyed the peanut crop subsequent door.
“My concern is simply the palm fruit,” the farmer instructed him. Harvest it—eat it as an ice apple, faucet the tree for neera—simply maintain the fruit from bringing the pigs.
Then, he made a suggestion: Kannan might entry roughly 200 timber without cost, as a result of the farmer was dropping greater than he was gaining.
Palm Period’s innovation was not flashy. It was sensible. Palm jaggery clumps, sweats, not like white sugar. The corporate’s resolution was to show it right into a effective granular powder—free‑flowing, with out components. The choice started with the climate (blocks soften; fungus seems) and with a home absurdity: a good friend tried to crack a tough block with a hammer and broke a kitchen stone as an alternative. Kannan determined the model ought to do the breaking.
His different company reflex was packaging. In order for you an unglamorous ingredient to learn as premium—if you need it on “elite individuals’s plate,” as he put it—you make it appear like it belongs there. Inside six or seven months, an organization within the United Arab Emirates supplied ₹25 lakh for the model and packaging even whereas he was dropping cash. Kannan referred to as his father and joked, “Dad, I’m getting a automotive.” His father requested him: “Is that this what you’ve been struggling for all nowadays?”
The battle, for Kannan, is much less about jaggery than palms. He comes from a palm-climbing group. In his village, he was the primary engineer. Climbers in 2021 earned round ₹20,000 a month—and just for about 4 months of the season—after spending hours up the tree morning and night. Palm Period’s “premium” story, he stated, was constructed to vary that math. He says climbers working with him now make roughly ₹1–1.5 lakh a month in season, instantly benefiting about 40–50 households.
Kannan nearly didn’t find yourself on Startup Singam. The primary electronic mail from the present’s workforce, he assumed, was spam. It was solely after he gained a social influence startup award from Startup Tamil Nadu in 2023 that the state’s startup workforce nudged him to use in early 2024.
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Startup Singam’s first season, which premiered on 26 January 2025, ran like a weekly funnel: 13 episodes, three startups per episode—39 startups. However the funnel has a time lag. Kannan stated his shoot was accomplished in January and broadcast later. For him, the extra significant lag wasn’t the paperwork; it was belief—whether or not “funding speak” really revered what founders had already constructed.
The digital camera, in fact, needed the ritual ending: a quantity, applause, the neat fiction that capital arrives on schedule. However by the point Kannan walked onto that set, the romance of “funding” had already worn skinny.
Earlier than Startup Singam, he stated, his first severe investor dialog left him shaken. Palm Period’s income then was about ₹17 lakh a yr. His personal cash already contained in the enterprise was nearer to ₹80 lakh—equipment alone costing roughly ₹50 lakh.
When the valuation speak got here, he remembered, “they had been talking solely in regards to the income… they didn’t even contemplate the quantity which I invested.”
He referred to as it “the worst expertise.” He went house “utterly down,” and determined he would reasonably look forward to break-even—round ₹1.8 crore a yr, by his estimate—than take cash that didn’t perceive what he had constructed.
That skepticism formed how he approached the present. He didn’t need to conform to an funding “inside three or 4 minutes”. Earlier than he stepped onto the set, he insisted on “5, six rounds” of dialog with the investor group. He’d agreed to lift ₹50 lakh, he stated. After which, about half an hour earlier than filming, was requested to contemplate ₹1 crore as an alternative. The ₹1 crore on-air dedication didn’t lastly shut, he stated, after delays pushed it previous his harvest season. So he selected to maneuver on.
What he remembers most now isn’t the stagecraft. It’s the aftermath. His episode aired on 2 March 2025—his birthday week—and by late afternoon, he was influenza-positive and vomiting, flat in mattress for 3 or 4 days, whereas the web site crammed up. He counted “3,000 to 4,000″ calls and messages. Earlier than the present, month-to-month gross sales hovered round ₹3–4 lakh; on the day of the telecast, it touched roughly ₹7 lakh.
The surge didn’t cease with the printed. He stated the pitch clip hit Instagram round 5 p.m., and by the following morning, it had crossed two million views.
By Might 2025, when he give up his job, Palm Period was doing about ₹20 lakh a month. By January 2026, it was round ₹50 lakh a month. The workforce had grown from six individuals to 24. “Startup Singam gave me the push,” he stated, including that the visibility helped him shut an outdoor spherical in late 2025 with an impact-focused investor group primarily based in Bengaluru.
It’s why his recommendation to different founders is sort of anticlimactic: don’t go “only for an funding.” Go for the window. Mass media makes a enterprise legible to individuals who would by no means open a pitch deck.
Constructing the platform
Balachandar R., often known as Bala, the present’s co-founder at Baanhem Ventures, frames Startup Singam as a market failure, not a TV-format alternative.
