Upasana Taku is the co-founder of an app that changed the way millions of Indians use digital technology to make payments. Mobikwik now has more than a 150 million registered users. When Upasana set up the business in 2009 with her co-founder Bipin Preet Singh, India was still a cash-dependant society, but having worked for big tech companies in the US, Upasana knew there was a gap in the market. Devina Gupta asks her about her decision to leave a high-powered job in the US to move back to India to start a fintech company, and how she convinced both investors and her family that it was a smart business move.Presenter/producer: Devina Gupta(Photo: Upasana Taku. Credit: Mobikwik)
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Folge vom 13.12.2024Business Daily meets: Fintech founder Upasana Taku
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Folge vom 12.12.2024Has graphene lived up to the hype?It was hailed as a wonder material that would transform industry – and all our lives.But 20 years on, companies are still racing to commercialise it.We speak to the people working with graphene and find out what sort of products their developing. Produced and presented by James Graham(Image: Graphene slurry, containing graphene and polymer binders, sits in a beaker inside a laboratory at the National Graphene Institute facility, part of the The University of Manchester. Credit: Getty Images)
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Folge vom 11.12.2024Keeping the lights on in South AfricaIn July, South Africa unveiled a new coalition government, after the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party lost its majority in May's elections.The coalition was welcomed by the business community who said it would ensure economic stability.So what's happened since? And will any optimism last?We hear about a reduction in power cuts - also known as loadshedding - and positivity on the stock market, as well as young people who are looking forward to the future.Produced and presented by Rob Young(Image: A worker connects a diesel generator to supply power to a sports complex during loadshedding in Frankfort, South Africa, in June 2023)
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