Ananya Birla was just 17 when she told her mother that she wanted to start a microfinance company. She had just got back home after a long day at school. The query from her mother revolved around what a microfinance company did, to which the teenager explained the concept in detail. At the end of that conversation, her mother’s response was, “Do it.”
If there was no conversation around business, there are memories of it in other forms. Ananya recalls that when she was around seven, she visited her father’s office in Industry House — the group’s iconic headquarters before moving to central Mumbai’s Worli area — and enjoyed a dosa in the cafeteria, while Birla was constantly on the phone discussing an upcoming deal.
Her initial success with Svatantra gave her the confidence to sink her teeth into the e-commerce business, one she had been tracking for a while. According to her, the game today, is not about discounting. She therefore saw the market for something like CuroCarte emerging for the youth, who aspire for luxury goods. “These are people who start their jobs early and travel a lot, hence they are aware. There is a huge opportunity in new-age design and handmade products,” she says. Here too, she took her time before telling her father. “I was not sure if we could get it right on the model, where we are currently sourcing from nine countries. When I told my father what it was all about, he said it was a path-breaking idea,” says Ananya, with glee. The plan for the business, which has got off the ground with an initial funding of Rs.6 crore, is to source from more countries. “Now, my mother wants to be the first CuroCarte client,” she quips.