Tag: Rajasthani

  • Stage secures $12.5m funding to take regional content centre stage

    Stage secures $12.5m funding to take regional content centre stage

    MUMBAI: Stage, the streaming platform championing India’s regional languages and cultures, has secured $12.5m in Series B funding led by Goodwater Capital and Blume Ventures, with Physis Capital and angel investors also piling in.

    The platform, which focuses on underserved linguistic communities, has become something of a dark horse in India’s crowded streaming market. Stage now boasts Rs 180 crore in annual recurring revenue, 4.4m paying households and over 20m app installations—impressive figures for a service that began by exclusively targeting Haryanvi speakers.

    Stage’s numbers tell a compelling story: a 289 per cent surge in revenue and 286 per cent jump in subscribers over the past year. Popular originals such as Videshi Bahu (Haryanvi), Kaand 2010 (Haryanvi) and Bhawani (Rajasthani) have helped drive growth, alongside the National Award-winning Dada Lakhmi featuring Bollywood veteran Yashpal Sharma.

    stage investors

    “What if stories could make people fall in love with their roots? That’s the question we asked five years ago,” reflected Stage chief executive and co-founder Vinay Singhal, on X (foremerly Twitter). “To everyone who’s ever hidden their dialect to sound ‘professional’… Walk taller today. Your culture, your dialect is not a liability. It is a matter of pride. And we’ll keep fighting to prove it. And this funding isn’t just about capital—it’s a resounding validation of India’s regional culture.”

    The platform’s success challenges the conventional wisdom that regional content remains a niche play. Harsh Mani Tripathi, chief product officer and co-founder, puts it bluntly: “Every subscriber who joins Stage isn’t just a user—they’re custodians of their culture.”

    Ritesh Malik, a Stage board member, waxed lyrical about the company’s mission: “By amplifying underrepresented voices and making regional dialects aspirational, Stage is not just shaping content—it’s shaping culture.

    With Bhojpuri content now live, Stage’s roadmap for 2025-26 involves breaking into new cultural territories while deepening its footprint in existing markets. “This isn’t just a growth story. It’s a movement. As we always say: ‘Company Nahin, Hum Kranti Hain!’,” declares Singhal.

    Reflecting on the journey, Karthik Reddy of Blume noted with satisfaction: “To see it bloom to Rs 15 crore a month when sceptics said no one would pay or watch this as primary content is very satisfying.” 
    The once-free Haryanvi app has certainly found its voice—and paying audience.

  • Regional OTT  Stage‘s board clears preference share issue

    Regional OTT Stage‘s board clears preference share issue

    MUMBAI: It’s been staging a saleable story by riding on the regional language OTT fascination wave. Harayanvi and Rajasthani dialect streamer Stage recently got the go ahead from its board to issue 31,179 series B preference shares of face value Rs 10 and at an issue price of Rs 27,137 each. 

    This part of a funding raise of Rs 84.6 crore or $10 million  in a round led by new investor Goodwater Capital along with  existing backer Blume Ventures. The former’s contribution is Rs 41.95 crore, while the latter will be pumping in Rs 26.01 crore.  Blume Ventures will end up with a 13.03 per cent stake making it the largest external investor while Goodwater Capital will have 6.24 per cent. 

    27 other investors are throwing their money into the investment pot. Among them figure: IA Growth Opportunities Fund I, TSM Ventures, LV Angel Fund and Brew Opportunities Fund.

    The funds will be used to scale up its content slate, as well as to introduce Bhojpuri, Awadhi and Maithali languages streams, according to its founders Shashank Vaishnav, Praveen and Vinay Singhal.  

    The trio claims that the platform, which was founded in 2019 has three  million subscribers, with 1.2 million of them in Haryana alone.  New subs to the tune of 250,000 are being added  every month.

    When the round gets completed it would have raised $19 million in its current avatar.  Of this, $4.83 million was raised in 2023 from Blume Ventures, NB Ventures and Dholakia Ventures. It had secured $2.5 million in a pre-series A round in January 2022 and $1.5 million from Venture Catalysts in November 2020.  Additionally, javelin champion Neeraj Chopra has also invested in the venture and regularly appears in promos for it. 

    Stage OTT app

    Stage began as a side project (competing with BuzzFeed)  at WittyFeed,– a successful  initiative that was shuttered in 2018, after Meta blocked its  page on Facebook and Rs 7 crore per month in revenue simply vanished.  The trio requested their employees to become their angel investors and help them come up with a reincarnation of the service.

    More than 50 per cent of the work force agreed and even put in their savings as investments. Brainstorming with them allowed them to come up with the idea to create an OTT offering regional language content. Stage was born under Stage Technologies Pvt Ltd. And it is in this company that investors have been pouring their money.

    Content in terms of originals at Stage is produced  in house in the local language and dialect using local artistes at a cost of Rs 18-20 lakh per six to eight episodic series. Ditto is the cost for a two to three hour long film is what the trio had revealed on Shark Tank season 2 on SonyLiv and Sony Entertainment Television.

    Around a year ago, the company brought in Harsh Mani Tripathi as a cofounder to further improve on the product. Earlier this week, its founders announced that it was being made available as an add-on to Zee-owned streamer Zee5 in the US.

    These days Stage is available at Re 1 for a seven day trial after being downloaded. The trio believe that once  they sample the series and movies available on the streamer they would not mind paying Rs 199 for a three month subscription.

    But the Singhal brothers and  Shashank Vaishnav will have to spruce up their act on one front:  Stage app’s download page on the Google Play store is flooded with complaints about subscribers getting their bank accounts deducted for Rs 199 even if they chose to cancel after the trial period.. So heavy is the stream of disgruntled subscribers, that Stage has put out a short teaser featuring Neeraj Chopra telling subscribers not to worry as only Rs 1 would be cut, and if more is, then those wanting to unsubscribe will get a refund into their bank accounts.

    (Picture: Courtesy Shark Tank, Sony)

  • DAVP empanels 3703 newspapers

    NEW DELHI: The Directorate of Advertising and Visual Publicity (DAVP) has empanelled a total of 3703 newspapers for the purpose of public service advertisements.

    According to statistics made available by the DAVP, it covers newspapers in 24 languages.

    Of these 2355 are in Hindi, 304 in English, 259 in Urdu, 146 in Gujarati, 112 in Marathi and 102 in Telugu. 

    Others include Oriya (76), Malayalam (73), Punjabi (69), Tamil (65), Bengali (54), Kannada (31), Assamese (22), Sindhi (14), and three in Mizo, apart from four each in Khasi, Manipuri and Nepali, and one each in Dogri, Garhwali, Konkani, Naga, Rajasthani, and Sanskrit.

    The DAVP under the New Advertisement Policy is expected to pay the advertisement bill within 60 days of receipt of the advertisement. Clause 22 of the Policy says every newspaper shall submit their bills, complete in all respects and supported with relevant documents, within 60 days of publication of the advertisement.