With venture capitalists lining up outside the offices of anyone with what seems a good, bankable idea or product for a start-up, here is the fifth annual list of new companies most likely to shine in the coming years.
StaffOnContract is just what its name signifies - the first job portal in the country devoted exclusively to those who want to work - or hire - on contract.
Valeric Rozycki teamed up with Sanjay Swamy, and Amiya Pathak to launch ZipDial Mobile Solutions in mid 2010, which uses missed calls as a marketing tool.
Attero Recycling processes over 300 tonnes of e-waste every month at its two-acre recycling facility in Roorkee, Uttarakhand.
Global Talent Track, run by Uma Ganesh and Ganesh Natarajan. has tied up with over 800 colleges across the country from which it draws candidates and trains them.
Most start-ups from earlier BT listings have done well. Here are five gems we spotted and five calls we made wrong.
It did not have a single customer for a year after it started in 2007. But today Druva has around 650 customers, including HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank in India, and NASA in the US.
Abhishek and Abhinav Sinha's EKO India Financial Services enables its 150,000 customers to save and transfer money through their mobiles.
Within a year of its start, over 25,000 individuals had filed their returns through Taxspanner. The number has been doubling every year since then and currently stands at 250,000.
Amuleek Singh Bijral started Chai Point in Bangalore in April 2010 to serve tea in clean and congenial surroundings. The single outlet has grown to nine.
IHO offers health services packages at premiums much lower than the mainstream insurance firms - and still manages to make a healthy profit.
While working at his family-run Royal Orchid chain of luxury hotels, Arjun Baljee, realised there were hardly any budget hotels in the country that would appeal to young people. He decided to launch his own chain to fill the gap.