“The issue is startups aren’t discovering traders and traders aren’t discovering startups,” he stated. Tamil Nadu isn’t brief on entrepreneurship; it’s brief on capital that reliably reveals up the place founders are. Cash, in his metaphor, behaves like an impatient traveler: “Individuals simply land within the airport, go to IIT, come out to the airport and return from Tamil Nadu.”
Bala’s pitch, he instructed me, wasn’t “let’s make a present.” It was: let’s construct a platform—tv because the entrance door to teaching, mentorship, pre-due diligence, deal-making.
He described pitching it for 2 years, dwelling by way of rejections, and placing in a few crore along with his co-founder Hemachandran L. In a single early try, he stated, they tried to accomplice with the federal government; it collapsed when officers needed management—screening episodes and sending them again with cuts.
That’s after they went to see Kumar Vembu, the founding father of GoFrugal Applied sciences and Mudhal Companions. Bala pitched him for an hour. Vembu backed the enterprise early, giving the present’s creators sufficient runway to maneuver from a pitch to a telecast. When the primary episode aired, Bala watched it along with his youngsters and cried—he stated it felt like a burden had lifted after two years of carrying the mission.
Kumar Vembu says he invested in Startup Singam in October 2024 as a result of he preferred the premise: a market that would velocity up funding for founders whose journeys stall between conferences and time period sheets. What shocked him later was how shortly the present grew to become a living-room behavior. Recovering from surgical procedure, he watched the primary telecast at house along with his spouse, daughter, and 79-year-old mom. His mom usually retains TV serials on within the background, he stated, however she watched the total hour, requested questions in the course of the breaks, and the following week, completed her chores early so she wouldn’t miss it.
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Gaps and phrases
Startup Singam’s numbers break up into two buckets: what will get dedicated on tv, and what really will get deployed after time period sheets and due diligence. Bala stated Season 1 generated about ₹45–50 crore in on‑air commitments (together with debt devices), and that about ₹23 crore had been deployed on the time of this interview. In a message this week, he stated deployed capital has since risen to ₹24 crore, and will finish Season 1 at about ₹26 crore, with the hole pushed by due diligence points, closing situations, or ultimate phrases that don’t maintain.
In the meantime, the present’s essential work occurs backstage. Founders undergo bootcamps. Bala described the “unseen work” that occurs earlier than filming.
“The best way they had been prepared on TV … was not the way in which they had been prepared the primary day they approached us,” he stated. He additionally pointed to the operational backbone. “We had been fortunate to get Arun (Nair) come on board because the CEO,” he stated.
Nair, up to now, has constructed founder and investor communities, working with TiE Kerala, the Kerala Angel Community and the Kerala chapter of the NASSCOM 10,000 Startups programme.
Toys to well being necklace
The clearest proof of that infrastructure shouldn’t be the cheque; it’s what founders do with the eye it brings.
Arthi Raguram, founder of non-public care product model Deyga, stated that she constructed the corporate from a private drawback (pimples) right into a shopper model. She started making charcoal cleaning soap at house as a youngster, then scaled from there. The title, she defined, comes from a Tamil phrase for the physique: “The physique known as deham.” She described herself as coming from a tier‑3 metropolis and stated that 97% of her workforce is girls.
Raguram didn’t come to the present to lift capital—Deyga is bootstrapped and worthwhile—however for visibility and buyer consciousness, she talked about.
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Bharat and Shruti, co-founders of the medical-products firm B-Arm Medical Applied sciences, described fundraising much less as a trophy than as an working actuality. The corporate was primarily B2B at first, then it watched a D2C competitor of their class pull far forward on spending and determined they couldn’t compete “as a money recreation” with out capital. Shruti traced her product obsession to her postpartum journey—discomfort, hormonal shifts, and melancholy. B-Arm Medical Applied sciences, she claimed, is already worthwhile—about ₹60 lakh a month—and initiatives roughly ₹7 crore in turnover this yr.
On stage, ₹6.85 crore was dedicated. Nair stated the corporate continues to be in diligence. The founders are actually taking ahead a ₹5 crore elevate, which was the unique ask.
Vasanth Tamilselvan, who runs Ariro Toys, framed the present’s worth as distribution: the platform’s consideration adjustments how different individuals negotiate—retail, landlords, distributors—lengthy earlier than a founder has “earned” belief the sluggish approach. Ariro makes Montessori-based wood toys. It started due to his daughter’s atopic dermatitis and a mistrust of plastic.
In 2018, on the Shanghai toy honest, he stated they got here again “very unhappy,” as a result of “80% of toys in India… had been export rejected merchandise.” Then BIS certification grew to become obligatory, and “in a single day… 90% of the toys acquired killed.” He additionally supplied the clear warning: many on-air offers die later. In 2023, he stated, Ariro practically shut down; to maintain it alive, he pledged private property.
