Tag: Indira Gandhi Pratishthan

  • From watching TV, swiping the mobile screen – to reading books

    From watching TV, swiping the mobile screen – to reading books

    MUMBAI: The covid-prompted lockdown turned every parent into a jailer. Trapped indoors with nowhere to run, children reached for the nearest dopamine hit, usually a glowing rectangle promising infinite scroll and zero effort. Kranti Gada, a media entrepreneur and mother of two, watched the same zombie-eyed transformation unfold in her Mumbai home. The dinner table conversations died. The bedtime stories vanished. Imagination, that most precious childhood commodity, seemed to flatline somewhere between Instagram and Youtube.

    Then she noticed something curious bubbling up in her school Whatsapp group. Some 200 desperate parents were frantically swapping books like contraband, passing dog-eared copies of Harry Potter and Geronimo Stilton from flat to flat, anything to prise their children’s fingers away from the screen. The informal lending library worked. Kids were reading again.

    “If this tiny circle could share resources so effectively,” Gada thought, “why not scale it for millions of mothers across India?”

    The result is neOwn, a subscription platform that has become Netflix for the printed page. Children aged 0 to 15 can binge-read from a catalogue of over 9,000 titles delivered straight to their doorstep anywhere in the country. Pick five books a month for Rs 1,299, keep them for 30 days, swap them for fresh ones. Repeat until literate. A single copy of Diary of a Wimpy Kid costs Rs 699 in bookshops; neOwn lets young readers devour up to 15 books a month for roughly double that price.

    The business model is deliciously simple: rent, read, repeat. But the execution requires military precision. Every book undergoes rigorous quality checks and sanitisation before it leaves the warehouse, no one wants sticky fingerprints or mysterious stains from the last borrower. The collection now spans 50,000 physical copies across adventure, mystery, fiction, general knowledge, fantasy and graphic novels, plus a growing selection of regional-language titles. Each book is reviewed by experts before making the cut. This isn’t just bulk-buying from publishers; it’s careful curation designed to hook reluctant readers and challenge voracious ones.

    The neOwn app does the heavy lifting that frazzled parents cannot. It offers personalised recommendations based on age, reading level and genre preferences. Reading progression trackers show how a child evolves from picture books to chapter books to young adult fiction. A waitlist function solves the perennial library problem: if that coveted title is currently out, you simply add it to your wish list. As soon as someone returns it, parents get a Whatsapp alert and an app notification. The book gets reserved for three days. Confirm your interest and it’s blocked exclusively for you, no one else can nick it, ready for your next delivery.

    Reading challenges gamify the experience in ways that would make a Silicon Valley product manager weep with envy. Children log their reading minutes, earn badges, compete (gently) with friends, and build consistent habits. Suddenly, books aren’t homework or vegetables to be endured. They’re addictive. They’re social currency. They’re something to boast about in the school playground.

    The numbers suggest Gada has tapped into something real and urgent. Over 10,000 active readers now scroll through the app. Some 8,500 subscribers are scattered across 350 cities, half of them outside the usual metropolitan suspects of Mumbai, Delhi and Bengaluru. Geography is no barrier; neOwn ships everywhere from tier-1 metros to tier-3 towns, proof that the hunger for stories transcends postcodes and privilege.

    But logistics remain a challenge. Children in Delhi and Bengaluru currently wait five to six days for books couriered from Mumbai, a delay that can dampen enthusiasm when attention spans are measured in seconds. Gada’s solution is simple: decentralise. New warehouses in Bengaluru are coming first, followed by the national capital region. Local distribution means faster deliveries, lower shipping costs, and happier parents. Nearly 10 per cent of neOwn’s subscribers are based in Bengaluru alone, a market too valuable to serve slowly.

    Gada’s background explains why neOwn feels less like a scrappy startup and more like a well-oiled machine. As chief operating officer at Shemaroo, the entertainment giant, she spent years transforming a traditional business-to-business enterprise into a consumer-facing brand. She launched broadcast channels, built OTT platforms, and dragged the company into the digital-first age. An MBA from NMIMS and an alumna of IIM Bangalore, she made Business World’s Disrupt 40 Under 40 list and currently sits on the management committee of the International Advertisers Association’s India chapter.

    “Everything I know I learned there,” she says of Shemaroo. “It’s like my alma mater.”

    That institutional knowledge, how to scale, how to market, how to build infrastructure, now powers neOwn’s rapid expansion.

