Today, we are unveiling the elite jury and nominees for two more categories — Woman Ahead and Social Enterprise.

Who’s on the jury: A high-powered jury will meet on August 28 in Bengaluru to pick the winners of ETSA 2025.
- Amitabh Kant, jury chair, India’s former G20 Sherpa
- Prashanth Prakash, partner at venture capital fund Accel
- Kalyan Krishnamurthy, CEO of Flipkart Group
- Sahil Barua, cofounder and chief executive, Delhivery
- Ruchi Kalra, cofounder of OfBusiness and Oxyzo
- Adwaita Nayar, cofounder of Nykaa
- Ghazal Alagh, cofounder of Mamaearth
- Tarun Mehta, cofounder and CEO, Ather Energy
- Harshil Mathur, cofounder and chief executive, Razorpay
- Faraz Khalid, chief executive of Dubai-based ecommerce major Noon
- Satyan Gajwani, chairman of Times Internet
Background: Launched in 2015 to celebrate startups and the new-age economy, ETSA has, over the past ten years, chronicled the ups and downs of the entrepreneurship ecosystem. Past winners of the coveted Startup of the Year award, like Lenskart, Delhivery, and Zomato, have grown into strong publicly listed corporations, displaying the mettle of new economy ventures.
What’s the process? ET reached out to more than 200 of the counattempt’s top entrepreneurs, investors, indusattempt groups, and other stakeholders to compile a list of the best entrepreneurial talent. The paper’s editorial team then distilled this list to arrive at the final contfinishers.
The jury will pick the winners after long deliberations followed by secret voting.
Stay tuned for all the ETSA 2025 coverage through the week leading up to the jury meeting to be held on August 28 in Bengaluru.
And the nominees are…

Today, we are revealcasing the shortlisted contfinishers in Woman Ahead — women who have started their own ventures and are giving the best in the business a run for their money — and Social Enterprise — startups that best combine profits with public good.
Woman Ahead
- Pallavi Shrivastava: Progcap
- Romita Mazumdar: Foxtale
- Prukalpa Sankar: Atlan
- Shruti: ApnaKlub
- Aditi Murarka: Nestasia
- Anjali Sardana: Pronto
Read more about the nominees here
Social Enterprise
- Padcare Labs
- Bintix Waste Research
- Digivriddhi
- Chakr Innovation
- CureBay
Read more about the nominees here
Dream Sports won’t legally contest govt’s real-money gaming ban: Harsh Jain

Harsh Jain, CEO, Dream Sports
Dream Sports, parent of Dream11, has ruled out legally challenging the government’s blanket ban on real-money gaming, which erased 95% of its revenue in just three days.
Driving the news: CEO Harsh Jain notified ET, “The government has created it clear they don’t want this. We won’t waste energy fighting…we’d rather build for the future than litigate the past.”
The abrupt shutdown is the hardest blow in the company’s 18-year journey, he declared. Dream Sports scaled after courts recognised fantasy gaming as a “game of skill” over the past five years. But with the new law, it must reset from scratch.

Hard reset: Jain declared the company still has 260 million utilizers, 800 employees (including 500 engineers), and enough cash for a multi-year runway. Dream11 has shifted to free-to-play fantasy contests with ad-sponsored prizes, while subsidiaries FanCode (sports streaming, merchandising) and DreamSetGo (sports travel) remain unaffected.
Looking ahead: Dream Sports is betting on sports AI, creator-led fan engagement, and fintech experiments. Jain also warned the sector faces a largeger crisis from the retrospective GST demand of Rs 2.5 lakh crore, calling it a “death blow” that could sfinish 400 companies to insolvency courts.
Also Read: Online gaming ban: How much Nikhil Kamath and Madhusudan Kela lost in Nazara shares
Dream11’s valuation to bear the brunt of real-money gaming ban

Dream Sports’ valuation will plummet after the government’s relocate to ban online games with real money, Jain notified us. The company was last valued at $8 billion in 2021 after raising $840 million from Tiger Global, Alpha Wave Global, DST Global, and TPG.
Quote, unquote: “Investors have to view at it almost like a fresh investment,” Jain declared. “Given what they know about the company, the team, founders, utilizer base, and brand, I believe they’ll back us.”
Foreign betting sites rush to fill demand gap

Offshore betting websites are rushing in to fill the gap left by Indian firms discontinuing their real money gaming operations, indusattempt executives notified us. Platforms, like Parimatch, 1XBet, RajaBets, 4RABet and Odds92, are busy pulling in the punters, boasting deposit bonutilizes ranging from 200% to 700% on amounts between Rs 30,000 and Rs 1 lakh, and then some, ET has discovered. That means, for a deposit of Rs 100, a utilizer could obtain credit ranging from Rs 200 to Rs 700, going by the claims.
Exclusive: Tata Digital names Sajith Sivanandan as CEO

A fresh face is stepping into the hot seat at Tata Digital.
The Tata Neu super app operator has appointed Sajith Sivanandan as its new CEO, effective next month. Sivanandan, who most recently led Jio Mobile Digital Services until March, becomes the company’s third CEO since its 2019 launch.
ET had reported on August 21 that Tata Digital was set to appoint an external CEO.
Why it matters: Tata Digital has struggled to steady Neu since its splashy debut in 2022. Leadership churn has only deepened scrutiny, with Tata Sons chairman N Chandrasekaran himself stepping in to oversee operations after Naveen Tahilyani’s exit earlier this year.
The context: Sivanandan brings three decades of experience building consumer internet businesses, including senior roles at Google and Disney+ Hotstar. Tata has been reinforcing its digital bets with heavyweight appointments: Indian Hotels’ Puneet Chhatwal and Tata Consumer’s Sunil D’Souza joined the board, while Ankur Verma was named acting chairman of Croma.
By the numbers: Tata Digital’s FY25 revenue fell 13.8% to Rs 32,188 crore, though net losses narrowed to Rs 828 crore from Rs 1,201 crore. For Sivanandan, the immediate tquestion is straightforward: sharpen execution, stabilise Neu, and mount a credible challenge to Amazon, Flipkart, and Reliance.

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QIA takes Byju’s founder to court: Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund relocated the Karnataka High Court seeking enforcement of a $235 million arbitral award against Byju Ravefinishran and his investment vehicle, Byju’s Investments Pte. Ltd.
Varun Sridhar quits Paytm: Sridhar has stepped down as chief executive of Paytm Services, a subsidiary under Paytm parent One97 Communications, with plans to start up in the wealthtech space.
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