Get All Access for $5/mo

When We Solve a Problem for India, We Solve a Problem For the World Says Google CEO Sundar Pichai Google launched 'The Digital Unlocked', a training program which is aimed at small and medium business enterprises.

By Aashika Jain

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

Google

India has been at the focal point of technology companies worldwide but Google's structured approach to make the best out of the growing Indian business ecosystem is laudable.

In an address in India, the Indian-American chief executive officer of Google Inc Sundar Pichai called the Indian internet story inspiring and vowed to help small and medium business enterprises via Google's initiatives.

"If we solve a problem for India, we solve that problem for the world," said Pichai putting India on a pedestal of the company's growth strategy.

Google launched "The Digital Unlocked', a training program which is aimed at SMBs enterprises and will help them build websites that will work on mobiles.

The online training will entail 90 training videos and an eight-hour classroom training programme. Pichai said Google intends to start training centres in 40 cities across country and will organize up to 5000 workshops.

Pichai also launched GoogleMyBusiness, which will help SMBs build websites from scratch along with Primer, an app that will teach SMBs skills to grow.

SMEs will need to register on the Digital Unlocked website to make use of this initiative.

Pichai praised the Indian startup growth by calling them world class. "We need adequate funding & great ecosystem for startups to blossom,' said Pichai.

According to Google's India head Rajan Anandan India has about 350 million internet users and SMBs make up 36 percent of India's GDP and the contribution of SMEs to India's GDP can grow by 10 per cent based on a KPMG-Google study.

"Over 8 million SMBs are benefiting from Google platforms such as Maps and Google is committed to bring every single business online in India," said Anandan.

The event was also attended by India IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad who said India wants to become a leader in world's digital revolution.

At the time of his last visit to India in 2015, Pichai launched free Wi-Fi project in collaboration with RailTel. The project facilitates free wi-fi at 100 railway stations currently.

Aashika Jain

Entrepreneur Staff

Former Associate Editor, Entrepreneur India

Journalist in the making since 2006! My fastest fingers have worked for India's business news channel CNBC-TV18, global news wire Thomson Reuters, the digital arm of India’s biggest newspaper The Economic Times and Entrepreneur India as the Digital Head. 
Growth Strategies

AMD Confident About Increasing Market Share In India

The semiconductor company is positive about the business environment in India on the back of growing investments in data centers and AI, Cloud repatriation, as well as technology refresh taking place across companies on both server side and client devices

News and Trends

Indian Airlines Hopeful Of Mitigating Current Challenges

The aviation industry is at a juncture marked by changing market dynamics and rapid innovation. Airlines such as Air India, Vistara, Air India Express, Akasa Air are adopting measures to navigate through a set of impediments

Leadership

7 Ways You Might Be Damaging Your Credibility as an Entrepreneur

Here are seven credibility killers entrepreneurs need to be aware of.

Lifestyle

Here's a quick five points to decode 10 years of Kiara Advani in Bollywood

As the actress shared an emotional post on her social media while celebrating her decade-long ride as a Bollywood star, with multiple superhit films and more than 25 brand endorsements in her kitty, we look at five interesting points to encapsulate the journey of Kiara Advani.

Business News

Wells Fargo Reportedly Fired More Than a Dozen Employees for Faking Keyboard Activity

The bank told Bloomberg that it "does not tolerate unethical behavior."

Leadership

Tech Overload Will Destroy Your Customer Relationships. Are You Guilty of Using Too Much Tech?

Technology's value in our world is undeniable. However, there can be a point where it is ineffective and possibly counterproductive. See where it can negatively impact your product, brand, and business.