Something has shifted in India’s elite engineering colleges. The placements that once defined success — Goldman Sachs, Google, Microsoft — are no longer the only dream. A growing number of IIT and NIT graduates are choosing to build their own companies instead.
The Numbers Tell the Story
In 2015, fewer than 5% of IIT graduates attempted entrepreneurship within 5 years of graduation. By 2025, that number had crossed 18% and is still rising. Among IIT Bombay and IIT Delhi graduates specifically, the startup route is now considered equally prestigious to a high-paying MNC job.
What Changed?
Three things happened simultaneously. First, the funding ecosystem matured. Indian VCs now invest at the idea stage, meaning talented founders can get capital without a product or revenue. Second, successful Indian founders like Kunal Shah, Girish Mathrubootham, and Nikhil Kamath became visible role models. Third, the risk calculus changed — if a startup fails, hiring managers at top companies now view it as an asset, not a red flag.
What Are They Building?
The current generation of IIT founders is not building another food delivery app. They are working on deep tech — AI infrastructure, semiconductor design, climate technology, defence tech, and enterprise software for global markets. The ambition level has increased dramatically.
The Challenges Are Real
Not everyone who leaves a high-paying job to start a company succeeds. The dropout rate remains high. Runway management, finding product-market fit, and building a sales function from scratch are skills that no IIT curriculum teaches.
The Support System
What has changed is the support system. IIT alumni networks now actively fund, mentor, and hire from founder networks. Incubators like IIT Bombay’s SINE and IIT Delhi’s FTIF have produced dozens of funded startups. The ecosystem feeds itself.
What This Means for India
If India’s best technical minds increasingly choose to build rather than join, the compounding effect on the startup ecosystem will be enormous. The next decade of Indian entrepreneurship will be defined by people who had safer options and chose the harder path anyway.