Selvan, too, didn’t cite an on‑air quantity raised to this author.
Senthilkumar Murugesan and Dinesh Pandian, founders of Save Mother, a maternal care platform, constructed the corporate after watching a pregnant sister get swallowed by hospital ready.
“We had been ready nearly five-six hours to get a three-minute session from the physician,” Senthilkumar recalled. On the present, he held up Allowear, a wearable gadget designed to observe the well being of pregnant girls and youngsters.
He defined why this wasn’t a smartwatch. “It’s a sensor. And it is a necklace.” Then he stated the road that explains why the platform’s language mission isn’t beauty: “Within the present, that is the primary time I’m giving my pitch in Tamil.”
His mother and father had watched his English displays; they didn’t perceive. “Due to the present… they actually perceive what I’m doing.”
For Save Mother, the deployed quantity at ₹2.97 crore was effectively above what was promised on stage.
Save Mother has onboarded “three lakh moms,” with round 7,000 high-risk pregnancies given the wearable, manufactured in India by way of an authorized accomplice in Pune. After the present, he stated, city prospects who will pay additional grew to become a solution to subsidize the agricultural work his firm started with.
The locked door
Preethi Shashikumar first discovered what it means to lose an organization with out ever leaving her telephone. She was three months right into a shapewear model she’d began with a faculty good friend; their Instagram web page had climbed to round 30,000 followers. They’d every put in ₹1 lakh to begin, she stated. Then, at some point, she opened the app and landed on the unsuitable facet of a login display. The OTP went to her co-founder. The password modified. The model title—registered quietly, preemptively—was instantly not hers. She requested for closure and was instructed to take her ₹1 lakh and disappear.
It is a sort of theft that doesn’t require a break-in. You don’t steal the store; you steal the keys.
She referred to as her good friend. No reply. So she referred to as her good friend’s father. He started gently. 9-to-5 jobs; weekends; possibly the U.S. After which the tone snapped. “You’re not match for doing enterprise,” he instructed her. “My daughter is match for doing enterprise.” After which he laughed. “Like a villain within the cinema,” Shashikumar stated.
She returned to her company job and constructed the following firm, one other shapewear label, within the hours that didn’t belong to anybody else.
Orders had been packed by household again in Coimbatore. The corporate that emerged from that betrayal grew: from about ₹1.2 crore in her first monetary yr to ₹6.5 crore, then ₹16.5 crore, projecting ₹23–25 crore. She expanded offline too: “Now now we have 5 offline shops,” she stated, and he or she had already signed three extra franchises.
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Then she pivoted by listening. “70% of my prospects then acquired pregnant,” she stated. A buyer messaged her: she needed to purchase, however she was pregnant—what ought to she put on?
Shashikumar ran polls and constructed what they requested for. “We launched maternity attire,” she stated, “and we acquired a turnover of ₹5 lakh in 5 days.”
Fundraising, she instructed me, nonetheless felt like a closed ritual carried out by different individuals. She needed to go on Shark Tank India. She couldn’t. “You must converse Hindi,” she stated. Startup Singam—lion in Tamil—supplied a unique entrance door. “Now I do know the route,” she stated after becoming a member of Season 2—not as a result of somebody handed her a verify on air, however as a result of the platform launched her to investor communities she didn’t know existed, and demystified the method.
The route, once more
It’s tempting to speak about capital because the bottleneck. In lots of founders’ lives, it isn’t the primary one. The primary bottleneck is legitimacy—the sense that cash strikes by way of rooms you’ve by no means been invited into, in a language you don’t converse.
Startup Singam doesn’t promise to repair each locked door. It guarantees one thing narrower: that the following time a founder hits one—traders, phrases, diligence—the founder will not less than know what the lock known as.
Kannan stated that after his episode aired, 30 or 40 individuals from his district set his clip as their WhatsApp standing. He hadn’t even instructed most individuals prematurely. His father—who had as soon as requested whether or not he was a idiot to go away IT for jaggery—didn’t ship a giant speech. He merely put his son’s video on his personal WhatsApp standing. Later, the daddy requested one query: “Are you effective?”
Key Takeaways
- Pitch present Startup Singham began with a easy premise: Tamil Nadu isn’t brief on entrepreneurship; it’s brief on capital that reliably reveals up the place founders are
- The present was initially backed by Kumar Vembu, the founding father of GoFrugal Applied sciences and Mudhal Companions
- Startup Singham shortly grew to become a living-room behavior within the state
- Founders don’t go to the present simply to safe investments
- They acquire visibility and buyer consciousness. The eye they get adjustments how others—retailers, landlords, distributors—negotiate
- There’s a spot between commitments made on-air in the course of the present and disbursements. Some offers fall by way of throughout due diligence