Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

Made in India Mobile OS that Outrun Apple and Microsoft The start-up is also the first OS in India to launch text-to-speech solution in nine native languages.

By Sandeep Soni

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Entrepreneur India

In 2013, RAKESH DESHMUKH was already into his second venture - a mobile application development company, when he realized how regional language support offered by Android in smartphones was layered on a broken user experience. While user access to content in their native languages was available but not in the way that users understood. Deshmukh turned this idea of facilitating a seamless transition from feature phone to smartphone into India's second largest smartphone operating system – Indus OS.

He tried doing a Paytm for feature phones back in 2007. However, the idea of making payments via feature phones at that time, he believes was ahead of its time. But the idea for a new OS for smartphones in 2013 seemed aptly timed, as smartphone penetration in India and particularly among native language speaking population started to break out. Working for a client in Myanmar, who wanted a customized interface for smartphones in Burmese language, during his second venture (MoFirst Solutions) gave Deshmukh sharp insights on how Android and OS integration of smartphone works.

"We were the first company to build the Burmese language smartphone keyboard for the Myanmar market," remembers Deshmukh. He exited MoFirst in August 2013 after running it for five years and raising Series A investment. Moreover, talking to users who have been switching to smartphones from feature phones offered him serious ground realities.

Out of more than 1.3 billion India's population, explains Deshmukh, only around 150 million people are English speaking, around 350 million are a mix of English and native languages and the largest chunk where Indus OS targets is of around 800 million people that have native as primary language. "The problems we heard were that people said they don't know how to use a smartphone, forget about the language support. Also locating icons for let's say making calls was a problem. People felt that their smartphones didn't have calling capability. They also had no idea of what Google Play store is," adds Deshmukh.

The gap, hence, has been huge between the way we understand technology and the way market understands it. The report published by market research firm, Counterpoint Research, in January this year claimed Indus OS as the second largest OS in India with 7.6 per cent market share and above six million users followed by Chinese smartphone brand, Xiaomi's MIUI OS, with 5.1 per cent share and iOS by Apple way behind at 2 per cent. Android, nonetheless, remained the default OS with a whooping 82.3 per cent share.

Mobile OS for Bharat

Indus OS allows translation of text from English to any of the 12 languages (spoken by 90 per cent of India's population) it supports by simply swiping over the message. Accuracy of that however depends on syntax. The OS has all the icons of important features like calls and messages displayed on the home screen the way they appear on a feature phone.

Currently Indus's regional app store called, App Bazaar, has more than 50,000 apps from all the leading publishers including Facebook, Microsoft, Truecaller, Times Music etc. where users can read about the apps in their languages unlike in Android and iOS. "We wanted to make the smartphone experience simpler as feature phone users migrating to smartphones have a certain mindset of how they use feature phones," claims Deshmukh.

The start-up is also the first OS in India to launch text-to-speech solution in nine native languages. The 100-people company, Indus OS is now aspiring to expand. "We accomplished our first milestone of putting Indus into every leading smartphone brands. Now we are looking at Chinese mobile brands to sign up with and have Indus as their default OS," concludes Deshmukh.

(This article was first published in the March issue of Entrepreneur Magazine. To subscribe, click here)

Sandeep Soni

Former Features Editor

Leadership

How to Break Free From the Cycle of Overthinking and Master Your Mind

Discover the true cost of negative thought loops — and practical strategies for nipping rumination in the bud.

News and Trends

Portl, Freshleaf, and Fix My Curls Raise Growth Stage Funding

Here are the Indian startups that announced growth-stage funding rounds.

News and Trends

Soleos Solar Energy Secures INR 48.5 Cr Funding

This funding infusion will help the company in generating its working capital, global renewable energy portfolio development and establishing manufacturing facilities across the globe.

Side Hustle

These Brothers Had 'No Income' When They Started a 'Low-Risk, High-Reward' Side Hustle to Chase a Big Dream — Now They've Surpassed $50 Million in Revenue

Sam Lewkowict, co-founder and CEO of men's grooming brand Black Wolf Nation, knows what it takes to harness the power of side gig for success.

Science & Technology

Bad Data: The $3 Trillion-Per-Year Problem That's Actually Solvable

How the right tech can help entrepreneurs make data more accessible and accurate, avoiding massive losses in the process.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.