Entrepreneur India – July 2019

(Greg DeLong) #1
JULY 2019 l ENTREPRENEUR l 35

RISHABH OSWAL, Executive
Director, Monte Carlo

THE ACTIVE


CLOTHING CATERER


B


usiness bug runs
deep in Rishabh
Oswal’s veins,
a third generation
entrepreneur.
He started his
entrepreneurial
journey while he was
still studying. “I was
into frozen yogurts
and gelatos. But after
meeting the big players
in the food industry,
I figured out that it


can never be as big a
business as what I can
do with Monte Carlo,’’
says Oswal.
He started with
his family’s denim
business, which was
looked after by his
father. One-and-a-half
years later, he joined
Monte Carlo. Currently,
Oswal is the Executive
Director of Monte
Carlo and the founder

of sports apparel
brand, Rock It.
Oswal says, “My
grandfather, dad and
uncle look after three
separate businesses.
So, when I had to
launch Rock It, I
only had to ask my
grandfather. To be
honest, my dad doesn’t
even know what I do
in my day-to-day work
life,” the young heir

giggles. “A few years
back, we changed
the outlook of the
business; instead
of being one brand

(i.e., Monte Carlo)
we wanted to make a
house of brands.” 80
per cent of the Oswal
group business is B2B,
Monte Carlo is their
only B2C business.
“We have started a
low-end brand under
the name of Cloak and
Decker. They are 20-25
per cent cheaper than
Monte Carlo,” adds
Oswal.

THE KNOWLEDGE


CONTAINER
DIVYA JAIN, CEO, Safeducate

I


n 2007, Divya
joined Safexpress,
India’s largest
logistics and supply
chain firm run by her
father-in-law, Pawan
Jain and husband,
Rubal Jain. She
spearheaded the
training division there.
When she realized the
lack of manpower and
skill gaps within the
logistics and supply
chain workforce,
Jain decided to
launch Safeducate.
Safeducate is India’s
premier supply chain
training company
offering vocational and
diploma courses.
Jain says setting

up a new business
was no easy ride. She
further confesses that
being a woman, it was
harder for her to make
a distinct identity for
herself. “India is still
very patriarchal. I made
sure I did my contract
deals on my own.
Never was my father-

in-law or husband
involved in any of
them,” says Jain. The
reason for the same,
she tells us, is that
people earlier would
think her to be the
mere face and the real
decision makers to be
the men in the family.
Jain worked
assiduously to be
taken seriously. “I
made sure that if there
is a problem, people
come up to me for a
solution,” she says.
Today, Safeducate has
set up 150 centres
across India and
trained more than
70,000 individuals.

WHAT’S NEXT?
Once Rock It takes off,
Oswal plans to expand
the family business by
venturing into footwear.
He also plans to launch
an ethnic wear brand
under the umbrella of
Oswal Group.

WINGS OF EDUCATION
>In 2015, Jain launched
the container school
programme, an initiative to
reach the masses.
>The container school
was inaugurated by Prime
Minister, Narendra Modi
>In 2016, she was felicitated
by Limca Book of Records
for her book, Horn Please:
Trucking in India.
Free download pdf