    But neOwn isn’t just clever logistics wrapped in an app. Gada understands that reading is a social act, not a solitary one. The platform regularly hosts online storytelling sessions, sometimes led by professional narrators who bring characters to vivid life, other times by authors themselves who chat with children about plot twists and character motivations. Young readers ask questions. Authors answer. The distance between creator and consumer collapses. It’s part book club, part fan convention, part interactive theatre. Authors promote neOwn to their followers; neOwn promotes authors to its subscribers. Everyone wins, especially the children who discover that writers are real people with interesting things to say.

    Her “Million Readers Pledge” aims to mobilise an entire country into a reading insurgency. Parents, teachers, corporates, Rotary Clubs, even people without children, everyone is invited to take small, weekly actions that promote literacy. “Gift a book instead of a toy,” Gada urges. “When everyone does a little, together we create a massive impact.” It’s grassroots activism dressed up as consumer behaviour.

    When she appeared on the television show Ideabaaz, which showcases promising business ideas, Liberty Shoes owner  Anupam Bansal immediately pledged his support. “We should encourage her,” he told the cameras. The reaction is typical wherever Gada pitches neOwn: people grasp the mission instantly and instinctively. There’s no need to convince anyone that children spend too much time on screens. The problem is obvious. What’s rare is a solution that’s both practical and scalable.

    Subscriptions currently range from Rs 4,000 for book-only plans to around Rs 8,400 for bundles that include educational toys, yes, neOwn has expanded beyond books into a full ecosystem of learning and play. Parents don’t subscribe once and vanish; they stick around because the value proposition is undeniable.

    The ambition, however, is enormous. Gada wants to scale from 10,000 readers today to 100,000 in the near term, then to one million active readers annually. With an average spend of Rs 8,000 to Rs 10,000 per customer, that translates to Rs 1,000 crore in revenue, a thousand-crore brand built on the radical notion that children might prefer stories to screens if given half a chance. It’s a bold target, but not an insane one. The infrastructure is proven. The engagement metrics are solid. The book quality is high. What’s needed now is reach, and that’s what the new warehouses and the Million Readers Pledge are designed to deliver.

    For Gada it’s like going back to her roots. Shemaroo, was a book lending library (it’s still operational), it moved forward into circulating videos, when her uncles – the Maroo family –  ran it in the seventies and eighties. Today, it runs channels galore and offers several video services to the media and entertainment industry.

    In an age when algorithms curate childhood and attention is the scarcest resource, Gada has sparked a kranti, a revolution, by offering something delightfully analogue. The crackle of a new page. The weight of a hardback. The shared wonder of a story told well, discussed over breakfast, argued about with siblings, remembered for life. She’s betting that beneath all the screen addiction lies something older and more powerful: humanity’s ancient love affair with narrative. Give children access to great stories, remove the barriers of cost and clutter, make reading social and rewarding, and they’ll choose books over Instagram.

    Turns out the greatest gift you can give a child isn’t a screen. It’s a plot and a twist and a turn. And nowhere can you find as many of them as in a book.

     

  • Teen Taal tunes into Lucknow for 125th bash

    Teen Taal tunes into Lucknow for 125th bash

    MUMBAI: They’ve tickled funny bones across the country, and now they’re bringing the laughter live. Aaj Tak Radio’s chart-topping Hindi podcast Teen Taal is heading to Lucknow for a special live recording of its 125th episode on Saturday, 4 October, promising an evening that’s equal parts wit, warmth and wackiness.

    After the roaring success of their 100th-episode celebration in Pune, where fans even flew in from abroad, the trio is now set to charm the city of nawabs with their signature flair. Expect Tau (Kamlesh Kishore Singh), Sardaar (Kuldeep Mishra) and Khan Cha (Asif Khan) to serve up their trademark mix of humour, satire and spicy observations, all wrapped in the kind of banter that’s made Teen Taal a national favourite.

    The live show at Indira Gandhi Pratishthan will turn everyday tales into laugh-out-loud stories, with the audience playing an active role in the fun. Fans can meet the hosts, join the conversation and be part of a recording that’s sure to become podcasting legend.

    A clever cocktail of storytelling and social commentary, Teen Taal has cemented its place as India’s No.1 Hindi podcast, consistently topping Apple Podcasts and other platforms. The Lucknow live marks not just a milestone episode but a celebration of the show’s unique ability to turn ordinary life into extraordinary entertainment.

    The laughter kicks off at 8 pm, but with seats limited and anticipation high, fans would do well to tune in early and register fast. After all, Teen Taal’s rhythm is best enjoyed live, with the crowd clapping in perfect sync.